Pruett v. TE Connectivity Corporation

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Tennessee
DecidedJune 10, 2024
Docket4:22-cv-00056
StatusUnknown

This text of Pruett v. TE Connectivity Corporation (Pruett v. TE Connectivity Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pruett v. TE Connectivity Corporation, (E.D. Tenn. 2024).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT EASTERN DISTRICT OF TENNESSEE AT WINCHESTER

RAVEN PRUETT, ) ) Plaintiff, ) ) v. ) No.: 4:22-CV-56-KAC-SKL ) TE CONNECTIVITY CORP., ) ) Defendant. )

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER

This case is before the Court on (1) Plaintiff’s “Motion to Strike Certain Documents and Declaration Testimony” [Doc. 28] and (2) Defendant’s “Motion for Summary Judgment” [Doc. 24]. Because Plaintiff has not sufficiently identified any harmful discovery violation, the Court DENIES Plaintiff’s “Motion to Strike Certain Documents and Declaration Testimony” [Doc. 28]. And because there is no genuine dispute of material fact and Defendant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law, the Court GRANTS Defendant’s “Motion for Summary Judgment” [Doc. 24]. I. BACKGROUND1 A. Plaintiff’s Employment History With Defendant Plaintiff is a black woman who began working for Defendant as an “Assembly Operator II” and “Line Setup” on June 1, 2015 [Docs. 24-4 at 2-3; 30-4 at 30]. Gene Hendon supervised Plaintiff from June 1, 2015 to December 9, 2018 [Docs. 24-3 ¶ 2; 30-4 at 28]. Hendon reported to Mark Gilliland, the plant operations manager [See Doc. 30-6 at 12]. Gilliland made the decision to

1 Because Plaintiff is the nonmoving Party, the Court describes the facts in the light most favorable to her. Matsushita Elec. Indus. Co. v. Zenith Radio Corp., 475 U.S. 574, 587 (1986); Nat’l Satellite Sports, Inc. v. Eliadis, Inc., 253 F.3d 900, 907 (6th Cir. 2001). terminate Plaintiff on September 16, 2021 [Doc. 24-4 at 1]. Gilliland made that decision based in part on Plaintiff’s “past performance and behavioral issues” [Doc. 24-4 at 1]. In one 2017 incident, Plaintiff “had an emotional outburst and raised her voice during a conversation with management” [Id. at 1, 3]. In a separate “conversation related to

her pay” “[Plaintiff] became angry with [Gilliland], called [him] a liar, and raised her voice” [Id.]. Following this event, “Pruett was counseled by Gene Hendon that her communication style was not acceptable and could result in disciplinary action” [Id. at 1]. Gilliland was aware that Plaintiff received “multiple coachings” for this pattern of behavior [Id.]. Hendon recalled that he personally “coached her on her behaviors 5-6 times” [Doc. 24-3 ¶ 11]. Plaintiff was denied a promotion to “Assembly Operator III” in 2017 because of this pattern of behavior [See Doc. 24-4 at 3-4]. And she was notified that “such behavior could result in her termination” [Doc. 24-4 at 1]. Tammy Taylor replaced Hendon as Plaintiff’s immediate supervisor in 2018 [Docs. 24-3 ¶ 2; 30-4 at 29]. B. The July or August 2021 Incident In February 2021, Plaintiff asked to step back from her line setup duties and work only as an assembly operator [Doc. 30-4 at 30]. William Sloan, a white man, took over her duties [Id. at 54]. In either July or August 2021, an incident occurred when Sloan believed

Plaintiff boxed a “bad part” that he had set to the side [Id. at 55]. Plaintiff, using her years of experience in Sloan’s role, fixed the part and then went on break [Id.]. When Plaintiff returned from break, Sloan was “going ballistic” because “he couldn’t find the part” [Id.]. Sloan told Plaintiff “I know you’re messing with me” and “you are trying to set me up” [Id.]. Sloan used profanity—“words like the effing and stuff,” but he “didn’t call [Plaintiff] a name” [Id. at 60]. Sloan left to discuss the issue with Taylor, who supervised Sloan [Id. at 55; Doc. 30-4 at 30]. Sloan was upset and talking at a loud volume [Doc. 30-6 at 11]. Taylor calmed Sloan down and told him “this was not going to be tolerated” [Id.]. Taylor called Gilliland to report the incident [Id. at 12]. Gilliland instructed her to write Sloan up, but Taylor failed to do so because “shift change” “was very hectic” [Id.]. At some point after this incident, Sloan moved to being an operator, and Plaintiff resumed her line setup duties with a pay raise [Doc. 30-4 at 31-32]. Plaintiff believes Sloan was removed

from the assembly job because “he would show up to work whenever he felt like” [Id. at 78]. C. The September 15, 2021 Incident On September 15, 2021 another altercation between Plaintiff and Sloan occurred [Doc. 30-4 at 34]. While Plaintiff was “cutting up” at a station with two other employees, Sloan became convinced the three were “watch[ing]” and “laugh[ing] at” him [Doc. 24-6 at 1; 30-3 at 8]. Sloan left his workstation and told Plaintiff something like “if [Plaintiff] had something to effing say to him, then [she] just need[s] to say it” [Doc. 30-4 at 36]. Accounts of what Sloan said exactly vary somewhat in the record. One of the employees standing with Plaintiff recalls that he said “what the fuck are you staring at” [Doc. 30-3 at 9]. Plaintiff included an unattributed written statement with her response that claims he told Plaintiff to instead “shut her damn mouth”

[Doc. 30-7 at 1]. And Sloan told Theresa Balentine that he used the word “hell” [Doc. 30-1 at 16]. But by all accounts, Sloan approached Plaintiff and used inappropriate language. Plaintiff told Sloan no one was laughing at him, and Sloan returned to his station [Doc. 30-4 at 39]. Next, Plaintiff needed to talk to the water spider—an employee responsible for distributing production supplies—in the breakroom [Id.]. To get to the breakroom Plaintiff walked through the aisle behind Sloan’s machine. Plaintiff decided to sing and dance down the aisle as she passed Sloan because she is a “happy person” and wanted Sloan to know he could not “steal her joy” [Id. at 41].2 As Plaintiff danced past him, Sloan asked her “why [she] hated him so much” [Id]. Plaintiff told him “[they] were friends” and continued to the breakroom [Id.]. Plaintiff found Taylor, their supervisor, in the breakroom and told her about the confrontation with Sloan [Id. at 42]. Plaintiff walked with Taylor back out to the plant

floor [Id. at 45]. As Plaintiff and Taylor approached, Sloan and Plaintiff both began yelling, trying to tell their sides of the story [Id. at 47]. As they were shouting, Plaintiff recalls Sloan “balling up his fists,” and she could see “the veins popping in his neck” [Id.]. Taylor stepped in between the shouting employees and told Sloan to come with her to the office to discuss the incident [Id.]. Sloan disengaged promptly [Doc. 24-9 at 3]. In contrast, Plaintiff shouted at Sloan that he was a “bitch” and a “coward” and that he should not act this way “as a man” [Doc. 30-4 at 48-49].3 Taylor repeatedly told Plaintiff to stop and to calm down while Plaintiff shouted [Doc. 30-6 at 15-16]. Taylor eventually led Plaintiff and Sloan into separate offices [Doc. 30-4 at 49]. Because no human resources representative worked that shift, through the night and early morning, Plaintiff and Sloan did not speak with human resources until after the shift was

over [Id. at 61]. D. Plaintiff’s Termination Theresa Balentine, a human resources representative employed by Defendant, first called Sloan [Doc. 30-1 at 16]. Sloan admitted to using inappropriate language and apologized [Id.]. Sloan was suspended, and “accepted the response” [Doc. 24-5 at 3]. Balentine then called Plaintiff and asked for her side of the story [Doc. 30-1 at 15]. Plaintiff admitted to calling Sloan a “bitch,” but she refused to apologize [Doc. 30-4 at 68]. When Balentine

2 Sloan reported that Plaintiff came up behind him and began “twerking” to provoke him [Doc. 30-1 at 15]. 3 Here again there is some variation in the record about exactly what Plaintiff said, but Plaintiff agrees that she said at least these things to Sloan [Docs. 30-4 at 48-49, 54; 30-6 at 15].

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Pruett v. TE Connectivity Corporation, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pruett-v-te-connectivity-corporation-tned-2024.