TEDROW v. FRANKLIN TOWNSHIP COMMUNITY SCHOOL CORPORATION

CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Indiana
DecidedMay 23, 2023
Docket1:21-cv-00453
StatusUnknown

This text of TEDROW v. FRANKLIN TOWNSHIP COMMUNITY SCHOOL CORPORATION (TEDROW v. FRANKLIN TOWNSHIP COMMUNITY SCHOOL CORPORATION) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Indiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
TEDROW v. FRANKLIN TOWNSHIP COMMUNITY SCHOOL CORPORATION, (S.D. Ind. 2023).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF INDIANA INDIANAPOLIS DIVISION

WESLEY A. TEDROW, ) ) Plaintiff ) ) v. ) Cause No. 1:21-CV-453 RLM-MG ) FRANKLIN TOWNSHIP ) COMMUNITY SCHOOL ) CORPORATION, et al., ) ) Defendants )

OPINION AND ORDER Wesley Tedrow sued Jill Britt, Melissa Morris, and the Franklin Township Community School Corporation for events during his employment as a teacher with the School Corporation. Mr. Tedrow brings various employment claims under the Civil Rights Act of 1964, the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990, the Genetic Information Nondiscrimination Act of 2008, as well as a breach-of- contract claim under Indiana law. Mr. Tedrow now moves for summary judgment on all claims but breach of contract, [Doc. 103], and the defendants cross-move for summary judgment on all claims. [Doc. 130]. For reasons explained in this opinion and order, the court: grants Jill Britt and Melissa Morris’s motion for summary judgment and dismisses them as defendants; grants in part and denies in part the School Corporation’s motion for summary judgment; and denies in full Mr. Tedrow’s motion for summary judgment. I. BACKGROUND These facts are undisputed, unless otherwise indicated. Wesley Tedrow started teaching for the Franklin Township School

Corporation in 2012. He began teaching third grade at Arlington Elementary School in 2015. Melissa Morris was Arlington Elementary School’s principal and Jill Britt was the School Corporation’s director of human resources while Mr. Tedrow taught at Arlington Elementary School. Mr. Tedrow received positive performance reviews for several years. In the fall of 2017, Mr. Tedrow requested and was granted six weeks of leave under the Family and Medical Leave Act for his anxiety disorder. He returned to Arlington Elementary at the end of his FMLA leave.

In the spring of 2019, Mr. Tedrow had a disagreement with Principal Morris. The parent of a student in the special education program asked to accompany the student on a field trip. The parent didn’t have a background check as required of chaperones. Principal Morris instructed Mr. Tedrow to allow the parent on the trip. Mr. Tedrow questioned whether this was proper without a background check, so called human resources to verify. When Principal Morris found out, she told Mr. Tedrow that she and Ms. Britt approved of the parent’s request and told him not to go to human resources behind her back. Mr. Tedrow

emailed the union president, asking if it was proper to allow a parent without a background check on the field trip and complaining that Principal Morris and Ms. Britt acted unreasonably. He asserted that Principal Morris abused her power or bullied him. Dr. Kent Pettet, the School Corporation’s Chief People Officer, eventually told Principal Morris that she communicated poorly to Mr. Tedrow and could’ve handled the situation better. That same month, the School Corporation started receiving complaints

from staff about Mr. Tedrow. Gina Gaddis, an instructional assistant, complained that Mr. Tedrow engaged in inappropriately personal conversations and paid inappropriately close attention to Justice Klene, another teacher. Ms. Gaddis told the administration she was unwilling to work with Mr. Tedrow in the 2019–2020 school year. Angie Bruce, a fifth-grade teacher, complained that Ms. Tedrow paid inordinate attention to Ms. Klene, looking her up and down and asking for her phone number so they could see a movie together. Ms. Klene eventually devised a system with her colleagues to get out of uncomfortable

situations with Mr. Tedrow — she would text “SOS” to Ms. Bruce and other teachers when Mr. Tedrow came to her classroom, so the other teachers could come and diffuse any uncomfortable situation. Around the same time, Mr. Tedrow had an altercation with Lisa Eck, a guidance counselor at the school. According to Ms. Eck, Mr. Tedrow had always been friendly and professional, but his behavior changed around 2019 when he was argumentative with presenters at a workshop. At one point, Ms. Eck reports that Mr. Tedrow confronted her over a disagreement about the field trip, verbally

attacking her and chasing her around a table in the teacher’s lounge. Later that school year, Mr. Tedrow loudly reprimanded a fourth-grade student in the hallway, yelling that the student wouldn’t be welcome back in his classroom. Ms. Eck told Mr. Tedrow he was wrong to exclude the student and Mr. Tedrow replied by yelling at her in her office. She was scared and yelled a profanity, then headed to the principal’s office. Mr. Tedrow followed her, continuing his yelling. Kathy Johnson, a receptionist, saw both incidents and found them alarming.

Mr. Tedrow’s account is different. He says he didn’t provoke Ms. Eck. She instead suddenly became aggressive and confrontational with Mr. Tedrow and yelled curse words at him. Mr. Tedrow complained about the incident with Ms. Eck to his union representative. The union representative told Principal Morris that he wanted Ms. Eck to apologize, that Principal Morris wasn’t doing her job, and that she would have addressed the issue differently if it were between two women. Mr. Tedrow claimed Ms. Johnson and Dr. Pettet told him that he was intimidating

because of his big chest and deep voice and claimed he was targeted for being a man. Principal Morris recorded this conversation with the union representative in an email to Dr. Pettet describing some of the other teacher complaints. Mackenzi Becker, a special education teacher, reported a similar exchange with Mr. Tedrow. She claims he came into her classroom yelling and demanding for information about a special education student’s individualized educational plan. He intimidated Ms. Becker with his puffed-out chest, slammed the door upon leaving, and made Ms. Becker cry.

Mr. Tedrow says no such incident occurred. He simply asked Ms. Becker for a student’s individualized educational plan. She was curt with him and the next day emailed him apologizing for the way she acted: “I apologize if I came off harsh with my body language, etc.” [Doc. 118-4]. After the incident with Ms. Eck, Dr. Pettet met with Mr. Tedrow and shared staff concerns with him. Dr. Pettet claims he told Mr. Tedrow that his colleagues felt uncomfortable around him. Dr. Pettet observed during their meeting that Mr.

Tedrow engaged in some of the same intimidating body language his colleagued complained of. He raised his voice, puffed up his chest, and otherwise seemed agitated. Mr. Tedrow remembers that during the meeting, Dr. Pettet told Mr. Tedrow that his deep voice and muscular body were a problem. Around that same time, some of Mr. Tedrow’s coworkers speculated about “roid rage” — steroid use might have made Mr. Tedrow aggressive and intimidating. When Principal Morris caught wind of that rumor, she informed Ms. Britt and Dr. Pettet that teachers were speculating about steroids.

The School Corporation’s concerns continued in the 2019–2020 school year. Karen Hosimer, an educational assistant, reported an interaction with Mr. Tedrow in which he became aggressive and yelled at her. The school administrators had known Mr. Tedrow to be personable and professional for several years and figured that any change in behavior might have a medical cause. They decided to order a fitness-for-duty exam to see if there was a medical cause that could be remedied rather than immediately disciplining or firing Mr. Tedrow. Ms. Britt sent a letter to Mr. Tedrow on October 4, 2019,

notifying him that he would have to undergo a fitness-for-duty exam. Mr. Tedrow was placed on paid administrative leave pending completion of the examination. Mr. Tedrow reported to the fitness-for-duty examiner’s officer on October 14 and signed some of the necessary release-of-information and consent forms. The examining doctor, Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
TEDROW v. FRANKLIN TOWNSHIP COMMUNITY SCHOOL CORPORATION, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tedrow-v-franklin-township-community-school-corporation-insd-2023.