Lima v. East Providence

CourtDistrict Court, D. Rhode Island
DecidedJune 12, 2020
Docket1:17-cv-00156
StatusUnknown

This text of Lima v. East Providence (Lima v. East Providence) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lima v. East Providence, (D.R.I. 2020).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF RHODE ISLAND

NADINE E. LIMA, ) Plaintiff ) ) v. ) C.A. No. 17-cv-156-MSM-PAS ) CITY OF EAST PROVIDENCE, by and ) through its Finance Director, MALCOLM ) MOORE, and CITY OF EAST ) PROVIDENCE SCHOOL DEPARTMENT, ) by and through its Superintendent, ) individually and in her official capacity, ) KATHRYN CROWLEY, ) Defendants )

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER

Mary S. McElroy, United States District Judge.

This matter is before the Court on the Objection of Nadine E. Lima to the Report and Recommendation of Magistrate Judge Patricia A. Sullivan (ECF No. 28). The Magistrate Judge, pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P. 72(b), has recommended that Count I of the Complaint (ECF No. 1-1) be dismissed and the defendants’ motion for summary judgment (ECF No. 13) be granted.1 Although Ms. Lima’s Objection to the Report is so general and devoid of reasoning as to be unhelpful, it minimally meets the criteria of LR Cv. 72(d).2 In any

1 An original Count III, claiming race discrimination, was dismissed by Stipulation (ECF No. 12).

2 Fed. R. Civ. P. 72(b)(2) requires that an objector file “specific written objections to the proposed findings and recommendations.” The Local Rule further mandates that event, the Court has undertaken, as is its responsibility under Fed. R. Civ. P. 72(b)(3), a review. I have read and considered the memoranda of the parties, the Statements of Disputed and Undisputed Facts, and the exhibits, as well as

thoroughly assessed the Report & Recommendation. After doing so, and in the exercise of my independent judgment, I concur in the conclusion that Count I should be dismissed3 and that the defendants are entitled to summary judgment on the remaining claims.

the objection “shall specify the findings and/or recommendations to which objection is made and the basis for the objection.” Ms. Lima’s objection (ECF No. 30), in its entirety, reads as follows:

As grounds therefore, Plaintiff states that the Magistrate made numerous decisions on issues of fact and did not construe evidence of retaliation against the Plaintiff for her protected conduct in the light most favorable to the Plaintiff. In addition, the magistrate construes evidence of a hostile environment against the Plaintiff under an unduly restrictive standard making Plaintiff’s burden of proof to get a trial much higher than what is required. It also fails to read the evidence in the light that it itself proves that the reasons asserted by the Defendants for the conduct against her are a mere pretext.

There was no memorandum filed in support of the Objection and thus no “fleshing- out” of Ms. Lima’s complaints about the Report. The above paragraph was the sum total of what Ms. Lima contends. She fails to mention any specific instances of alleged factfinding which contravened the summary judgment requirement to assume all reasonable facts and inferences in her favor. She also fails to identify what “unduly restrictive standard” she believes the Magistrate Judge applied. The final sentence of her objection is rather unclear, and the Court is quite unable to figure it out. I have assumed she is again complaining that all reasonable facts and inferences were not drawn in her favor on the issue of pretext.

3 Even reading Ms. Lima’s inartful objection to the report generously, there is no indication that she objects to the recommendation of dismissal of Count I for breach of contract. She mentions only retaliation, hostile work environment, and pretext. None of these are relevant to the breach of contract claim. Separate from the breach of contract claim of Count I, Ms. Lima’s claims invoke 42 U.S.C. § 1981 (Civil Rights Act of 1866), 29 U.S.C. § 2615(a)(2) (Family Medical Leave Act), and the Rhode Island Civil Rights Act,

R.I.G.L. § 42-112-1, all of which protect her from discrimination and retaliation for the exercise of protected rights.4 The dispute arose from Ms. Lima’s employment as a school principal in East Providence, at the Whiteknact Elementary School and subsequently as the principal of a newly-founded pre-K program, established with the help of a special grant obtained from the Rhode Island Department of Education.5 Ms. Lima contends that her involuntary transfer to the pre-K program was a “demotion,” undertaken in retaliation for her previous exercise of rights in suing East

Providence some years before, for her obtaining a settlement in that action, and for her having taken family medical leave. She alleges a series of other retaliatory

4 As noted in the Magistrate Judge’s Report, all use the same framework of analysis. (ECF No. 28, at 14, n.7.)

5 One of Ms. Lima’s complaints is that the school department(?) used her credentials to bolster its application for state funding for this special, pre-K program, and did so without telling her. East Providence does not dispute this fact. I fail to see, however, how that would constitute either a discriminatory or retaliatory action against Me. Lima. If East Providence had already decided that someone with Ms. Lima’s qualifications would make the best principal for the new program, it would make sense to include her credentials as a selling point in the application. Even if that decision had not yet been made, it has not been demonstrated that this was an unusual practice, or an unjustified one, or in any way an unlawful thing to do. East Providence clearly had an interest in putting its ‘best foot forward” to secure special funding and its belief that Ms. Lima’s participation would be a selling point hardly points to racial animus or a retaliatory motive. It would have been a courtesy to tell her, but their failure to tell her does not turn an insignificant event into a significant one. Not surprisingly, the Report and Recommendation notes that Ms. Lima conceded in oral argument before the Magistrate Judge that use of an employee’s credentials, without consent, in such an application “is not a violation of any established norm.” (ECF No. 28, at 18, n.10.) actions pre-dating the transfer and, ultimately, the creation of a hostile work environment that, she maintains, caused her constructive termination when she resigned her position on August 2, 2016.

The Report and Recommendation contains a thorough recitation of the factual background, analysis of the relevant law, and application of the governing law. (ECF No. 28, pp. 3-11.) The Court need not restate either the factual background or governing law in detail. The Court has read the filings carefully, considered the Statements of Disputed and Undisputed Facts (ECF Nos. 14, 21, 22, 24), and the Exhibits, and applied the burden-shifting paradigm of , 411 U.S. 792, 93 S.Ct. 1817, 36 L.Ed.2d 668 (1973). Ms. Lima falters at the

first step of her first burden in that analysis: establishing a case of discrimination or retaliation. The evidence that she offers hardly supports a finding of adverse employment action that “impair[ed] or potentially impair[ed] the plaintiff’s employment in some cognizable manner.” 923 F. Supp. 274, 281 (D.Me. 1996). Even if one assumes that her re-assignment was adverse,6 she has not shown any connection to her status in a protected class by virtue

of her race.7 Nor did she produce any evidence that the transfer was motivated by a

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