MARK A. ADAMS v. SCHNEIDER ELECTRIC USA.

101 Mass. App. Ct. 516
CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedAugust 17, 2022
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 101 Mass. App. Ct. 516 (MARK A. ADAMS v. SCHNEIDER ELECTRIC USA.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Appeals Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
MARK A. ADAMS v. SCHNEIDER ELECTRIC USA., 101 Mass. App. Ct. 516 (Mass. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

ADAMS vs. SCHNEIDER ELECTRIC USA, 101 Mass. App. Ct. 516

MARK A. ADAMS vs. SCHNEIDER ELECTRIC USA.

101 Mass. App. Ct. 516

December 14, 2021 - August 17, 2022

Court Below: Superior Court, Middlesex County

Present: Green, C.J., Meade, Rubin, Henry, & Singh, JJ. [Note 1]

No. 21-P-158.

Anti-Discrimination Law, Age, Termination of employment, Prima facie case, Burden of proof. Employment, Discrimination, Termination. Practice, Civil, Summary judgment, Burden of proof.

Discussion of the heavy burden of persuasion faced by an employer seeking summary judgment in an employment discrimination case. [524-526]

In a civil action brought in Superior Court by a plaintiff alleging age discrimination arising from the termination of his employment by his former employer (defendant), the judge erred in granting summary judgment in favor of the defendant, where there was evidence of persistent, pervasive, and material remarks from which a fact finder could find that management, in implementing a series of reductions in force (RIFs), did not treat age neutrally; and where a rational fact finder could find that the individual decision maker was aware of this animus and therefore selected workers over the age of fifty, including the plaintiff, for the RIF in accordance with company policy. [526-531] Meade, J., dissenting, with whom Singh, J., joined.


Civil action commenced in the Superior Court Department on October 11, 2017.

The case was heard by William M. White, Jr., J., on a motion for summary judgment.

Robert S. Mantell (Ilir Kavaja also present) for the plaintiff.

Christopher W. Kelleher for the defendant.


HENRY, J. The plaintiff, Mark A. Adams, a former employee of Schneider Electric USA (Schneider or company), appeals from a summary judgment entered in favor of Schneider on his age

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discrimination claim. [Note 2] See G. L. c. 151B, § 4 (1B). The summary judgment record in this case contains something rarely seen in discrimination cases: an e-mail trail documenting that Schneider was so concerned about its "aging" Boston work force that it instituted a series of reductions in force (RIF) designed to shed older workers to make room for "young talent." Viewed in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party, here Adams, a rational fact finder could find that the company engaged in a systematic effort to replace older workers, including Adams, to make room to hire younger ones, and that Adams lost his job as a result.

Because there were facts in dispute from which a jury could find that age was not "treated neutrally" either in calling for the RIF or in selecting Adams for the RIF, summary judgment should not have been granted. Accordingly, we reverse.

Standard of review. In reviewing a grant of summary judgment, we assess the record de novo and take the facts, together with all reasonable inferences to be drawn from them, in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party. See Godfrey v. Globe Newspaper Co., 457 Mass. 113, 119 (2010). "[T]he court does not 'pass upon the credibility of witnesses or the weight of the evidence [or] make [its] own decision of facts.'" Shawmut Worcester County Bank, N.A. v. Miller, 398 Mass. 273, 281 (1986), quoting Attorney Gen. v. Bailey, 386 Mass. 367, 370, cert. denied, 459 U.S. 970 (1982). Viewing the facts in this light, we then determine whether the moving party has affirmatively shown that there is no real issue of fact, "all doubts being resolved against the party moving for summary judgment." Id. The record at hand, viewed with these principles in mind, showed the following.

Factual background. Schneider is a large global conglomerate with offices and facilities located in one hundred countries. Schneider has numerous divisions and subdivisions or "departments," and a complicated organizational structure. At all relevant times, Adams was employed as an electrical engineer in the secure business power group of the home and business network in

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the research and development subdivision (HBN R&D). [Note 3] He worked out of Schneider's Boston One Campus in Andover (BOC or Boston). [Note 4]

Around 2012, Adams began working on Schneider's battery quality initiative project supporting the field quality engineering and procurement teams headed by William Kabai and Christopher Granato. As a member of the "Battery A-team," Adams visited suppliers all over the world, investigating battery failures and fixing problems, assisting with the development of processes to improve quality, writing protocols and checklists for suppliers, auditing suppliers to ensure they were complying with manufacturing standards, and validating potential new suppliers.

In 2015, Adams began reporting to Mirza Akmal Beg, who also contributed to the battery quality initiative; the two spoke dozens of times about battery failures. In 2016, Adams was pulled from the battery quality initiative to work on the restricted other hazardous substances project (ROHS), an important engineering project of HBN R&D. [Note 5] That year, Schneider implemented a number of internal reorganizations and two RIFs.

1. The RIFs. Amanda Arria was a human resources (HR) leader for the company's Boston office during the time period relevant to the layoffs. [Note 6] She stated that she "partner[ed] with the leadership team to ensure we have the right people strategies in place for the business success." In October 2015, fifteen months before the January 2017 RIF through which Adams was terminated, Colin Campbell, vice-president of the information technology division (ITD), wrote in an e-mail message to Arria that the "[b]usiness [p]ower team in Andover needs age diversity. The embedded system team leader recognizes this and has been stocking his team with young talent. I'd like to encourage this more." In the months that followed, the company did just as Campbell suggested.

From April 2016 to January 2017, the company conducted

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three RIFs. Twenty-three of twenty-four terminated employees were over the age of forty and twenty-two of the twenty-four were over the age of fifty. In an April 2016 RIF, six of seven terminated employees were over the age of forty and five of seven were over fifty. In a May 2016 RIF, all nine terminated employees were age forty-eight or older and six of the nine were over age fifty. Adams was terminated by the company in January 2017 at the age of fifty-four. All eight of the employees selected for this third RIF that included Adams were over the age of fifty.

2. Colby's selection of Adams for the January 2017 RIF. In December 2016, the senior vice-president of HBN, Pankaj Sharma, "gave cost take-out targets to each of his leaders." Sharma informed Kenneth Colby, who had recently been promoted to the position of director of engineering of HBN R&D, that he needed to cut twenty-two percent of his budget, the equivalent of around €1.7 million. [Note 7] Sharma, whose office was in Singapore at that time, left the specifics of how to meet the goal up to Colby.

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