PICARDI v. PULMONARY CONSULTANTS, INC.

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 21, 2025
Docket2:24-cv-01440
StatusUnknown

This text of PICARDI v. PULMONARY CONSULTANTS, INC. (PICARDI v. PULMONARY CONSULTANTS, INC.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
PICARDI v. PULMONARY CONSULTANTS, INC., (E.D. Pa. 2025).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA

MARINELLA PICARDI : CIVIL ACTION : v. : : PULMONARY CONSULTANTS, INC. : NO. 24-1440

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER

ELIZABETH T. HEY, U.S.M.J. May 21, 2025

Defendant, Pulmonary Consultants, Inc., seeks summary judgment in this age and sex discrimination case brought by Plaintiff, Marinella Picardi. Because I find that there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact and that Defendant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law, I will grant the motion and enter judgment for Defendant and against Plaintiff. I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND1 Plaintiff worked for Defendant as Practice Administrator from February 7 to June 27, 2022, and was sixty-six years of age throughout her period of employment. See Complaint (Doc. 1) ¶¶ 10-11; Deposition of Marinella Picardi, attached to response at Exh. A (Doc. 30-1) (“Pl. Dep.”), at 6-7, 23.2 Plaintiff was hired by Gary D. Wendell,

1The facts presented are either not disputed or taken in the light most favorable to Plaintiff as the non-moving party. Except for the deposition transcripts, which can be found at Docs. 30-1 and 30-2, pinpoint citations will be to the court’s ECF pagination. 2Plaintiff was born on July 20, 1955. Pl. Dep. at 6. Therefore, Defendant’s assertion that Plaintiff was sixty-eight years of age throughout the relevant period, see Def.’s Statement of Undisputed Facts (“SUF”) ¶ 2, is erroneous. Rather, Plaintiff was M.D., one of Defendant’s four physician-owners,3 and reported to him. Pl. Dep. at 10-11. Dr. Wendell had approached Plaintiff because Defendant’s practice manager was leaving, and Dr. Wendell was familiar with Plaintiff’s experience working at another medical

practice. Id. at 8-9; see also Wendell Dep. at 14-15 (he offered Plaintiff the position because he knew her in her capacity in charge of medical records at another facility, and she was helpful to him and friendly with Defendant’s former practice administrator). As Practice Administrator, Plaintiff played a managerial role. Wendell Dep. at 20. Her responsibilities included, among other things, supervising, training, and evaluating

office staff; setting the staffing schedule and approving paid time off and overtime; developing and implementing office policies and procedures; ensuring compliance with laws, regulations, ethical and customer service standards; liaising with doctors and nurses to identify potential office dysfunctions; overseeing financial operations such as billing, coding and payments to vendors; using required software for electronic medical record,

billing, scheduling, and payroll; submitting timesheets; maintaining medical and staff records; ensuring licenses, certificates, credentials, and malpractice insurance were up to date and renewed on time; and ordering medical and office supplies as needed. SUF ¶ 14; Pl. Resp. to SUF ¶ 14. Although Plaintiff understood that she was not a partner, she

sixty-eight years of age when she commenced this action. Plaintiff’s Response to Defendant’s Statement of Undisputed Facts (Doc. 30-4) (“Pl. Resp. to SUF”), ¶ 2. 3The other owners were Pierre Frederique, M.D., Asad Khan, M.D., and Wei Bin, M.D. (collectively with Dr. Wendell, the “Partners”). See Deposition of Dr. Wendell, attached to response at Exh. B (Doc. 30-2) (“Wendell Dep.”), at 8-9. expected to be involved in communicating with the Partners and was initially invited to the Partners’ meetings. Pl. Dep. at 11-12. Plaintiff was told that Defendant’s support staff reported to her, Pl. Dep. at 25, and

she proposed to the Partners that she could train the staff on how to use electronic systems, such as the digital electronic medical record systems (“DEMR”), because there were many functions that were not being utilized by Defendant, several staff members had no idea how to use the system, and it would be helpful to Defendant’s practice to modernize its recordkeeping. Id. at 25-28. Although she scheduled several virtual

trainings with the DEMR representative, Dr. Frederique would repeatedly pull the staff away to work on other things. Id. at 29-30, 38. Similarly, although her title, roles, duties, and responsibilities did not change during her period of employment, id. at 40, the execution of her duties changed “because they were regularly being rerouted and interrupted” by Dr. Frederique, who would remove Plaintiff’s directives to staff and

thereby create chaos. Id. at 40-41. Plaintiff described Dr. Frederique as “very intimidating” and “condescending” to the older female staff, Pl. Dep. at 41, and stated that he would regularly enter her office to ask her what she was working on, interrupting her work without apology. Id. at 43. Plaintiff also saw Dr. Frederique get very angry with a female nurse practitioner for not

staying beyond her contracted shift and demanded that Plaintiff fire her, but after speaking with the other Partners he backed down. Id. at 52-53. Plaintiff could not recall whether any employee or supervisor ever made any derogatory or inappropriate comment relating to Plaintiff’s sex or gender during her employment, Pl. Dep. at 91, but she heard women staff members referred to as “girls” and believed it was intended to make them “feel like they were insignificant” id. at 92, and she said to Dr. Wendell that they should be referred to as women. Id. at 132. Aside

from these remarks, Plaintiff perceived her sex discrimination claims in Dr. Frederique’s routinely frustrating her efforts to modernize and improve the practice, and targeting Plaintiff for micromanagement. Pl. Dep. at 30, 123; see also Pl. Resp. to SUF ¶ 22. When asked how she was harassed by Dr. Frederique, Plaintiff explained that he would walk into her office every day and expect immediate responses to everything -- the same

demanding treatment he gave to other older women in the office, but not to the younger women. Pl. Dep. at 96-97. The only explicit age-related comment directed to her that Plaintiff attributes to Defendant is that Dr. Wendell said to her during her recruitment, “I guess you're going to be -- you're about my age, so you're going to be re -- you're going to be leaving -- you're

going to be retiring soon.” Pl. Dep. at 85, 94-95. Plaintiff perceived that older employees were treated less favorably than younger employees. For example, the Partners resisted her efforts to train the older staff on a new computer system, with Dr. Wendell stating that the older staff members were “too old to learn anything” and that Plaintiff “should just give it up.” Id. at 66, 67. Plaintiff also learned that older workers

(not including her) were underpaid compared to younger employees, id. at 73, and she successfully recommended to the Partners that the older workers be given a pay increase to establish pay parity and improve the chances of recruiting new, qualified staff. Id. at 74-77. When asked how she was specifically treated differently because of her age, Plaintiff identified her exclusion from partner meetings (id. at 81, 83-84, 86) and the disrespectful treatment by Dr. Frederique (id. at 81-82).4 The conflict between Plaintiff and Dr. Frederique came to a head on June 27,

2022, and culminated in Plaintiff’s separation from employment. The exchanges began that morning when Plaintiff sent an email to the Partners in which she, in response to staff advising her of changes to billing practices, stated: “So, I’m really sorry to hear that you are continuing to exclude me from crucial conversations regarding office processes, staff and duties and running the risk of missed billing.” 6/27/22 email (11:19 a.m.),

attached to Response at Exh. C (Doc. 30-3 at 2) (“11:19 a.m. email”).

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PICARDI v. PULMONARY CONSULTANTS, INC., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/picardi-v-pulmonary-consultants-inc-paed-2025.