Mary Gascho v. Scheurer Hospital

400 F. App'x 978
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedNovember 17, 2010
Docket09-2077
StatusUnpublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 400 F. App'x 978 (Mary Gascho v. Scheurer Hospital) 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.

Bluebook
Mary Gascho v. Scheurer Hospital, 400 F. App'x 978 (6th Cir. 2010).

Opinion

SUTTON, Circuit Judge.

Mary Ann Gascho signed an agreement releasing her Title VII claims against Scheurer Hospital, her- former employer. She now argues that the agreement is unenforceable because she executed it under duress. The district court entered summary judgment against her, and because she has not supported her claims with evidence from which a reasonable jury could conclude that the agreement was invalid, we affirm.

I.

In 1972, Mary Ann Gascho began working as a registered nurse for Scheurer Hospital, near the shoreline of Lake Huron and Saginaw Bay. For the last eighteen years of her employment at the hospital, she was married to the hospital’s President and CEO, Dwight Gascho.

In the summer or autumn of 2006, Gas-cho suspected that her husband was having an affair with Ms. Rabideau, a vice president at the hospital. At that same time, Mr. Gascho grew physically violent with Gascho. In early November, he kicked her in bed because she was “snoring like a cow.” R.44-3 at 52. Later, on the night of November 10, Mr. Gascho allegedly raped his wife after she refused to have sex with him, an incident that *980 caused her to suffer a split lip. The following day, Gascho asked her husband whether he and Ms. Rabideau were having an affair, and he acknowledged the infidelity.

On January 17, 2007, after Mr. Gascho told his wife he was seeking a divorce, she went to see Ms. Rabideau. Gascho sarcastically congratulated Ms. Rabideau, reported that her children called Ms. Rabideau “the whore next door” and berated her in other ways. R.44-3 at 53-54. Mr. Gas-cho, who witnessed the confrontation, asked Gascho to join him in his office. She refused and, after further prodding, refused again. Mr. Gascho grabbed her around the shoulders and dragged her into his office, causing bruises on her back and scratches on her back, arms and wrists.

Once Mr. Gascho had pulled Gascho into his office, he fired her. Two days later, after Gascho revealed her injuries to Lee Gascho, a hospital employee and relative of Dwight Gascho, as well as to the hospital’s Human Resources Director Grey Foy, the hospital converted the discharge into a three-day suspension. When the suspension ended, the hospital allowed Gascho to take mental health leave under the Family and Medical Leave Act.

In February 2007, the husband told Gas-cho that the hospital was going to offer her a separation agreement. Foy and Lee Gascho drove to Gascho’s house to present her with the agreement. The agreement gave her a year’s salary and other benefits in return for her voluntary resignation and release of claims, including Title VII claims, against the hospital. Foy explained the separation agreement to Gas-cho, summarizing its key provisions. Foy recommended that she hire a labor-law attorney to review the document and told her that she would have twenty-one days to sign the agreement and seven days to change her mind if she did sign it. Foy also told her to “sue [Mr. Gascho] for everything he’s worth.” R.44-3 at 12.

Neither her husband nor anyone from the hospital threatened physical harm to Gascho between the day she was fired and the day she signed the agreement. Nor were there any other incidents of physical violence during this time.

During this time, however, Gascho had several conversations with Mr. Gascho and felt intimidated by some of them. At one point, he warned her that, if she failed to sign the agreement, “he would be the worst enemy [she] could ever imagine. The hospital has deep pockets and we always win.” R.40-1 at 32. He promised to “destroy [her] life” if she did not sign it and told her that he was “willing to ruin [other people’s] lives” if he lost his job over the incident. R.40-1 at 51. At other times, apparently trying to coax her into signing the agreement, he said “you need to sign it, at least it gives you insurance,” and the agreement was “only a retirement package and we do it all the time.” R.44-3 at 29, 31, 48; R.40-1 at 26, 49. At still other times, he lashed out at her, calling her “crazy” and “confused,” and insisting that “I am in control!” R.44-3 at 57; R.44-4 at 24-26.

Gascho saw a psychiatrist and took antidepressants as well as Lunesta, Ambien, Benadryl and Ultram, all to help her sleep. She experienced “mental anguish” at her husband’s “betray[al].” R.44-3 at 19. While she had worked her way to a management position at Scheurer Hospital, she feared she would be unable to obtain an equivalent position elsewhere. She had $11,000 in the bank and worried about how long that would sustain her.

Gascho sought advice from several sources about whether to sign the agreement. She showed the agreement to her divorce lawyer, but the lawyer declined to review it because she was not a labor *981 attorney. She spoke with her three children about it, and they all told her to sign it. She also talked with friends about the agreement.

On February 28, 2007, she called her husband and told him that she was ready to sign the agreement. He brought a copy of the agreement to her home, where they had a “civil” meeting and she signed it. R.40-1 at 45.

About a year later, Gascho filed this action in federal court seeking to rescind the settlement agreement and seeking money damages against the hospital under Title VII and Michigan law. The court dismissed her state law claims, a determination she does not appeal, then rejected her Title VII claim as a matter of law, concluding that she had voluntarily and knowingly signed the settlement agreement and thus could not rescind it on duress grounds.

II.

Gascho presents two questions on appeal: May she rescind the settlement on the ground that duress prevented her from voluntarily and knowingly signing it? And did the district court abuse its discretion in denying her motion to compel discovery?

A.

In addressing the duress ruling, we build from the ground floor. We give fresh review to the district court’s summary judgment ruling and draw all factual inferences in favor of Gascho, the party opposing summary judgment. Reese v. CNH Am. LLC, 574 F.3d 315, 321 (6th Cir.2009); Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(c)(2). The parties and the district court have assumed that an effort to rescind a settlement agreement presents a question of fact for a jury, and so have we. “Federal law controls the validity of a release of a federal cause of action.” Street v. J.C. Bradford & Co., 886 F.2d 1472, 1481 (6th Cir.1990). And a “totality of the circumstances” test determines whether an employee has “knowingly and voluntarily executed” a release of her Title VII claims and thus may not rescind it on duress grounds. Adams v. Philip Morris, Inc., 67 F.3d 580, 583 (6th Cir.1995).

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