Trevizo v. Del Toro

CourtDistrict Court, M.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 21, 2025
Docket1:23-cv-00508
StatusUnknown

This text of Trevizo v. Del Toro (Trevizo v. Del Toro) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, M.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Trevizo v. Del Toro, (M.D. Pa. 2025).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE MIDDLE DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA KETZY TREVIZO, : CIVIL NO.: 1:23-CV-00508 : Plaintiff, : (Magistrate Judge Schwab) : v. : : CARLOS DEL TORRO, : SECRETARY OF THE NAVY, : : Defendant. :

MEMORANDUM OPINION

I. Introduction. Plaintiff Ketzy Trevizo claims that her employer, the United States Department of the Navy, discriminated against her in violation of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 (“Title VII”), 42 U.S.C. § 2000e et seq. Currently pending is the defendant’s second motion to dismiss and/or for summary judgment. For the reasons discussed below, we will grant the defendant’s motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted.

II. Background and Procedural History. Trevizo began this action by filing a complaint on March 22, 2023, naming Carlos Del Toro, the Secretary of the Navy, as the defendant. Doc. 1. In the complaint, Trevizo brought two counts, claiming that the Department of the Navy discriminated against her and created a hostile work environment through severe

and pervasive harassment on account of her gender, ethnicity, and color in violation of Title VII. After the defendant entered his appearance (docs. 4, 5), and was granted an extension of time to file a responsive pleading (doc. 8), the parties

consented to magistrate judge jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 636(c) (doc. 10). The defendant then filed a motion to dismiss and/or for summary judgment (doc. 11), and a brief in support of that motion. Doc. 19. Trevizo filed a brief in opposition to this motion. Doc. 33. And the defendant filed a reply brief. Doc. 38.

We granted this motion to dismiss. Docs. 39, 40. We dismissed Trevizo’s discrimination claim because her opposition papers denied she was bringing such a claim, despite the complaint listing Title VII discrimination as Count I. Docs. 1,

39, 40. We dismissed Count II, the hostile-work-environment claim, because Trevizo did not allege facts supporting a reasonable inference that she was subject to severe or pervasive discrimination, with the memorandum opinion noting examples of specific deficiencies in the complaint. Doc. 39, 40. Our dismissal

was, however, without prejudice and we granted leave to amend. Doc. 40. As a result, Trevizo filed an amended complaint against the defendant, now alleging a single Title VII hostile-work-environment claim. Doc. 41. The

defendant filed the presently pending motion to dismiss and/or for summary judgment (doc. 43) and a brief in support (doc. 49). After Trevizo filed a brief in opposition (doc. 69), the defendant filed a reply brief (doc. 76). Trevizo alleges

the following facts in her amended complaint. Beginning in May 2016, Trevizo, who “is a Hispanic female with brown skin, of Puerto Rican decent [sic],” was employed at the Naval Supply Systems

Command, Ammunition Logistics Center in Mechanicsburg, Pennsylvania, as a Supervisory Logistics Management Specialist. Doc. 41 ¶¶ 3, 9-10. Catherine Butler was Trevizo’s first-level supervisor. Id. ¶ 11. Beginning in 2019, Captain Arcangelo Dell’Anno became Trevizo’s second-level supervisor and Butler’s first-

level supervisor. Id. ¶ 12. Trevizo alleges that she was subject to a “hostile and abusive work environment” that “was created by pervasive and continuous discriminatory

actions” by Butler, who “continuously and increasingly treated” her “significantly less favorably than her white, male counterparts[.]” Id. ¶ 13. “By way of illustration and without limitation,” Trevizo lists the following as “some examples of this behavior” by Butler:

• In 2017, Ms. Butler refused to permit Ms. Trevizo to move her ergonomically fitted office furniture with her when she was moved to another office, which was provided to her as an accommodation after

an ergonomic study was performed for Ms. Trevizo, forcing Ms. Trevizo to work at a desk that was not accommodating to her physical needs, as was established as necessary through the study;

• In 2017, Ms. Butler denied Ms. Trevizo’s request to telework due to a school closure for a snowstorm, advising that telework was not authorized to watch children, despite Ms. Butler doing just that, only a

few months prior to this denial; • In 2018, [w]hile Ms. Trevizo was on maternity leave, Ms. Butler stated to Jeremy Hilliker, a white male and subordinate to Ms. Trevizo, that[] “it is so much nicer having you attend the meetings,

you are so much more agreeable,” while Mr. Hilliker was the acting division head in place of Ms. Trevizo, which was degrading toward Ms. Trevizo and inhibit[ed] the trust and loyalty that Ms. Trevizo had

worked diligently to instill with the members of her team; • In 2019, when Ms. Trevizo’s husband applied for a Logistics Management Specialist position in the department managed by Keith

Rhodes, a lateral department to Ms. Trevizo’s department, Ms. Butler advised Mr. Rhodes to refrain from interviewing Ms. Trevizo’s husband for the position, despite other married couples working in similar departments and those relationships not being an issue; • In 2019, Ms. Trevizo’s request to hire a transferring employee from WSS as a developmental hire, something that [] had been done many

times in the past because of the specialized work, was met with significant pushback from Ms. Butler and additional hurdles to overcome, as compared to these types of hire requests being readily

approved for Ms. Trevizo’s white, male predecessor, as well as a subsequent request by Mr. Rhodes, that same year, without any pushback or additional steps inserted into the process; • In 2020, Ms. Trevizo received a standup desk that she was approved

for in 2019, however, the motor did not work, and despite notice to Ms. Butler, Ms. Butler refused and/or failed to have the motor repaired, thus eliminating any benefit that could have been

appreciated by Ms. Trevizo; • The work product produced by Ms. Trevizo’s division was scrutinized more harshly while under the management of Ms. Trevizo, compared

to when it was managed by her white, male predecessor, Craig Murphy, or while under the temporary management of Mr. Hilliker, including but not limited to, the revisions of the NAVSUP P-724, the Non-Combat Expenditure Allowance Naval Message, [and] the

Annual Price Update. • The increased scrutiny[] was not supported by the Naval Style Guide, and differed from one submission to the next, such that when a format

was adjusted, by the next submission, the adjusted format was questioned; • The increased scrutiny and hostile environment created by Ms. Butler

and aimed an [sic] Ms. Trevizo became so pervasive that one of Ms. Trevizo’s staff members, Mark Emory, sought another position to get away from the hostility;

• Ms. Butler denied approval of developmental training for Ms. Trevizo on multiple occasions that would have assisted her in her promotional prospects within her career, even inserting herself to deny some training opportunities that did not require supervisor approval and

trying to accuse her of not following approval procedures, when Ms. Butler had previously approved the training in question; • Ms. Butler seemed to consistently misinterpret e-mails from Ms.

Trevizo to Ms. Copp, as though they were aggressive or overstepping her authority, despite Ms. Treviso [sic] just trying to relay the formatting concerns that she was trying to navigate with Ms. Butler to avoid being further criticized for allegedly inferior work product; • Ms. Butler used one instance of a misinterpreted September 23, 2020 e-mail between Ms. Treviso [sic] and Ms.

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Trevizo v. Del Toro, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/trevizo-v-del-toro-pamd-2025.