Rood v. Coastal Lumber Co.

12 Fla. Supp. 2d 169
CourtState of Florida Division of Administrative Hearings
DecidedFebruary 7, 1985
DocketCase No. 84-1961
StatusPublished

This text of 12 Fla. Supp. 2d 169 (Rood v. Coastal Lumber Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering State of Florida Division of Administrative Hearings primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rood v. Coastal Lumber Co., 12 Fla. Supp. 2d 169 (Fla. Super. Ct. 1985).

Opinion

OPINION

RECOMMENDED ORDER

DIANE K. KIESLING, Hearing Officer.

Pursuant to notice, the Division of Administrative Hearings, by its duly designated Hearing Officer, Diane K. Kiesling, held a formal hearing in this case on November 8, 1984, in Tallahassee, Florida.

This issue is whether Coastal Lumber Company discriminated against William D. Rood, Jr. on account of his race in its failure to [170]*170promote him to plant superintendent and in its subsequent termination of employment.

The Petitioner, William D. Rood, Jr., (hereinafter Rood) presented the testimony of five witnesses: William D. Rood, Jr., David Carter, Jr., Dave Brown, Donald L. Hilburn and Lacy Stacker. Petitioner also introduced five exhibits which were admitted into evidence. The Respondent, Coastal Lumber Company (hereinafter Coastal) presented two witnesses, Gary Phillips and Leon L. Pinner, Jr., together with four exhibits. One of the exhibits was the deposition testimony of David D. Carter. The parties filed proposed findings of fact and conclusions of law as permitted by law. All proposed findings of fact and conclusions of law have been considered. To the extent that the proposed findings and conclusions submitted are in accordance with the Findings, Conclusions, and view submitted herein, they have been accepted and adopted in substance. Those findings not adopted are considered to be subordinate, cumulative, immaterial, unnecessary, or not supported by the credible evidence.1

FINDINGS OF FACT

1. Rood is a black person.

2. Rood was employed by Coastal Lumber Company on June 22, 1981, as a glue line superintendent, where he supervised three shifts and three shift supervisors. In January, 1982, Rood was promoted to Dry End Superintendent, responsible for seven supervisors and three shifts.

3. Coastal Lumber Company operates a plywood production plant in Hinson, Florida. The plant has been in operation only since 1981 and produces plywood panels for use in the construction industry.

Plywood production is divided into several stages. The first stage is referred to as the Green End and involves stripping green logs straight from the forest by use of an industrial lathe. The lathe strips the logs into thin veneer sheets approximately 50 inches by 101 inches in size.

The veneer sheets are then transported to a huge oven where the sheets are dried out. Once the green veneer has had most of the water content removed in the oven, the sheets are placed on a conveyer belt [171]*171(the lay-up line). Glue is applied and the veneer sheets are placed one on top of the other like a sandwich to obtain the desired thickness. The multi-layer sheets are then pressed together in a large hydraulic press to cure the glue and bond the veneer sheets together to form a plywood panel.

After pressing, the rough-edged panels are squared off into standard size panels, sorted, graded and shipped. The production line beginning with the drying out process in the ovens through glueing and pressing process is referred to as the Dry End. The finishing and shipping department is a part of the Dry End in that the finished product has been dried in the oven, but is more typically referred to as a separate department.

4. David Carter was hired by Coastal Lumber as the plywood production manager in February 1982. He had previously been employed by the Union Camp Corporation as a plant manager and has twenty-five years of experience in the plywood industry.

Carter was hired because Coastal Lumber was in dire financial straits. The company had lost a lot of money in its first year of operation and was in danger of closing down. Production was down, costs were out of control and the plant was lacking in leadership.

5. When he arrived at Coastal Lumber, Carter found the plant organized in a departmental superintendent system. Warren Thornton, a black man, was the Green End superintendent. Rood was the Dry End superintendent. John Asbell, a white man, was the Finishing and Shipping superintendent. Under the system, the three superintendents were of equal authority and were responsible for scheduling and coordinating production between their departments. Carter had worked before in plants which used this departmental superintendent system but based on his many years of experience preferred a system utilizing a single plant superintendent who is responsible for scheduling production throughout the plant.

6. In order to increase production and turn the plant around, Carter began making changes. First, he fired John Asbell because Asbell was unable to improve the finishing and shipping department. He then transferred Mike Leonard, a black employee, from the glue line to the finishing and shipping department because Leonard had some prior experience in the area. Rood, who had previously supervised Leonard on the glue line, was required to assume superintendent responsibilities for the finishing and shipping department in addition to his responsibilities as dry end superintendent. Both of these personnel moves were on a trial basis.

[172]*1727. Although some improvement occurred in the finishing and shipping department under Rood’s supervision, the improvement was not satisfactory in light of the serious financial condition of the company. Production had not improved sufficiently, housekeeping and maintenance was not up to par and the manufacture of specialty items was requiring too much personal involvement by Carter due to Rood’s inexperience.

8. Having exhausted internal efforts at increasing production in the finishing and shipping department, Carter hired Leon Pinner from outside the company as the finishing and shipping supervisor. Pinner had over one and one-half years experience in the finishing and shipping department with International Paper Company and had been directly involved in the production of speciality items. He had also worked as assistant plant superintendent, plant superintendent and plant manager while employed with Georgia Pacific.

9. For several weeks Pinner worked under Rood’s supervision but Carter relieved Rood of any supervisory responsibilities in the finishing and shipping department shortly after Pinner’s arrival. Within four weeks or so after Pinner’s arrival, the finishing and shipping department was up to production, housekeeping was in order and Carter was tremendously impressed with Pinner’s performance.

10. Shortly thereafter Carter, along with his immediate boss — J.T. Woods, elected to switch to a plant superintendent organization scheme for the plywood plant. This reorganization resulted in the elimination of the three department superintendent positions, although as a practical matter two of the positions were vacant at of the time of reorganization.

11. Woods and Carter considered three candidates for the position of plant superintendent — Warren Thornton, Bill Rood and Leon Pinner. There was no advertisement or announcement that Coastal was seeking a plant superintendent. Based on Pinner’s superior performance in straightening out the finishing and shipping department, Pinner’s experience in the industry and Rood’s inability to straighten out the finishing and shipping department, Pinner was promoted to the positon of plant superintendent.

12. Rood completed 3 Vi years of college credits. He was first hired in the plywood industry in 1966.

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12 Fla. Supp. 2d 169, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rood-v-coastal-lumber-co-fladivadminhrg-1985.