Szeinbach v. Ohio State University

987 F. Supp. 2d 732, 2013 WL 6595542, 2013 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 176106
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Ohio
DecidedDecember 13, 2013
DocketCivil Action No. 2:08-cv-822
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 987 F. Supp. 2d 732 (Szeinbach v. Ohio State University) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Szeinbach v. Ohio State University, 987 F. Supp. 2d 732, 2013 WL 6595542, 2013 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 176106 (S.D. Ohio 2013).

Opinion

DECISION

MARK R. ABEL, United States Magistrate Judge.

This matter is before the Court on defendant The Ohio State University’s May 22, 2013 renewed motion for summary judgment (doc. 123).

I. Overview

Szeinbach came to OSU’s College of Pharmacy (“COP”) from the University of Mississippi in 1999, starting as a full professor with tenure. (Szeinbach Dep.; Doc. 122-17 at 3.) Szeinbach is currently employed in OOP’s Division of Pharmacy Practice and Administration (“PPAD”). In 2002, COP hired Dr. Enrique SeoaneVazquez (“Seoane”), a native of Spain, as an assistant professor.1 In 2005, it hired Dr. Rajesh Balkrishnan (“Balkrishnan”), a native of India, as an associate professor with tenure. Prior to Balkrishnan’s hiring, Szeinbach had met him at a meeting and formed an opinion that he was rude and disrespectful. (Id. at 10.) At the faculty meeting to approve Balkrishnan’s tenure, Szeinbach voiced her concerns about him, and she was displeased when he was hired. (Id. at 8,10.)

In 2005, Dr. Milap Nahata (“Nahata”), the chairman of PPAD, appointed Balkrishnan to prepare and present Seoane’s February 9, 2005 annual review to PPAD’s promotion and tenure committee. According to Szeinbach, she had observed Balkrishnan and Nahata discriminating in favor of students of Indian origin. (Doc. 135-1 at 3.) At Seoane’s review, Balkrish[735]*735nan apparently made plain his opinion that he was not a productive member of the COP faculty. (Doc. 98 at 4; 98-1 at 7.) The next day, Szeinbach sent an email to Robert Brueggemeier, the dean of COP:

Dear Bob: I attended the P & T meeting yesterday. I have questions regarding the fairness of the evaluation that was performed for Enrique SeoaneVazquez. I felt the presentation of the evaluation was intentionally very biased against Enrique — there was a lot of discussion as well. I was wondering if Enrique should be evaluated at all given his extensive illness, where his recovery took several months. Also, I wanted to provide a message a priori so there is an awareness of the situation—
I would not send this message unless I felt very strongly that something is not right—

(Doc. 98-1 at 7.) In the following months, Szeinbach deliberately got to know Seoane better, and “wanted to work with him so that ... I could find out ... where’s all this coming from, maybe the faculty is right, maybe there’s something wrong with this guy.” (Doc. 110 at 56.) She concluded that there was “absolutely nothing wrong with Enrique” and that “for some reason people were really trying to sabotage his efforts to do research ... that’s when I became concerned and said, whoa, this — this has to stop.” (Id.)

On August 22, 2005, Seoane submitted an internal complaint at OSU, alleging “discrimination and retaliation.” (Doc. 98 at 4.) Szeinbach did not help him file it, and was not aware at the time that Seoane had filed the complaint. (Doc. 110 at 55-56.) She provided Seoane with a copy of her February 10, 2005 email to Dean Brueggemeier, but did nothing else in particular to support his complaint except that she “listened to him.” (Id. at 56.) The COP’s investigation committee investigated Seoane’s OSU-HR complaint, interviewing numerous faculty, including Szeinbach, Balkrishnan, Cynthia Carnes (“Carnes”), Craig Pedersen (“Pedersen”), and Phillip Schneider (“Schneider”). Szeinbach told the committee that Balkrishnan had attempted to change the ranking of one of Seoane’s students, that students had reported to her that Balkrishnan did not want Seoane’s students to do as well as his, and that an Indian graduate student had been told to switch to. an advisor of Indian national origin. (Doc. 135-5'at 4.) An OSU-HR investigator separately, in October 2005, . interviewed Szeinbach, Seoane, Schneider, and two graduate students concerning Seoane’s racial discrimination claims. Szeinbach told the OSU-HR investigator that Nahata and Balkrishnan were working together to end Seoane’s employment, and that some COP students were being told not to take her classes. She also told the investigator that Nahata had falsely reported that she had voted in favor of a negative annual review for Seoane. (Id.)

On November 3, 2005, Szeinbach sent an email to Dr. James Dalton (“Dalton”), the chairman of the promotion and tenure committee, complaining of several inaccuracies and omissions in materials which Nahata had recently circulated for Seoane’s fourth-year review. (Doc. 98-1 at 9-10.) Dalton responded to this email, noting that Brueggemeier had recently announced that the college would be restarting Seoane’s review and discarding all existing materials. (Id.)

Balkrishnan and Szeinbach clashed repeatedly. Pedersen testified at deposition that he had seen Szeinbach and Balkrishnan “go at it pretty good in faculty meetings”; they would “typically raise their voice at each other. And they would typically not treat the other one with respect.” He opined that they were both equally to [736]*736blame for their personal conflicts, and that “they were both very good at raising the ire of the other one.” (Doc. 109 at 58.) Brueggemeier testified that for three years in a row he had to inform Balkrishnan that he was receiving a lower annual raise because of “his lack of ability to ... appropriately interact with students and faculty in the Division”. He referred to disagreements Balkrishnan had with Szeinbach, Seoane, Pedersen, and Schneider. (Doc. 116 at 6-7.)

On February 16, 2006, Balkrishnan sent an email to Dean Brueggemeier and Nahata complaining about teaching assistant-ship (“TA”, “GA”, or “GTA”) position allocations, and stating that he nevertheless understood if the department was funding “unqualified GAs” “for fear of additional ‘discrimination’ law suits, which are as usual, totally baseless.” (Doc. 118-11 at 2.) In May and June 2006, Balkrishnan allegedly advised his students not to participate in a research program Szeinbach advised, and complained about Szeinbach to a group of peers at a national conference. (Doc. 132 at 4; Doc. 130 at 15.) On June 23, 2006, Balkrishnan sent an email to Brueggemeier and Nahata alleging that a faculty candidate had been contacted several times by Szeinbach and advised not to come to the COP, because of discrimination there and the bad influence of Balkrishnan himself. (Doc. 118-11 at 6.) He alleged further that she had complained to a prospective PhD student that he was a “slavedriver” and “an evil person”, and that the candidate should work with her instead. Finally, he claimed that Szeinbach had slandered him and the COP at the recent International Society for Pharmacoeconomics and Outcomes Research meeting, and that she had falsely reported to OSU-HR that he was harassing her students. (Id.) On July 14, 2006, Balkrishnan sent an email to Brueggemeier complaining that in one of her classes Szeinbach gave her students the answers to exam questions the day before the exam. (Id. at 9.)

Several of Szeinbach’s colleagues (although not including Balkrishnan), sent Brueggemeier a letter on June 6, 2006, “to express the collective frustration and dissatisfaction of several Senior members of [PPAD] with ... Dr. Sheryl Szeinbach.” (Doc.

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987 F. Supp. 2d 732, 2013 WL 6595542, 2013 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 176106, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/szeinbach-v-ohio-state-university-ohsd-2013.