Michael Walden v. General Electric Int'l

119 F.4th 1049
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedOctober 24, 2024
Docket24-5141
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 119 F.4th 1049 (Michael Walden v. General Electric Int'l) 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
Michael Walden v. General Electric Int'l, 119 F.4th 1049 (6th Cir. 2024).

Opinion

RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION Pursuant to Sixth Circuit I.O.P. 32.1(b) File Name: 24a0241p.06

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT

┐ MICHAEL L. WALDEN, │ Plaintiff-Appellant, │ > No. 24-5141 │ v. │ │ GENERAL ELECTRIC INTERNATIONAL, INC.; │ COMMUNICATIONS WORKERS OF AMERICA, AFL-CIO, │ CLC, │ Defendants-Appellees. │ ┘

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Western District of Kentucky at Owensboro. No. 4:19-cv-00159—David J. Hale, District Judge.

Decided and Filed: October 24, 2024

Before: McKEAGUE, KETHLEDGE, and NALBANDIAN, Circuit Judges. _________________

COUNSEL

ON BRIEF: Austin P. Vowels, VOWELS LAW PLC, Henderson, Kentucky, for Appellant. Jay Inman, LITTLER MENDELSON, P.S.C., Lexington, Kentucky, for Appellee General Electric. Robert F. Holt, IUE-CWA, Dayton, Ohio, for Appellee Communication Workers of America. _________________

OPINION _________________

NALBANDIAN, Circuit Judge. Multiple times, Michael Walden applied for a manufacturing job with General Electric (GE). Multiple times, he failed required tests. When he didn’t get the job, he sued GE for age discrimination. Walden also sued his union, alleging unfair representation in his challenges to the company’s hiring decisions. GE and the union both No. 24-5141 Walden v. General Electric Int’l Page 2

point to the failed tests to explain their dealings with him. The district court granted summary judgment for GE and the union. We affirm.

I.

Walden was born in 1955. For several decades he worked as a tool and die maker. Then, in September 2011, he took a job with GE as a “Flexible Machine Operator II.” R. 113-5, Signed Offer, p. 1, PageID 1539. While at GE, Walden joined the union, an affiliated local with the Communications Workers of America. Eventually, he began applying for a promotion to toolmaker.

Under the Collective Bargaining Agreement (CBA) then in place, the company had to fill toolmaker jobs “on the basis of Total Plant Seniority to those employees that possess the minimum qualifications.” R. 113-1, CBA, p. 3, PageID 1286. For some time, GE had evaluated candidates’ qualifications and seniority from resumes alone. Then, in 2016, GE and the union agreed to implement a written test requirement, too. Several toolmakers in the union designed the test, which initially had twenty questions. The toolmakers agreed that “anyone that understood toolmaking should not miss more than three questions,” or in other words, score lower than 85%. R. 113-6, Riggs Deposition, p. 17, PageID 1556. The graded tests of candidates GE hired confirm as much; successful candidates all passed with a score of 85% or better.

In December 2018, GE had two toolmaker openings. It published a job posting that read as follows:

Qualifications: Graduate of GE approved Tool & Die Apprenticeship Program or 5 years of Tool and Die job experience.

Job Description: Build and assemble various types of tools, fixtures, gages, dies, etc. of intricate and complicated designs requiring the sue [sic] of equipment to produce compound angles and complicated dimensional and functional relationships, mechanical movements, and multi-plane machining. Diagnose and repair original designs of complex and intricate tools and fixtures. . . . No. 24-5141 Walden v. General Electric Int’l Page 3

Note: The job’s classifications and definitions are merely for purposes of identification and general description and do not purport to be all inclusive or exhaustive of the actual requirements of any job so classified or defined. To be considered, you must list your qualifications or attach a resume or record of experience.

R. 113-2, 2018 Job Posting, p. 1, PageID 1313. Walden applied, as did two others—Brad Brown and Nathan Bryant. Both Brown and Bryant were younger than forty and were less senior than Walden. All three candidates had the required level of experience, so GE had them take the test. Based on shift availability, Brown and Bryant tested first. GE manager Tim Riggs administered the test.

But before Walden could also test, union steward Kevin Christian informed Riggs of a rumor that someone had passed around test questions and answers. Riggs testified that he and Christian took the matter to the skilled trades chairman (confusingly also named Brad Brown), and the three agreed to add five new questions to the test. They did not change the passing score.1 Shortly after, Walden took the now-twenty-five-question test while Brown (the candidate) and Bryant came back to answer the five new questions.

Riggs graded the tests. When Walden turned his test in, he had a brief conversation with Riggs about some questions, including one that he did not answer. Riggs considered Walden’s concerns about the question and agreed not to count it against him. Walden also claims that Riggs made a vague comment that “it’s not going to be an issue,” though it’s not obvious what this comment might have referred to. R. 113-4, Walden Deposition, p. 57, PageID 1371.

Brown and Bryant passed. Walden did not. According to Walden, Riggs informed him that he had missed six while Brown and Bryant had each missed four. But the graded tests show something else. Brown’s test displays no missed answers, a perfect score. Bryant’s test had two wrong answers, a 92%.2 Walden’s test, on the other hand, shows five wrong answers, an 80%.

1 The passing score remained the same whether scores were based on missed answers or percentages. On both versions of the test, missing more than three questions would result in a score below 85%. Missing four out of twenty would result in an 80%, while missing four out of twenty-five would garner an 84%. 2 The graded test shows only one answer (on Question 23) marked incorrect. GE and Riggs admit that Riggs made a mistake in grading Question 7, which also should have been marked incorrect. With two missed answers, Bryant still passed. No. 24-5141 Walden v. General Electric Int’l Page 4

With these results in hand, GE filled the openings with Brown and Bryant. Walden discussed losing the job opportunity with union officials but elected not to file a grievance after they advised him that he would have little chance of success.

The next month, in January 2019, GE sought two more toolmakers. It published a job posting with the same description as before. But this time, the test changed. GE and the union agreed to a new test with a written component and a hands-on component, both administered by local community colleges. For the written component, GE and the union settled on a standardized test from the National Occupational Competency Testing Institute. They decided not to use a few parts of the test, considering them inapplicable to GE toolmaker responsibilities. GE and the union agreed that a candidate would need to score a combined 70% to pass.

Once again, Walden applied for the job. Once again, Walden failed the test. He scored an 86.89% on the written component but only a 16% on the skills component, for a combined score of about 51%. A younger candidate, Keith Crowley, scored a combined 69.6%, which the company rounded up to 70%. GE hired Crowley over Walden for the January opening.

After the January test, Walden asked the union to file a grievance. It did so. On the grievance form, Walden argued that despite the failed tests he had the minimum qualifications required for the job and that the CBA therefore required GE to pick him over candidates with less seniority. GE denied the grievance. The union appealed, but GE again denied it. The company wrote Walden to explain its decision and reiterated that testing had been required for years. It offered to let Walden test again for the next job posting.

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