LaFawn Carter v. Ford Motor Company

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedApril 2, 2009
Docket08-1082
StatusPublished

This text of LaFawn Carter v. Ford Motor Company (LaFawn Carter v. Ford Motor Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
LaFawn Carter v. Ford Motor Company, (6th Cir. 2009).

Opinion

RECOMMENDED FOR FULL-TEXT PUBLICATION Pursuant to Sixth Circuit Rule 206 File Name: 09a0130p.06

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT _________________

X - LAFAWN CARTER, - Plaintiff-Appellant, - - No. 08-1082 v. , > - Defendant-Appellee. - FORD MOTOR COMPANY, - N Appeal from the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Michigan at Detroit. No. 06-15285—Bernard A. Friedman, District Judge. Argued: January 21, 2009 Decided and Filed: April 2, 2009 * Before: MARTIN and COOK, Circuit Judges; WATSON, District Judge.

_________________

COUNSEL ARGUED: James W. Fraser, FAUPEL, FRASER & FESSLER, Ann Arbor, Michigan, for Appellant. Kathryn S. Wood, DICKINSON WRIGHT, Detroit, Michigan, for Appellee. ON BRIEF: James W. Fraser, FAUPEL, FRASER & FESSLER, Ann Arbor, Michigan, for Appellant. Kathryn S. Wood, Tiffany Angeleen Buckley, DICKINSON WRIGHT, Detroit, Michigan, for Appellee. _________________

OPINION _________________

BOYCE F. MARTIN, JR., Circuit Judge. Defendant Ford Motor Company fired LaFawn Carter in March 2005 when she did not report to work and, in Ford’s view, had not properly extended her medical leave. Carter filed a grievance and Ford agreed to

* The Honorable Michael H. Watson, United States District Judge for the Southern District of Ohio, sitting by designation.

1 No. 08-1082 Carter v. Ford Motor Co. Page 2

reinstate her, but only as a probationary employee. In January 2006, Ford fired Carter after she was involved in a physical altercation with Ford’s labor relations supervisor. Carter then sued Ford, alleging sex discrimination and violations of the Family Medical Leave Act. The district court granted summary judgment in Ford’s favor on all counts. Carter’s appeal focuses only on her March 2005 termination, and contends that the district court erroneously concluded that her complaint did not encompass the 2005 termination. We disagree and AFFIRM the district court’s judgment.

I.

From 2001 until 2006, LaFawn Carter worked as an assembler at Automotive Components Holdings, a Ford Motor Company affiliate. In February 2005, while Carter was visiting her co-worker and ex-boyfriend, Corey Thrower, she tore a ligament in her knee. She wanted time to recover, so she called Ford’s medical department and requested medical leave. Ford’s medical department placed her on a two-week conditional medical leave and instructed her to submit a medical certification form within two weeks. But at the end of the two weeks, Carter neither returned to work nor submitted the medical certification. So, on March 10, Ford sent Carter a notice informing Carter that she would be fired within five days if she did not: (1) report in person to the medical department; or (2) mail Ford a medical certification form completed by her physician; or (3) “telephone to inform the Company of [her] condition.” The notice instructed, “If you respond by telephone, request a call-in number.” It was signed by Shonn Colbrunn, the plant’s human resources specialist, and it provided two phone numbers at the bottom.

On March 15 (within five days), Carter left a message for Colbrunn. According to Colbrunn, he “instructed her to call Medical to extend her leave after she mentioned that she would continue to be out for medical reasons.” The parties disagree about whether Carter’s conversation with Colbrunn was enough, without a separate call to “Medical,” to extend her leave. Ford thought it was not, and fired Carter on March 18 for failing to extend her medical leave. Three days later, she provided Ford with a medical certification signed by a physician and dated March 7. No. 08-1082 Carter v. Ford Motor Co. Page 3

After she was fired, Carter filed a grievance. Ford’s labor relations supervisor, Sabrina Griffin, agreed to rehire Carter if she would sign a reinstatement waiver providing that she could be discharged for any misconduct or violation of the rules within twelve months of her return to work. Carter signed the waiver on April 27, but she remained on medical leave until December 2.

Carter’s return to work did not go smoothly: she twice complained that co- workers (including Thrower) sexually harassed her, and that on a separate occasion, a co-worker threw an assembly part at her. Ford investigated these incidents and the labor relations supervisor, Griffin, held a meeting with employees to discuss the plant’s rules on sexual harassment and horseplay. As the meeting ended, there was some sort of physical collision between Carter and Griffin—Carter says she “bumped” Griffin; Griffin says the bump was “quite hard” and in response to her statement to Carter that, “I’m going to assume you did that by accident,” Carter replied, “Apparently not. You felt it, didn’t you?” Colbrunn investigated the incident, interviewed Griffin and Carter, and then recommended that Ford fire Carter.

Carter did not report to work on the day after the altercation with Griffin. She says that instead she phoned the medical department to request medical leave. Ford has no record of the call and does not agree that Carter phoned the medical department. In any event, the next day, January 27, 2006, Ford fired Carter—an action which, as a probationary employee, Carter had no right to challenge through a grievance.

Thus, Carter filed a complaint in district court, alleging three counts of Title VII violations and one count of a Family Medical Leave Act violation. Ford moved for summary judgment on the ground that Carter was not covered by the Family Medical Leave Act in January 2006 because she had not worked the statutory minimum number of hours in the preceding twelve months. Instead of defending her claim relating to the 2006 firing (which she concedes was “effectively waived”), Carter responded that her Family Medical Leave Act claim was based on her 2005 termination and probationary reinstatement. No. 08-1082 Carter v. Ford Motor Co. Page 4

Carter’s focus at the summary judgment stage on those 2005 events was inconsistent with the deposition testimony she had given three months earlier explaining that her lawsuit was only about her January 2006 termination:

Q: Is anything that happened prior to you returning to work in December 2005, any events that happened prior to that[,] part of the lawsuit that you are bringing against Ford today? A: Anything that happened?

Q: Mm-hmm. A: No, not—no. ...

Q: Okay. If you know, is your FMLA, Family Medical Leave Act, claim related to your request for the two weeks off right before you were terminated [in January 2006]? Is that what you are claiming is violating the Family Medical Leave Act? A: I believe so, yes.

Q: Is there any other way you believe that Ford violated the Family Medical Leave Act as to you? A: No, ma’am.

Ford, surprised to learn at the summary judgment stage that Carter’s claim involved the 2005 termination, replied by describing a claim based on that event as a “new cause of action”—not indicated by her complaint and directly contradicting her deposition testimony. After Ford filed its reply brief, Carter attempted to file an affidavit supplementing her deposition testimony (styling it as an attachment to her response to motion for summary judgment), that purported to explain why, since her deposition, she had come to believe that her Family Medical Leave Act claim included the early 2005 events. The district court struck it from the record on the ground that it was an impermissible sur-reply and did not comply procedurally with Local Rule 7.1(f) for filing supporting documents and briefs.

Granting summary judgment in Ford’s favor, the district court observed, “Plaintiff also testified in her deposition that the above-described events of 2005 during which she took FMLA leave, and was fired, and was later reinstated are not part of the No. 08-1082 Carter v.

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Bluebook (online)
LaFawn Carter v. Ford Motor Company, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lafawn-carter-v-ford-motor-company-ca6-2009.