McPherson v. Penobscot Aerie No. 3177 FOE

CourtSuperior Court of Maine
DecidedAugust 18, 2016
DocketPENcv-15-0046
StatusUnpublished

This text of McPherson v. Penobscot Aerie No. 3177 FOE (McPherson v. Penobscot Aerie No. 3177 FOE) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McPherson v. Penobscot Aerie No. 3177 FOE, (Me. Super. Ct. 2016).

Opinion

STATE OF MAINE SUPERIOR COURT Penobscot, SS. Docket No. CV-2015-0046

Beth McPherson, ) Plaintiff, ) ) ) v. ) D_ccision and Order ) ) Penobscot Aerie No. 3177 FOE, ) Defendant. )

Introduction

Plaintiff seeks relief for gender discrimination in violation of the Maine Human Rights Act. Her COH'1plaint presents two grounds f r relief in a single count: first, t·hat she was subjected to sexual harassment while employed by Defendant and, sec nd, that her employment wa · t nninaled on im.permissable gender-based grounds. Trial was he ld on Mc1y 10 and May 25, 2016. Th cou rt heard testimony from Plaintiff, Martin Panther, Howard 8arne tt, George Crouse, Kathy McDonald, and Lawrence Dawson. Following trial, counsel submitted written arguments.

The court thanks counsel for an efficient presentation at trial and for helpful post-trial memoranda. The case is now in order for decision.

Evidentiary Ruling

B "for l>laintiff filed her complaint, her concerns were br ught to the attention of the Maine T uman [{ights Com rnission (MIIRC). At trial, the court accepted de bene Defendant's Exhibit 1 (the MHRC investigator's report) and Exhibit 2 (the MHRC's Statement of Finding). Following review of the xhibits and counsel's arguments, the court excludes the contents of both exhibits as inadmissablc hearsay not subject to the business records exception. M.R.Evid. 803 (8); Jiemaqn v . Saptarelli !;:n tcr rises In . 486 A.2 126, 131 (Mc. 1984). Both exhibits are admitted for the limited purpose of proving Plaintiff's compliance with the Maine l-Iurnan Rights Act. 5 M.R.S. § 4622.

Analysis

Defendant hired Plainliff as assistant manag r of its op ra li n in Brewer, Maine, in February, 2011. The club provides a social setting for, among oth r aclivili -s, cons umption of alcoholic b 'verage . Plaintiff worked und er the manag r, Chari s Duncan, until he departed in D comb 'r f 20'! 1, at which Ume Plaintiff was hired to succeed him as manager. Plaintiff's employment was terminated at a meeting of Defendant's Board of Trustees in January of 2013. Immediately thereafter, her position was filled by a man. • Gendel' Discrimination

Plaintiff argues her claim for gender discrimination is established by both direct and circumstantial evidence. The court first considers the circumstantial claim, which is more difficult to establish. In a case based on circumstantial evidence, a plaintiff must fulfill an initial burden to show the following:

1. Sh- belongs to a protected class; 2. She performed her job satisfactorily; 3. She suffered adverse employment action; and 4. h · emp loye r continu d to have the duties performed by a comparably qualified person (or still needed to l'rnve the duties performed).

Patten v. Wa1Mart, 300 P.3d 21, 24-25 (1~ Cir. 2002).

In this case, factors l, 3, and 4 are not h, dispute: Plaintiff is a womun, she was fi red from her job, and the duties were immed iate ly assumed by a man. She testified that she fulfilled all of h er mploymcnt du tic. and supported her claim with a favorable written review of her performance as assistant manager (Pl. Ex. 5) as well as with the absence of any adverse reviews or job actions during her tenure as manager.

In addition to her own testimony, Plaintiff called as witnesses Mr. Panther and Mr. Crouse who, as members of the Iloard of Trustees, were involved in her dismissal. Mr. Panther testified that dming Plainliff's tenure as manager Trustee Leo Cookson made frequ nt, nega tive, gend r-based comments about her job performance. He further Leslified that the board v t cl a number of times during 2012 on the issue of whether Plaintiff should be retained in her position. These votes resulled in repeated 3 to 2 decisions to retain Plaintiff. Al the meeting in which Plaintiff's e mploym nl wa actually terminated, Mr. Crouse left the me ting b ause he did not, gree with the decision he thought was about to be made. Although the vote was recorded as having been unanimous, Mr. Panther testified no actual vote had been taken; instead, he sa id, the trustees had "thrown up lheir hands."

Based on the above, Plaintiff has fulfilled her initial burden of establishing gender discrimination. The burden therefore shifts to Defendant, to establish gender-neutral reasons for ils action.

Defendant's proposed gender-neutral reasons for Plaintiff's termination are not persuasive. All are undermined by the absence of any evidehce showing an adv rse job review or job action during Plaintiff's tenure as manager. Sh was never warned, disciplined, or offered a plan of remediation for any alleged shortcomings in her performance.

One of Defendant's asserted reasons for Plaintiff's termination arose from an event in which two bnnds. howcd up at the club to play c1t the same time on a Friday evening. Notwith tt1nding tlrnt the error lny with one of the bands, which had gotten the date wrong, Plaintiff was thereafter required to work on Friday and Saturday evenings lo

2 preve nt a recurrenc . l laintiff thought this was llnnccessary and resisted lhe directive. She did, however, comply for a month. In the absence of any wrilten record to the contrary, Plaintiff's version of the resolution of this dispute, that after about a month she was allowed to revert to her former schedule, is more persuasive than Defendant's version, which is that Plaintiff simply refused to work the new schedule.

Defendant's second asserted reason is that Plaintiff was sometimes drunk on the job. The evidence on this s ubje l was murky at best. l laintiff is a member of the club and, given the dispute outlined in the preceding parngraph, migh t have been present as a member on nights in which one or more trus tees thought she shmild have been working. Further, there was undisputed testimony that another member of the board actually bought a drink for Plaintiff during working hours (Plaintiff testified she took one sip, then declined the drink). Finally, once again, there was no evidence of any disciplinary action having been taken.

Defendant's final asserted reason, that the club was suffering financial hardship from Plrlintiff's mismanagement, was unsupported by any documentation. To the extent any such erosion in receipts may have occurred, it was explained by increased competition from Hollywood Slots and other venues competing for the ame business.

Plaintiff was a good witness. Mr. Panther carried considerable baggage both from his own disputes with Defendant and from his own harassing actions toward Plaintiff (see below). His current zeal for Plaintiff's cause is disproportionate to his alleged efforts to support her during the rneeting in which she was fired. The court concludes on the whole, however, that Mr. Panther' version of the terms in which Plaintiff was discussed al board meetings was truthful.

Based on all of the above, Plaintiff has fulfilled her burden of proof. The same conclusion results when her claim is analyzed in terms of direct evidence of a dis riminal ry motive. Refer n s to Plaintiff's gender in meetings of the tru st •cs, in conjunction with complaints about her job performance, establish that Plaintiff's termination was based at least in part on her gender. Febres v. Challen er Caribbean Corp., 214 F.3d 57, 60 (1~ Cir. 2000). Based on all the evidence presented, the court does not believe Dafcndant would have taken the same action had Plaintiff been a man. See Patten., 300 F.3d at 25.

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McPherson v. Penobscot Aerie No. 3177 FOE, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcpherson-v-penobscot-aerie-no-3177-foe-mesuperct-2016.