Terri Smyth-Riding v. Sciences and Engineering Services

699 F. App'x 146
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedAugust 17, 2017
Docket16-1295
StatusUnpublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 699 F. App'x 146 (Terri Smyth-Riding v. Sciences and Engineering Services) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Terri Smyth-Riding v. Sciences and Engineering Services, 699 F. App'x 146 (4th Cir. 2017).

Opinion

Unpublished opinions are not binding precedent in this circuit.

AGEE, Circuit Judge:

Terri L. Smyth-Riding appeals the district court’s judgment in favor of her former employer, Sciences and Engineering Services, LLC (“SES”), and SES’s founder, Dr. Hyo Sang Lee, on her claims of retaliation and sex discrimination. Following Smyth-Riding’s presentation of evidence to a jury, SES and Dr. Lee moved for judgment as a matter of law,' which the district court granted based on its conclusion that Smyth-Riding had failed to put forward evidence of causation. For the reasons set out below, we affirm.

I.

A.

SES is a scientific research and development company with facilities in Columbia, Maryland, and Huntsville, Alabama. 1 During the relevant period, Dr. Lee served as the company’s president and CEO.

In June 2007, SES hired Smyth-Riding as its Director of Human Resources to work in the Columbia office. As the HR Director, Smyth-Riding’s responsibilities included facilitating the hiring of new employees, coordinating employee benefits and overseeing other related HR matters. At first, she reported directly to Dr. Lee, but after a year Dr. Robert Serino, the company’s Director of Operations, took over that supervisory role.

Immediately after starting her employment at SES, Smyth-Riding began to point out corporate practices that she believed could be perceived as discriminatory. For example, at her own interview, she was asked about her age and family status, and specifically whether she had children and intended to have more children. She believed this question was improper and informed SES’s senior management that they should not ask prospective employees these kinds of questions because they could be construed as discriminatory. Almost two years later, when she learned that another female applicant had also been asked if she intended to have children, Smyth-Riding assured the woman *148 that SES did not make employment decisions on that basis and admonished the interviewers not to ask questions of that type.

Early in 2008, Smyth-Riding and Daniel Joe, SES’s financial controller, began clashing over employment decisions in the finance department. For example, in the first few months of 2008, SES began accepting applications for an accounts payable position. Joe asked to see the résumés directly rather than having Smyth-Riding review them first. Later, Smyth-Riding observed that only Asian candidates were being interviewed for the position. Based on her experience with the employment pool for similar positions, Smyth-Riding believed that the pool should have been-predominantly African-American, so she took her concerns to Serino, who spoke to Joe and “inserted [Smyth-Riding] back into ... the hiring process for that position.” J.A. 372. A Caucasian woman from within SES was eventually hired for this vacancy.

Smyth-Riding and Joe were again in conflict when Joe fired Zakia Harris, an African-American payroll specialist. Immediately before he did so, Joe notified Smyth-Riding that he’d decided to terminate Harris’ employment due to her poor performance. Smyth-Riding, however, did not accept Joe’s explanation because she believed an Asian payroll employee with poor performance had not been disciplined. Although Joe further explained his rationale, Smyth-Riding did not believe the explanation was “legitimate.” J.A. 364. She asked Joe to wait in order to “think about” this decision, during which time she brought her concerns to Serino, Serino’s manager, and SES legal counsel. In particular, she was concerned that Harris may perceive that she was being terminated due to her race regardless of the truth. While Smyth-Riding was still talking to them, however, Joe informed Harris of his decision. Joe then told Smyth-Riding and the others that he’d already spoken with Harris.

Smyth-Riding also was unhappy with how Joe chose to hire a payroll administrator to replace Harris. Joe once again asked to see the résumés directly and when Smyth-Riding observed the list of individuals who received interviews, the names “weren’t representative of the Baltimore metropolitan area” and were not “the demographic you’d expect to see” for that type of position, by which Smyth-Riding meant “a predominantly black pool of candidates.” 2 J.A. 373.

Smyth-Riding was also distressed by conduct she testified occurred in the process of hiring an executive assistant for Dr. Lee in the spring and summer of 2008. One application was returned to her with the notation “too old” on it in Dr. Lee’s handwriting. J.A. 393. In addition, Serino informed her that Dr. Lee wanted to hire “someone very young” for the position and on another occasion returned a stack of applications to her saying that all of the applicants were “too old.” J.A. 381, 384. Another time, one of Dr. Lee’s sons, Richard Lee, asked Smyth-Riding to bring in “chicks” to interview so that he could “hit on” them. J.A. 390. Believing she had a “big sister” relationship with Richard, Smyth-Riding chided him and said he “c[ould]n’t say things like that.” J.A. .390. Smyth-Riding also expressed concern with Serino and SES’s Senior Vice President Randal Castro that these events constitute ed inappropriate actions and potentially unlawful discrimination. However, Smyth-Riding never spoke to Dr. Lee or communicated to him in any way regarding her concerns.

*149 In the fall of 2008, SES accepted applications for a second accounts payable position, and Smyth-Riding and Joe once again found themselves at odds over who should be hired. The final two candidates consisted of an Asian woman with no relevant professional experience, but who had recently graduated with a Bachelor’s Degree in the field, and a Hispanic woman with four years’ experience in accounts payable, but only an Associate Degree, Smyth-Rid-ing felt the Hispanic woman was more qualified, and voiced her objections to Joe, Serino, and Castro when Joe decided to hire the Asian college graduate.

Smyth-Riding emailed Joe about this and other areas in which the two had ongoing disagreements, centering on the role that Smyth-Riding believed she should have in Joe’s decisions regarding employees within the finance division. Among other things, Smyth-Riding observed that she could provide expertise in employment-law compliance. Later, after Joe asked how SES was violating any labor laws, Smyth-Riding referenced Title VII and expressed her concern that Joe had hired someone she believed to be less-qualified, but who had been referred to Joe personally, rather than the more experienced candidate. Joe responded, explaining his hiring decision and challenging what he perceived to be Smyth-Riding’S belief that she had oversight of his employment decisions. He further indicated that he did not want to violate any employment laws and that, if he was doing so, Smyth-Riding should let him know and copied Serino and Castro on the email exchanges.

Around the same time, Serino completed Smyth-Riding’S annual performance evaluation, marking her as “consistently ex-ceedfing] expectations” in four of seven categories. She received the mid-range “met expectations” mark in two categories and “met and sometimes exceeded expectations” in one category. J.A. 639-40.

In 2008, Smyth-Riding volunteered to coordinate the SES holiday party.

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