Madison v. District of Columbia

593 F. Supp. 2d 278, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4630, 2009 WL 159683
CourtDistrict Court, District of Columbia
DecidedJanuary 23, 2009
DocketMisc. Action 07-289 (RMC)
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 593 F. Supp. 2d 278 (Madison v. District of Columbia) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, District of Columbia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Madison v. District of Columbia, 593 F. Supp. 2d 278, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4630, 2009 WL 159683 (D.D.C. 2009).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

ROSEMARY M. COLLYER, District Judge.

Christine Madison served as a juror on a capital case in federal district court in Washington, D.C. from February 7 through June 6, 2007. When she returned to her job at the District of Columbia State Education Office, she was informed that her 13-month employment contract would not be extended or renewed. Despite the shifting defenses put forth by D. C., the facts show that Ms. Madison was separated from employment because she served as a federal juror, in apparent violation of the Jury System Improvements Act, 28 U.S.C. § 1875 (the “Juror Act”). Notwithstanding this factual conclusion, a legal question remains as to whether, under these particular circumstances, Ms. Madison qualified as a “permanent” employee and thus enjoyed the protections of the Juror Act. The Court holds that she did so qualify.

I. FACTS

Ms. Madison was employed full-time as a Staff Assistant in the Operations Department of the District of Columbia State Education Office (“SEO”) 1 from May 15, 2006 through June 14, 2007. Tr. I, 12:11— 12; 15:11-12; 18:16-20; 43:13-15; Pl.’s Exs. 8, 10 & ll. 2 She had previously served for approximately seventeen (17) years as an employee of the District at D.C. General Hospital. Tr. I, 10:23-11:7; Pl.’s Ex. 10. At the time of separation from SEO, she was approximately 60 years old. See Tr. I, 66:16-17.

Dr. JoAnn Smoak, then-Director of Operations at SEO, hired Ms. Madison at a Grade 9 salary level, pursuant to a 13-month term appointment. Tr. I, 14:17-15:12; 88:1-2; PL’s Ex. 10. 3 Former May- or Anthony Williams instituted these “NTE” 4 appointments for employees in the Executive Office of the Mayor (“EOM”) in order to create “at will” status for EOM employees without civil service protections. See Tr. I, 198:9-24. At Ms. Madison’s job interview, Dr. Smoak explained to Ms. Madison that most SEO employees held term appointments and that it was very rare for an employee not to have their term extended, although there was no guarantee. Tr. I, 14:17-15:2; 71:11-13; 95:6-23. Ms. Madison was hired to replace Staff Assistant Marsha Proctor, who had transferred in April 2006 to Support Services for the EOM. Stip. ¶ 8.c. Like Ms. Madison, Ms. Proctor had been working at SEO at Grade 9 under a 13-month term appointment. Tr. I, 94:7-10; Tr. II, 5:16-17, 24-25; 6:1-13; Stip. ¶8.5.

During Ms. Madison’s employment with SEO, five other employees (aside from Dr. Smoak) worked in SEO Operations. Tr. I, 19:18-21:9; Stip. ¶¶ 3-7. Four of the five were hired generally around the same time *280 as Ms. Madison and pursuant to 13-month term appointments. Stip. ¶¶ 3.a., 4.a., 6.a., 7.a. The fifth person was hired in 2003 pursuant to a four-year term appointment. Tr. I, 97:1-11; Pl.’s Ex. 14A. 5 Specifically:

• Baehir Kabbara was a Database Manager who had been appointed to a four-year term appointment, effective May 18, 2003, with an NTE date of May 13, 2007. Tr. I, 97:1-11; Pl.’s Ex. 14A.
• Diane Scroggins was a Program Analyst who had been hired into SEO Operations by Dr. Smoak with a 13-month appointment, effective February 18, 2006 and an NTE date of March 18, 2007. Tr. I, 97:12-19; Stip. ¶ 4.a.; Pl.’s Ex. 13A.
• Anthonisha Felton was a Staff Assistant, hired by Dr. Smoak sometime around May 2006 pursuant to a 13-month term. Tr. I, 97:23-25; 98:1-7; 99:13-19; 101:8-24; Stip. ¶ 6a; PL’s Ex. 15A.
• Mutinda Parris was hired by Dr. Smoak into the position of Management Analyst, effective June 12, 2006, with an NTE date of July 11, 2007. Stip. ¶ 3.a.; PL’s Ex. 12A.
• Ronald Pitts was hired by Dr. Smoak as an Information Technology Specialist/Data Management, effective October 2, 2006, with an NTE date of November 1, 2007. Tr. I, 103:15-18; Stip. ¶ 7.a.; PL’s Ex. 16A.

Dr. Smoak directly supervised this group. Tr. I, 22:1-4; 86:3-4.

Ms. Madison’s salary at hire with SEO was at a Grade 9/Step 1 level, or $34,832/ year. Tr. I, 19:14-15; PL’s Ex. 10. She thereafter received one step increase and one parity-pay increase. Tr. I, 63:25-65:4. When separated from employment by Dr. Smoak, her annual salary was $41,901. Tr. I, 65:13-14; PL’s Ex. 11. While employed, she received full employment benefits, including life insurance, annual and sick leave, and credit towards D.C. retirement benefits to add to her previous 17 years of D.C. service. Tr. I, 65:15-66:23; PL’s Exs. 10 & 11.

Ms. Madison’s job responsibilities covered general administrative duties, such as ordering supplies, distributing mail, filing, facilities management, petty cash, coordinating approval and payment of employee cell phone bills, and payroll. Tr. I, 15:13-18:2. Her payroll responsibilities, characterized by Dr. Smoak as her “biggest” and “most critical” responsibility, Tr. I, 142:10-14, included collecting time and attendance records and related information for all SEO employees and processing them so that employees could be timely paid. Tr. 1,17:19-18:4.

Dr. Smoak informally evaluated Ms. Madison’s performance in late 2006. Tr. I, 23:7-13. During their discussion, Dr. Smoak noted strengths and areas for improvement. Tr. I, 25:16-17; 26:2-3, 7-10. Ms. Madison recalled that Dr. Smoak told her that she was doing very well with her time and attendance responsibilities; that she was getting along well with co-workers; that her handling of the mail was efficient and timely; and that she did well in taking care of filing. Tr. I, 25:20-24. Dr. Smoak testified that Ms. Madison was *281 “really pretty efficient” with her payroll responsibilities. Tr. I, 194:5; see also Tr. I, 108:17-24. During the evaluation, Dr. Smoak told Ms. Madison that she needed to become more prompt in processing cell phone bills and she suggested that Ms. Madison take some in-service employee training courses offered through the D.C. Center for Workforce Development. Tr. I, 25:25-26:10; 74:14-15. Ms. Madison took one course recommended by Dr. Smoak— Managing Multiple Projects, Objectives, and Deadlines — before she was summoned for jury duty. Tr. I, 32:3-11; Pl.’s Ex. 4. 6

During her jury service, Ms. Madison sometimes worked late or came in on a Saturday to work. Tr. I, 153:12-19; 154:15-16. Dr. Smoak characterized her willingness to do so, without extra pay, as “above and beyond” and something that Dr. Smoak “really appreciated.” Tr. I, 153:17-18.

Nonetheless, Dr. Smoak testified at trial that Ms. Madison’s “overall performance other than in the area of time and attendance was not generally good,” Tr. I, 110:11-12, and that she would not characterize Ms. Madison as a satisfactory employee. Tr. I, 119:14-16. Dr. Smoak testified that there were “intermittent problems” with Ms. Madison’s work performance, Tr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
593 F. Supp. 2d 278, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4630, 2009 WL 159683, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/madison-v-district-of-columbia-dcd-2009.