Matus v. Lorain County General Health District

707 F. App'x 304
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedAugust 22, 2017
Docket16-4054/16-4094
StatusUnpublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 707 F. App'x 304 (Matus v. Lorain County General Health District) 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
Matus v. Lorain County General Health District, 707 F. App'x 304 (6th Cir. 2017).

Opinion

HELENE N. WHITE, Circuit Judge.

Defendant-Appellant Lorain County General Health District (the “health district”) appeals the district court’s denial of its motions for judgment as a matter of law and for a new trial, as well as the court’s entry of a $615,175.18 judgment in favor of its former medical director, Plaintiff-Appellee Paul Matus, on Matus’s breach-of-contract and retaliation claims, based on a remitted jury verdict of $1,365,175.18. Matus cross-appeals the re-mittitur and the grant of summary judgment to the health district on three other claims. For the reasons that follow, we (1) reject the health district’s challenges to the jury’s verdicts and the court’s rulings, (2) agree with the health district that re-mittitur is required under Ohio law, and (3) agree with Matus that the district court erred in choosing the remittitur amount. We AFFIRM in part, and VACATE and REMAND in part.

I

A

The Lorain County General Health District is a state agency responsible for public-health services in Lorain County, Ohio. A board of health (the “board”) governs it, and a commissioner, appointed by the board, manages it day to day.

Paul Matus was the health district’s medical director from 1991 through early 2013, when the board discharged him. Ma-tus’s employment agreement provided that he would serve as medical director .from March 31, 2009, at an annual salary of $48,000, “for an indefinite and continuing term” and that the agreement would be terminable on thirty days’ written notice for “cause,” including, but not limited to, “breach or neglect of duty, violation of any law, dishonesty, insubordination, or gross misconduct.” R. 1-1, PID 34-35. He contends he was discharged without “cause” and in retaliation for participating in a workplace investigation.

*307 In July 2012, commissioner Ken Pearce announced his intention to retire. After retiring, Pearce would begin drawing retirement benefits, and, after a sixty-day waiting period, would return to the health district as interim commissioner, allowing him to receive a salary as well. Edward von Hofen, the board’s president and Ma-tus’s brother-in-law, told Matus at a backyard picnic that he was uncomfortable with Pearce’s plan. Matus ■ replied that the arrangement is “not uncommon,” but agreed that it would be good for the health district to have new leadership. Trial Tr,, R. 109-1, PID 4062-63. At the board’s August 16 meeting, von Hofen opposed Pearce’s plan to retire and then return, but the board voted to accept it. Tanas Wilcox, the health district’s nursing director, testified that after the August 15 meeting, Pearce told her that he would fire her and that “someone else was going to take care of [Matus].” Trial Tr., R. 114, PID 4400.

About two weeks later, Pearce wrote to Benjamin Davey, a prosecutor who served as counsel to the health district, about a conversation he had with board-employee Stephanie Charles. This conversation took place a week before the August 16 board meeting and three weeks before Pearce reported it:

Ms. Charles stated that while she was instructing Dr. Matus on how to access and use the Emergency Alertfind website, he sat uncomfortably close to her and began a conversation of a personal nature including comments alluding to his relationship with his wife. His statements included characterizing his wife as acting old and going to bed like an “old woman.” Stephanie commented that these comments made her uncomfortable and were unrelated to the work environment and of a sexual nature that she felt she would be in a very difficult situation if Dr. Matus were to be named health commissioner.

Aug. 28, 2012 Lett., R. 58-9, PID 786.

Charles testified that during the winter of 2010/2011, she trained Matus on how to use a software program. During the training he discussed personal matters while sitting uncomfortably close to, but never touching, her: “I don’t think he was aware that I felt like my personal space was violated. I don’t think he took that into consideration.” Trial Tr., R, 108, PID 2876.

Plaintiffs expert, organizational-behavior professor Susan Case, testified that she did not “think that the statement by Stephanie Charles that she was made uncomfortable warranted an outside investigation.” Trial Tr., R. 110, PID 3430. But the prosecutor’s office, assistant prosecutor Gerald Innes testified, determined that given Matus’s stature, it would be best to engage an outside firm to investigate. Prosecutors briefed the board at its September 12 meeting that an employee complained of Matus making inappropriate comments; they recommended an investigation, which the board hired Clemans, Nelson & Associates (“CNA”), a human-resources firm, to conduct.

Between October 26 and November 5, CNA investigator Sandy Conley interviewed five young females who were current or former employees of the health district, including Charles. During the investigation, Charles confirmed that there was no inappropriate touching by Matus, that he sat uncomfortably close to her, and that she was uncertain whether he realized he was sitting too closely. Other interviewees described Matus’s conduct toward younger women in the office as “awkward,” “creepy,” “weird,” or “overly flirtatious,” including compliments about their personal appearances. Conley Report, R. 58-17, PID 817. But the interviewees were not offended by the comments, explaining *308 that some in the office viewed them as part of Matus’s personality, or as an example of “generational differences.” Id. at PID 817-18.

Conley found that although Matus did not sexually harass Charles, and no other evidence suggested that Matus engaged in sexual harassment, he should nevertheless be counseled to avoid making comments about the appearance of female employees and to respect personal space. Her report suggested that the disconnect between Matus and younger female employees could be generational. Conley testified that she did not interview Matus because she did not believe his conduct was sexual harassment, and that she would have interviewed him if she had concluded otherwise.

Conley delivered her conclusions orally to Davey on Friday, December 7. The next day, Matus received a call from Laura Baus-Fenick, a former health-district employee whom Conley interviewed, to alert him to the investigation. She testified that she told Matus she believed Charles was the source of the investigation because her name was conspicuously missing from the interview list. Matus testified that this call from Baus-Fenick sent him into a panic, leaving him embarrassed, humiliated, and confused. Seeking answers, he asked the health district’s administrative director, Tonya Kollen, “is there something going on about me?.... Am I being investigated?” Trial Tr., R. 114, PID 4093. Kollen responded “No, Dr. Matus, no.” Id.

On December 13, Conley presented her findings to Dave Covell, then the acting commissioner of the health district. Conley told him that Matus had not engaged in sexual harassment, and that she found only a “sensitivity issue” that should be addressed with training. Trial Tr., R. 109-1, PID 3905. After the board heard a summary of Conley’s findings at its December 12 board meeting, it instructed Covell “to tell [Matus] that ...

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
707 F. App'x 304, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matus-v-lorain-county-general-health-district-ca6-2017.