MEDINA v. MENASHA PACKAGING COMPANY, LLC

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 7, 2024
Docket2:23-cv-04956
StatusUnknown

This text of MEDINA v. MENASHA PACKAGING COMPANY, LLC (MEDINA v. MENASHA PACKAGING COMPANY, LLC) 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
MEDINA v. MENASHA PACKAGING COMPANY, LLC, (E.D. Pa. 2024).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA FELIX MEDINA, Plaintiff,

v. CIVIL ACTION

MENASHA PACKAGING CO., NO. 23-4956 Defendants. Pappert, J. October 7, 2024 MEMORANDUM Felix Medina, Jr., a Hispanic man, worked for the Menasha Packaging Company for roughly twenty-three years, serving initially as “general help” and working his way up to production supervisor. He was a generally knowledgeable and skilled employee but throughout his time with the company ran afoul of policies governing attendance and hours of work. He also exhibited aggressive, intemperate and erratic behavior. He was issued several warnings over the years and even served a three-day suspension. In both 2018 and 2019, he was placed on performance improvement plans for behavioral issues and was subsequently counseled on his penchant for getting to work late and leaving early. These problems continued into the spring of 2022, when he again reported late to work. That summer, Medina’s supervisor Domenic Santone met with Medina to discuss attendance and tardiness issues, which Medina pledged to correct. But the problems continued into the fall. On December 5, Santone and Human Resources Representative Jennifer Friedman met with all production supervisors, including Medina, to reiterate the importance of reporting to work on time for their shifts and fulfilling their job responsibilities. Just days after this meeting, Medina left work early without permission and arrived late the following day. He did the same thing the following week, leading the general manager, Nathan Timmons, to decide that Medina needed a “final written warning”.

On December 20, Santone and Friedman held a meeting with Medina, the purpose of which was to communicate to him the final warning for his attendance violations coming out of the December 5 meeting. The meeting did not go well. Medina talked over Santone, shouted obscenities at him and then stood up, wheeled around and punched his fist through the conference room wall. All within roughly three minutes. Medina, knowing he went too far and that he did something for which he could be fired, agreed to be escorted out of the building. He subsequently texted Friedman and Timmons apologizing and seeking to keep his job. But the damage, literally and figuratively, was done. Two days later, the company’s western Pennsylvania-based

Vice President of Sales and Operations made the decision to fire Medina after getting an accounting of the incident from a shell-shocked Friedman and looking at a picture of the newly ventilated wall. So Medina knew screaming obscenities at his boss and putting his fist through the wall in front of the boss and someone from HR could get him fired and knew why he lost his job. No other reason. Despite knowing all this, and likely knowing that he should have been fired for what he did, he found a lawyer and filed this lawsuit. And boy did he lay it on thick. Although he had never alleged during his time with Menasha that he or any of his Hispanic co-workers were subjected to mistreatment on account of their race, he now claimed Menasha discriminated against him because he is Hispanic. Because he apparently vomits a lot when he gets sick, he claimed (absent any such diagnosis) to have a disability called cyclic vomiting syndrome and that he was discriminated and retaliated against under the Americans with Disabilities Act and retaliated against as well under the Family and Medical Leave Act.

Menasha sought summary judgment on all claims. The Court heard oral argument on the motion, during which Medina’s counsel, acknowledging that discovery rendered the ADA and FMLA claims illusory, withdrew all but the racial discrimination claim.1 But that claim, at the end of the day as specious as the others, should have also been withdrawn. The Court grants what remains of the motion and enters judgment for Menasha. I Medina began working for Triangular Container Corporation in 1998. (Medina Dep. at 221:5-6, ECF No. 20-9.) In 1999, Menasha Packaging Company acquired Triangular and hired its employees, including Medina. (Decl. of Jennifer Friedman at ¶ 2, ECF No. 20-10.) Medina cycled through several positions on the factory floor until

2011, when he was promoted to production supervisor. (Medina Dep. at 59-60); (Promotion Letter, ECF No. 20-16.) Menasha viewed Medina as a knowledgeable employee, possessing technical skill and the ability to grow. (Nathan Timmons Dep. at 15:19-20, ECF No. 21-6); (Domenic Santone Dep. at 34:18-21, 35:9, ECF No. 21-4.) At Menasha, six production supervisors are split among three shifts, with two working one shift at a time. (Santone Dep. at 20:12-14, 14:8-11, 14:3-16.) For six years, Medina and Domenic Santone both worked as production supervisors, and they got

1 See (Oral Argument at 64:1-15, 71:7-20, 72:6-7). along with one another. (Medina Dep. at 72:19-23, 73:2-7); (Santone Dep. at 11:9-11.) In 2019, Santone was promoted to plant manager, becoming Medina’s direct supervisor. (Medina Dep. at 72:1-5.) Roughly half of the employees who directly report to Santone are Hispanic, including two other production supervisors. (Santone Decl. at 3, ECF No.

20-17.) Notwithstanding his other positive attributes, Medina routinely had unexcused absences from work. Menasha handled employee misconduct, including tardiness, via the following progressive disciplinary system: (1) verbal warning, (2) written warning, (3) suspension for a number of days, (4) final warning, and (5) termination. See, e.g., (Termination Letter at 2, ECF No. 20-35). Over the course of his time with the company, Medina was issued three verbal warnings, two written warnings, a three-day suspension and two final written warnings. (First Offense 1999, ECF No. 20-11); (Second Offense 2003, ECF No. 20-12); (Final Warning 2003, ECF No. 20-13); (First

Offense 2006, ECF No. 20-14); (Final Written Warning, ECF No. 20-36); (First and Second Offense 2009, ECF No. 20-15.) In 2018, General Manager Nathan Timmons placed Medina on a performance improvement plan (“PIP”) due to his unexcused absences. (2018 PIP, ECF No. 20-21.) Medina also had a history of “aggressive or unprofessional” conduct towards other employees. (2019 PIP at 2.) In one instance, he “aggressively raised his voice and threw paperwork onto a desk.” (2019 PIP at 3.) In another, an employee accused him of being “aggressive and erratic.” (Harassment Complaint at 2, ECF No. 20-19); (Timmons E-mail at 2, ECF No. 20-20.) In 2019, Timmons placed Medina on another PIP for aggressive conduct towards subordinates. (2019 PIP.) Human Resources Representative Jennifer Friedman was aware of these incidents and accusations. (Timmons E-mail at 2); (Friedman Dep. at 47:2-22.) Medina became increasingly frustrated with Menasha’s disciplinary measures. Between 2019 and 2022, he repeatedly complained to Friedman about Santone’s

purported “unfair” treatment. (Medina Dep. at 213:11-13, 244:19-24); (Friedman Dep. at 49:12-50:21.) In one of these meetings, Medina told her that Santone is a “dickhead” and that he would “like to kill him.” (Friedman Dep. at 49:12-50:21.) In November of 2022, Medina also complained to Timmons. (Medina Dep. at 241:1-3.) He never suggested to Friedman or Timmons that his treatment was racially motivated, (Friedman Decl. at 3), rather that he was frustrated by Santone’s attempt to discipline him for his unexcused absences. (Timmons Dep. at 23:21-25, 24:1-4.) On December 5, 2022, Santone and Friedman held a meeting with all six production supervisors to “reset” performance and attendance expectations. (Medina

Dep. at 163:15-21, 164:8-14); (Timmons Dep. at 28:23-29:3); (Santone Dep. at 51:22-24); (Termination Letter at 2.) But between December 5 and December 18, Medina worked less than his full shift several times. (Final Written Warning, ECF No.

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