McGLOTTEN v. OMNIMAX INTERNATIONAL, INC.

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedFebruary 22, 2023
Docket2:21-cv-03998
StatusUnknown

This text of McGLOTTEN v. OMNIMAX INTERNATIONAL, INC. (McGLOTTEN v. OMNIMAX INTERNATIONAL, INC.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McGLOTTEN v. OMNIMAX INTERNATIONAL, INC., (E.D. Pa. 2023).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA

TYRRAL MCGLOTTEN, Plaintiff,

v. CIVIL ACTION NO. 2:21-cv-3998-MMB OMNIMAX INTERNATIONAL, INC. et al., Defendants.

MEMORANDUM OF DECISION

BAYLSON, J. February 22, 2023

This is a racial discrimination case brought by a black male shipping supervisor against his former employer, a manufacturer and shipper of construction materials and building products, as well as against his former plant manager, a white male. Plaintiff alleges that he was discriminated against on account of his race during the ten-month period that he was employed and supervised by Defendants, ending with his voluntary resignation. Significantly, Plaintiff alleges that: (1) He was not given proper training, (2) He was not given the same access to facilities as other supervisors, (3) Racism was acceptable at his workplace, which included a hanging toy monkey, (4) His office and belongings were vandalized, (5) He was the only black supervisor hired by Defendants, (6) Upper management refused to support his managerial decisions on account of his race, and (7) His comments and complaints about all the above were ignored. Stemming from these allegations, Plaintiff brought a hostile work environment claim, a disparate treatment claim and a retaliation claim under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, as well as identical state law claims under the Pennsylvania Human Relations Act. Under federal civil rights law, a business may be found liable for compensatory damages

for conduct that results in an employee’s adverse work experience where the basis for that conduct is the employee’s race. Around 17 years ago, the Third Circuit noted Title VII’s success in reducing “open[]” racial discrimination in the American workplace.1 Plaintiff asserts that Defendants upheld a “discriminatory culture” at the Bucks County, Pennsylvania facility where Plaintiff worked and “refused to . . . provide equal treatment” to Plaintiff based on his skin color. See Plaintiff’s Supplemental Brief in Further Response to Defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment at 1 (“Plf. Supp. Br.”) (ECF 44). But this discriminatory culture was not in the open—Plaintiff bases his case on “facially-neutral” events that present a “more sophisticated type of discrimination.” See 12/8/22 Tr. of Mot. for Summary Judgment Argument Hrg. at 22:4-6, 29:3-7 (“Hrg. Tr.”) (ECF 42). This case theory is necessarily permitted by the Third Circuit to support discrimination claims.2 “Title VII applies

to both facially neutral mistreatment and overt ethnic discrimination.” Cardenas v. Massey, 269 F.3d 251, 261 (3d Cir. 2001) (internal quotations omitted). Now, Defendants have filed this Motion for Summary Judgment to dismiss all of Plaintiff’s claims. Plaintiff needs only to present a genuine dispute of material fact for his case

1 From the Third Circuit’s oft-cited Aman v. Cort Furniture Rental Corp.: “Anti-discrimination laws and lawsuits have ‘educated’ would-be violators such that extreme manifestations of discrimination are thankfully rare. Though they still happen, the instances in which employers and employees openly use derogatory epithets to refer to fellow employees appear to be declining.” Aman v. Cort Furniture Rental Corp., 85 F.3d 1074, 1081 (3d Cir. 1996).

2 “Courts today must be increasingly vigilant in their efforts to ensure that prohibited discrimination is not approved under the auspices of legitimate conduct, and ‘a plaintiff's ability to prove discrimination indirectly, circumstantially, must not be crippled. . . .’” Aman, 85 F.3d at 1082 (quoting Riordan v. Kempiners, 831 F.2d 690, 698 (7th Cir. 1987)). to survive summary judgment, of which Plaintiff provides several possibilities in his briefing and at oral argument. See Plf. Supp. Br. at 1-3. Because genuine disputes of material fact exist for some of Plaintiff’s claims when viewing all justifiable inferences in favor of the non-movant, the Court will grant in part and

deny in part Defendants’ Motion. I. JURISDICTION This Court has jurisdiction over Plaintiff’s federal claims under 28 U.S.C. 1331 (federal question jurisdiction), and over his state law claims under 28 U.S.C. 1367 (supplemental jurisdiction) as they arise from the same set of facts. II. FACTS The following is a fair account of the factual assertions at issue in this case, as taken from both parties’ Statements of Fact and briefs as well as the deposition transcripts and discovery documents reviewed by the Court, as the Court finds that many of the parties’ stated facts as presented were in dispute.

A. Plaintiff’s Testimony as to Defendants’ Discrimination The Plaintiff in this case is Mr. Tyrall McGlotten, a black male hired in October 2018 to be a shipping supervisor at Defendants’ Feasterville-Trevose plant located in Bucks County, Pennsylvania. Defendants are Omnimax International, Inc. (“Omnimax”) and McGlotten’s plant manager, Erich Doberenz. As the morning shipping supervisor, McGlotten was mainly tasked with daily inventory checks, routing workers for truck packing, managing payroll, and supervising truck routing. He supervised around 20 workers, and as first shift supervisor he was supposed to arrive at the plant early to open up for the rest of the first shift floor crew. McGlotten worked in this position for Omnimax until he resigned in July 2019.3 Things got off to a poor start shortly after McGlotten’s hiring, with McGlotten failing to have his key fob activated so that he could open the facility up in the mornings. McGlotten

complained to Defendant Doberenz, but the key fob was not activated until January 2019, about two and a half months later. McGlotten testified that this resulted in him having to wait for floor workers to arrive to let him into the facility. McGlotten felt targeted because a white employee got the same issue “resolved in two weeks when my issue lingered for almost three months.” Around this time, McGlotten raised with a customer service manager that one of the customer service employees had hung a toy monkey at her cubicle, with McGlotten explaining that he found it offensive and wanted it taken down. In his testimony, McGlotten characterized the toy monkey as “hanging from a noose.” Omnimax’s human resources manager investigated and declined to order the toy monkey taken down. During this time, McGlotten also began to complain that he was not receiving proper

training to do his job, including training on how to use Omnimax’s computer software. McGlotten testified that he was “belittled” by colleagues for his failure to get up to speed on his responsibilities, which he blamed on the lack of training that he had received compared to his coworkers. It was also around this time that McGlotten began communicating with a lawyer about potential discrimination claims against Omnimax.

3 It is clear from even Mr. McGlotten’s own testimony that he was not the only black supervisor at the Feasterville plant—in fact, another black supervisor, Lorenzo Davis, was deposed for this case. However, McGlotten remains steadfast that it is significant that McGlotten was hired as a permanent worker while Davis was hired only as a temp worker because the temp workers would be eventually “leaving” as part of their contract unlike McGlotten.

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