Muslow v. Louisiana State University and Agricultural and Mechanical College

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Louisiana
DecidedDecember 30, 2024
Docket2:19-cv-11793
StatusUnknown

This text of Muslow v. Louisiana State University and Agricultural and Mechanical College (Muslow v. Louisiana State University and Agricultural and Mechanical College) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Muslow v. Louisiana State University and Agricultural and Mechanical College, (E.D. La. 2024).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT EASTERN DISTRICT OF LOUISIANA

KATHERINE MUSLOW, et al. CIVIL ACTION

VERSUS NO. 19-11793

BOARD OF SUPERVISORS OF SECTION M (2) LOUISIANA STATE UNIVERSITY, AND AGRICULTURAL AND MECHANICAL COLLEGE, et al.

ORDER & REASONS Before the Court is a motion for summary judgment regarding available damages filed by defendant Board of Supervisors of Louisiana State University and Agricultural and Mechanical College (“LSU”).1 Plaintiffs Katherine Muslow and Meredith Cunningham (together, “Plaintiffs”) respond in opposition.2 LSU replies in further support of its motion,3 and Plaintiffs file a surreply.4 Having considered the parties’ memoranda, the record, and the applicable law, the Court grants the motion in most all respects. I. BACKGROUND This case arises out of an employment dispute. Muslow and Cunningham were employed by LSU’s Health Sciences Center in New Orleans (“LSUHSC-NO”) as full-time general counsel and part-time staff attorney, respectively, until the summer of 2019, when their positions were retired as part of LSU’s plan to consolidate its university-wide legal team.5

1 R. Doc. 551. 2 R. Doc. 553. 3 R. Doc. 559. 4 R. Doc. 560. 5 R. Docs. 551-1 at 2-4; 553 at 3-4. The consolidation plan involved retiring the two LSUHSC-NO legal positions, then occupied by Plaintiffs, and adding two new attorney positions to LSU’s office of general counsel (“OGC”), intended to be filled by Plaintiffs.6 LSU informed Muslow of this plan in December 2018.7 In January 2019, Muslow and Cunningham were each provided an unexecuted, proposed employment contract for the positions of OGC chief counsel and OGC staff attorney, respectively,

with salaries matching each Plaintiff’s then-current LSUHSC-NO salary and an effective date of February 1, 2019.8 By February, Plaintiffs had completed applications for the new positions, as requested by OGC to facilitate their transfer, but neither had executed her OGC contract, despite prompting by OGC staff.9 On February 15, 2019, Muslow emailed OGC vice president of legal affairs Thomas Skinner, with Cunningham copied on the email, requesting that Plaintiffs’ salaries be reviewed before they executed the contracts.10 Based on the results of a 2017 market study conducted by LSUHSC-NO, Muslow suggested that her salary be increased from $227,520 to $375,000, and Cunningham’s part-time salary from $76,500 at 60% full time equivalent (“FTE”) to $204,748 at 80% FTE, adjustments she deemed “overdue and necessary to ameliorate an

environment at [LSUHSC-NO] that has not seemed historically to view equity as potentially a gendered issue.”11 On February 18, Skinner notified Plaintiffs that their OGC offers were rescinded “pending further review” for the stated reason that the contracts had not been executed or returned by the effective date.12 On March 1, Muslow emailed Skinner and LSUHSC-NO chancellor Larry Hollier, inquiring whether “the review referenced in Mr. Skinner’s [recission] letter [was] still

6 R. Docs. 551-1 at 3-4; 553 at 3-4. 7 R. Doc. 553-3 at 7. 8 R. Docs. 551-1 at 3; 551-5 at 8-13; 553 at 6. 9 R. Docs. 551-5 at 9-10, 12-13. 10 Id. at 14-15. 11 Id. (quote at 15). 12 Id. at 16-17; R. Doc. 551-6 at 1-2. pending or if further guidance [was] forthcoming.”13 On March 6, Muslow again emailed Skinner and Hollier, stating that Plaintiffs “complied with everything asked of [them] and … were responsive to the employment agreements” and “[t]hat [they] requested that [their] salaries be reviewed [did] not render [their] response to the employment agreements nonresponsive or a rejection of the offers.”14 Muslow also requested confirmation that Plaintiffs were “active

candidates” for the OGC positions.15 Neither Skinner nor Hollier responded.16 On March 28, 2019, the OGC positions were publicly posted with an application deadline of April 28, 2019.17 Plaintiffs were each personally invited to apply by OGC business manager Dana Dewailly on April 4.18 Upon learning that Plaintiffs had not submitted applications, LSU deputy general counsel Carlton Jones emailed Plaintiffs on May 2, after the April 28 deadline had passed, to confirm whether they intended to apply for the OGC positions.19 On May 3, Muslow responded, with Cunningham copied on the email: … We stand by our request for salary reviews and to be paid fairly as compared to our male peers and consistent with the [LSUHSC-NO]’s 2017 market study. In asking if we intend to “apply” for our jobs, are you indicating that salary reviews will, indeed, take place and that we will be compensated equitably and in line with the [LSUHSC-NO]’s market study?20

Jones clarified on May 10 that he “was simply trying to determine if [Muslow was] still interested” in the OGC chief counsel position and informed her that he would forward her resume to the hiring committee.21 On May 13, Muslow replied, again copying Cunningham, stating: “... Unless my position is going to be compensated as dictated by the market study done at [LSUHSC-NO], …

13 R. Doc. 553-4 at 11. 14 Id. at 12. 15 Id. 16 Id. at 15. 17 R. Doc. 551-6 at 20, 23. 18 Id. at 22, 25. 19 Id. at 26; R. Doc. 551-7 at 3. 20 R. Doc. 551-7 at 2. 21 Id. at 1. you do not have my permission to treat me as an ‘applicant’ for a position I have held going on eighteen years now. [Cunningham] concurs.”22 On May 15, Jones again asked Muslow to confirm whether she was interested in being considered for the OGC chief counsel position, adding that if she did not respond by 5:00 p.m. the following day, he would “take [her] May 13, 2019 email as direction to not include [her] in the

application process and … move forward with the current pool of online applicants.”23 Muslow did not respond, and Jones removed Plaintiffs from consideration for the OGC positions.24 Pursuant to the consolidation plan, the LSUHSC-NO staff attorney position was retired, ending Cunningham’s employment at LSU, on June 30, 2019,25 and the LSUHSC-NO general counsel position was retired, ending Muslow’s employment at LSU, on July 15, 2019.26 LSU subsequently hired Louis Colletta for the OGC chief counsel position, at a starting annual salary of $182,500.27 The OGC staff attorney position was not filled.28 On July 22, 2019, Plaintiffs filed this action against LSU and several individual defendants, alleging violations of Title VII, Title IX, the Equal Pay Act (“EPA”), 42 U.S.C. § 1983, and the Louisiana Employment Discrimination Law.29 After extensive preliminary motion practice and

with the filing of a third amended complaint, the Plaintiffs’ claims included gender discrimination in violation of Title VII against LSU, retaliation in violation of Title VII against LSU, gender discrimination in violation of the EPA against LSU and three individual defendants, retaliation in violation of the EPA against LSU and three individual defendants, and gender discrimination in

22 Id. 23 Id. at 4 (emphasis in original). 24 Id. at 5. 25 Id. at 7-8. 26 Id. at 9-10. 27 R. Doc. 365-10 at 100. 28 R. Doc. 551-1 at 13. 29 R. Doc. 1. violation of § 1983 against two individual defendants.30 Thereafter, the Court granted the defendants’ motions for summary judgment, dismissing all of Plaintiffs’ claims,31 and upon Plaintiffs’ appeal,32 the Fifth Circuit affirmed the dismissal in all respects but one. The Fifth Circuit determined that, as of the summary-judgment stage, Plaintiffs had established a prima facie case only as to one of their retaliation allegations against LSU – namely,

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Muslow v. Louisiana State University and Agricultural and Mechanical College, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/muslow-v-louisiana-state-university-and-agricultural-and-mechanical-laed-2024.