Shelton v. Babbitt

921 F. Supp. 787, 1994 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 20911, 1994 WL 898941
CourtDistrict Court, District of Columbia
DecidedApril 26, 1994
DocketCivil A. No. 92-1123 (HHG)
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 921 F. Supp. 787 (Shelton v. Babbitt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, District of Columbia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shelton v. Babbitt, 921 F. Supp. 787, 1994 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 20911, 1994 WL 898941 (D.D.C. 1994).

Opinion

OPINION

HAROLD H. GREENE, District Judge.

In this Title VII1 case, the plaintiff contends that officials of the Bureau of Mines, an agency of the Department of the Interior, brought about an unwarranted 30-day suspension from his position and discouraged him in his employment relationships in various other ways, with the result that he finally resigned. This constructive discharge2, plaintiff argues, occurred as a consequence of racial discrimination and reprisal.3

I

The evidence adduced at the trial demonstrated the following. Ronald Shelton was a long-time employee of the Department of the Interior, who, at the time of the incidents in question in this case, was manager of the Bureau’s Equal Opportunity Investigations Office. His performance appraisals had always been excellent or superior, and there was no blemish on his record. However, beginning in 1987, he was disadvantaged in various ways, and this discriminatory treatment culminated in 1989 in his suspension and other acts by the then relatively new [789]*789Director of the Bureau of Mines, T.S. Ary,4 and another high-level supervisor by the name of Larry Miller. None of the other division heads in the Bureau of Mines, all of whom were white, were similarly treated.

Among the relatively minor slights and disadvantages plaintiff endured during this period were the removal from his job description of his role as a liaison with the Annual Conference of Historically Black College and University Program (HBCU) which he had handled, at least in part, for a considerable period of time; his exclusion from management conferences attended by other division chiefs; and his exclusion from the presentation function at such conferences. Furthermore, Mr. Ary, the then new Director of the Bureau of Mines, gave plaintiff a lower appraisal rating than he had received on any evaluation until that date — one that would have hampered his progress within the Agency. Indeed, despite many efforts, and his incumbency in the position for many years, he was not promoted from his GS-14 grade to a GS-15. However, his successor in that position, a Hispanic woman, received that very promotion within a year.

The culmination of this discriminatory pattern occurred when plaintiff was suspended from his job in 1989. The circumstances of this suspension deserve more extended discussion. Ellie Gilbert, an employee in the EEO Office, was dispatched in March 1987 by plaintiff to conduct an investigation in the Bureau of Mines Research Center located in Tuscaloosa, Alabama. On four occasions, she travelled from Tuscaloosa to Pensacola, Florida, a city where she had relatives, in her government-leased ear. These trips by Ms. Gilbert, and Mr. Shelton’s approval, or at least his failure to disapprove, are at the heart of defendant’s claims that these two EEO employees violated travel regulations.5 However, as the testimony and the evidence adduced at trial made clear, the matters surrounding these trips are not nearly as clear-cut as the Bureau of Mines has attempted to make them appear.

As concerns the first of the detours by Ms. Gilbert from Tuscaloosa to her ultimate official destination, Salt Lake City, it was specifically approved by the Bureau’s Finance Office, and for that reason could not reasonably be charged against her, or her supervisor Shelton, with any degree of legitimacy.

Ms. Gilbert’s third and fourth trips involved similar detours and these detours were also approved by Mr. Shelton and/or the Finance Liaison Officer as being cost effective. Defendant’s bureaucratic complaints seem designed to create a problem where before one did not exist.

It is the second trip away from Tuscaloosa to Pensacola that was apparently regarded by Mr. Ary, the Bureau Director, as the most serious, including as it did two work days for which Ms. Gilbert did not request annual leave. However, upon closer examination, the charges regarding that trip illuminate most clearly the anti-EEO, and inferentially, possibly an anti-black, bias that animated from Mr. Ary and others under his command.

When Ms. Gilbert arrived in Tuscaloosa for her EEO investigation, she was met with massive hostility by the Bureau’s personnel at the Research Center. According to her testimony, Center personnel were eavesdropping at the door to the room where she was conducting her interviews; her telephone calls were being monitored; and she was awakened by loud nighttime noises against her motel room door. Her testimony regarding the extreme hostility and disdain was corroborated, albeit indirectly, first, by the fact that the manager of the Tuscaloosa facility, one Stanczyk, directly walked out of and never returned to a meeting at which Ms. Gilbert was seeking to collect EEO data, and second, by a letter signed by twenty-eight employees of the Center to a United [790]*790States Senator, complaining that the EEO process was being abused to the detriment of the Center’s employees and in effect asked him to get the Equal Employment representatives off their backs.

Two conclusions can be drawn from this unusual sequence of events. First, that Ms. Gilbert was justified in leaving Tuscaloosa to escape the massive hostility there and the perceived threat to her physical safety, and second, that Mr. Ary’s reaction to these incidents — without any proof whatever, he cast doubt on Ms. Gilbert’s recitation of events; he minimized their significance; and he suggested that she was wrong in what she did and that she should have taken alternative, absurd courses of action — indicates that hostility to EEO and concurrently to Ms. Gilbert and Mr. Shelton existed at the highest levels at the Bureau of Mines.6

To be sure, as the Bureau of Mines suggests, Ms. Gilbert could have escaped to a city closer to Tuscaloosa, such as Birmingham. However, it again shows singular lack of empathy with the Bureau’s own EEO employees to regard her escape to her family from segregationist pressure by white opponents of EEO as a cause for discipline of both her and her supervisor.

In any event, Ms. Gilbert repaid the government for the amounts that may have been7 improperly expended by the detour as soon as the matter was drawn to her attention. As for the Bureau’s rationale that under its disciplinary procedures it had no choice but to impose at least a thirty day suspension on Shelton, a black male, it is directly contradicted by the fact that the actual “perpetrator,” Ms. Gilbert — who is white — was penalized by only a fifteen day suspension. Likewise, allegations of misuse of a government vehicle by Martin Stanezyk, the Research Director and a white male, were given only cursory treatment, and he was subjected to no discipline.

The Court draws yet another conclusion from the Tuscaloosa events. The evidence, albeit circumstantial, suggests that the initial impetus for the investigation of plaintiff originated with the anti-EEO staff at Tuscaloosa. The anonymous complaint against Mr. Shelton and Ms. Gilbert was made while the latter was investigating EEO matters at Tuscaloosa. Further, someone within the Bureau of Mines organization itself appears to have submitted written material to support the complaint inasmuch as official documents, such as travel vouchers, were submitted with it.

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Bluebook (online)
921 F. Supp. 787, 1994 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 20911, 1994 WL 898941, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shelton-v-babbitt-dcd-1994.