Victoria Okakpu-Mbah v. Postmaster General of United States

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedAugust 31, 2022
Docket21-2811
StatusUnpublished

This text of Victoria Okakpu-Mbah v. Postmaster General of United States (Victoria Okakpu-Mbah v. Postmaster General of United States) 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
Victoria Okakpu-Mbah v. Postmaster General of United States, (6th Cir. 2022).

Opinion

NOT RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION File Name: 22a0362n.06

Case No. 21-2811

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FILED Aug 31, 2022 FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT DEBORAH S. HUNT, Clerk

VICTORIA N. OKAKPU-MBAH, an individual, ) ) Plaintiff-Appellant, ) ) ON APPEAL FROM THE UNITED v. ) STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR ) THE WESTERN DISTRICT OF POSTMASTER GENERAL OF THE UNITED ) MICHIGAN STATES, ) Defendant-Appellee. ) OPINION )

Before: GIBBONS, WHITE, and NALBANDIAN, Circuit Judges.

NALBANDIAN, Circuit Judge. The United States Postal Service hired Victoria Okakpu-

Mbah to be a mail clerk. As a new hire, Okakpu-Mbah had to complete a 90-day probationary

period, during which it became clear that she was not working at the appropriate speed. In turn,

the Postal Service fired her. But Okakpu-Mbah believed that the Postal Service had treated her

unfairly—especially considering the workplace incidents with her co-workers that took place

during her probationary period. And so she sued, alleging that the Postal Service discriminated

against her based on race, national origin, age, and that her firing was retaliatory. The district court

granted summary judgment to the Postal Service, finding that Okakpu-Mbah did not show that the

Postal Service’s reason for firing her was pretextual. We AFFIRM. No. 21-2811, Okakpu-Mbah v. Postmaster Gen. of United States

I.

Victoria Okakpu-Mbah is a Nigerian-born American. In 2016, she saw that the Postal

Service was hiring a mail clerk at its Oshtemo Process and Distribution Facility (also known as

the “Kalamazoo Hub Station” or “the Hub”).1

Okakpu-Mbah began working as a mail sorter in October 2016 at the age of 58. Her duties

involved processing packages, organizing them into carts by their zip code, and taking them to a

designated area for pick up. At times, Okakpu-Mbah was expected to work as an expeditor. In

that role, she had to go to the dock to receive incoming mail trucks, scan and monitor their trips

on a computer, and ensure that the trucks were loaded properly. Because of the large volume of

mail that had to be processed, speed was vital. Clerks had to “think quickly on [their] feet” and

“be aware of [their] surroundings” in order to “stay safe and do the work that’s required.”

Sometimes, mail clerks at Kalamazoo would start their day at the Westwood Post Office and work

a few hours before going to the Kalamazoo Hub.

Okakpu-Mbah had some trouble with her co-workers. She worked mainly with three

younger white females, Taylor Perkins, Krista Winters, and Joslyn Steck, who were all mail clerks.

Okakpu-Mbah testified that shortly after she started, one of her co-workers asked about her age.

And when she answered, the co-worker laughed and another said, “you’re as old as my mother.”

(R. 42-1, Okakpu-Mbah Dep., PageID 167.) But Okakpu-Mbah thought it was a “joke” and never

told Michelle Fish, her supervisor, about it. (Id.)

On December 23, 2016, Okakpu-Mbah was working on the dock as an expeditor. One of

her co-workers, Jessi DeGryse, pushed one of the mail carts towards her, but the cart never hit her.

Okakpu-Mbah complained to Perkins, but Perkins told her that is how DeGryse is. When DeGryse

1 The full title of the position is PSE Clerk, Sales and Services Distribution Associate.

2 No. 21-2811, Okakpu-Mbah v. Postmaster Gen. of United States

found out, she came up to Okakpu-Mbah and screamed “what did you say to Taylor, . . . you F’ing

old African piece of shit?” and told her to go back to her own country. (Id. at 169.) DeGryse was

spitting on her while telling her all of this. (Id.) Okakpu-Mbah then complained to Fish about the

event. (Id.) Fish told her to write a statement, which Okakpu-Mbah did. (Id. at 172.) In her

statement, Okakpu-Mbah did not recount the specific language used by DeGryse; instead, she

wrote that DeGryse was “cussing, swearing and . . . us[ing] all kinds of profane words that I cannot

even put down here.”2 (R. 42-9, Witness Statements, PageID 242.) And Fish warned DeGryse,

in the presence of her union representative, that her behavior was unacceptable.

As a new mail clerk, Okakpu-Mbah had to complete a 90-day probationary period. The

Postal Service uses this period as the “final step in determining an employee’s suitability, since

only an actual trial on the job can be conclusive.” U.S. Postal Serv., Handbook EL-312

Employment and Placement (“Handbook”), § 584.1.3 During this time, employees are assessed

on their work quantity, work quality, work relations, work methods, dependability, and personal

conduct. Supervisors are also required to give probationary employees three reviews before their

probationary period is over: one at 30 days, another at 60, and a final one at 80. And noncareer

employees are “separated as soon as it becomes evident that they are unable to meet the

requirements of their positions.” Handbook § 584.35.

Fish gave Okakpu-Mbah her 30-day review on November 24, 2016 and rated her as

satisfactory in all work categories except for work quantity, which she rated as unacceptable. Fish

testified that she gave Okakpu-Mbah that rating because she “was not working at an acceptable

2 Fish testified that she became aware of DeGryse’s racist and ageist comments only after Okakpu- Mbah had been terminated. (R. 42-2, Fish Dep., PageID 196.) 3 Available at: https://about.usps.com/handbooks/el312/el312c5_039.htm

3 No. 21-2811, Okakpu-Mbah v. Postmaster Gen. of United States

speed” and “did not keep up with her co-workers.” (R. 42-2, Fish’s Dep., PageID 197.) She added

that “there was no sense of urgency in the work that she had done” and that she got in the way of

her co-workers. (Id.) Fish explained all this to Okakpu-Mbah, and according to Okakpu-Mbah,

told her that because she is new her speed would pick up over time.4

But Okakpu-Mbah’s speed did not improve. Towards the end of her probationary period,

Fish reached out to Okakpu-Mbah’s other supervisors asking for their feedback on Okakpu-

Mbah’s performance. Brandi Whitten, a black supervisor at the Westwood Post Office, told Fish

that Okakpu-Mbah “works veeeery slow and I don’t think she grasps the concept.” (R. 42-4,

Whitten Email, PageID 203.) Whitten also testified that Okakpu-Mbah was “slower than most of

the people that she was working with” and that she sometimes had to “redirect her to a different

task” as a result. (R. 42-5, Whitten’s Dep., PageID 210.) And Postmaster Travis Graham told

Fish that Okakpu-Mbah “has no sense of urgency” and recommended that she not be kept after her

probationary period. (R. 42-4, Graham Email, PageID 205.)

In January 2017, Fish fired Okakpu-Mbah because she was not working at the appropriate

speed. Following her termination, Okakpu-Mbah sued. She alleged race and age-based

harassment,5 race and national-origin discrimination, age discrimination, and retaliation.

Following discovery, the Postal Service moved for summary judgment, which the district court

4 The parties dispute whether Fish gave Okakpu-Mbah her other performance reviews before firing her. Okakpu-Mbah maintains that Fish only gave her a 30-day performance review. And as evidence of this, she stresses that she did not sign the evaluation sheet for the 60-day or 80-day review. Fish, however, testified that she gave her all three performance reviews. Fish did not recall specifically the 60-day review but said that the 80-day review was the meeting in which she terminated Okakpu-Mbah.

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