Nancy Roschival v. Hurley Med. Center

695 F. App'x 923
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJune 19, 2017
Docket16-1722
StatusUnpublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 695 F. App'x 923 (Nancy Roschival v. Hurley Med. Center) 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
Nancy Roschival v. Hurley Med. Center, 695 F. App'x 923 (6th Cir. 2017).

Opinion

HELENE N. WHITE, Circuit Judge.

Plaintiff-Appellant Nancy Roschival, a White female, worked at Hurley Medical Center (HMC), a public hospital owned by the City of Flint, Michigan. After she was laid off pursuant to a reduction in force (RIF), she filed this action asserting a 42 U.S.C. § 1983 claim against Melany Gavulic, the chief executive officer of HMC (also White), alleging that Gavulic’s decision to lay her off, rather than an African-American male coworker, was made on the basis of race. In her amended complaint, Roschi-val added HMC as a defendant with respect to new counts, against both Gavulic and HMC, for wrongful discharge under Michigan common law and racial discrimination under Michigan’s Elliott-Larsen Civil Rights Act.

After discovery, Defendants moved for summary judgment. The district court found that Roschival failed to show that Gavulic’s nondiscriminatory reason for laying her off was pretext for racial discrimination and granted Gavulic summary judgment as to the § 1983 claim. It declined to *924 exercise supplemental jurisdiction over the remaining state-law claims and dismissed them without prejudice.

Accepting arguendo that Roschival established a prima facie case of racial discrimination, she failed to meet her burden of showing that Gavulic’s proffered legitimate, nondiscriminatory reason for laying her off was a pretext for discrimination. For that reason, we AFFIRM.

I

A

Roschival began working in HMC’s human-resources department (HR) in 1995. For the majority of her time there, she was responsible for processing workers’ compensation claims in the Employee Health Office (EHO), a unit affiliated with HR that provided occupational-health services to HMC employees. Her job title was “Service Center Advisor.” •

Between fall 2013 and summer 2014, HMC reorganized and eventually closed the EHO: its functions were transferred to outside contractors and a new startup subsidiary, Hurley Health Services (HHS). As • a result of this reorganization, EHO’s staff was largely laid off. In September 2013, Colleen Mansour,. interim senior administrator within HR, informed Roschival that her position as Service Center Advisor was being eliminated and that she would be transferred to a position in HR.

After the transfer, Roschival was assigned the job title “Human Resources Coordinator I” (HRC1), but her duties remained essentially the same and she continued to process workers’ compensation claims (although HMC had begun to outsource this work to a contractor). Jamal Dozier (Dozier), an African-American man with fewer years’ seniority than Roschival, also worked in HR as “Human Resources Coordinator” (HRC). Dozier was responsible for employee orientation and other HR activities, but was never involved in workers’ compensation claims. Roschival and Dozier were the only employees with the HRC1 and HRC job titles.

B

HMC closed the EHO completely on August 4, 2014 and transferred the remaining workers’ compensation duties handled by Roschival to its outside contractor. As a result of this reorganization, Roschival received a layoff notice on July 31, 2014, signed by Gavulic. (Id,) The notice stated that Roschival’s employment would be terminated effective August 14, 2013 because “a decision has been made to close the [EHO] and utilize the Occupational Medicine Services through [HHS].” Term. Lett., R. 23-17, PID 326, In making this layoff decision, Gavulic followed the recommendation of Deidra Roriex—an African-American woman and HR generalist—that Roschival was the only person in her job classification and was thus the appropriate employee to lay off based on HMC’s reduction-in-force (RIF) procedures. 1

Many HMC employees belong to labor unions. The others, including Roschival and Dozier, are non-union employees. Layoffs of union members are governed by collective-bargaining agreements, while layoffs of non-union employees are governed by HMC’s exempt-employee handbook. The parties disagree whether Gavulic and Roriex followed HMC’s RIF policy *925 in laying Roschival off rather than Dozier. The handbook states in pertinent part:

For incidences of reduction in the work force, management reserves the right to determine the classifications and departments in which layoffs will occur. Recalls will be made in reverse order of layoffs within classification and department.... Layoffs or status reductions within classifications and department are made in reverse order of seniority within classification and department.... Handbook, R. 23-7, PID 244.

The parties dispute what “classification” means under the policy and whether it includes the concept of a job series, such as Technician, Technician I, Technician II, and so on. 2 Roschival argues that her HRC1 position was within the same classification series as Dozier’s. If she is correct, then because she had seniority she should have been allowed to “bump” Dozier (i.e., take his position while he was laid off). HMC and Gavulic assert that HRC1 and HRC were separate classifications, and that they had discretion to eliminate the HRC1 position in connection with the EHO closure rather than the HRC position. If theirs is the correct view, then because plaintiff was the only employee in her classification, she was the only employee to lay off.

Roschival deposed former HR employees to develop factual support for her view that the proper RIF procedure was not followed.

Rebecca Jackson, HMC’s assistant director of HR operations from January 2001 to October 2010 (four years before the layoff), testified that “classification[ ]” “includ[es] their job title, their pay grade, their multi-code, their job code....” Jackson Dep., R. 23-10, PID 303. She also testified that a classification might contain a job series, such as Nurse, Nurse I, Nurse II, and so on. Jackson explained that identifying a series requires “looking] back at the job description[s], and the MER’s [ (minimum entrance requirements) ]” because a job series has progressive job requirements such that a senior role encompasses the requirements of all junior roles. Id. at PID 302.

Lisa Foster, who was employed at HMC as assistant HR director from July 1995 to July 2010, and who trained Roriex on conducting layoffs, also testified regarding “series” within a job classification. Foster described a series as “jobs within a job,” i.e., that jobs in a series are all related to one another. Foster explained that to ensure clarity, she created specific titles to show that a job was in a series. 3 She further stated that any jobs with the same title, but differing numbers, were in a series. 4 In classifying a series, Foster also looked at the job responsibilities and duties, MERs, and title, to determine how related they were.

Consistent with this testimony, Roschi-val argues that her job and Dozier’s were part of the same classification—Human *926

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695 F. App'x 923, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nancy-roschival-v-hurley-med-center-ca6-2017.