Tolliver v. Children's Home-Chambliss Shelter

784 F. Supp. 2d 893, 2011 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 32553, 2011 WL 1159646
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Tennessee
DecidedMarch 28, 2011
Docket3:10-cr-00077
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 784 F. Supp. 2d 893 (Tolliver v. Children's Home-Chambliss Shelter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tolliver v. Children's Home-Chambliss Shelter, 784 F. Supp. 2d 893, 2011 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 32553, 2011 WL 1159646 (E.D. Tenn. 2011).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM

CURTIS L. COLLIER, Chief Judge.

Plaintiff Patricia Tolliver (“Plaintiff’) brings this lawsuit against her former employer Children’s Home-Chambliss Shelter (“Defendant”), alleging age and sex discrimination, retaliation, and other employment-related claims. Before the Court is Defendant’s motion for summary judgment, which is supported by a memorandum (Court Files No. 11, 13). Plaintiff has responded (Court File No. 14), and Defendant has replied (Court File No. 15). For the following reasons, the Court will GRANT IN PART and DENY IN PART Defendant’s motion for summary judgment (Court File No. 11).

I. Relevant Facts

Defendant is a non-profit organization that provides shelter for needy children. From January 18, 2008 until March 3, 2010, Plaintiff was employed by Defendant as a “direct care staff employee” — a position also referred to as a “residential care specialist.” Direct care staff employees are responsible for the physical, emotional, social, and educational well being of the children assigned to their care. Prior to working for Defendant, Plaintiff had worked as a mental health technician at Cumberland Hall Hospital for over a year, a developmental technician at Martin Boyd Christian Center for over a year, a mental health technician at Omni Vision for three years, and a developmental technician at Orange Grove Center for five years.

When Plaintiff was hired, Defendant’s president and CEO Phil Acord set her initial rate of pay. This rate was determined by use of a matrix, which factors an employee’s experience, education, training, and work experience, to arrive at a dollar figure (see, e.g., Court File No. 12-1). Plaintiff had a high school education, no college credit, no training toward any certifications considered by the matrix (though she did have training in CPR, crisis intervention, and some other areas), and what Mr. Acord considered to be one year of “relevant experience” (Court File Nos. 11-4, pp. 3-4; 12, ¶ 5). Per the matrix, Mr. Acord established Plaintiffs pay rate at $9.25 per hour, which included a $1.00 “differential” due to Plaintiffs working the night shift. Plaintiff claims she was promised a forthcoming raise and promotion to “activities staff’ pending a successful evaluation at the end of a six-month probationary period (see Court File No. 1-1, ¶¶ 5, 10). Defendant vehemently denies this, claiming all pay raises are considered at the beginning of the calendar year, not at the end of probationary periods, thus Plaintiff would not have been promised a raise at six months (see, e.g., Court File No. 11-5, p. 7).

Defendant’s work week begins on Sunday at 12:00 a.m. and ends the following Saturday at 11:59 p.m. Pay periods are two weeks in length. Plaintiffs assigned shift was from 8:00 p.m. to 8:00 a.m. Generally, Plaintiff was scheduled to work 36 hours the first week, and 48 hours the second (Court File No. 11-4, p. 9). If employees worked more than their scheduled hours, they were supposed to submit an “Extra Time Worked Verification Form” so they could be appropriately paid, including pay for overtime (see id. at p. 50).

After some time on the job, Plaintiff began to be troubled by what she regarded as Defendant’s improper treatment of female employees. According to Plaintiff, “female direct care staff workers, including the Plaintiff, were required to perform cleaning tasks while the younger, better paid, male workers were not required to *899 clean” (Court File No. 1-1, p. 4). However, Plaintiff acknowledges she was not specifically told women were the only employees required to perform cleaning tasks (see Court File No. 11-4, p. 6). Heredia Hester, one of Plaintiffs coworkers, corroborates that women did the “traditional” tasks of cleaning, cooking, dusting, and the like, while the men played basketball or video games with the kids (Court File No. 14-6, p. 6). However, Ms. Hester states she does not know why the men did not do the housework-type tasks, and that it was up to the employees on a particular shift to work out who would do what tasks during the shift (Court File No. 11-6, p. 3).

On July 18, 2008, Plaintiff received her first job performance evaluation (Court File No. 11-4, pp. 46-49). She reviewed this evaluation in a meeting with her supervisors, Mr. Cox and Ms. Pelton. Plaintiffs overall rating was “very good.” However, an addendum to the evaluation stated Plaintiffs probationary period was being extended by 60 days so that her direct work and interactions with the children could be further observed. 1 On the line for salary increase, the evaluation said “N/A.” Despite this, Plaintiff contends that during the meeting she was told she would receive a raise immediately (id. at p. 38).

After several pay periods went by, Plaintiff realized she was not receiving the expected raise (id.). Plaintiff complained about this, as well as the perceived inequalities between men and women, to her immediate supervisor Mr. Cox. Mr. Cox had no involvement in setting pay scales, so he took Plaintiffs concerns to his supervisor, Ms. Pelton, who in turn apparently took the matter to Mr. Acord (Court File No. 14-5, pp. 5-6). Ultimately, Plaintiff did not receive a mid-year pay raise. Mr. Acord testifies such raises, in fact, were never given to anyone, because wage increases for all employees are only given in the first quarter of the calendar year (Court File No. 12, ¶ 3).

Later that month, Defendant hired Mr. Ezzard Robinson as a direct care staff employee. Mr. Robinson worked the same shift as Plaintiff. Mr. Robinson was paid $10.50 per hour — $1.25 more per hour than Plaintiff (Court File No. 14-4). Mr. Robinson was 30 years-old at the time, which was roughly 20 years older than Plaintiff (Court File No. 14-4). Defendant considered Mr. Robinson to have four-and-a-half years of “relevant experience” (Court File No. 12, ¶ 12). It is not clear how Defendant determined what experience counted as “relevant.” Mr. Robinson’s résumé shows what appears to be three years of employment with rehabilitation centers, a year or two working in restaurants, and several months working as a “disciplinarian” with a camp (Court File No. 12-9, pp. 3-5). Plaintiffs résumé shows 11 years of employment as a mental health technician and developmental technician, yet Defendant credited her with only one year of “relevant experience” (Court File No. 14-1). However, it is undisputed Mr. Robinson had almost completed an associate’s degree, while Plaintiff had no education past high school (Court Files Nos. 12, ¶ 12; 12-2, p. 3).

Plaintiff was concerned that Mr. Robinson was being paid more than her. Additionally, Plaintiff believed Mr. Robinson was hired as “activities staff,” a position Plaintiff believed she had been promised (Court File No. 1-1, ¶ 10). However, it is *900 undisputed Mr. Robinson’s official position was identical to Plaintiffs: direct care staff. Plaintiffs grievance regarding Mr. Robinson, then, was apparently that though they shared the same position, Mr. Robinson had greater responsibility for planning activities for the children — a task Plaintiff wanted to perform and believed she was entitled to.

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784 F. Supp. 2d 893, 2011 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 32553, 2011 WL 1159646, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tolliver-v-childrens-home-chambliss-shelter-tned-2011.