Sauvage v. Snow

413 F. Supp. 2d 1289, 2005 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 38543, 2005 WL 3475276
CourtDistrict Court, M.D. Florida
DecidedSeptember 13, 2005
Docket8:02 CV 373 T TGW
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 413 F. Supp. 2d 1289 (Sauvage v. Snow) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, M.D. Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sauvage v. Snow, 413 F. Supp. 2d 1289, 2005 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 38543, 2005 WL 3475276 (M.D. Fla. 2005).

Opinion

ORDER

WILSON, United States Magistrate Judge.

This is an employment discrimination case in which a retired United States Customs Service special agent alleges that he was the victim of age discrimination and retaliation. The evidence at a non-jury trial fails to establish that the plaintiff was a subject of adverse employment action or that the defendant acted with a discrimina *1292 tory or retaliatory intent. Consequently, judgment will be entered for the defendant.

I.

At the beginning of 2000, the plaintiff Charles C. Sauvage, Jr., was an Associate Special Agenb-in-Charge of the United States Customs Service’s office in Miami, Florida. He had joined Customs in 1987 and, after various assignments and promotions, had reached that position. On March 17, 2000, a letter of directed reassignment was prepared transferring the plaintiff to the Customs’ office in Los An-geles as Associate SAIC (Def.Ex. 8). That transfer has given rise to this lawsuit.

The Commissioner of Customs at the time was Raymond W. Kelly. 1 He was a political appointee who, before becoming an Under Secretary of the Treasury, had been Police Commissioner of New York City. He moved from the position of Under Secretary to Commissioner of Customs in the summer of 1998 (I Tischler Dep., pp. 8, 10).

Special agents in the Customs Service were in the Office of Investigations, which was one of twelve divisions in Customs (see Def. Ex. 1). At the beginning of 2000, Bonni Tischler was the Assistant Commissioner for the Office of Investigations. However, Tischler was suffering from cancer and at times would be out of the office due to illness or treatment. In her absence, John C. Varrone, who was deputy Assistant Commissioner, would act for her.

Commissioner Kelly was viewed as a mieromanager (Eichelberger Dep. of 4/24/03, p. 39; I Tischler Dep., p. 11). According to Tischler, Kelly thought things were “screwed up at Customs” and he was making a lot of changes (I Tischler Dep., p. 19). Tischler said that Kelly wanted “to make a strong statement of [a] new sheriff in town” and, because there were people who had been sitting in their jobs for a while, he wanted people transferred around (II Tischler Dep., p. 751). Mobility was a condition of employment for the agents (Doc. 110, p. 181; Doc. 112, p. 25; I Tischler Dep., pp. 111-12).

On Monday, March 13, 2000, the Commissioner’s office asked Varrone to prepare as soon as possible a list of senior agents for transfer (Doc. 112, p. 41). Var-rone promptly discussed that matter with the executive directors of the three domestic Customs regions, and with John Eichel-berger, the executive director of Administration, Planning and Policy for the Office of Investigations (id. at pp. 14-15, 41-42). Contact was then made with various Special Agents-in-Charge, seeking names for inclusion on a transfer list (id. at p. 15). Within a couple of hours, Varrone had received the information and prepared a list of twelve names (Plt.Ex. I). 2 The list was delivered on March 13, 2000, to the Commissioner’s office. The list included the plaintiffs name and indicated that he was to be transferred from Associate SAIC Miami to Associate SAIC Los Ange-les (id.). Kelly approved the list by initialing it on March 14, 2000. 3

Varrone testified that he was not surprised to see the plaintiffs name included in the responses to his inquiry (Doc. 112, p. 16). The plaintiff and his supervisor, SAIC Frank Figueroa, did not have a smooth working relationship. Figueroa *1293 had previously told Varrone that he thought the plaintiff was undermining him and needed a management change (id. at pp. 16-17).

Varrone said he asked John Eichelber-ger to identify offices in need of an Associate SAIC. Varrone was told that the El Paso and Los Angeles offices had such a need (id. at p. 17). Varrone decided to send the plaintiff to Los Angeles based upon the plaintiffs “skills set” because Los Angeles was an under-performing office with a relatively new SAIC (id. at pp. 17-18).

On March 17, 2000, the Customs Service issued a letter of directed reassignment to the plaintiff (Def.Ex. 8). Varrone had signed the letter on behalf of Tischler because she was out for chemotherapy treatment that day (id.; Doc. 112, p. 21; Tis-chler MSPB Dep., p. 23). Attached to the letter was a statement of the plaintiffs retirement benefits (Def.Ex. 8). The plaintiff was 53 at the time (Doc. 110, p. 56).

The plaintiff testified that he was shocked when he read the letter (id. at p. 81). He subsequently placed the letter in his desk drawer for a week to see if anyone would say anything to him about it. According to the plaintiff, á supervisor normally calls an employee into his office to give the employee his transfer, but that did not happen in his case (id. at p. 82).

On April 6, 2000, the plaintiff formally noted his acceptance of the transfer to Los Angeles (Def.Ex. 9). Consequently, the plaintiff received a letter dated April 11, 2000, from the Customs Service regarding the offer of employment in Los Angeles (Plt.Ex. 7). In a related matter, Loraine Brown, the accepting SAIC in Los Ange-les, discussed with the plaintiff the plaintiffs reporting date. The plaintiff and Brown agreed that the plaintiff would report to Los Angeles on July 16, 2000 (Doc. 110, p. 90; Doc. 112, p. 104).

On April 28, 2000, the plaintiff signed an employment agreement (Def.Ex. 10). The agreement listed the agreed reporting date of July 16, 2000 (id.). Because the transfer was a directed reassignment, the government would pay the plaintiffs expenses arising from the move, including costs related to the sale and purchase of residences. It was expected that the expenses would amount to about $70,000 (Doc. 110, p. 158).

On May 21, 2000, the plaintiff filed a hardship request with the Customs Service’s hardship review board, seeking to stay in the Miami area (Pit. Ex. 8; Def. Ex. 14). The plaintiff based his request on his wife’s various illnesses and her need to remain in the Miami area due to her cadre of doctors and her family support system, which was located there (id.). 4 Eiehelber-ger, by a letter dated June 5, 2000, informed the plaintiff that, under the hardship review board policy, an employee is ineligible to file a hardship request to seek relief from a directed reassignment (Plt.Ex. II). 5

On June 7, 2000, the plaintiff filed a complaint with the Treasury Department’s *1294 office of Equal Employment Opportunity (“E.E.O.”), alleging that he was being discriminated and retaliated against on the basis of age, race and sex in connection with his. directed reassignment of March 17, 2000 (Plt.Ex. 34).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
413 F. Supp. 2d 1289, 2005 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 38543, 2005 WL 3475276, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sauvage-v-snow-flmd-2005.