Mzozoyana v. Secretary of Veterans Affairs

CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Ohio
DecidedNovember 10, 2022
Docket3:19-cv-00091
StatusUnknown

This text of Mzozoyana v. Secretary of Veterans Affairs (Mzozoyana v. Secretary of Veterans Affairs) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mzozoyana v. Secretary of Veterans Affairs, (S.D. Ohio 2022).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF OHIO WESTERN DIVISION TERI L. MZOZOYANA, . Plaintiff,

Vv. Case No. 3:19-cv-091 : JUDGE WALTER H. RICE DENIS R. MCDONOUGH, Secretary, Department of Veteran Affairs, Defendant.

DECISION AND ENTRY OVERRULING DEFENDANT'S MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT (DOC. #26); CONFERENCE CALL TO RESCHEDULE TRIAL AND OTHER DATES

Plaintiff, Teri L. Mzozoyana (“Mzozoyana” or “Plaintiff”), filed a complaint against Denis R McDonough, Secretary of her employer, the Department of Veteran Affairs (“VA” or “Defendant”). Doc. #1. Count One alleges that Defendant unlawfully discriminated against Plaintiff due to her race in violation of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 42 U.S.C. 2000e et seq. Count Two alleges that Defendant unlawfully discriminated against Plaintiff due to her age in violation of the Age Discrimination Enforcement Act of 1967, 29 U.S.C. § 621 et seq.

This matter is before the Court pursuant to a Motion for Summary Judgment filed by the VA. Doc. #26 (“Motion” or “Motion for Summary Judgment”). For the reasons set forth below, Defendant's Motion is overruled.

I. Factual Background Plaintiff, Teri Mzozoyana, was the Human Resources Officer (“HRO”), a “service chief,” at the Columbus, Ohio, VA Ambulatory Care Center (“Columbus VA") from early 2000 until November 12, 2016. Doc. #25, PagelD##134, 226, 232. She was then temporarily promoted to Acting Associate Director from November 13, 2016, until March 5, 2017. /d., PagelD#232. After the temporary promotion, Plaintiff returned to her previous position as HRO. /d. However, she was subsequently demoted to Human Resource Specialist (“HRS”) on November 26, 2017. Doc. #25-1, PagelD#492. Plaintiff alleges that her November 26, 2017, demotion was motivated by both race and age discrimination. In response, the VA contends that she was demoted not because of her race or age, but because she violated the VA‘s rules against nepotism. Doc. #26, PagelD#562. Specifically, the VA contends that Plaintiff changed a newly created position’s classification, and that change allowed her husband to qualify for the position when he previously did not. /d., PagelD#564-565. The VA also contends that Plaintiff failed to adequately inform her supervisors that her husband had both applied and was being considered for the position. /d., PagelD#562. The VA contends that her actions, even if not

specifically intended to benefit her husband, nonetheless created the appearance of nepotism and the appearance alone warranted the demotion. /d. The circumstances surrounding Plaintiff's demotion are detailed below.

A. Creation of the Position and Classification Decision In early 2016, the Columbus VA created a new trainer (“EMS Trainer”) position for its Environmental Management Service (“EMS”). Doc. #25, PagelD##238-239. EMS prepared a job description for the EMS Trainer position and sent it to the Columbus VA’s human resources office for classification’. /d. As HRO, Plaintiff was responsible for both assigning and approving the classifications for all jobs at the Columbus VA. /ad., PagelD#227. She assigned the classification task for the new EMS Trainer position to an HRS, Cindy Lamprecht. PagelD##239-240. On February 24, 2016, Ms. Lamprecht classified the EMS Trainer position as WL-3566, which is a wage grade (“WG”) position. Doc. #25-1, PagelD#493. Plaintiff approved of the classification on March 29, 2016, and her supervisor, Director Wendy Hepker (“Director Hepker”), also approved of the classification on April 4, 2016. /o. Due to the WL-3566 classification, the EMS Trainer position was restricted to preference eligible veterans, assuming an eligible veteran was available. Doc. #25, PagelD##248-249,

1 Classification is necessary to determine a new position’s qualifications and salary.

However, EMS then indicated it wanted the EMS Trainer position to be a general schedule (“GS”) rather than a WG position. Doc. #25, PagelD#240. Ms. Lamprecht asked Plaintiff to enlist a different VA station to help with the new classification. /o. The Dayton VA had recently created and classified a similar position, /d., and on May 16, 2016, Plaintiff asked the Dayton VA if they could help classify the Columbus VA’s new Trainer position. Doc. #25-2, PagelD##507-508. The Dayton VA obliged and returned a pay grade classification of GS-9. /a. Consistent with the Dayton VA’s recommendation, Plaintiff informed Director Hepker that the EMS Trainer position was being reclassified as a GS-9 pay grade. Doc. #25, PagelD#241. However, she testified in her deposition that Director Hepker told her the EMS Trainer position should instead be classified as a GS-7 pay grade, and EMS would need to amend the job description accordingly. /d. Plaintiff informed EMS of the change, and EMS amended the job description. Id. Not wanting to further delay EMS’s hiring process, Plaintiff testified that she unilaterally classified the EMS Trainer position as GS-1712, a GS-7 pay grade, without further collaboration with the Dayton VA or Ms. Lamprecht. /a. She submitted the classification on July 12, 2016, and Director Hepker approved of the classification on July 19, 2016. Doc. #25-2, PagelD#499. As a result of the ultimate classification change from WL-3566 to GS-1712, the EMS Trainer position was no longer restricted to preference eligible veterans. Doc. #25, PagelD##248-249. Plaintiff's husband was not a preference eligible

veteran, /d., PagelD#249, and the new classification allowed him to apply for the position five months later.

B. Mzozoyana’s Temporary Promotion and EMS’s Hiring Decision On November 13, 2016, Plaintiff was temporarily promoted from the HRO position to the Acting Associate Director for the Columbus VA. /d., PagelD#231. As the Acting Associate Director, she directly supervised EMS Chief Novella Fulmore, who would be responsible for hiring the EMS Trainer position. /d., PagelD#279. The EMS Trainer position was publicly posted on December 14, 2016. Doc. #25-1, PagelD#455. Plaintiff's husband, Mbulelo Mzozoyana, subsequently found the EMS Trainer position on USAJobs.gov and applied on December 29, 2016. Doc. #24, PagelD##143 and 147. Plaintiff maintains that she did not know her husband had applied for the job until after he already submitted his application, which was just prior to the application’s closing date of January 3, 2017. Doc. #25, PagelD##252-254. After learning of her husband's application, Plaintiff contends she informed him that she could not provide any assistance in the process. /d., PagelD##255-258. She maintains that Mr. Mzozoyana respected her position and never requested, nor did she offer, any assistance in the application or subsequent interview process. /d. Mr. Mzozoyana was one of several candidates ultimately selected for an interview by a three-person panel. The panelists rated the applicants numerically, and Mr. Mzozoyana was given a numeric score of 55, whereas another applicant,

Kelvin Lancaster, was given a higher numeric score of 61. /d., PagelD##287-288. Accordingly, the panel recommended Mr. Lancaster over Mr. Mzozoyana for the EMS Trainer position. /c., PagelD#292. However, EMS Chief Fulmore overruled the panel’s recommendation and hired Mr. Mzozoyana. /a. EMS Chief Fulmore never justified her decision in writing, /¢., PagelD##289-290, but Plaintiff maintains she never discussed her husband's application with EMS Chief Fulmore. /d., PagelD#280. However, Plaintiff admits that due to the uniqueness of her and her husband’s shared name of “Mzozoyana,” other employees at the Columbus VA would likely recognize a connection. /d., PagelD##221 and 299.

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Mzozoyana v. Secretary of Veterans Affairs, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mzozoyana-v-secretary-of-veterans-affairs-ohsd-2022.