Paul Bischoff v. Denis McDonough

CourtDistrict Court, M.D. Florida
DecidedMarch 18, 2026
Docket3:23-cv-01303
StatusUnknown

This text of Paul Bischoff v. Denis McDonough (Paul Bischoff v. Denis McDonough) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, M.D. Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Paul Bischoff v. Denis McDonough, (M.D. Fla. 2026).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT MIDDLE DISTRICT OF FLORIDA JACKSONVILLE DIVISION

PAUL BISCHOFF,

Plaintiff,

v. Case No.: 3:23-cv-1303-WWB-MCR

DENIS MCDONOUGH,

Defendant. / ORDER THIS CAUSE is before the Court on Defendant’s Motion for Summary Judgment (Doc. 26), Plaintiff’s Response (Doc. 33), Defendant’s Reply (Doc. 34), and Plaintiff’s Surreply (Doc. 44). For the reasons set forth below, Defendant’s Motion will be granted. I. BACKGROUND Plaintiff Paul Bischoff (“Bischoff”), now a 64-year-old veteran, began working as a boiler operator in 1995. (Doc. 30-7 at 2). In 2015, he transferred to the Veteran Affairs Hospital in Lake City, Florida, to work as a Utility Systems Repair Operator (“USRO”). (Id.). Like in his previous role, Bischoff maintained boiler systems, the fire system, and the medical air. (Id.; Doc. 30-8 at 27:3–10, 29:11–12). Bischoff was known as a good worker. (E.g., Doc. 30-9 at 59:23–24 (“I call [Bischoff] because he could fix anything.”); see also Doc. 30-10 at 10:9–11:8). Initially, when Bischoff began at the Hospital, the supervisor position was periodically vacant. (Doc. 30-8 at 34:2–19, 35:4–9). However, in 2021, Robert Farmer became Maintenance Operations Supervisor. (Doc. 30-7 at 3). Conflict then erupted between Farmer and the USROs he was tasked with “squar[ing] away.” (Doc. 30-9 at 12:5; see also, e.g., Doc. 30-10 at 12:19–23). At age 60, Bischoff was then the oldest USRO among himself, Monroe Jackson (59), Kent Hassebroek (58) and Tim Moore (54). (Doc. 30-7 at 3–4; Doc. 30-8 at 138:3–7). In December 2021, Jackson was detailed from the boiler plant to Environmental Management Services (“EMS”), where he performed housekeeping duties. (Doc. 30-7 at

3; Doc. 30-8 at 53:11–18; Doc. 30-15 at 12:1–13). According to testimony, this occurred after Jackson “caught” Farmer breaking a feed pump that Jackson and another USRO were attempting to repair, and “[Farmer] tried to blame [Jackson and his co-worker] for [it].” (Doc. 30-9 at 16:18–19). Farmer then hired two younger USROs—Mitch Wilson (55) and Ricky Bell (55). (Doc. 30-7 at 3–4; Doc. 30-8 at 53:14–20, 138:5–7). After Jackson’s detail, Farmer and Bischoff’s relationship was contentious; Bischoff and other USROs testified that Farmer targeted Bischoff. (Doc. 30-8 at 78:2–5; Doc. 30-9 at 25:20–22; Doc. 30-11 at 24:14–25). On some occasions, Farmer would instruct Bischoff to complete tasks but then discipline Bischoff for doing so. For example, Bischoff and Wilson were told to dispose of parts they did not use. (Doc. 30-7 at 4; Doc.

30-11 at 23:15–19). In doing so, they disposed of an old calibration tool with missing parts, and Farmer appeared to blame the disposal on Bischoff. (Doc. 30-11 at 23:17– 25). Though Wilson accepted blame for the incident, Bischoff was written up for a failure to follow instructions. (Doc. 30-1 at 2; Doc. 30-7 at 4–5; Doc. 30-11 at 23:24–24:8). On other occasions, Bischoff was assigned unsafe tasks, such as moving 400 to 500-pound equipment by himself or improperly applying anti-seize lubricant to valves twenty feet in the air. (Doc. 30-9 at 32:22–33:22, 51:2–52:9; Doc. 30-18 at 7–8, 59). Sometimes Bischoff was reported for refusing to complete the tasks. (Doc. 30-1 at 2).1 Farmer also assigned Bischoff tasks that were impossible to complete, such as locating monthly boiler reports that, according to testimony, did not exist because Farmer never scheduled the testing. (Doc. 30-8 at 79:12–81:13; Doc. 30-9 at 54:6–7; Doc. 30-16 at 7–

9, 13). Farmer asked Bischoff to explain why he could not locate the reports. (Doc. 30- 16 at 9, 11). It appears that Bischoff, rather than explaining that the reports did not exist, simply told Farmer that he had already looked and refused to look any further. (Id. at 2– 9; Doc. 30:8 at 80:24–81:6). In any event, Bischoff was written up for failing to follow instructions. (Doc. 30-1 at 2; Doc. 30-7 at 6–7). On May 22, 2022, Bischoff received a “fully successful” performance evaluation, in contrast to his prior “outstanding” ratings. (Doc. 30-7 at 6; Doc. 30-28 at 6, 14, 22). Bischoff claims this made him “ineligible for the annual bonus which could amount to $4,000” and “limit[ed him] to a $500 bonus.” (Doc. 30-7 at 6).2 Around July 2022, Bischoff complained to Farmer’s supervisor, Danny Dwyer, that Farmer was “trying to force [him]

out” based on his age. (Doc. 30-8 at 71:12–17). Dwyer disputes Bischoff contacting him. (Doc. 30-13 at 23:25–24:19). In September 2022, Bischoff contacted an EEO counselor to report age discrimination. (Doc. 30-7 at 11; Doc. 36-2 at 3). Other incidents continued. (E.g., Doc. 30-9 at 57:25–58:3 (“[Farmer] would come down to the boiler plant and he

1 In his Response, Bischoff states that his refusal to move the heavy equipment was written up as an act of “insubordination.” (Doc. 33 at 3). However, the Court cannot locate this incident in the exhibit that Bischoff cites. (See Doc. 30-1). 2 Bischoff has not put forth evidence demonstrating that an “outstanding” employee receives a $4,000 bonus. Defendant contests the bonus’s existence as well as its award to Bischoff. (Doc. 26 at 17–18). Rather, Defendant claims that Bischoff received a cash award no greater than $3,500, which itself was awarded only once. (Id.; see also Doc. 28-4 at 2). would take something . . . up to the chiller plant. And then he will tell [Bischoff] to look for it.”)). On October 11, 2022, Bischoff was detailed to EMS pending a disciplinary investigation into him for “alleged incidents of possible intentional damage of VA

equipment, harassment in the workplace, [and] failure to follow instructions.” (Doc 30-2 at 2; see also Doc. 30-8 at 88:15–90:1; Doc. 30-14 at 29:22–30:8, 80:10–83:24). According to testimony, Dwyer and his superiors made the decision to detail Bischoff. (Doc. 30-13 at 33:4–8; Doc. 30-14 at 30:1–4). The pieces of equipment in question were, primarily, two emergency sump pumps, which “ha[d] always been” a “huge problem” at the plant, and also an LED light that Bischoff had painted without permission.3 (Doc. 30- 10 at 19:25–20:1; see also Doc. 30-11 at 18:7–12; Doc. 30-14 at 30:5–10, 44:2–5). According to Farmer, the pumps had been taken out of the water on Bischoff’s shift, which could have destroyed their motors, caused flooding, and shut down the entire plant. (Doc. 30-14 at 81:8–83:9). One USRO called this “ridiculous” and testified that the pumps had

to be pulled out of the water to be de-clogged. (Doc. 30-9 at 66:20–67:19). Another testified that the plant went “through pumps left and right” because they would frequently clog and draw too much electricity and “just wouldn’t . . . work at all.” (Doc. 30-11 at 18:11–12, 27:21–22; see also id. at 15:20–16:3, 18:7–10). Conversely, Dwyer and Farmer testified that the pumps’ electrical problems had been remedied by the time of the

3 As for the LED light, Bischoff testified that Farmer ratified his paint job after the fact. (Doc. 30-8 at 85:1–12). He claimed the same in an e-mail sent to Farmer, also after the fact, though Farmer quickly denied the claim. (Doc. 30-6 at 8–9). Nonetheless, it is uncontested that Bischoff painted the light without first obtaining permission. incident, though Farmer admits the pumps were inadequate. (Doc. 30-13 at 26:25–27:4; Doc. 30-14 at 56:18–57:15, 66:8–13). Bischoff remained on detail for two years while Dwyer conducted the investigation. (Doc. 30-8 at 90:2–6; Doc. 30-13 at 40:4–9). During that time, he requested a transfer to

the Gainesville VA Boiler Plant, but Dwyer informed him that he could not be transferred while his investigation was underway. (Doc. 30-8 at 102:14–103:8; Doc. 30-18 at 56– 57). Meanwhile, Bischoff was unable to work overtime and primarily assembled furniture. (Doc. 30-7 at 12; Doc. 30-8 at 113:17–24).

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Paul Bischoff v. Denis McDonough, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/paul-bischoff-v-denis-mcdonough-flmd-2026.