Officer v. Sedgwick County

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 27, 2007
Docket05-3404
StatusUnpublished

This text of Officer v. Sedgwick County (Officer v. Sedgwick County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Officer v. Sedgwick County, (10th Cir. 2007).

Opinion

F I L E D United States Court of Appeals Tenth Circuit UNITED STATES CO URT O F APPEALS February 27, 2007 TENTH CIRCUIT Elisabeth A. Shumaker Clerk of Court

SHEILA OFFICER,

Plaintiff-Appellant, v. No. 05-3404 (D.C. No. 04-CV-2418-KHV) SED GW ICK CO UNTY , KANSAS; (D. Kansas) and SEDGW ICK CO UN TY DEPARTM ENT OF CORRECTIO NS,

Defendants-Appellees.

OR DER AND JUDGM ENT *

Before KELLY, EBEL, and GORSUCH, Circuit Judges.

Sheila Officer seeks damages from her former employer, Sedgwick County,

Kansas (the “County”), for its termination of her employment allegedly in

violation of Title VII. The district court granted summary judgment in favor of

the County after finding that M s. Officer failed to identify a material factual

dispute suggesting that she suffered an adverse employment action as a result of

* This order and judgment is not binding precedent except under the doctrines of law of the case, res judicata and collateral estoppel. It may be cited, however, for its persuasive value consistent with Fed. R. App. P. 32.1 and 10th Cir. R. 32.1. her race. Our review confirms that, on the limited factual record developed solely

by the County, entry of summary judgment was appropriate. 1

I

A

From October 1991 through August 30, 2002, M s. Officer, an African-

American, was employed by the County as an Intensive Supervision Officer (“ISO

I”) in the County’s Department of Corrections comm unity corrections program

(the “Corrections Department”). As an ISO I in the adult corrections services

department, M s. Officer was tasked with monitoring adult felons on probation and

ensuring that they complied with court-ordered conditions of probation. See

Aple. A pp. at 168; see also id. at 130, 141. Her job responsibilities included

gathering and verifying client intake information; developing a supervision plan;

creating and maintaining files tracking client compliance and progress; and

generally liaising between the client, courts and law enforcement. Id. at 168-69.

Beginning in approximately 1998, M s. Officer’s job performance audits

(including formal and informal evaluations), while positive in many respects,

critiqued her repeated failures to report and take seriously her probationers’

1 Cited below are only those facts essential to the resolution of the matters appealed to us. For a more detailed chronology of the events giving rise to this litigation, see the district court’s comprehensive memorandum and order granting summary judgment to the County. Aple. App. at 600-634.

-2- deviations from probation conditions. 2 Although M s. Officer received repeated

warnings, she apparently did not alter her behavior and people outside the

Corrections D epartment began to take note. O n July 22, 2002, Judge David

Kennedy, a Sedgwick C ounty district judge, contacted M s. Officer’s superior,

Annie Nash, to express his concern that M s. Officer w as “running interference,”

or protecting her probationers from him. M s. Nash directed Greg Friedman, an

ISO II, to speak with Judge Kennedy regarding this issue; during this meeting,

M r. Friedman noted Judge Kennedy’s statement that he “does not send his

defendants to Sedgwick County Department of Corrections to be ‘loved’ and that

if Sheila w as going to love them instead of supervise them he did not want her to

supervise his defendants.” Id. at 290. At the conclusion of this meeting, Judge

Kennedy requested the Corrections Department to review M s. Officer’s case files

involving a host of probationers subject to her supervision. See id. at 288-90.

2 See Aple. App. at 228 (November 30, 1998 Interim Review) (“In her zealous efforts to assist her clients, she frequently fails to integrate [the] program’s policies and procedures into her decision making.”); id. at 245 (October 29, 1999 Performance Review) (“In her desire to help her clients, she sometimes loses focus of the bigger picture. She has difficulty detaching from her clients . . . .”); id. at 263 (November 2001 Interim Review ) (“Sheila sometimes makes recommendations to the court which do not reflect the seriousness of the client’s violations.”); id. at 268 (M emo from Supervisor A nnie Nash dated M arch 12, 2002 regarding M s. Officer’s job performance) (“You are to fully disclose client violations to the judge. File audits have shown occasions in which only partial disclosure has occurred.”).

-3- M s. Officer’s job performance evaluations from as early as M arch 1999

also revealed chronic problems complying with department policy to maintain

client files accurately and consistently. 3 On February 22, 2000, M s. Officer

received a “memorandum of concern” from M s. Nash regarding M s. Officer’s

“ongoing difficulty . . . in maintaining [her] clients [sic] files according to . . .

program[] policies and procedures.” Id. at 252. Her M ay 2000 evaluation

showed no sign of improvement in this regard: it observed that M s. Officer “is

willing to follow policies that are in agreement with her values and opinion” and

that she consistently failed to provide adequate documentation of client

communications and progress. Id. at 258.

B

M s. Officer’s job troubles came to a head in a case involving Ronda Felix,

a probationer convicted of multiple counts of theft and fraud. M s. Felix was

charged to M s. Officer’s care upon her sentencing in February of 2001. Aple.

3 See Aple. App. at 233 (M emorandum from M s. Nash to M s. Officer dated M arch 11, 1999) (two client files were missing probation violation letters in their files and M s. Officer was ordered to file all such documents in the future); id. at 250 (M emorandum from M s. Nash to M s. Officer dated Jan. 27, 2000) (M s. Nash documented deficiencies in M s. Officer’s client files and observed that “some offenders [of] especially high risk requires [sic] a more strict adherence to policies . . . [an audit of M s. Officer’s files] revealed that [a sex offender whom M s. Officer was supervising] is not being supervised . . . according to program’ [sic] guidelines and . . . contact standards. High risk offenders must be supervised according to programs’s guidelines . . . Few clients have the correct employment information and you are not entering the intervention information . . .” (emphasis in original)).

-4- App. at 306. M s. Felix was temporarily also under the watch of Cinda Hahn, a

Shawnee County caseworker, from M arch 20, to N ovember 14, 2001. M s. Felix

was thereafter transferred back to M s. Officer’s sole care. Id. at 309.

On M arch 15, 2001, M s. Officer received a phone call from M s. Felix’s

roommate, LaJune Carson, claiming that M s. Felix had stolen some of her

clothing and forged her checks. Id. at 160. M s. Officer took no action in

response to this allegation; she did not obtain the police report M s. Carson had

filed, or inquire further; nor did she supply any plausible reason for inaction. Id.

at 160. M s. Officer similarly dismissed allegations by a furniture rental company

on M arch 22, 2001, that M s. Felix had left town with its property. Id. at 160.

M s. Officer claims no action was necessary because “[M s. Officer] put Ronda

Felix on a bus personally. She could not have left with their property.” Id. at

160.

On June 19, 2001, M s. Officer received a call from M s. Hahn, the Shawnee

County ISO , notifying her that M s. Felix’s employer claimed that she forged

checks from his business account. Id.

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