Pickney v. Diamond Offshore Drilling, Inc.

CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Texas
DecidedMarch 25, 2022
Docket4:18-cv-04545
StatusUnknown

This text of Pickney v. Diamond Offshore Drilling, Inc. (Pickney v. Diamond Offshore Drilling, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pickney v. Diamond Offshore Drilling, Inc., (S.D. Tex. 2022).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT March 25, 2022 FOR THE SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF TEXAS HOUSTON DIVISION Nathan Ochsner, Clerk RAYMOND PICKNEY and § DAVID FREZEL, § § Plaintiffs, § § v. § CIVIL ACTION NO. H-18-4545 § DIAMOND OFFSHORE SERVICES § LIMITED, § § Defendant. § MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER Plaintiffs, Raymond Pickney (“Pickney”) and David Frezel (“Frezel), bring this action against defendant, Diamond Offshore Services Limited (“DOSL”), for engaging in employment discrimination in violation of 42 U.S.C. § 1981, and Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, as amended, 42 U.S.C. § 2000 et seq. (“Title VII”). Pending before the court are Defendant [DOSL]’s Final Trial Plan & Objection to Plaintiffs’ Initial Trial Plan (Docket Entry No. 192); Plaintiffs’ Final Trial Plan; Objections to [DOSL]’s Final Trial Plan; and Response to [DOSL]’s Objections to Plaintiffs’ Initial Trial Plan (Docket Entry No. 193); and Plaintiffs’ Objections to Defendant’s Second Amended Trial Exhibit List (Docket Entry No. 196). Also pending before the court is DOSL’s request to exclude Plaintiffs’ statistical evidence asserted in Defendant’s Motion in Limine (Docket Entry No. 161),1 which the 1Defendant’s Memorandum in Support of Its Motion in Limine, Docket Entry No. 161-1, pp. 17-21 ¶ XIII. Page numbers for docket (continued...) court denied at Docket Call on October 8, 2021, stating that “I’ll rule at trial after I determine what predicate has been laid to support the testimony.”2 At a previous Docket Call held on June 11, 2021, the court denied Defendant’s Motion to Exclude Report and Testimony of Plaintiff’s Proposed Expert, N. Shirlene Pearson, Ph.D., stating I’ve read the motion, the response, and the reply. I have some observations and then I’m going to rule. My normal practice is to rule on motions to exclude or to strike expert testimony during the trial because experts frequently modify their opinions. And at trial, the party offering the expert may often establish a more extensive predicate for the expert’s testimony. Moreover, the context in which the testimony is offered is often necessary for the Court to understand and rule effectively on the issues. However, in this case, because it looks like the expert’s testimony was basically the primary evidence to support the plaintiff’s case, I carefully reviewed the testimony under the prevailing Daubert standards. It is the Court’s preliminary determination that Dr. Pearson is certainly qualified. Her testimony would be relevant, assuming that the facts stated by plaintiffs are the correct facts; i.e., that there was one reduction in force covering a number of years. But in order for the Court to determine what the correct facts are, I have to hear evidence to determine whether the factual predicate for the expert’s testimony are correct or not. In other words, in order to determine whether the expert’s opinions are reliable, I need to resolve fact issues that can only be resolved at trial. 1(...continued) entries in the record refer to the pagination inserted at the top of the page by the court’s electronic filing system. 2Transcript of October 8, 2021, Docket Call, Docket Entry No. 181, pp. 4:10-12. So, I’m going to deny the motion to strike the report and testimony of Dr. Pearson. I am somewhat skeptical about whether there were one or more than one reductions in force. But we’ll leave that for trial.3 This Memorandum Opinion and Order is intended to further address the admissibility of Dr. Pearson’s report and testimony, and other issues of law and evidence raised in the parties’ pretrial filings that will necessarily impact the amount of time that the court, the parties, and the witnesses will need for trial.4 Other issues to be addressed include: (1) whether Plaintiff Pickney exhausted administrative remedies with respect to his Title VII disparate impact claim; (2) evidentiary matters pertaining to Plaintiffs’ disparate treatment claims; and (3) a timing order for trial.5

3Transcript of June 11, 2021, Docket Call, Docket Entry No. 174, pp. 3:5-4:13. 4See Defendant Diamond Offshore Services Limited’s Final Trial Plan & Objection to Plaintiffs’ Initial Trial Plan, Docket Entry No. 192, p. 3 (“As stated in Diamond’s Initial Trial Plan (Document No. 187) and further explained below, Diamond has two different time estimates at this stage — one estimate total 1275 minutes (21.25 hours), and the second estimate total 2140 minutes (35.6 hours). These different estimates derive, in large part, from the open question of whether Plaintiffs’ ‘single reduction-in-force theory’ will be permitted at trial. . . . If that theory — which Diamond denies — were to be permitted, Diamond’s total estimate of 2140 minutes (35.6 hours) applies; otherwise, Diamond’s total estimate of 1275 minutes (21.25 hours) applies.”). 5Joint Pre-Trial Order, Docket Entry No. 162, pp. 9-10. -3- Plaintiffs, Pickney and Frezel — both of whom are African- American — were employed by DOSL as Safety Department Representatives (“SDRs”). DOSL employed Pickney as a SDR from May 4, 1996, until May 6, 2016; and employed Frezel as a SDR from May 14, 2012, until August 12, 2015. Plaintiffs contend that DOSL violated their rights under 42 U.S.C. § 1981 by discharging them because of their race — African-American — while retaining less tenured, less experienced, and lower-rated white SDRs as part of a single, continuing reduction-in-force (“RIF”) that lasted for four years from 2014 through 2017. Pickney also contends that DOSL violated his rights under Title VII by discharging him as a result of a neutral policy or practice that had a discriminatory impact on other African-American SDRs, and that DOSL violated his rights under 42 U.S.C. § 1981 and Title VII by failing to rehire him in retaliation for filing a complaint with the United States Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (“EEOC”), and for filing this lawsuit. Plaintiffs contend that DOSL’s racially biased actions have caused them substantial economic and non-economic damages. DOSL denies that it discriminated against Plaintiffs because of their race in violation of either § 1981 or Title VII, and denies that it retaliated against Pickney for filing an EEOC charge or this lawsuit. DOSL contends that the decline in oil prices

6The factual background is based on the Statement of the Case in the Joint Pre-Trial Order, Docket Entry No. 162, pp. 2-4; Defendant’s Memorandum of Law, Docket Entry No. 166; and Plaintiffs’ Trial Memorandum, Docket Entry No. 167. economic downturn in the oil industry, which caused a downturn in its business and a reduction in the number of offshore oil rigs in operation. DOSL contends that the reduction in the number of

offshore oil rigs in operation necessitated multiple reductions in offshore personnel over a six-year period, and that it discharged Frezel and Pickney in separate RIFs that occurred in in 2015 and 2016, respectively. DOSL contends that its RIFs were not based on race, and that many white and other non-African American SDRs were affected, including the white SDR who was assigned to the same rig as Pickney when his employment ended in May of 2016. DOSL contends that the economy-driven RIFs during which Plaintiffs were discharged are legitimate, nondiscriminatory reasons for these employment actions, and that consequently Plaintiffs are not entitled to any of the relief they are seeking in this lawsuit. DOSL contends that Pickney’s disparate impact claim is not actionable because he failed to exhaust his administrative remedies for this claim.

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Bluebook (online)
Pickney v. Diamond Offshore Drilling, Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pickney-v-diamond-offshore-drilling-inc-txsd-2022.