Robert Sloat v. Hewlett-Packard Enter. Co.

18 F.4th 204
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedNovember 17, 2021
Docket20-6169
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 18 F.4th 204 (Robert Sloat v. Hewlett-Packard Enter. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Robert Sloat v. Hewlett-Packard Enter. Co., 18 F.4th 204 (6th Cir. 2021).

Opinion

RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION Pursuant to Sixth Circuit I.O.P. 32.1(b) File Name: 21a0264p.06

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT

┐ ROBERT SLOAT, │ Plaintiff-Appellant, │ > No. 20-6169 │ v. │ │ HEWLETT-PACKARD ENTERPRISE COMPANY, │ Defendant-Appellee. │ ┘

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Tennessee at Knoxville. No. 3:18-cv-00371—Curtis L. Collier, District Judge.

Argued: July 22, 2021

Decided and Filed: November 17, 2021

Before: BOGGS, CLAY, and KETHLEDGE, Circuit Judges. _________________

COUNSEL

ARGUED: D. Alexander Burkhalter, III, THE BURKHALTER LAW FIRM, P.C., Knoxville, Tennessee, for Appellant. Dustin M. Dow, BAKER & HOSTETLER LLP, Cleveland, Ohio, for Appellee. ON BRIEF: D. Alexander Burkhalter, III, David. A. Burkhalter, II, Zachary J. Burkhalter, THE BURKHALTER LAW FIRM, P.C., Knoxville, Tennessee, for Appellant. Dustin M. Dow, Martin T. Wymer, BAKER & HOSTETLER LLP, Cleveland, Ohio, for Appellee. _________________

OPINION _________________

KETHLEDGE, Circuit Judge. Robert Sloat sued his former employer, Hewlett-Packard Enterprise Company, asserting claims under the Age Discrimination in Employment Act (“ADEA”) and the Tennessee Human Rights Act. The district court granted summary judgment No. 20-6169 Sloat v. Hewlett-Packard Enter. Co. Page 2

to Hewlett-Packard, holding that Sloat lacked evidence supporting a prima facie case for his claims. We respectfully disagree and reverse.

I.

In describing the facts for purposes of summary judgment, we view the evidentiary record in the light most favorable to Sloat. See Upshaw v. Ford Motor Co., 576 F.3d 576, 584 (6th Cir. 2009).

Hewlett-Packard hired Sloat in 2011 to develop training programs for its salespeople. Sloat was 54 years old at the time. For the next five years his performance reviews were notably positive: his managers found that his work “exceeded expectations” in 2011, 2012, and 2015, and “significantly exceeded expectations” in 2013 and 2014. In each of those years, Sloat also received a 30% performance bonus. In late 2015, Sloat developed a highly regarded training program for sales managers worldwide, called “Ropes to the Ground” (“Ropes”). Sloat spent most of 2016 implementing Ropes in “the Americas” and in “Asia-Pacific Japan.” In June 2016 Hewlett-Packard promoted Sloat to the executive-level position of director, in which he reported to Marcel Keller. For that fiscal year (which ended in October), Keller found that Sloat’s performance met expectations.

Sloat’s fortunes began to change in October 2016, when he learned that his position would be transferred to a different group within Hewlett-Packard. Keller told Sloat, “This is a good thing for you. They want Ropes to the Ground.” Sloat was then age 60, which made him the oldest person reporting to his new manager, Steven Hagler. During their first phone call, Hagler said that he didn’t know what Sloat’s responsibilities would be or what would happen to Ropes. Shortly before the transfer took effect on November 1, Sloat attended a meeting in Dallas along with Hagler’s other direct reports. That meeting was the first time that Hagler and Sloat met in person. Hagler gave a PowerPoint presentation in which he showed Sloat as having no responsibilities. That made Sloat nervous, so when Hagler said he needed “someone to step up” to replace the director of his “analytics team,” Sloat volunteered for the role. At the end of the meeting, Hagler asked Sloat and Sandy Connor—who was the training director for Hagler’s group—to stay an extra day to discuss Ropes. Connor agreed to have Sloat and three of her No. 20-6169 Sloat v. Hewlett-Packard Enter. Co. Page 3

subordinates compare Ropes with her existing training program. After that evaluation, the group agreed that Ropes was the superior program, but Connor changed its name to “License to Lead.” Hagler put Connor in charge of the renamed program, though Sloat played a supporting role.

Hagler was cold and distant toward Sloat from the start. One month after Sloat joined Hagler’s group, Hagler told him that he would not receive a raise the coming year and that Sloat’s annual performance bonus would be only 8%. Hagler explained that he rewarded his “top performers” and “everyone else got what was left.” Sloat responded that he had been “an outstanding performer for the year before”; Hagler said, “Not for me.”

A month later, in January 2017, Hagler met with his direct reports in Houston. At one point during the meeting, Hagler’s chief of staff, Christie Hayden, referred to Sloat as “Ron”; when Sloat objected (his name is Robert), Hayden said, “How about if we call you Uncle Ron.” Everyone but Sloat laughed; and rather than intervene, Hagler joined the others in referring to Sloat as “Uncle Ron” during the meeting. Hagler also addressed Sloat (in Sloat’s view sarcastically) as “young man” several times during the meeting. When Sloat’s turn came to do a presentation, he initially “fumbl[ed]” with the laptop computer; Hagler stepped forward and said, “You’ve got old skills. You need vice president support on this”—and put the laptop into presentation mode himself.

Meanwhile, on at least ten occasions after the Houston meeting, Hagler asked Sloat, “When are you going to retire?” A month or so after the meeting, Sloat complained to Seema Iyer, Hewlett-Packard’s Vice President of Human Resources, that Hagler was discriminating against him based on his age and was asking him when he would retire. Iyer told Sloat to speak to Hagler about his concerns, which Sloat promptly did. That conversation went badly; Hagler was furious, “screaming” that “he hadn’t done anything.” Soon afterward, Hagler reassigned Sloat’s remaining responsibilities for Ropes to Connor, and spoke to Sloat by phone (Sloat worked remotely) only seven times in four months. Around that time—in March 2017—Hagler asked Sloat, “Why are you still here?” That same month, Hagler emailed Iyer and asked that she reassign Sloat to a different position within Hewlett-Packard so that Sloat would no longer report to him. That effort failed after Iyer told the in-house recruiter assigned to the issue that Sloat might present a “chemistry” problem for the first position the recruiter suggested. No. 20-6169 Sloat v. Hewlett-Packard Enter. Co. Page 4

In June 2017, Hagler recommended to Hewlett-Packard’s human-resources team that the company fire Sloat in a one-person work-force reduction, on the ground that Sloat’s job was redundant with Connor’s. In response, Iyer emailed Barbara Randell (an HR subordinate), flagging that “[t]here is a WFR [i.e., workforce reduction] situation in Steven Hagler’s team that needs some legal attention” and asking Randell to talk with Hagler about “the rationale and any risks associated with” firing Sloat. Hagler decided not to fire Sloat at that time—but only after Randell told him to wait until the company proceeded with a “significant downsizing” that was pending then.

The next month, in Sloat’s mid-year performance review, Hagler gave Sloat a performance rating of “Stalled”—the second-worst rating a Hewlett-Packard employee can receive. When Hagler met with Sloat about it, Sloat told him that the poor rating was motivated by age discrimination and that he thought Hagler was retaliating against him for Sloat’s complaint about age discrimination a few months before. Hagler told Sloat to talk to Randell about it, which Sloat promptly did; Randell then told Sloat to talk to Hagler about it and otherwise did nothing to investigate the allegation.

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18 F.4th 204, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robert-sloat-v-hewlett-packard-enter-co-ca6-2021.