Timothy Pio v. Benteler Auto. Corp.

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 7, 2022
Docket21-1231
StatusUnpublished

This text of Timothy Pio v. Benteler Auto. Corp. (Timothy Pio v. Benteler Auto. Corp.) 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
Timothy Pio v. Benteler Auto. Corp., (6th Cir. 2022).

Opinion

NOT RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION File Name: 22a0068n.06

Case No. 21-1231

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT

) FILED TIMOTHY PIO, Feb 07, 2022 ) ) DEBORAH S. HUNT, Clerk Plaintiff - Appellee, ) ) v. ON APPEAL FROM THE UNITED ) STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE ) BENTELER AUTOMOTIVIE WESTERN DISTRICT OF MICHIGAN ) CORPORATION, ) ) Defendant - Appellant. )

Before: COLE, GIBBONS, and LARSEN, Circuit Judges.

JULIA SMITH GIBBONS, Circuit Judge. After twenty-two years working at Benteler

Automotive Corporation (“Benteler”), Timothy Pio was terminated from his job during a reduction

in workforce in May 2018. Pio, a white, American man, was fifty-eight years old at the time of

his termination. Pio sued Benteler, alleging employment discrimination on the basis of age, race,

and national origin in violation of federal and state law. The district court granted Benteler’s

motion for summary judgment, holding that Pio failed to establish a prima facie case of age or race

discrimination and, even if he had, he did not show Benteler’s proffered reasons for his termination

to be pretext for unlawful discrimination. Because Pio has not offered direct, circumstantial, or

statistical evidence establishing that Benteler terminated him due to his age or race, we affirm the

district court’s grant of summary judgment. No. 21-1231, Pio v. Benteler Auto. Corp.

I

Benteler makes metal automotive products and has manufacturing facilities in Goshen,

Indiana; Grand Rapids, Galesburg, and Holland, Michigan; and Duncan, South Carolina. Pio was

born November 28, 1959, and he “identifies as a white, American man.” DE 49, Joint Statement

of Material Facts (“J.S.”), Page ID 187. Benteler hired Pio on July 22, 1996, to work at its

manufacturing plant in Galesburg, Michigan. Pio worked as a welder and machine operator during

the course of his employment. Two of Benteler’s major projects were scheduled to end in early

2018. Benteler secured business to replace this anticipated loss in sales, but it was not scheduled

to begin until summer 2019. In autumn 2017, Galesburg Plant Manager Guido Paffhausen told

Human Resources (“HR”) Manager Jennifer Piotrowicz that Benteler would have to implement a

reduction in force (“RIF”) due to the drop in sales. The exact number of employees to be

terminated was subject to change based on attrition and fluctuations in sales volume, but it was

evident positions would have to be eliminated in spring 2018.

In early 2018, the Galesburg plant had 320 Benteler employees. At a plant-wide “All

Hands Meeting” on February 8, 2018, the company formally announced a RIF would occur

because of the significant decrease in sales. Benteler stated no eliminations would occur before

May 2018. To select the employees for reduction, HR personnel compiled a list of all employees

and their personnel information. Several factors were considered in determining who would be

terminated, including “performance review[s], attendance, safety records, [and] quality records.”

DE 50-6, Paffhausen Dep., Page ID 439. Benteler did not review all the historical data and files

of every employee considered for termination, but the attendance records, performance appraisals,

and active performance counseling reports it relied on were “then-current” as of 2017. HR

Manager Piotrowicz reviewed Pio’s file and presented a final list of employees selected for the

-2- No. 21-1231, Pio v. Benteler Auto. Corp.

RIF to the plant management team at a staff meeting. There was no discussion of age, race, or

national origin in Benteler management’s review of the list.

On May 4, 2018, Benteler terminated Pio as part of the RIF. Pio had two negative

attendance points as of May 4, 2018. His 2017 performance review stated, “Tim works hard to hit

his line goals. Tim has been talked to about how important it is to stay on his line.” DE 50-4, Pio

Dep., Page ID 342. Benteler frequently advised Pio “not to wander away from his work area.”

DE 49, J.S., Page ID 189. On the day of his termination, Piotrowicz spoke with Pio and informed

him that HR representatives from other Benteler plants were available to meet with him to discuss

a transfer. No Benteler personnel mentioned age, seniority, race, or national origin to Pio on the

day of his termination.

At the time of his termination, Pio was fifty-eight years old. Although Benteler gave each

employee subject to the RIF, including Pio, the opportunity to discuss transferring to another plant

with HR, Pio did not consider transferring. He did not meet with any HR representatives on the

day of the RIF and did not inquire about other open positions. Benteler told Pio that he “can come

back next year when we get busy and reapply,” but Pio did not reapply for his position. DE 49,

J.S., Page ID 189. The parties agree no one at Benteler ever spoke to Pio about his age, race, or

national origin in the context of his termination or employment.

Pio sued Benteler in November 2018, approximately six months after his termination,

alleging age, race, and national origin discrimination1 in violation of federal and state law. In June

2020, Benteler moved for summary judgment and simultaneously moved to strike an affidavit from

1 Although Pio frames his claim as an allegation of discrimination due to his race and national origin, his appeal does not mention national origin and focuses exclusively on his claim of racial discrimination. The district court noted Pio’s filings state that his “natural [sic] origin claim here is that he is not Burmese, so it is essentially the same as his race discrimination claim.” DE 69, Op. and Order, Page ID 1627. -3- No. 21-1231, Pio v. Benteler Auto. Corp.

Pio’s counsel, William Piper, upon which Pio relied in his response to Benteler’s Motion for

Summary Judgment. In a revised affidavit, also submitted in response to the summary judgment

motion, Piper attested to reviewing personnel records of Benteler employees and compiling a list

purporting to have the age, race, and national origin of certain employees. Piper indicated he

“could tell, from documents in their files, that many employees were born in Burma (Myanmar)

or otherwise originated from there.” DE 61-2, Revised Piper Aff., Page ID 1584. He also compiled

a list of employees who self-identified as Black or African American and a list of individuals

Benteler considered for termination on May 4, 2018. Each of these lists included an age next to

the employee’s name, and “[b]ased on their dates of birth, [Piper] was able to tell . . . what their

ages were on May 4, 2018.” Id. at 1586.

The district court held there was no direct evidence of discrimination and Pio had not

established a prima facie case of age or race/national origin discrimination. The court further

concluded that even if Pio had made a prima facie case of discrimination, he did not establish that

Benteler’s proffered reason for his termination during the RIF was merely pretext and he was

actually terminated because of his age or race. Because Pio did not produce evidence of

discrimination, the court granted Benteler’s motion for summary judgment and denied as moot

Benteler’s Motion to Strike Piper’s Affidavit.

II

We review de novo a district court’s grant of summary judgment. Equitable Life Assurance

Soc’y of the United States v. Poe, 143 F.3d 1013

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