Neoma Shafer, Judith Ann Parks v. Army & Air Force Exchange Service United States Department of Defense

376 F.3d 386
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedAugust 26, 2004
Docket03-10074, 03-10220
StatusPublished
Cited by45 cases

This text of 376 F.3d 386 (Neoma Shafer, Judith Ann Parks v. Army & Air Force Exchange Service United States Department of Defense) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Neoma Shafer, Judith Ann Parks v. Army & Air Force Exchange Service United States Department of Defense, 376 F.3d 386 (5th Cir. 2004).

Opinion

E. GRADY JOLLY, Circuit Judge:

The Plaintiff-Appellee, Judith Ann Parks, was awarded over $1,000,000 in compensatory damages and attorneys’ fees by the district court. This award followed the district court’s wholesale adoption of the factual findings and legal recommendations of a report prepared by a special master. A central dispute in this confusing case concerns whether the special master exceeded his authority by considering claims made by Parks in a separate lawsuit, which was never formally referred to the special master or otherwise consolidated with the contempt proceeding arising *389 from a related lawsuit, which was properly before the special master. We conclude that the special master did exceed the scope of his appointment by hearing, and addressing in his report, claims that were not properly before him. It follows that the district court’s adoption of the findings and recommendations relating to the unre-ferred case constitutes reversible error. We therefore REVERSE the judgment in favor of the plaintiff on those claims. As to the district court’s findings with respect to the claims that were properly before the special master, we also REVERSE but on other grounds.

I

A

The genesis of this appeal is a very old Title VII sex discrimination suit filed in 1976 against The Army and Air Force Exchange Service (“AAFES”) — a federal instrumentality that operates Post Exchanges and Base Exchanges for military personnel. That case, Shafer v. AAFES, 667 F.Supp. 414 (N.D.Tex.1985), was eventually settled in an agreement approved by the district court in 1987. The settlement agreement did not conclude the entire ease, however; the claims of four AAFES employees, including • Plaintiff-Appellee Parks, proceeded as individual discrimination suits. Parks’s individual case was eventually referred by the district court to a special master, who recommended that Parks be awarded back pay, retroactive promotions, and other relief. The district court adopted the master’s report and entered final judgment on Parks’s claim in January 1988. In pertinent part, the judgment ordered AAFES to promote Parks to pay grade UA14 retroactive to April 1981, to amend Parks’s personnel files to reflect her promotion, and to give Parks “priority placement” into a supervisory position; further, the judgment enjoined AAFES “from any form of retaliation against Judith Ann Parks.” The judgment was not appealed.

In accordance with that judgment, AAFES promoted Parks to grade UA14 and made her chief of one branch of the Information Systems Directorate, Systems Development Division (“IS-D”). That final judgment was anything but final, however, as far as the dispute between Parks and AAFES is concerned. Beginning in 1993, Parks began once again to experience workplace incidents that she contended were discrimination and retaliation. First, in early 1993, AAFES established a new directorate for Change Management and needed to fill eight positions for Project Managers. Tom Saga, Park’s immediate supervisor, asked several people, including Parks, whether they were interested in the position. Saga told Parks that it would be a lateral UA14 position, and Parks therefore declined it. Robert McFarland was then selected for the position, which was soon after reclassified as a UA15 position. Parks contends that the government knew the new position would be UA15 but intentionally waited until after she had declined the job and McFarland had accepted before it reclassified it.

Parks also contended that the discrimination and retaliation continued in 1994. On her Performance Evaluation Report (“PER”) for that year, which was completed by Saga and his superior, James McKinney, Parks received a poor mark in a section (called the “diamond”) that rated an employee’s relative promotion potential. According to Parks, she was given a low score in the diamond so that men could be promoted ahead of her. Three men in the Information Systems Directorate were promoted to UA15 in 1994, but Parks was not.

*390 Finally, in May 1995, the curtain appeared to fall on the long-running battle between Parks and AAFES when Parks accepted a voluntary offer of early retirement made generally available to AAFES’s employees in response to budget cuts. Not so. Despite the voluntary nature of her retirement, however, Parks nevertheless soon maintained that she was constructively discharged. She alleged that her decision to quit was directly brought on by years of discrimination, escalating retaliation, and the realization that (had she remained at AAFES) her poor ratings would make any promotion in the next several years highly unlikely.

B

In this connection, Parks had earlier filed a series of complaints with the AAFES’s internal EEO office, beginning in April 1994 and continuing through May 1995. Additionally, in June 1994, Parks began this present action — she filed a motion to have AAFES held in contempt of the 1988 Shafer judgment. In this motion, she asserted that AAFES had violated the 1988 judgment by: (1) failing .to correct personnel records to reflect Parks’s retroactive promotion, (2) failing to give her priority placement in a suitable UA14 supervisory position within a reasonable time after the judgment, and (3) retaliating against her by passing over her for promotions to UA15 positions and giving her poor performance evaluations. The-motion further stated that AAFES had “continued to discriminate against Judith Ann Parks with regard to promotions and had retaliated against her because of her participation in this lawsuit, the Court’s retroactive promotion of her, and her subsequent claims of discrimination and retaliation.” The motion asked the court to hold AAFES in contempt and to order the agency, inter alia, retroactively to promote Parks to UA15, to provide her with back pay to match the UA15 salary, and to pay her other compensatory and punitive damages.

On April 3, 1995, the district court appointed John Albaeh, who had served as special master in the earlier Shafer proceedings, to serve as the special master for the. purpose of holding hearings and making a report and recommendation to the court on Parks’s contempt motion. Invoking Rule 53 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, the district court issued a referral order, setting out the specific claims and issues before the special master. Specifically, the order directed the special master to consider Park’s “Motion to Hold the Defendants in Contempt.” The order further delineated the precise claims at issue in that motion as set out by that motion: to wit, (1) AAFES’ failure to eoi~-rect Park’s personnel records, (2) its failure to grant her priority placement, and (3) its alleged retaliation and discrimination against her.

In August 1995, Parks filed a separate and independent Title YII complaint styled Parks v. Perry. This occurred fourteen months after filing the contempt motion and four months after that contempt motion had been referred to the special master.

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376 F.3d 386, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/neoma-shafer-judith-ann-parks-v-army-air-force-exchange-service-united-ca5-2004.