Langston v. Carraway Methodist Hospitals of Alabama, Inc.

840 F. Supp. 854, 1993 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 19534, 63 Fair Empl. Prac. Cas. (BNA) 524, 1993 WL 551112
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Alabama
DecidedNovember 1, 1993
DocketCV-92-N-2176-S
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 840 F. Supp. 854 (Langston v. Carraway Methodist Hospitals of Alabama, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Langston v. Carraway Methodist Hospitals of Alabama, Inc., 840 F. Supp. 854, 1993 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 19534, 63 Fair Empl. Prac. Cas. (BNA) 524, 1993 WL 551112 (N.D. Ala. 1993).

Opinion

Memorandum of Opinion

EDWIN L. NELSON, District Judge.

In this civil action, brought pursuant to the Age Discrimination in Employment Act of 1967, 29 U.S.C. §§ 621, et seq., (the “ADEA”), plaintiffs Edward A. Langston (Langston) and Billy J. Simmons (Simmons), claim that they were discharged from their employment because of their age. Defendant Carraway Methodist Hospitals of Alabama, Inc. (“Carraway”) denies that the plaintiffs were discharged because of their age and, instead, says their positions were eliminated as a part of a reduction-in-force (RIF). The matter is now before the court on motion of the defendant for summary judgment. The motion has been briefed and was submitted for decision at the court’s regularly scheduled motion docket on October 29,1993. The defendant’s motion will be granted and the claims will be dismissed.

I. The Facts.

The facts here are gleaned from the parties’ submission of facts claimed to be undisputed, their respective responses to those submissions and the court’s own examination of the evidentiary record. 1

*856 The plaintiffs Langston and Simmons were terminated from their employment with the defendant Carraway on January 31,1992 as a part of a RIF. 2 At the time of his termination, Mr. Simmons held the position of Director of the Central Services Department (Simmons depo., p. 13) and also exercised top supervisory functions in the patient transportation department. (Id., pp. 13-16) His duties included management of receiving, preparation, sterilization and issuing of supplies and equipment needed for patient care as well as supervision of patient transportation throughout the hospital. 3 In the Central Services Department, Mr. Simmons supervised 18 employees who all answered directly to him. (Id., pp. 30-31) Those employees held titles of Technician, Control Clerk and Rental Clerk. (Id., p. 31)

As of January 1, 1992, plaintiff Simmons supervised approximately 20 employees in the Transportation Department. (Id., p. 30) Of the 20 employees in that department, one held the title of Assistant Supervisor, and another held the title of Shift Leader. (Id., pp. 33-34) Helen Gober, who was age 55 in January, 1982, was the Assistant Supervisor. (Id., p. 31; Jones affidavit, ¶7) All other employees in the Transportation Department were designated as Transportation Attendants. (Simmons depo., p. 34)

At the time he was terminated, Mr. Simmons was supervised by Mike Sheffield who held the title of Administrative Assistant. Mr. Sheffield was then 38 years of age. (Sheffield depo., pp. 5,10; Simmons depo., p. 41)

Plaintiff Langston, at the time he was terminated, held the positions of Technical Director of Nuclear Medicine and Technical Director of Radiation Oncology. (Langston depo., p 25) Like his co-plaintiff Simmons, Langston worked under the supervision of Assistant Administrator Mike Sheffield. (Id., p. 87) This plaintiff supervised four employees in the Nuclear Medicine Department. (Id., p. 78) They held the titles of Nuclear Medicine Technologist, one employee, Nuclear Technician, one employee, Con *857 trol Clerk, one employee, and Assistant Director, one employee. (Id., p. 78) The Assistant Director was Larry Harris, who was age 41 in January, 1992. (Id., p. 78; Jones affidavit, ¶ 7)

Mr. Langston’s duties in the Nuclear Medicine Department encompassed both clinical, direct patient care, and administrative functions. (Id., pp. 91-92) In some ways he performed duties similar to those of Technologists and Technicians in that he provided direct care to patients. (Id., p. 91) His administrative duties in that department included responsibility for payroll, personnel functions, budgeting, purchasing, equipment maintenance and quality assurance and control. (Id., p. 92)

With respect to the Oncology Department, Mr. Langston’s job duties also included both clinical and administrative functions. (Id., p. 109) Under his supervision were five employees including technologists, two nurses and a receptionist-clerk. (Id., pp. 78-79) Marsha Crane, age 45, was the Supervisor of the department. (Id., p. 81; Jones affidavit, ¶7) In addition to his direct patient care duties in Radiation Oncology (Id., pp. 109-110) , Mr. Langston performed administrative duties consisting of payroll, personnel, purchasing, budgeting, invoicing, maintenance and quality assurance and control. (Id., pp. 109, 112-117)

Until the time they were terminated as a part of the RIF, neither plaintiff had any complaint about the way they had been treated at Carraway. (Simmons depo., pp. 13-16; Langston depo., p. 87)

At some point in time before the plaintiffs’ positions were eliminated, the defendant undertook to evaluate its operations with a view to streamlining and making more efficient its delivery of services to its “customers.” Mr. Sheffield testified in deposition:

The purpose of the reorganization was to help us reduce costs, to help us bring the size of our management structure in line with our current volume of business, to help be more efficient in our daily operations within the hospital. We had had layoffs in the past — or excuse me, reduetions in force in the past with staff employees and we had reduced our level of staff. Our volume of business had gone down from five hundred and fifty patients a day to a little under three hundred patients a day. We had reduced our staff accordingly. We had not adjusted our management hierarchy.

(Sheffield depo., pp. 36-37) Ms. Williams testified,

The goal was to position ourselves to respond to the changes in our health care industry to become more efficient, we needed to improve our efficiency. • We had been experiencing a decline in our in-patient census and the need was to flatten the organization to become more responsive and efficient.

(Williams depo., pp. 54^55)

The original recommendations that eventually resulted in the elimination of the plaintiffs’ positions came from two different sources. Mike Sheffield recommended that the Central Services and Transportation Departments be merged into and placed under the supervision of the Pharmacy Department, eliminating the position then held by plaintiff Simmons. (Sheffield depo., pp. 25-26) The recommendation to eliminate the position of Director of Nuclear Medicine and Radiation Oncology and merge those functions with the Department of Radiology came from charts of the new organizational structure provided to the reorganization committee by the Carraway hospital administrator, James Hallmark. (Id., pp. 62-64, 65; Williams depo., pp. 18-20, 28-31) 4

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840 F. Supp. 854, 1993 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 19534, 63 Fair Empl. Prac. Cas. (BNA) 524, 1993 WL 551112, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/langston-v-carraway-methodist-hospitals-of-alabama-inc-alnd-1993.