Ryan D. Wilkins v. Union Pacific Railroad Company and Leonard Sherer

CourtDistrict Court, D. Nebraska
DecidedNovember 19, 2025
Docket8:22-cv-00239
StatusUnknown

This text of Ryan D. Wilkins v. Union Pacific Railroad Company and Leonard Sherer (Ryan D. Wilkins v. Union Pacific Railroad Company and Leonard Sherer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Nebraska primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ryan D. Wilkins v. Union Pacific Railroad Company and Leonard Sherer, (D. Neb. 2025).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF NEBRASKA

RYAN D. WILKINS,

Plaintiff, 8:22CV239

vs. MEMORANDUM AND ORDER

UNION PACIFIC RAILROAD COMPANY and LEONARD SHERER

Defendants.

This matter is before the Court on Defendant’s Statement of Objections to Magistrate Judges Order (Filing No. 172). Defendants are objecting to the Magistrate Judge’s Orders dated June 26, 2025 (Filing No. 160), as supplemented by the Magistrate Judge’s Order dated July 22, 2025 (Filing No. 171). The Orders were a result of a discovery dispute conference in this case (Filing No. 158). The Court will overrule the objections. PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND Plaintiff Ryan D. Wilkins brings this action against Defendants Union Pacific and Leonard Sherer, the Vice President of the Union Pacific Law Department, for whistleblower retaliation, constructive discharge, and other related adverse actions in violation of the Federal Railroad Safety Act (“FRSA”), 49 U.S.C. § 20109. (Filing No. 45 at 1.) Starting in October 2014, Wilkins worked as an attorney in Union Pacific’s Law Department. (Filing No. 45 at 2; Filing No. 48 at 7.) Wilkins alleges that until 2018, he was a “rising star” at Union Pacific: he received excellent performance ratings, held increased job responsibilities, earned several promotions, and was commended for “significant contributions and successes with [Union Pacific’s] FRSA Whistleblower Team.” (Filing No. 45 at 2.) In early 2017, Wilkins was allegedly chosen to succeed Kathy Hughes, Law Department leader of the FRSA Whistleblower Team, and Patricia Kiscoan, Senior Labor Counsel and Union Pacific’s lead attorney specializing in the Railway Labor Act. (Filing No. 45 at 3-4.) In early 2018, Wilkins helped implement Operating Instruction 35 (“OI 35”), an operational rule meant to prevent FRSA violations. (Filing No. 45 at 5-6; Filing No. 48 at 7.) The rule required the “Operating Department to obtain prior approval from the Law Department and Labor Relations for all contemplated terminations of unionized employees, system-wide at [Union Pacific].” (Filing No. 45 at 5.) Wilkins alleges he met with the internal investigations group at Union Pacific to discuss cases he referred for review. (Filing No. 45 at 6.) Wilkins and members of this group allegedly were concerned “whether they had the support they needed from [Union Pacific’s] senior leadership to carry out the group’s purpose.” (Filing No. 45 at 6.) Wilkins worried that “internal investigations into particularly egregious cases like the ones he referred for further investigation would most likely not be welcomed by either the lower-level supervisors in the Operating Department who were administering the discipline or the higher-ranking senior officers that were often ordering the discipline.” (Filing No. 45 at 6.) Allegedly, other members of the group were concerned that participating in the internal investigations “could cost each of them their jobs.” (Filing No. 45 at 6.) Wilkins alleges his experience at Union Pacific began to deteriorate in October 2018 after Union Pacific abolished OI 35 and “implemented a new train operating strategy called Precision Scheduled Railroading (PSR)[.]” (Filing No. 45 at 6.) Union Pacific then terminated two high- ranked employee-members of the internal investigations team and hired Sherer to be Vice President of the Law Department. (Filing No. 45 at 7-8.) In late 2018 into early 2019, Union Pacific and Sherer allegedly retaliated against Wilkins for his FRSA advocacy by reassigning his responsibilities, passing him over for promotions, rendering low performance ratings, and removing him from his roles at the company without discussion. (Filing No. 45 at 7-8, 11.) On June 17, 2019, Wilkins met with Sherer to discuss his mid-year review. (Filing No. 45 at 9.) Wilkins alleges he asked Sherer during this meeting “whether the purpose of Sherer’s actions was to reduce his importance to the organization and put him in the position to be laid off in the next round of reduction-in-force.” (Filing No. 45 at No. 10.) Wilkins alleges Sherer denied this purpose. (Filing No. 45 at 10.) But in this same conversation, Wilkins alleges Sherer accused him of “using company funds to buy his wife a ‘short stack’ of pancakes during a business trip in May 2019[,]” and presented Wilkins with a highlighted restaurant receipt to show Wilkins had ordered “an egg dish and a short stack of pancakes[.]” (Filing No. 45 at 10.) Wilkins further alleges, “Sherer told Wilkins that he has seen him eat, and that he knows Wilkins does not have that big of an appetite[,]” and Sherer reported he had referred the matter for an internal audit. (Filing No. 45 at 10-11.) At the end of this meeting, Sherer allegedly stated Wilkins had been “next-in-line” for a promotion to head of Union Pacific’s Labor Relations Department, an executive position held by Patricia Kiscoan, one of the employees for whom Wilkins had been selected as a successor. (Filing No. 45 at 4, 11.) Sherer allegedly told Wilkins, “I don’t know what happened, but you were her successor. Either perceptions of you changed, or maybe it’s the company that changed, but that job was yours.” (Filing No. 45 at 11.) Wilkins left the meeting “feeling intimidated and even more fearful that Sherer was working to get him fired from [Union Pacific].” (Filing No. 45 at 11.) In July 2019, Wilkins filed a complaint with Department of Labor, Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) pursuant to 49 U.S.C. § 20109. (Filing No. 45 at 11). Wilkins alleges after he filed this complaint, Union Pacific slated him for the next reduction-in-force, constructively discharged him, and then denied him severance. (Filing No. 45 at 12-13). Wilkins filed the present action in the United States District Court after his OSHA complaint was dismissed. (Filing No. 1 at 13-14.) The parties have had several discovery disputes in this case. This current dispute traces back to the Magistrate Judge’s order on Wilkins’ Motion to Compel, issued on September 27, 2024 (Filing No. 110). The crux of the dispute is the relationship between the September 27, 2024 Order and the scope of discovery it set forth and the Magistrate Judge’s subsequent set of discovery rulings, issued during a telephone conference with the attorneys on June 26, 2025 (Filing No. 164), which was supplemented by a written order on July 22, 2025 (Filing No. 171). 1. September 27, 2024 Order In the September 27, 2024 Order, the Magistrate Judge ruled on several overbreadth objections by Union Pacific to Wilkins’ Requests for Production of Documents (“RFP”). The rulings important to the present dispute are summarized as follows. The Magistrate Judge overruled Union Pacific’s objection to a request for Defendant Sherer’s complete employee and/or personnel file (RFP No. 2). During the discovery conferral process, Wilkins had offered to limit the request to performance, disciplinary, and salary/payroll records. (Filing No. 110 at 16.) The Magistrate Judge adopted this limitation and directed Union Pacific to supplement its response to RFP No. 2 as proposed by Plaintiff. However, the Magistrate Judge sustained Union Pacific’s objection to a request for personnel files for “any current or former employee” who was an attorney in the Union Pacific Law Department for the two years prior to Wilkins’ last day of employment (RFP No. 4). (Filing No.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Lisdahl v. Mayo Foundation
633 F.3d 712 (Eighth Circuit, 2011)
Roble v. Celestica Corp.
627 F. Supp. 2d 1008 (D. Minnesota, 2007)
Dale Stroud v. Southwestern Energy Company
858 F.3d 481 (Eighth Circuit, 2017)
Jan Vallejo v. Amgen, Inc.
903 F.3d 733 (Eighth Circuit, 2018)
Lyoch v. Anheuser-Busch Companies, Inc.
164 F.R.D. 62 (E.D. Missouri, 1995)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Ryan D. Wilkins v. Union Pacific Railroad Company and Leonard Sherer, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ryan-d-wilkins-v-union-pacific-railroad-company-and-leonard-sherer-ned-2025.