Travers v. Flight Services & Systems, Inc.

737 F.3d 144, 21 Wage & Hour Cas.2d (BNA) 1167, 2013 WL 6501332, 2013 U.S. App. LEXIS 24706
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedDecember 12, 2013
Docket18-1862
StatusPublished
Cited by49 cases

This text of 737 F.3d 144 (Travers v. Flight Services & Systems, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Travers v. Flight Services & Systems, Inc., 737 F.3d 144, 21 Wage & Hour Cas.2d (BNA) 1167, 2013 WL 6501332, 2013 U.S. App. LEXIS 24706 (1st Cir. 2013).

Opinion

KAYATTA, Circuit Judge.

Appellee Flight Services fired Appellant Joseph Travers as he pursued a lawsuit against the company under the Fair Labor Standards Act (“FLSA”). Flight Services says it terminated Travers for violating company policy. Travers says he was fired in retaliation for his FLSA lawsuit. Because a reasonable jury could return a verdict for Travers without relying on improbable inferences or unsupported speculation, we vacate the district court’s grant of summary judgment to the company.

I. Background

The district court granted judgment to Flight Services before any factfinder could evaluate the competing evidence and inferences. We therefore describe the facts giving rise to this lawsuit in a light as favorable to Travers as the record will reasonably allow, without implying that the following is what actually occurred. McArdle v. Town of Dracut, 732 F.3d 29, 30 (1st Cir.2013).

Travers began work in 2004 as a skycap employed by Flight Services, a company that provides services to airlines, including JetBlue. In April 2008, Travers filed a lawsuit against JetBlue. Roughly a year later, he amended the complaint to include Flight Services as a defendant. As amended, the complaint brought five claims on behalf of Travers and ten other plaintiffs, representing a putative class of skypcaps. Count I of the complaint charged JetBlue and Flight Services with violating the FLSA by failing to pay the federal minimum wage.

By all accounts, Travers acted as the leader among the plaintiffs, encouraging others to join the suit, coordinating with counsel on behalf of the plaintiffs, and serving as the first named plaintiff on the complaint. According to Travers’s former supervisor Robert Nichols, after Travers filed the suit, Flight Services CEO Robert Weitzel, Sr., repeatedly yelled at Nichols to “get rid of [Travers]” and “talk [Tra-vers] into dropping the lawsuit.” Weitzel complained specifically about how much money the suit was costing the company. Weitzel made these statements on telephone conferences in which his son, the president of Flight Services, also participated. Nichols, in turn, told Travers to “be careful” because “the company would be coming after” him. ■ Flight Services fired Nichols in April 2010. The record does not reveal the reasons for Nichols’s termination, and no party has claimed that the termination is relevant to this case. Weitzel continued to serve as CEO.

By September 2010, Travers and Flight Services were awaiting decisions on Tra-vers’s motion to certify conditionally an opt-in class under the FLSA, and on Flight Services’ motion for, summary judgment. Meanwhile, on September 3, 2010, Flight Services received a complaint about Travers from a JetBlue passenger, who said that Travers had solicited a tip. Flight Services’ employee handbook bars solicitation of tips, classifying it as grounds for termination:

Solicitation of tips shall not be condoned. This includes any form of solicitation to include but not limited to — advising passengers of the amount of the tip that they must give to the employee for the service provided, refusing to provide service without first receiving a tip, selling weight, etc. Employee who are [sic] *146 found to have solicited tips will be terminated immediately!.]

The passénger complained about Tra-vers to a JetBlue supervisor, whose report indicated that the passenger was “extremely upset” and felt “bullied.” At the supervisor’s request, the passenger wrote a statement describing the incident:

The baggage man informed me that a tip is required just as you would tip in a restaurant. He said this is his lively hood [sic]. When I only tipped $1 he got angrier [and] said he was sorry I didn’t like the service. He walked away, told someone he was going on break & slammed the door. I felt like [he] was hussling [sic] people.

Later that day, Flight Services suspended Travers pending investigation of the complaint and'asked him to write a statement describing his interaction with the passenger. Travers’s account read as follows:

I do Recall Customer, Whe[n] She Arrived At Podium I Requested I.D. and How many Bags[.] Proceeded To Check in Customer!.] Informed her of $2.00 fee Adv Customer fee was JetBlue and Tip was not included, Cust got upset and stated she didn’t have To Tip, I responded tip was optional Just Like Restaurant and I Apoligize [sic] If she Didn’t Like The Service. I Then went on Break.

Three and a half weeks later, on September 27, 2010, Lisa Varotsis, a general manager at Flight Services, fired Travers. Varotsis had recommended Travers’s firing to Flight Services’ director of human resources, who approved it. According to Travers, Varotsis gave just one reason for his termination: tip solicitation.

Travers filed his retaliation suit in January 2011. After discovery, the district court granted summary judgment to Flight Services.

II. Standard of Review

We review de novo the district court’s grant of summary judgment. McArdle v. Town of Dracut, 732 F.3d 29, 32 (1st Cir. 2013). Under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 56, a “court shall grant summary judgment if the movant shows that there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(a). In this case, as in many others, deciding whether a factual dispute is “genuine” poses the most difficult challenge. We label a dispute genuine if “a reasonable jury, drawing favorable inferences, could resolve it in favor of the nonmoving party.... Conclusory allegations, improbable inferences, and unsupported speculation, are insufficient to establish a genuine dispute of fact.” Triangle Trading Co., Inc. v. Robroy Indus., Inc., 200 F.3d 1, 2 (1st Cir.1999) (internal citations, quotation marks, and alterations omitted).

III. Analysis

Indisputably, Travers’s evidence would enable a reasonable jury to conclude that Flight Services CEO Weitzel wanted to fire Travers because of the FLSA lawsuit. Nevertheless, Flight Services argues that the evidence concerning the circumstances of Travers’s firing would not allow a reasonable jury to find a causal connection between Weitzel’s retaliatory animus and that firing.

In support of its argument, Flight Services points, first, to the lack of any direct evidence that Weitzel had a role in the decision to fire Travers or that those who made the decision (Varotsis and the human resources director) were even aware of Weitzel’s views. Flight Services correctly describes the evidence: the record contains no testimony or document chronicling any communication regarding Travers be *147

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Vera v. F.W. Webb Company
D. New Hampshire, 2025
Raheb v. Delaware North Companies, Inc. - Boston
120 F.4th 896 (First Circuit, 2024)
Strifling v. Twitter Inc.
N.D. California, 2024
Caruso v. Delta Air Lines, Inc.
113 F.4th 56 (First Circuit, 2024)
Johnson v. Englander
D. New Hampshire, 2024
Kinzer v. Whole Foods Market, Inc.
99 F.4th 105 (First Circuit, 2024)
Emigrant Residential LLC v. Pinti
D. Massachusetts, 2023
Der Sarkisian v. Austin Preparatory School
85 F.4th 670 (First Circuit, 2023)
Adams v. Schneider Electric USA
Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 2023
McCoy v. Town of Pittsfield, NH
59 F.4th 497 (First Circuit, 2023)
Frith v. Whole Foods Market, Inc.
D. Massachusetts, 2023
Shaffer v. IEP Technologies, LLC
D. Massachusetts, 2021
NuVasive, Inc. v. Richard
D. Massachusetts, 2021
NuVasive, Inc. v. Day
D. Massachusetts, 2021

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
737 F.3d 144, 21 Wage & Hour Cas.2d (BNA) 1167, 2013 WL 6501332, 2013 U.S. App. LEXIS 24706, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/travers-v-flight-services-systems-inc-ca1-2013.