Teresa Gibson v. MGM Grand Detroit, LLC

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJune 11, 2020
Docket19-1467
StatusUnpublished

This text of Teresa Gibson v. MGM Grand Detroit, LLC (Teresa Gibson v. MGM Grand Detroit, 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
Teresa Gibson v. MGM Grand Detroit, LLC, (6th Cir. 2020).

Opinion

NOT RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION File Name: 20a0345n.06

No. 19-1467

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT FILED Jun 11, 2020 TERESA GIBSON, ) DEBORAH S. HUNT, Clerk ) Plaintiff-Appellant, ) ) v. ) ON APPEAL FROM THE ) UNITED STATES DISTRICT MGM GRAND DETROIT, L.L.C., ) COURT FOR THE EASTERN ) DISTRICT OF MICHIGAN Defendant-Appellee. ) )

Before: SUHRHEINRICH, DONALD, and MURPHY, Circuit Judges.

BERNICE BOUIE DONALD, Circuit Judge. Plaintiff Teresa Gibson alleges gender

discrimination under Title VII and the Michigan Elliott-Larsen Civil Rights Act (ELCRA). After

working at Defendant MGM Grand Detroit, LLC (MGM) for years as a plumber in the casino,

Gibson applied for three different positions at MGM but was denied. Each position went to a man.

She filed Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) charges related to two of the three

positions and later brought suit against MGM. The district court granted summary judgment to

MGM on all of Gibson’s claims. Even assuming that Gibson satisfies the prima facie case for each

of the three positions, she still fails to create a genuine dispute that the legitimate, non-

discriminatory reason—Gibson was not the most qualified candidate for any of the three

positions—offered by MGM in all three cases was pretext. As such, we AFFIRM the district

court. No. 19-1467, Gibson v. MGM Grand Detroit, LLC

I. BACKGROUND

A. Statement of Facts

Teresa Gibson alleges that she suffered gender discrimination under Title VII and ELCRA

over the course of two years when MGM denied her three different promotions. First, in 2015,

Gibson applied for an engineering job (Engineer I-FACE) on the Fix and Clean Everything

(FACE) team in the hotel. Next, in 2016, Gibson applied for an engineering position (Engineer

II-FACE) in the hotel. Soon after, Gibson applied for another engineering position (Engineer III-

Journeyman) in the plumbing department. Gibson did not receive any of the three positions, and

each went to a man. Jimmie Valentine and Ernest Lewis made all three hiring decisions. MGM

and Gibson’s union partially negotiated the job requirements for each of the positions for which

Gibson applied; we begin there.

Labor Agreement- Descriptions of the Relevant Jobs

MGM bargained with the Detroit Casino Council and agreed on a job classification system

for its maintenance and engineering employees. Maintenance trainees are classified into four

different levels. Engineers are classified into three different levels with various specialties,

including painting, engineering, carpentry, electrical, and plumbing. In the bargaining agreement,

MGM and Detroit Casino Council agreed that union employees “shall be awarded promotional

opportunities for which they are qualified before new [e]mployees are hired. The qualifications

required for a position will be determined by the Employer; such determination shall not be

arbitrary or capricious.”

Under the labor agreement, the parties agreed that all engineers are required to have a

minimum of two years’ experience in building maintenance in the hospitality or service industry,

or some equivalent maintenance experience. The lowest tier, Engineer I, requires a “trade related

-2- No. 19-1467, Gibson v. MGM Grand Detroit, LLC

certification or license where mandated by trade regulatory requirements.” The next tier, Engineer

II, requires (1) a minimum of 3-5 years building maintenance experience in the hospitality or

service industry, or some equivalent experience in a different industry; (2) trade related

certification or license where required;1 (3) 2-5 years’ experience in Kitchen and Refrigeration (K

& R); (4) Chlorofluorocarbon (CFC) Type II or better qualification; (5) Heating, Ventilation, and

Air Conditioning (HVAC) 3rd Class Refrigeration license; and (6) passage of electrical courses.

The next tier, Engineer III, requires (1) a minimum of 8 years of building maintenance experience

in the hospitality or service industry, or some equivalent experience in a different industry; (2)

trade related certification or license where required;2 (3) 8 years of K & R experience; (4) Type III

or Universal CFC license along with a First Class Refrigeration license or unlimited refrigeration

Journeyman license; (5) electric, millwright, plumbing, locksmith, or journeyman experience; and

(6) completion of 1000 hours of accredited schooling.

Teresa Gibson

Teresa Gibson began working at MGM in 1999 as a maintenance trainee. After completing

her plumber’s certification, she became an Engineer I-Plumber in 2002 or 2003. Since then, she

has not completed any other training, educational, or vocational programs, but she has hands-on

experience in the casino. As of 2015, she had approximately 15 years’ experience working in the

casino’s women’s bathrooms and kitchens. While not part of her every-day responsibilities, she

also occasionally replaces receptacles and sockets, works in the carpentry shop, and does K & R

work. Based on her experience working at MGM, Gibson also testified that, in her position as an

Engineer I-Plumber, she does many, if not all, of the same things that an Engineer III-Plumber

1 The agreement also notes that “[f]ive (5) years of trade experience may be an acceptable alternative for license requirements.” 2 The agreement also notes that “[e]ight (8) years of experience may be an acceptable alternative for the license requirement.”

-3- No. 19-1467, Gibson v. MGM Grand Detroit, LLC

would do. She also testified that she has worked in the hotel “[a] few times,” taking occasional

plumbing calls when needed.

Hiring Managers- Jimmie Valentine & Ernest Lewis

Lewis and Valentine were the hiring managers during the relevant time period, and they

jointly interviewed and declined to promote Gibson. In 2010, MGM hired Lewis as an engineering

supervisor, and he was promoted to engineering manager in 2011, a role in which he had hiring

duties. Lewis testified that the only female employee he has ever interviewed for a promotion is

Gibson. He also testified that he had previously offered a job to two female candidates, but they

both declined.

Valentine started working at MGM in 2000 as an engineer. He was quickly promoted to

engineering supervisor, and, in 2003, he became an engineering manager, where he has hiring

duties. He previously promoted a female employee Amy Winton to Engineer III-Painter. He also

previously hired another female employee, Patty Logan, as an Engineer III-Plumber, and testified

that Logan had a journeyman license.

The Other Candidates- Marcus Weldon & Joseph Davis

MGM promoted Marcus Weldon to fill the Engineer I-FACE and Engineer II-FACE

positions over Gibson. Weldon worked as a housekeeper in the MGM hotel from 2007 to 2014.

In 2014, he became a Maintenance Engineer Trainee on the FACE team where he worked for

approximately ten to eleven months until he was promoted to the Engineer I-FACE position in

2015. While he was working for the hotel as a housekeeper, Weldon also worked part-time as an

electrical apprentice and completed an Associate Degree of Applied Science with a certificate in

electronic engineering technology at a local community college. He was also working on getting

certified in HVAC when he interviewed in 2015 for the Engineer II-Plumber position. As a

-4- No. 19-1467, Gibson v. MGM Grand Detroit, LLC

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