Thomas Brown v. City of Franklin

430 F. App'x 382
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJune 28, 2011
Docket10-5107
StatusUnpublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 430 F. App'x 382 (Thomas Brown v. City of Franklin) 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
Thomas Brown v. City of Franklin, 430 F. App'x 382 (6th Cir. 2011).

Opinion

ROGERS, Circuit Judge.

Plaintiff Thomas C. Brown, a firefighter for the Defendant City of Franklin, Tennessee, alleges that the city retaliated against him for providing testimony favorable to African-American firefighters who were suing the city for racial discrimination, and for otherwise supporting and/or assisting the firefighters with their claims. Brown claims violations of Title VII, 42 U.S.C. § 2000e et seq., and the Tennessee Human Rights Act, Tenn.Code Ann. § 4-21-101 et seq. 1 The district court granted the city’s motion for summary judgment. Brown has offered no evidence that Fire Chief Rocky Garzarek knew of Brown’s protected activities, and has not claimed that other city officials bore a retaliatory animus against him. Brown also did not put forth sufficient evidence showing that the city’s non-retaliatory reasons for its actions were pretextual. Consequently, the district court properly granted summary judgment with respect to the claims raised on this appeal.

Brown has been employed by the fire department for fourteen years. He was promoted to captain on March 16, 2006. Until the events of this lawsuit, Brown had no formal punishments in his employment record. Brown claims that it is common knowledge in the fire department that he supports African-American firefighters’ discrimination complaints. In his deposition, Brown clarified that he is known to take a neutral stance on discrimination complaints, believing that complaint-review procedures should be allowed to run their course without positions being taken.

In the fall of 2006, Brown was approached by an African-American firefighter, Gairy Ferguson, about racial discrimination Ferguson allegedly experienced. Brown says that he told Ferguson to report his concerns to the human resources department and to the EEOC. Brown reported the conversation to his supervisor, Assistant Chief Gentry Fox. Brown claims Fox told him not to document the conversation with Ferguson and not to report Ferguson’s concerns any further up the chain of command. Brown and Fox decided to make a personal investigation of Ferguson’s complaint, and eventually decided that the complained-of actions were not race-based.

In October 2006, Brown was interviewed by the city’s attorneys and was questioned about his knowledge of pending racial-dis *384 crimination lawsuits against the city by African-American firefighters. During this meeting, Brown allegedly discussed instances of racial discrimination, as well as policy changes that had an adverse impact on African-American firefighters. The city denies that Brown ever made such statements, but treated Brown’s version of the events as true for purposes of summary judgment. Ferguson later raised his race-based harassment claims with the fire department, triggering an investigation by human resources. Pursuant to this investigation, on December 20, 2006, human resources interviewed Brown. Brown says that he told the attendees of this meeting that he supports anyone who utilizes available procedures to address discrimination complaints. The city again denies that Brown said this, but again treated his version of the events as true for purposes of summary judgment.

Human resources later issued a report concluding that Brown and Fox acted inappropriately by personally investigating Ferguson’s complaint instead of reporting it to human resources or to Chief Garzarek. Garzarek was given a copy of this report. Garzarek denied ever learning of Brown’s statements from the two interviews, and at oral argument, Brown conceded that he had no evidence to contradict Garzarek on this point.

On January 31, 2007, Garzarek disciplined Brown for poor performance as a captain and had Brown’s probationai'y period extended by one year. This excluded Brown from testing for certification for promotion. Brown had been on probation due to his recent promotion to captain. While Garzarek recalled few specific examples of Brown’s poor behavior, Garzarek and Fox said that they perceived a pattern of poor judgment, management decisions, and interpersonal skills on Brown’s part that, while not outright policy violations, reflected a lack of the judgment and discretion needed for the position of captain. Garzarek claims that the precipitating event involved firefighters Ben Gasser and Doug Bowman. In this event, Brown apparently berated a human resources employee, over a speaker phone and in front of an audience, about the reasons given for denying Gasser and Bowman promotions. Garzarek and Fox also claimed that Brown alienated people and had a difficult time accepting answers with which he disagreed.

While Fox testified that Brown technically performed “by the book” and was a competent shift commander, Fox also explained that Brown exercised poor judgment and decision-making on a number of occasions. Fox said that he did not know why Gai'zarek extended Brown’s probation and that Fox could not recall seeing anything warranting the decision. Fox had no personal knowledge of the Gasser/Bowman incident, however. Garzarek said that he usually relied on the assistant chiefs, such as Fox, for assessing Brown and other captains. Garzarek could not recall whether he relied on information from Fox about Brown’s performance problems.

On March 26, 2007, Garzarek disciplined Brown for reporting Ferguson’s discrimination concerns to Fox instead of to the department head (Garzarek) or to human resources. The disciplinary action consisted of suspending Brown for one day without pay and ordering additional harassment training. Garzarek also gave Fox a counseling letter for not reporting the discrimination concerns to Garzarek or to human resources. According to Fox, discrimination reports were supposed to be reported up the chain of command, i.e., first to Fox, and then to the Fire Chief. However, the city’s Personnel Policy states that “[wjhen an allegation of harassment is made by an employee, the person to whom *385 the complaint is made shall immediately prepare a report of the complaint according to the preceding section and submit it to the Department Head.” The policy also states that it is human resources’ responsibility to investigate such complaints. Brown appealed his disciplinary actions through the city’s internal procedures, but to no avail.

Also in March, Fox transferred Brown from fire station number two to station number five, without request or input from Garzarek or others. Brown says this deprived him of crucial on-the-job experience and denied him the opportunity to be the acting shift commander. Fox told Brown that he transferred him “to protect him,” which Brown interprets as “protection” from further retaliation. Fox explained that he meant to “protect” Brown from the consequences of his professional deficiencies, deficiencies that would be much more visible in the high-volume environment of station two than in the more relaxed environment of station five.

In April 2007, Brown was deposed for a lawsuit brought by African-American firefighters against the city.

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Bluebook (online)
430 F. App'x 382, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thomas-brown-v-city-of-franklin-ca6-2011.