Steve Fletcher v. U.S. Renal Care

709 F. App'x 347
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 28, 2017
Docket17-3327
StatusUnpublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 709 F. App'x 347 (Steve Fletcher v. U.S. Renal Care) 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
Steve Fletcher v. U.S. Renal Care, 709 F. App'x 347 (6th Cir. 2017).

Opinion

ROGERS, Circuit Judge.

Steve Fletcher claims that while working as a registered nurse at U.S. Renal Care, he was forced to endure a campaign of discriminatory scrutiny and mistreatment by an African-American manager, because he is white. In this suit, Fletcher alleges that a racially discriminatory and retaliatory campaign led to his constructive discharge, in violation of both federal and Ohio law. The district court, however, properly granted summary judgment against him. There is not sufficient evidence to raise a genuine issue of material fact that Fletcher was in fact constructively discharged, or that his complaints to management were the cause of his discipline.

In October 2013, after working as a “float” nurse at several of U.S. Renal Care’s Cincinnati dialysis clinics, Fletcher accepted a position as a registered nurse in the company’s Norwood, Ohio clinic. He soon transferred again to the Kenwood clinic, and appears to have worked there without incident until May 2014, when his first supervisor, Anita Johnson, who is African-American, was replaced by Devon Nelson, who is also African-American. It was then that Fletcher claims the problems central to this suit begán.

Although Fletcher points to a number of incidents, the first sign of trouble appears to have come only a month after Nelson arrived at Kenwood, when Fletcher claims that Nelson told him that he would no *349 longer be allowed to wear black jeans to work, as he had for several months, but would instead have to wear scrubs. Fletcher raised that policy change with Nelson’s supervisor, Sabon Shelton, who told him he could continue wearing his jeans until the matter could be addressed at an already-scheduled nurses’ meeting. Fletcher also brought his complaint to the attention of Andrea Foley, a human-resources manager, writing to her that he believed Nelson had “chosen to single out and harass only the Caucasian personnel],” including Fletcher. In response, Foley, who is also white, explained to Fletcher that “[i]t would be unfair to single [him] out,” and that if his clinic was determined to be. “scrubs only, that [would] go for everyone.”

Two days later, Fletcher again wrote Foley, telling her that he was “not the only one in the clinic to see the racism demonstrated by” Nelson, and that another employee, Benjamin Ullman, had left U.S. Renal Care, because he was unwilling to put up with Nelson’s “racist attitude one more day.” Ullman claims to have complained to human resources about his own concerns of “racism,” but received no response.

Around the same time, Fletcher claims that he had two more encounters with Nelson that, he says, suggested Nelson’s racial animus. The first incident came after Nelson accused Fletcher of putting a doctor’s order on the wrong patient’s chart — a potentially dangerous mistake. Nelson claims to have discussed the charting issue with Fletcher soon after the alleged mistake was discovered. According to Fletcher, however, he made no such mistake, which, he alleges, Johnson confirmed for him.

The second incident came not long after the charting concern, when Fletcher cracked a tooth, exposing a nerve and leaving him in considerable pain. Instead of “callpng] off,” Fletcher reported to work, and asked Johnson if she would cover for him for an hour so he could see a dentist. Johnson agreed, and Fletcher scheduled his appointment. Once Nelson arrived, however, she told Fletcher that she could not authorize the time off, but that he should “do what [he] need[ed] to do.” Fletcher left anyway, and the next day he again wrote Foley, telling her that Nelson “ha[d] become more hostile,” and that “[h]er attitude and singling out ha[d] become more frequent and more aggressive.”

Around that time, Nelson also brought Fletcher’s alleged charting errors to the attention of Scott Sasserson, U.S. Renal Care’s chief operating officer, detailing Fletcher’s apparent failure in one instance to name the doctor who issued a medical order as well as his placement of the patient note on the wrong chart. Sasserson passed those concerns on to Foley, who began investigating Fletcher’s performance. During the investigation Foley asked Joanne Zimmerman, the company’s vice president of clinical services, to review Fletcher’s charting notes. Zimmerman was reportedly “shocked at how lacking [Fletcher’s] written orders” were, and suggested that Fletcher be put “on final warning,” which, according to Foley, was standard practice whenever a “patient safety issue required] discipline.” Like Foley, both Sasserson and Zimmerman are white.

Foley, along with Shblton and Sasser-son, then decided to discipline Fletcher. Although Nelson took no part in the decision, she presented Fletcher with a written counseling form, listing the various charting and other errors that had raised safety concerns as well as other acts of insubordination, including Fletcher’s continuing to wear jeans and his abruptly leaving work to tend to his tooth. In the presence of Sasserson and Shelton, Fletcher ultimately *350 signed the form, over Fletcher’s “strong! ] disagree[ment],” and without the opportunity to protest the infractions. A few days later Fletcher resigned from U.S. Renal Care, stating in his resignation notice that “[t]he work place has become hostile and intolerable due to racism, retaliation, and other questionable behavior by management.” He was soon replaced by another nurse, Samantha Waggoner, who is also white.

Fletcher then filed this suit, alleging that U.S. Renal Care constructively discharged him on account of his race and retaliated against him for complaining about that allegedly discriminatory treatment, in violation of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and 42 U.S.C. § 1981, as well as Ohio’s' counterpart civil-rights statute. U.S. Renal Care moved for summary judgment, and the district court granted it on both of Fletcher’s claims.

The court first concluded that Fletcher, who had offered no direct evidence of racial animus, had failed to make out a prima facie case of reverse discrimination. The district court noted that the first prong of the McDonnell-Douglas framework — -whether U.S. Renal Care was the “unusual employer who discriminates against the majority,” Nelson v. Ball Corp., 656 Fed.Appx. 131, 134-35 (6th Cir. 2016) — presented a “close question.” But the court ultimately left that question unresolved, concluding that Fletcher’s case would fail regardless of that answer, under the third and fourth prongs.

As to the third prong, the court determined that Fletcher had failed to show that he had suffered an adverse employment action, through his alleged constructive discharge. None of the circumstances Fletcher cited — his disciplinary warning, his alleged concern that U.S. Renal Care would file a false report against him with the State Board of Nursing or that he would be fired, or his complaints about Nelson’s supervision — was enough, the court held, to indicate that U.S. Renal Care had deliberately set out to make his working conditions intolerable.

Nor had Fletcher shown that similarly situated employees were treated differently because of their race, the court concluded, or that he was replaced by an employee of another race, as required by McDonnell-Douglas’s fourth prong.

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