Robertson v. All American Quality Foods, Inc.

246 F. Supp. 3d 1365, 2017 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 55646
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Georgia
DecidedMarch 31, 2017
DocketCIVIL ACTION NO. 1:15-CV-1629-AT
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 246 F. Supp. 3d 1365 (Robertson v. All American Quality Foods, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Robertson v. All American Quality Foods, Inc., 246 F. Supp. 3d 1365, 2017 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 55646 (N.D. Ga. 2017).

Opinion

ORDER

Amy Totenberg, United States District Judge

I. OVERVIEW1

This employment discrimination case is before the Court on the Magistrate Judge’s Final Report and Recommendation (“R & R”) [Doc. 57]. The Magistrate Judge’s R & R recommends that Defendant’s Motion for Summary Judgment (Doc. 43) be granted in full. Plaintiffs have filed Objections to the R & R (Doc. 64), [1368]*1368and Defendant has filed a Response to the Objections (Doe. 66). As discussed below, the Court ADOPTS IN PART the Magistrate Judge’s R & R [Doc. 57] and GRANTS IN PART AND DENIES IN PART Defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment [Doc. 43].

, Plaintiffs Yolanda Robertson and Marque Hart are African-American former employees at a Food Depot grocery store located in Stone Mountain, Georgia. Approximately fifteen employees, including Plaintiffs, worked in the store’s, meat department. (Hart Depo., Doc. 43-6 at 82.) Defendant is the owner of the Food Depot grocery chain. Hart, a meat cutter, worked in the same store as Robertson, a meat wrapper.

Within the span of a few months in 2014, Robertson was disciplined and later fired. Hart was also fired around the same time in 2014. Defendant allegedly based these decisions on Robertson’s violation of various company rules and Hart’s insubordinate conduct. Plaintiffs claim that these disciplinary and firing decisions were racially discriminatory and retaliatory, and each subsequently brought claims of race discrimination and retaliation under 42 U.S.C. § 2000e et seq. (“Title VII”) and 42 U.S.C. § 1981 (“Section 1981”) against Defendant. Defendant moved for summary judgment on all of their claims.

The initial incidents that led to both Plaintiffs’ disciplinary actions occurred on May 10, 2014. The Magistrate Judge summarizes the testimony of the events involving Robertson that day in the R & R as follows:

On May 10, 2014, Ms. Robertson was exiting her work area in the meat department to go to the restroom, and she pulled her cell phone out of her pocket to read a text message. (Robertson Dep. at 25-27). As she was looking at her phone, the store manager, Rick Davis, approached her and told her that she was not supposed to be on her phone and to put her cell phone away. Ms. Robertson responded that she was not on her cell phone, that she was checking a text. Mr. Davis then attempted to explain the cell phone rules to Ms. Robertson by saying, “Hey, let me tell you the phone rules,” but Ms. Robertson just continued to walk away from Mr. Davis. Mr. Davis then told her to “come here” and tried to get her attention by calling, “Hey, hey,” to which Ms. Robertson responded, “My name is not ‘hey,’ it’s Yolanda. I don’t address you as [hey], I address you as Mr. Rick.” (Id at 26-27). Ms. Robertson put her cell phone back in her coat pocket, and instead of proceeding to the restroom, she walked back to her work station in the meat department. Because Mr. Davis believed that Ms. Robertson was violating the cell phone use policy and had “flat out refused to do what [he] asked her to do,” Mr. Davis followed her back to the meat department and told her, ‘Your black ass is going home today.” Instead of leaving, Ms. Robertson just resumed working at her wrap machine. (Doc. 43-12, Deposition of Rick Davis [“Davis Dep.”] at 33-34; Doc. 43-13 at 30; Robertson Dep. at 26-27). Mr. Davis then asked, “Where’s Tony,” referring to the meat department manager, Tony Walker. Mr. Davis got on the intercom and told Mr. Walker to come to the back of the store. When Mr. Walker arrived, Mr. Davis told him, “This little bitch is going home today. She’s getting suspended for three days.” (Robertson Dep. at 27). After speaking with Mr. Davis, Mr. Walker told Ms. Robertson to go [1369]*1369home for the day. (Id. at 30). When Ms. Robertson went to the time clock to punch out, she saw that she was already clocked out. (Id.).
After exiting the building, Ms. Robertson sat in her car and called Tim Collins, the meat department supervisor (who was out of the store that day), to tell him what had happened. (Robertson Dep. at 31-32). She told Mr. Collins that on her way to the bathroom, she had pulled out her phone to read a text, and Mr. Davis had told her she could not be on the phone, so she put it back in her pocket. Mr. Collins reminded Ms. Robertson that Defendant has a policy that employees cannot be on their phone. Ms. Robertson explained, “I wasn’t on my phone, I was reading a text.” (Id. at 32). Mr. Collins told her that he had already spoken to Mr. Davis about the incident, and that she should clock back in until Mr. Collins arrived to the store so he could get both sides of the story. Mr. Collins instructed Ms. Robertson to draft a written statement about the incident for him to review. (Collins Dep. at 65-66).
When Ms. Robertson re-entered the store and tried to return to her work station, Rick Davis told the meat department manager, Tony Walker, that Ms. Robertson needed to go home and that she was suspended for three days. At some point, Mr. Davis threatened to call the police if she did not leave the building. (Robertson Dep. at 29-30). Mr. Walker then told Ms. Robertson to go home for the day. Ms. Robertson exited the building, went back to her car, and called the area manager, Allen Buchanan, on her cell phone. (Id. at 31-33). In describing the incident to Mr. Buchanan, Ms. Robertson told him that the store manager, Rick Davis, was unprofessional when he told her that her “black ass was going home today,” and she thought his conduct amounted to discrimination. (Id. at 33). Ms. Robertson told Mr. Buchanan that Mr. Davis had also announced in front of her entire department that “this little bitch is going home today,” which made her feel “degraded.” (Id.). She explained that she had not said anything back to Davis and had just kept walking to her work station. She asked why she was being punished and told to go home. Mr. Buchanan replied that Tim Collins was on his way to the store to speak with her and get some statements from employees, and that Mr. Collins would handle it. Ms. Robertson responded, “Okay.” (Id. at 33-34).
Ms. Robertson testified that after Mr. Collins arrived at the store, she re-entered the store to speak with him. (Robertson Dep. at 33-36). In lieu of providing a written statement to Tim Collins as he had requested, Ms. Robertson gave him a written statement that Gail Ware, a coworker in the meat department, had prepared with Ms. Robertson’s verbal assistance. (Id.; Doc. 43-8 at 102). The statement was addressed to Tim Collins from “The Meat Department Employees,” and it stated the following:
On May 10, 2014 inside the meat department, the Store Manager Rick Davis called Ms. Yolanda Robinson [sic] a bitch. His statement was as followed [sic]. This little bitch is going home today. You are suspended for (3) days. This was very unprofessional on Mr. Rick Davis, the store manager. These are the following employees that heard this statement.
(Doc. 43-8 at 102). The statement was signed by Gail Ware, Marque Hart (the [1370]*1370other plaintiff in this case), and three other meat department employees. (Id.). Ms.

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246 F. Supp. 3d 1365, 2017 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 55646, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robertson-v-all-american-quality-foods-inc-gand-2017.