Nieves v. Envoy Air Inc.

300 F. Supp. 3d 960
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Michigan
DecidedJanuary 3, 2018
DocketNo. 1:16–CV–1346
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 300 F. Supp. 3d 960 (Nieves v. Envoy Air Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Michigan primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nieves v. Envoy Air Inc., 300 F. Supp. 3d 960 (W.D. Mich. 2018).

Opinion

Paul L. Maloney, United States District Judge

This matter is before the Court on Defendant Envoy Air Incorporated's motion for summary judgment. Because Envoy articulated a legitimate and nondiscriminatory reason for discharging Plaintiff Armando Nieves and because Nieves has not been able to present sufficient evidence of pretext to create a trial issue, the Court will grant the motion for summary judgment and dismiss the case with prejudice.

I. BACKGROUND

Armando Nieves began working for American Eagle airlines (an affiliate of American Airlines and the predecessor to Defendant Envoy Air Incorporated) in Chicago in 1997. He and his wife, Sahara Vargas (a fellow Envoy employee) first moved to Springfield, Missouri to work in an airport there, and then moved again to Grand Rapids, Michigan to work at the Gerald R. Ford Airport ("GRR") in 2008. Both Nieves and Vargas work for Envoy.

Nieves worked as a gate agent. Envoy's gate agents had dual responsibilities; they worked "above-wing" at the ticketing counters and customer service desks and "below-wing" outside at the gates directing planes and loading luggage. By all accounts, Nieves was a model employee and was well-liked by coworkers and airline customers. (ECF No. 45-7 at PageID.597.) He was also named the designated trainer for new employees, earning him an extra dollar per hour.

In 2014, Envoy transferred a new General Manager named Mitch Felkey into GRR. Shortly after Felkey joined GRR, small conflicts arose between Nieves and Felkey. On one occasion, company training files were lost. (ECF No. 45-6 at PageID.577) Felkey blamed Nieves, and he did not apologize or otherwise rectify the situation when the files turned up. Another time, Felkey believed that Nieves was absent from his duty station and demanded that he obtain statements from four coworkers to corroborate that he was assisting at a ticketing counter. (ECF No. 45-5 at PageID.544-45.) Felkey threatened that if he could not produce the statements, he would have to "turn in his badge." (Id. ) Other examples include being chosen to work below-wing more than other gate agents, (ECF No. 45-6 at PageID.577), accusations that he or his wife were making personal long-distance phone calls to their family in the Dominican Republic while at work, (Id. at PageID.574-75), and episodes in which Felkey or another supervisor named Kyle Klausner would laugh as Nieves made announcements over the intercom or made comments referencing the *964size of Nieves' family or Hispanic background. (ECF No. 45-6 at PageID.577.)

In the Spring of 2015, American Airlines initiated a random travel audit of a large number of its employees and the employees of its affiliated airlines, including Envoy. The audit was specifically to look for abuses of travel privileges by employees. American Airlines' policy makes it a terminable offense for an ineligible family member of an employee to use travel benefits. In other words, if someone does not met the criteria for travel privileges as a family member as defined by American (e.g., a child, spouse, or parent) and that person travels, it is grounds for termination of the employee.

American's Employee Travel Privilege Department is responsible for administering all facets of the employee travel privileges program, including random audits of employees' use of travel privileges. (ECF No. 44-18 at PageID.438-39.) The department oversees two types of audits-random audits that occur two to four times a year and include multiple employees and specific audits of individual employees, usually triggered by a request from a supervisor. (Id. at PageID.440-42.) The department sends out initial letters to the audited employees and coordinates individual investigations with human resources representatives employed by American and its affiliated airlines. (Id. at PageID.443.)

In April of 2015, the Travel Privileges Department allegedly sent Nieves a letter indicating that he was included in the "random dependent / student audit Q2-15". (ECF No. 44-18 at PageID.449.) Nieves did not get this letter, and a second letter followed in June, indicating the same and requesting that he provide documentation for "some of [his] family members including qualified children." (ECF No. 45-11 at PageID.627.) After receiving the letter, Nieves faxed documents relating to his stepdaughter Sharina and his wife Sahara-the only family members that were active on his travel list. (ECF No. 45-12.)

However, over the course of Nieves' employment with Envoy, he had listed a number of other family members. Between Nieves and Vargas, they had seven children. (ECF No. 45-6 at PageID.573.) Some of the children had been listed multiples times as their status changed from children to students. (ECF No. 44-10 at PageID.218-19) There were also duplicate entries on the travel list because of some misspellings. (Id. ) These mistakes made it appear that Armando had an extremely large travel privileges list-totaling 24 names for Nieves, Vargas, Vargas' mother, their seven children, and Nieves' mother and her boyfriend. (Id. )

In addition to their children, Nieves listed two other people as students or children at different points in his employment with Envoy. The first, Arnaldo Melo, came to the Nieves family from the Dominican Republic for high school in the United States. (ECF No. 45 at PageID.497.) Arnaldo's mother was close friends with Sahara Vargas, so Nieves and Vargas agreed to take Arnaldo into their home when his mother wrote to them and said that she could not take care of him any longer. Arnaldo stayed with Nieves and Vargas for approximately nine months and used travel privileges in 2004. (Id. ) The second, Denys Martinez, was Sahara's half-brother. Martinez stayed with them for a short time while he pursued higher education in the United States. He was listed on Nieves' travel privileges list as a child, but he did not use them. (ECF No.45 at PageID.497.)

According to Nieves, all that is required to transfer temporary guardianship of a child in the Dominican Republic is a letter signed by the child's parents. (ECF No. 45-5 at PageID.558-59.) He says he had *965letters for both Melo and Martinez but Nieves and his family had not taken steps in the United States to have their guardianship of either of the minor children recognized. (ECF No. 44-13 at PageID.314 ("We had a paper signed by [Denys' mother], and we was going to-he went to Michigan, and Michigan didn't want it.").)

In addition to the two children, Nieves also listed his mother's longtime companion, Daniel Cesar, although the two had not married and did not have a recognized common-law marriage. (ECF No. 44-13 at PageID.334.) Nieves now claims that he had specifically gotten approval to list Daniel on his travel list from a previous supervisor, although nothing in the record indicates that he raised this in response to the audit at any point. (Id. )

After Nieves faxed the documents for his active travelers in June, he did not hear anything back for a significant period of time. However, emails between American Airlines and Envoy's HR Field Representative for Grand Rapids, Nina Ingalls, indicate that the audit had not come to a close. Instead, the Nieves audit was added to a stack of audits that each needed to be thoroughly investigated by HR field representatives like Ingalls.

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Related

Armando Nieves v. Envoy Air
Sixth Circuit, 2019

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Bluebook (online)
300 F. Supp. 3d 960, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nieves-v-envoy-air-inc-miwd-2018.