Margaret DePalma v. Sec'y of the Air Force

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedOctober 25, 2018
Docket17-4019
StatusUnpublished

This text of Margaret DePalma v. Sec'y of the Air Force (Margaret DePalma v. Sec'y of the Air Force) 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.

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Margaret DePalma v. Sec'y of the Air Force, (6th Cir. 2018).

Opinion

NOT RECOMMENDED FOR FULL-TEXT PUBLICATION File Name: 18a0534n.06

No. 17-4019

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT FILED Oct 25, 2018 MARGARET DEPALMA, ) DEBORAH S. HUNT, Clerk ) Plaintiff-Appellant, ) ) ON APPEAL FROM THE v. ) UNITED STATES DISTRICT ) COURT FOR THE SOUTHERN SECRETARY OF THE AIR FORCE, ) DISTRICT OF OHIO ) Defendant-Appellee. ) )

BEFORE: KEITH, CLAY, and NALBANDIAN, Circuit Judges.

DAMON J. KEITH, Circuit Judge. Dr. Margaret DePalma (“Dr. DePalma”), a former

United States Air Force employee at the Wright-Patterson Air Force Base (“WPAFB”) in Ohio,

brought claims for sex discrimination and retaliation under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of

1964, 42 U.S.C. § 2000e et seq. She brought these claims against her employer, Deborah Lee

James, Secretary of the Air Force, after she was terminated from her position as a historian. Dr.

DePalma alleged that her male supervisor at the Air Force base discriminated and retaliated against

her after she filed an internal grievance, and later informal and formal EEOC complaints, against

him. The district court granted summary judgment in favor of Defendant and against Dr. DePalma.

For the following reasons, we AFFIRM.

BACKGROUND

I. Factual Background

Dr. DePalma earned her Ph.D. in history, and began her career as a historian at Whiteman

Air Force Base in Johnson County, Missouri in 2005, where she worked for five years. In 2010, No. 17-4019, DePalma v. Secretary of the Air Force

Dr. Joseph Marchese (“Dr. Marchese”), lead historian at WPAFB, hired Dr. DePalma to work at

WPAFB, in Dayton, Ohio, as a historian in the Air Force Research Lab (“AFRL”). He hired her

based on a recommendation he received from a then-current historian in his division.

In Dr. DePalma’s job description as an Air Force historian, some of her required tasks

included: (1) writing historical narratives to produce professional histories of the AFRL;

(2) synthesizing large amounts of written and oral source materials into a coherent, accurate,

supportable, and accessible narrative; and (3) providing complete documentation of sources for

written materials to justify and defend analyses and conclusions, inter alia. In addition, all

historians in the AFRL are mandated to adhere to the standards outlined in AFI 84-101. AFI 84-

101 is an approximately seventy-three page publication that “provides guidance and procedures

for collecting historical data and documentation, preparing historical reports, and providing

historical services.”

Dr. DePalma worked with at least three other male historians. Dr. DePalma began her

employment at the WPAFB around the same time as Dr. Frank Kalesnik (“Dr. Kalesnik”), who

was also a historian hired in the AFRL and worked under the same supervisor, Dr. Marchese.1 He

stated, “Dr. Marchese consistently praised the work of Dr. James Aldridge (“Dr. Aldridge”) and

Mr. Kevin Rusnak (“Mr. Rusnak”), which in my professional opinion, was of no better than

average quality.” R. 17-1 at PID 278

Dr. DePalma also worked with Dr. Aldridge. He stated, “[M]y experience is that Dr.

Marchese is a VERY THOROUGH proofreader and reviewer of all written products that I have

produced for the office. I have rarely had a product returned to me without numerous insightful

comments and useful suggestions for emendations, where necessary.” R. 15-25 at PID 211

1 In November 2012, Dr. Kalesnik transferred out of WPAFB to accept a position as Command Historian with the U.S. Marine Corps.

Page 2 of 16 No. 17-4019, DePalma v. Secretary of the Air Force

(emphasis in original). He has no specific knowledge of the events that led to Dr. DePalma’s claims

of sex discrimination and retaliation.

Mr. Rusnak was also employed in the AFRL History Office, and has worked as a historian

under the supervision of Dr. Marchese for 11.5 years (as of January 2014). When asked whether

he was treated differently than Dr. DePalma, he stated that when he first began at the AFRL he

was subject to “significant” criticism, and that “Dr. Marchese still closely edits my submissions.”

R. 15-26 at PID 219. When asked about his knowledge of Dr. DePalma’s allegation of

discrimination, he responded, “I have never been witness to, nor heard mention of, any instances

of Dr. Marchese sexually harassing Dr. DePalma or any female member of AFRL/[History Office]

or its contractor staff at any time during the 11.5 years I have been in this office.” Id. at PID 220.

Dr. DePalma received her six-month assessment from Dr. Marchese on May 24, 2011. Her

evaluation contained feedback such as (1) “[Dr. DePalma] [r]esearches well,” (2) “Interacts well

with colleagues to learn about how to become more efficient in job,” and (3) “Needs to work on

making write-ups more nearly a product of her thought and effort and less nearly that of the authors

of original documentation,” inter alia. R. 15-4 at PID 64-5.

In May 2012, Dr. DePalma and Dr. Kalesnik submitted their respective individual

assignments for the 2011 annual history report. Dr. Marchese reviewed both of their assignments,

and later that month spoke separately with them detailing that they submitted unoriginal work

product, which was unacceptable. Dr. Marchese thereafter issued a separate memorandum to both

Dr. DePalma and Dr. Kalesnik, which documented the performance evaluation conversation, and

filed it in their respective work folders. Both Dr. Kalesnik and Dr. DePalma voiced disagreement

over his assertions that they submitted unoriginal work product, but Dr. Marchese maintained his

position and directed both Dr. Kalesnik and Dr. DePalma to revise their submissions.

Page 3 of 16 No. 17-4019, DePalma v. Secretary of the Air Force

That same month, both Dr. DePalma and Dr. Kalesnik filed workplace grievances with

Col. Eugene Henry (“Col. Henry”), Dr. Marchese’s superior and Chief of Staff for the Air Force

Research Library, requesting that the memoranda be removed from their employee work folders.

Col. Henry granted Dr. DePalma and Dr. Kalesnik’s requests, and ordered the memoranda be

removed from their respective work folders. In Col. Henry’s grievance decision letter, no rationale

for the granting the request is mentioned.

For the remainder of the year, Dr. DePalma continued to receive negative feedback for the

same reasons as stated above. For example, in November 2012, after submitting a draft outline

for her portion of the 2012 annual history report, Dr. DePalma received feedback from Dr.

Marchese stating that her work product was again unacceptable because it was copied. See R. 15-

8 at ¶ 6, PID 87 (“[H]e called me into his office and handed me a memo stating the chapters were

‘unacceptable’ because they were ‘copied.’”). As rationale, Dr. Marchese stated that certain

footnotes in Dr. DePalma’s writing did not substantiate the assertions proffered, she inconsistently

utilized footnotes, and her writing included factual errors regarding the substance of the chapter,

inter alia. After receiving this feedback, Dr. DePalma requested a “more exact accounting of the

problems [Dr. Marchese] found in the draft chapters.” Less than a week later, Dr. Marchese

provided Dr. DePalma with a breakdown of the paragraphs that were deficient and in need of

revision.

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