Marski v. Courier Express One, Inc.

CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Illinois
DecidedSeptember 29, 2021
Docket1:19-cv-04132
StatusUnknown

This text of Marski v. Courier Express One, Inc. (Marski v. Courier Express One, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Marski v. Courier Express One, Inc., (N.D. Ill. 2021).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT NORTHERN DISTRICT OF ILLINOIS EASTERN DIVISION

MICHELLE MARSKI,

Plaintiff, Case No. 19 CV 4132

v. Judge John Robert Blakey

COURIER EXPRESS ONE, INC., et al.,

Defendants.

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER Plaintiff Michelle Marski brings suit against Defendants Courier Express One, Inc., PreCC, Inc., Vertek, LLC, Dispatch Express, Inc., and Anthony Urso, alleging: sex discrimination in violation of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, disability discrimination in violation of the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA), age discrimination in violation the Age Discrimination in Employment Act (ADEA), and sex, disability, and age discrimination in violation of the Illinois Human Rights Act (IHRA) (Counts I, III, VI and IX respectively); retaliation in violation of Title VII, the ADA, the ADEA, and the IHRA (Counts II, V, VII, and XI respectively); failure to accommodate under the ADA and the IHRA (Counts IV and X respectively); discriminatory conduct in violation of the Equal Pay Act (Count VIII); intentional infliction of emotional distress (Count XII); violation of the Illinois Wage Payment Collection Act (IWPCA) (Count XIII); violation of the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) (Count XIV); violation of the Illinois Minimum Wage Law (IMWL) (Count XV); violation of ERISA (Count XVI); violation of the Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA) (Count XVII); and defamation (Count XVIII). [2]. Defendants Courier, Vertek, Dispatch Express, and Urso now move for

summary judgment in favor of Courier on Counts I–XVII; in favor of Vertek and Dispatch Express on Counts I, III, VI, VIII, IX, XII, XIV, XV, and XVII; and in favor of Urso on Counts XII, XIV, XV, XVII, XVIII. [143]. Separately, Defendants PreCC and Urso move for summary judgment in favor of PreCC on Counts I, III, VI, VIII, IX, XII, XIV, and XV–XVII; and in favor of Urso on Counts XII, XIV, XV, XVII, XVIII. [149].

For the reasons explained below, this Court grants summary judgment in favor of Defendants on all counts. I. Relevant Facts and Procedural History A. PreCC In May 2015, PreCC1 hired Plaintiff to work as an administrative assistant to Pam Rebhorn, PreCC’s Chief Operating Officer, at an hourly rate of $18.00. [173] ¶ 3; [197] ¶ 40. In February 2016, Plaintiff assumed the position of HR/Payroll

Supervisor. [154] at 30–31; [172] ¶¶ 71–72. In connection with this change in position, PreCC increased Plaintiff’s compensation from $18.00 per hour to an annual salary of approximately $48,100 (or $925 per week) with no overtime permitted. [154] at 31; [196] ¶ 72; [197] ¶ 43. In February 2017, Plaintiff’s title changed from

1 Although this Defendant was known as Premier CC, Inc. in May 2015, [192] ¶¶ 3, 4, this Court will refer to this entity as PreCC throughout this opinion to avoid confusion with Premier CC, LLC, a wholly distinct entity dismissed from this action in February 2021, [160]. HR/Payroll Supervisor to HR/Payroll Manager, and Premier increased her salary to $57,200 per year (or $1,100 per week). [154] at 31; [196] ¶ 76. Although the parties dispute various aspects of Plaintiff’s responsibilities as a

Payroll Supervisor, and later Payroll Manager, the record clearly establishes that Plaintiff’s responsibilities included training managers how to discipline employees; establishing payroll deadlines; creating “checks and balances to reduce the amount of manual checks”; holding “contractors accountable” for “money they owed Premier”; holding Premier “locations accountable for the timely reporting of PTO”; protesting and appealing worker’s compensation and unemployment claims; requiring

managers to document their verbal warnings to employees, interpreting FLSA to identify exempt employees; identifying instances of employee misconduct and violations of company policy; and “completely restructure[ing] payroll and HR.” [151- 3] at 23, 25–28, 32, 96, 98–100, 110; [151-4] at 41. Plaintiff, who is now forty-seven, and suffers from migraine headaches and fibromyalgia, the latter since at least 2012, [146-2] at 23; [151-3] at 101; [172] ¶ 30, alleges that, while employed at PreCC, she experienced discriminatory treatment due

to her sex, age, and disability status. Plaintiff contends that Defendant Urso, the Chief Operating Officer of PreCC, made discriminatory comments and subjected her to violent outbursts during her employment. [146] ¶ 42; [172] ¶ 3; [190] at 11. For example, in May 2017, Plaintiff alleges that Urso “threatened Marski’s job and kicked a garbage bin into Marski’s office” because Urso was displeased with the results of a company audit. [197] ¶ 56. Defendants PreCC and Urso deny this incident occurred. Id. But Defendants PreCC and Urso admit that “Urso would yell when he got upset because business matters did not go his way, and he yelled at a lot of people regardless of age or gender.” [192] ¶ 17.

Plaintiff further alleges Premier CC paid her wages lower than those of Richard Healy, the HR Director for Vertek LLC, an entity partially owned by Urso, even though she and Healy performed similar work. [192] ¶ 21; [197] ¶¶ 34, 47. The record shows that Healy and Plaintiff reported to different supervisors and contains no information regarding Healy’s responsibilities as HR Manager, Healy’s age, or Healy’s disability status.

In addition, Plaintiff asserts Defendants interfered with her leave under the FMLA following surgery in December 2016. [197] ¶ 48. Plaintiff asserts that PreCC employees repeatedly contacted her about work-related issues and that company employees delivered work assignments to her house during her leave. Id. Defendants PreCC and Urso, on the other hand, deny that Plaintiff received work assignments while on leave, maintaining instead that Plaintiff requested to work from home because she could not afford unpaid leave. [192] ¶ 28.

Plaintiff contends that her FMLA leave was recertified through the end of January 2017, [192] ¶ 29, but that Defendant Urso contacted her in mid-January requiring her to attend a meeting in the office, [151] ¶ 30; [172] ¶ 79. Plaintiff states that she attended the meeting for fear of losing her job. [154] at 60–61. Defendants dispute this account, asserting that Plaintiff voluntarily came to the office for the meeting. [151] ¶ 30; [197] ¶ 50. Plaintiff also claims that a PreCC employee disclosed Plaintiff’s medical information to another individual. [192] ¶ 31. Lastly, Plaintiff claims that, because she handled work matters during

scheduled days off in December 2017, Urso permitted Plaintiff to roll over paid time off (PTO) accrued in 2017 into the 2018 calendar year. [197] ¶ 57. Defendants Urso and PreCC dispute this account. Id. In July 2018, Plaintiff left PreCC after PreCC’s sale to QualTek/NX Utilities. [197] ¶ 33. B. Courier Express One, Inc.

In July 2018, Urso hired Plaintiff to work as HR/Payroll Manager at his new logistics company, Courier Express One, Inc. [172] ¶ 9; [192] ¶ 5. Courier paid Plaintiff an annual salary of $62,400 (or $1,200 per week) again with no overtime permitted. [196] ¶91. As Payroll Manager, Plaintiff generally held the same responsibilities that she had at PreCC. [151-3] at 25. Plaintiff alleges further employment discrimination based upon her sex, age, and disability, during her time at Courier. Plaintiff again contends that Defendant

Urso made discriminatory comments and subjected her to violent outbursts during her employment. [172] ¶¶ 43–44, 46. Specifically, Plaintiff identifies a remark by Defendant Urso around the time of Plaintiff’s birthday that Plaintiff was “so old,” and a 2018 remark by Urso that he did not “know why we hire women” (in reference to a female employee who fell and injured herself on the job). Id. ¶ 42. Defendants Urso and Courier deny that Urso made these statements. [196] ¶ 96.

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