Matson v. Sanderson Farms, Inc.

388 F. Supp. 3d 853
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Texas
DecidedJuly 23, 2019
DocketCIVIL ACTION NO. H-18-2369
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 388 F. Supp. 3d 853 (Matson v. Sanderson Farms, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Matson v. Sanderson Farms, Inc., 388 F. Supp. 3d 853 (S.D. Tex. 2019).

Opinion

At bottom, the case involves an employer that met its statutory obligations and an employee who did not meet his employment *861obligations. The employer is entitled to summary judgment.

A. The Summary Judgment Record

The facts are shown by the parties' summary judgment evidence. The summary judgment evidence includes the following:

• transcripts from the depositions of Matson, Amberly Sherwood, Brenda Gatlin, and Casey Laub;
• declarations from Matson, Judy Matson, Amberly Sherwood, Casey Laub, and Jennifer Buster;
• Sanderson Farms's job description for the master skilled mechanic position; and its substance abuse policy, work rules, and other employment documents;
• commercial driver licenses held by Sanderson Farms employees besides Matson;
• Matson's psychiatric evaluation from a behavioral-health center;
• the certification forms for Matson's FMLA leave;
• documents showing that Sanderson Farms granted Matson's FMLA leave;
• return-to-work letters sent to Sanderson Farms from Matson's treatment center;
• email correspondence between Sanderson Farms, Matson's treatment center, and Matson;
• a transcript from a recording of the meeting in which Matson was fired;
• the Sanderson Farms termination and reinstatement paperwork for Matson;
• the findings and conclusion from the Arizona State Board of Nursing's investigation into the nurse practitioner who held himself out as a doctor; and
• Matson's EEOC discrimination charge and related documents.

(See generally Docket Entry Nos. 18-1, 23, 26-1).

B. What the Record Evidence Shows

Sanderson Farms is a Mississippi company that processes chicken products in facilities across the country, including in Bryan, Texas. (Docket Entry No. 1 at 1-2). In September 2009, Sanderson Farms hired Matson as a master mechanic. (Docket Entry No. 18-1 at 5-7, 54-55). His job was to maintain and repair the commercial trucks and trailers, perform road tests, train other mechanics, and keep inventory at the Bryan Facility. (Id. ). The master-mechanic position required the "[a]bility to obtain a class A [commercial driver's license] within [a] specific time limit." (Id. at 56). Matson drove commercial trucks "every day" and maintained his commercial driver's license. (Id. at 8).

When Matson was hired, Sanderson Farms gave him the "Work Rules for Hourly Employees." (Id. at 62, 76). Under these Rules, falsifying a "doctor's statement" was "cause for discharge without warning." (Id. at 66). The Sanderson Farms Department of Transportation Drug and Alcohol Policy permitted an employee to return to work after self-identifying a drug or alcohol problem, but the employee had to meet with a mental-health professional and pass an unannounced drug and alcohol test before returning to work. (See id. at 170-200; Docket Entry No. 23 at 111-12). An employee's "failure to appear for any test within a reasonable time" counted as a refusal to take the test, and the employee would be fired. (Docket Entry No. 18-1 at 172-78).

Matson has a history of psychiatric problems, including hallucinations and thoughts of self-harm. (Docket Entry No. 23 at 7-8). Early in January 2016, Matson was diagnosed with Hepatitis C and gout and prescribed Interferon for 12 weeks. (Id. at 8-9, 81). The gout caused inflammation *862in his foot, and the Interferon made Matson's psychiatric problems worse. He had "meltdowns" at Sanderson Farms.1 (Id. at 9, 81). Matson asked Sanderson Farms if he could "work [his] 40 [hours] in four days" instead of five, explaining his "medical condition" and "what was going on in [his] mind." (Id. at 20). Sanderson Farms approved Matson to work 4-day weeks, which Matson described as a "special accommodation[ ]" allowing him to "stay on the job." (Id. at 20).

On May 25, 2016, Matson was admitted to the Rock Prairie Behavioral Health Center for residential treatment for "depression, anxiety, and agitation." (Id. at 97). His initial psychiatric evaluation described "an obese male, in severe distress," with bipolar disorder, alcohol dependence, and nicotine dependence. (Id. at 97-98). Matson told Rock Prairie that he had been "drinking about a half a pint or a fifth [of liquor] on a daily basis now," and had smoked "four packs [of cigarettes] in the last 24 hours." (Id. at 97). The evaluation, signed by Dr. Fernando G. Torres, stated:

The patient will stabilize with the care plan involv[ing] medication management, group, individual therapy, family therapy. Estimated length of stay will be a week. Initially, the patient is going to be prescribed medications [that have] some sedative properties, but as he recovers then [Dr. Torres] will lessen the medications so they will not adversely affect his commercial driver's license operations.

(Id. at 98). Matson testified that he submitted a FMLA request for his stay at Rock Prairie in early June 2016, but the record does not contain that request or its result, and it is unclear when Matson left Rock Prairie. (Docket Entry No. 18-1 at 10-11).

In July 2016, Judy Matson, Matson's wife, became convinced that he needed "professional psychiatric treatment" because his "depression, mood swings[,] and insomnia continued" after the Interferon treatment ended. (Docket Entry No. 23 at 100). Judy Matson arranged in-patient treatment for Matson from "Doctor" Rodney Dy Wolpert at the Red Rock Addiction and Treatment Company outside Phoenix, Arizona. (Id. ).

On July 20, the Matsons both went to Sanderson Farms to meet with Amberly Sherwood, the Field Employee Relations Manager at the Bryan Facility, about Matson's "health and his need to take time off to get treatment." (Id. ). According to Matson, he told Sherwood that he needed "FMLA [leave] for a mental issue." (Id. at 9). He got the FMLA leave

Matson arrived in Arizona on July 23, 2016. (Id. at 10-11, 13-15, 23). He went to a hospital for two weeks for examinations and "psychiatric interviews" to determine which in-patient residential treatment center best suited his medical needs. (Id. at 10-11, 13-15). After his hospital stay, Matson was admitted to Red Rock Addiction and Treatment Company for treatment. He saw Dy Wolpert, the faux doctor, each day for an hour of therapy. (Docket Entry No. 18-1 at 14-16; Docket Entry No. 23 at 12). Dy Wolpert told Matson that he was "schizophrenic" and that his condition was "life threatening." (Docket Entry No. 18-1 at 19). Matson left Red Rock on August 26, 2016, after about 30 days. (Docket Entry No. 23 at 13).

*863

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388 F. Supp. 3d 853, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matson-v-sanderson-farms-inc-txsd-2019.