Sokolnicki v. Cingular Wireless, LLC

331 F. App'x 362
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJune 1, 2009
Docket07-1817
StatusUnpublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 331 F. App'x 362 (Sokolnicki v. Cingular Wireless, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sokolnicki v. Cingular Wireless, LLC, 331 F. App'x 362 (6th Cir. 2009).

Opinion

JULIA SMITH GIBBONS, Circuit Judge.

Plaintiff-appellant Margaret Sokolnicki appeals from the district court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of defendant-appellee Cingular Wireless, LLC (“Cingu-lar”). Sokolnicki worked for Cingular as a retail sales consultant from 1997 until 2005. In April of 2005, following a series of documented incidents in which Sokol-nicki violated company policy, Cingular terminated Sokolnicki. Sokolnicki then brought this suit in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Michigan, alleging age discrimination, sex discrimination, and intentional infliction of emotional distress. The district court granted summary judgment in favor of Cingular and dismissed all claims with prejudice. We affirm the judgment of the district court, although we employ a different analysis.

I.

Sokolnicki joined Ameritech, Cingular’s predecessor company, as a retail sales consultant in the Clarkston, Michigan, store in September of 1997. Sokolnicki, a white female, was then about 48 years old. In her first performance appraisal, Sokolnicki received praise for “deliver[ing] good customer service.” However, store manager Robert Martin noted that Sokolnicki was only “average in sales” because she “needs to speed up sales when stores [sic ] busy.” Although Martin noted issues with Sokol-nicki’s speed several times, he gave her an overall performance rating of “Successful.” 1 In the first quarter of 1998, Martin praised Sokolnicki as “very customer focused” but again noted that she “Needs to continue to speed up sales even though she has improved.” By the end of 1998, Sokol-nicki had become “one of the top sales associates,” achieving 123% of her quota for the year in activations. Nonetheless, Martin again rated Sokolnicki “Successful” and wrote that “During busy times needs to find ways to increase the speed of transaction.” In 1999, despite being selected as employee of the month in September, Sok-olnicki finished the year at 94% of her quota. Martin again rated Sokolnicki “Successful” and stated that “Speed of transactions has increased but needs to continue to work in this area.”

In 2001, Sokolnicki’s evaluation was overwhelmingly positive. Bethann Levy, who had replaced Martin as manager of the Clarkston store, noted that Sokolnicki averaged 137% of her quota for the year and was sales leader of the month for July *364 and October. Levy rated Sokolnicki 4.7 out of 5. 2

However, in October of 2003, Levy issued Sokolnicki a “Counseling Notice” for failure to achieve her quota. Sokolnicki was required to achieve at least 71% of her quota for adjusted gross sales but achieved only 64.7%. The written notice, which memorialized a discussion between Levy and Sokolnicki, indicated that “Failure to improve to acceptable levels at any time during [a six month period], or if any further incidents occur, could result in further discipline, up to and including dismissal.”

Robyn Kelsey replaced Levy as store manager in November of 2003. Although Sokolnicki never had problems with Martin or Levy, Sokolnicki alleges that Kelsey discriminated against her because of her age. According to Sokolnicki, Kelsey “thought [she] was too old to do the work.” As direct evidence of. this, Sokolnicki points to a single comment that Kelsey made when coaching Sokolnicki to speed up her customer transactions. Sokolnicki alleges that Kelsey told her “to quicken [her] sales like the younger workers” and then immediately corrected herself and said “other workers ... like she did not mean to say younger.” Although that was the only time Kelsey used the word “younger,” Kelsey frequently told Sokolnicki that she was too “slow.” Sokolnicki believes that Kelsey “thought [Sokolnicki] was slow because of [her] age.”

Another point of contention between Sokolnicki and Kelsey was the title of “Lead Associate.” Lead associates take on a small number of extra responsibilities when no manager is present at the store. Under Martin and Levy, Sokolnicki had held the title of lead along with two others. When Kelsey became manager, however, she had all of the leads re-interview for the position. According to Sokolnicki, Kelsey then re-selected the other two leads but replaced Sokolnicki with another, younger employee, Stephanie Frederickson. According to Kelsey, however, there were four existing leads, only two of whom were re-selected. The other existing lead who was not re-selected was Jamie Szwec, who appears to be younger than Sokolnicki.

Kelsey’s first review of Sokolnicki assigned her an overall review rating of 2.1 out of 5 for 2003. Sokolnicki’s review' indicates that her two primary problems were failure to achieve her quota and her slowness in completing customer transactions. Of particular note, Sokolnicki achieved only 78.51% of her quota in “Subs.” Regarding Sokolnicki’s performance in subs, Kelsey wrote: “Sub attainment is below7 Expectations. 78.51% in Subs is unexcepta-ble [sic ].”

On March 24, 2004, Kelsey gave Sokol-nicki a “Verbal Warning-Following the Correct Procedures.” The warning related to an incident involving customer Don McLain and was not a part of Cingular’s formal discipline policy. Then on May 28, 2004, Kelsey issued a second counseling-notice, .again referencing the McLain transaction as well as a second transaction with customer Younia Isaac. Both incidents involved Sokolnicki’s cancelling a customer’s existing phone line and then activating a new line, rather than upgrading the existing line. This practice vio *365 lates Cingular policy because it could allow a sales consultant to collect fraudulent commissions. Sokolnicki did not dispute the events underlying the McLain and Isaac incidents, but she insisted that she had done nothing wrong. The 2004 counseling notice, like the 2003 counseling notice, warned that failure to improve could result in dismissal.

On October 5, 2004, Kelsey issued Sokol-nicki a “Final Written Warning” for activating a line at the request of a person who was not an authorized user on the customer’s account and accepting a forged contract. Sokolnicki accepted a personal check for the line from Laura St. Clair and verified St. Clair’s identity by checking her driver’s license. However, Sokolnicki also had St. Clair sign the service contract in the name of Cheryl Curtis, the owner of the account. Curtis was not present in the store. As a result, Sokolnicki knew or should have known that she was accepting a forged document. Sokolnicki admitted that she accepted a document with a forged signature because she “didn’t look really closely at it” and made a “mistake.” This violation, standing alone, could have resulted in termination. While Sokolnicki was not terminated for the St. Clair incident, the final written warning, like the two counseling notices, stated that “if any further incidents occur” Sokolnicki could be dismissed.

The incident that led to Sokolnicki’s termination occurred in early April of 2005, when Sokolnicki activated an account for a customer who was not present in the store. Sokolnicki had the customer fax a copy of her driver’s license to the store. The driver’s license was expired, and the address on the license did not match the address in Cingular’s system. In that situation, Cin-gular policy requires the sales consultant to check a second piece of identification.

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