Patricia J Dignan v. Ypsilanti Community Schools

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 7, 2019
Docket340089
StatusUnpublished

This text of Patricia J Dignan v. Ypsilanti Community Schools (Patricia J Dignan v. Ypsilanti Community Schools) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Patricia J Dignan v. Ypsilanti Community Schools, (Mich. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

If this opinion indicates that it is “FOR PUBLICATION,” it is subject to revision until final publication in the Michigan Appeals Reports.

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

PATRICIA J. DIGNAN, UNPUBLISHED February 7, 2019 Plaintiff-Appellant,

v No. 340089 Washtenaw Circuit Court YPSILANTI COMMUNITY SCHOOLS, LC No. 16-000802-CD

Defendant-Appellee,

and

MDW AND ASSOCIATES,

Defendant.

Before: CAMERON, P.J., and BECKERING and RONAYNE KRAUSE, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

In this employment discrimination action, plaintiff, Patricia Dignan, appeals by right from an order granting summary disposition in favor of defendant, Ypsilanti Community Schools, pursuant to MCR 2.116(C)(10) (no genuine issue of material fact, movant entitled to judgment as matter of law). Plaintiff’s claim alleged that defendant’s agent, MDW and Associates, Inc., doing business as Michigan Leadership Institute (MLI) 1, committed age or race discrimination in violation of MCL 37.2202 by failing to include her job application among the narrowed-down pool of applicants for consideration by defendant when filling a superintendent position, which went to a younger, less qualified candidate of another race. Plaintiff is Caucasian and was 72 years old at the time she applied. The trial court held that plaintiff failed to present any evidence establishing directly or circumstantially that either her age or her race

1 MLI was also named as a defendant, but later settled with plaintiff and was dismissed from the case. was a motivating factor in the applicant pool selection process, or that defendant’s failure to hire plaintiff was a pretext for unlawful discrimination. We affirm.

I. RELEVANT FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

In April 2015, defendant hired MLI to conduct a search for the superintendent position within defendant’s school district. MLI agreed to recruit a qualified candidate pool and recommend approximately four to six candidates to the board for interview.

Plaintiff submitted an online application to MLI in May 2015. Her application indicated that she was currently self-employed, working part-time in consulting and writing about education, which she had been doing since 2008. Plaintiff’s application also indicated that she had not been an employee in a school district since she served as executive director for student achievement for Detroit Public Schools from June 2000 to June 2005. Plaintiff had experience as an assistant superintendent and superintendent at Milan Area schools from 1988-1995. From October 1995 to April 1997, she had a superintendent position at Falls Church Schools in Falls Church, Virginia, at which time she was offered a buyout because “the Board and I were starting to differ philosophically on key issues.” Plaintiff alleged on the first page of her application that she had 15 years of experience in positions similar to superintendent. However, her superintendent and assistant superintendent positions totaled approximately nine years. Plaintiff’s last principal position ended in 1988. Her application also showed that plaintiff received her bachelor’s degree in 1963. The application form did not ask for the race or age of the candidate.

MLI received 27 applications for the superintendent position and selected five applications to forward to defendant for its review. MLI did not forward plaintiff’s application to defendant for consideration, and defendant did not receive any materials related to plaintiff’s application during the review process. The candidates forwarded to defendant for consideration were all currently or very recently employed by school districts in leadership positions, and had other recent experience working in school districts.

In June 2015, plaintiff was informed that she was no longer being considered for the position. Plaintiff subsequently filed a complaint with the Michigan Department of Civil Rights and the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission on January 5, 2016, alleging that she was not hired because of her race and age. In August 2016, plaintiff filed a complaint with the Washtenaw Circuit Court, alleging age and race discrimination and requesting that the trial court award her 2 years’ worth of salary and benefits, amounting to approximately $600,000, which she would have earned had she been hired. In September 2016, both MLI and defendant answered the complaint with affirmative defenses. MLI asserted that plaintiff’s application “lacked viability on a comparative and/or objective basis.” MLI responded to a set of interrogatories issued by plaintiff in November 2017. In that response, MLI stated that its knowledge of the candidates was limited to their “paper” applications because MLI conducted no employment interviews. MLI also stated that plaintiff was eliminated from consideration based on her disclosed credentials.

In May 2017, defendant filed a motion for summary disposition pursuant to MCR 2.116(C)(10). Defendant argued that plaintiff did not have any evidence to support her prima

-2- facie case against defendant because she could not establish that “she was considered for and denied the position” by defendant. Defendant did not even know that she had applied. Defendant also argued that it was not liable for any alleged discrimination by MLI because it would have been intentional and outside the scope of employment. Plaintiff opposed summary disposition, arguing that MLI was acting as an agent for defendant when it passed her over and, as a result, defendant was vicariously liable for MLI’s discrimination. She also argued that she was “uniquely qualified” and that the man whom defendant hired was nowhere near as qualified as she was. She continued that the only possible reason for her being passed over for an interview was because of her age or her race. She argued that she was discriminated against based on race because only one Caucasian person was selected for an interview. She also argued that MLI knew her general age because she told the search consultant for MLI and her resume indicated that she received her bachelor’s degree in 1963. Plaintiff also argued that there was an issue of material fact because her qualifications begged the question of why she was not interviewed, and there was an issue as to whether MLI knew her age. Defendant filed a reply to plaintiff’s response and plaintiff filed a response to defendant’s reply, neither party raising significant new arguments.

The trial court heard argument on defendant’s motion for summary disposition on June 21, 2017. During that hearing, defendant argued that MLI did not forward on plaintiff’s application because of her disclosed credentials, which revealed the fact that at the time of her application she was not working at, nor had she recently worked at, a school district. Defendant noted that two of the applications submitted to it for consideration were from people in their 60s and at least one was from a Caucasian person; further, two were superintendents and two were assistant superintendents in that time frame. Defendant pointed out that there were important reasons why recent school experience was relevant. In the past 10 years, during which plaintiff had not been working for a school district, things had changed, such as “financing, MEAP, different governors, different funding from state, [and] different funding from the federal government.” Defendant also argued that MLI was not acting as defendant’s agent when it did not forward plaintiff’s application.

Plaintiff argued that MLI was clearly acting as defendant’s agent and knew her age from the date she graduated college, along with the fact that she told an MLI employee her age on the phone, and knew an employee of MLI personally.

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