Wisdom v. M.A. Hanna Co.

978 F. Supp. 1471, 1997 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15044, 1997 WL 610483
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Georgia
DecidedJune 4, 1997
Docket1:95-cv-02492
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 978 F. Supp. 1471 (Wisdom v. M.A. Hanna Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wisdom v. M.A. Hanna Co., 978 F. Supp. 1471, 1997 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15044, 1997 WL 610483 (N.D. Ga. 1997).

Opinion

ORDER

HULL, District Judge.

Plaintiff Gaylen Wisdom brings this employment discrimination action under the Age Discrimination in Employment Act (“.ADEA”) and under state law. Plaintiff claims that Defendants’ terminating him and replacing him with an employee 21 years his junior constituted age discrimination. This matter is before the Court on Defendants M.A. Hanna Company (“Hanna”) and PMS Consolidated, Inc.’s (“PMS”) Motions for Summary Judgment [21-1; 22-1] on all of Plaintiffs claims.

/. FACTS

In 1979, Plaintiff began work as Manager of Management Information Systems (“MIS”) for Defendant PMS. At all times relevant to this action, Defendant PMS was a wholly-owned subsidiary and then a division of Defendant Hanna. Subsequent to Plaintiffs termination, Defendant PMS was consolidated with Defendant Hanna’s Allied Col- or and Wilson Color divisions to form M.A. Hanna Color Division. At the time of the consolidation, Defendant PMS ceased to exist as a separate entity.

As Defendant PMS’s Manager of MIS, Plaintiff was responsible for all facets of Defendant PMS’s MIS function, including managing the MIS department and its employees. Plaintiff was responsible for all software and hardware utilized by Defendant PMS and its plants throughout the United States. Plaintiffs responsibilities included preserving data integrity, maintaining the availability of the computer system and its services, providing meaningful operational data and reports, as well as training the system’s users and monitoring the system’s performance.

The first computer system Defendant used under Plaintiffs direction was a System 38 minicomputer. In 1983, Defendant PMS switched to the IBM AS/400 minicomputer for its computer needs. Plaintiff was involved in the decision to switch to the AS/400 and was responsible for overseeing implementation of the AS/400. Defendant PMS used the MAPICS database software program with its AS/400.

A. Defendant PMS Experiences Problems With Its MAPICS Software

1. MAPICS Version 2 Software Was Not Adequate to Meet Defendant PMS’s Computer Needs

In 1990, Defendant PMS upgraded its software program to MAPICS version 2. However, this program was not adequate to address Defendant PMS’s business needs. Plaintiff and his staff were required to make over 1.000 programming changes to the software to make it adequate for Defendant PMS’s needs. Despite all the programming-changes, Plaintiff still believed in the Fall of 1993 that the MAPICS version 2 software was adequate to meet Defendant PMS’s needs. Plaintiff believed that he and his staff could continue to make programming *1473 changes as necessary to meet the company’s needs.

2. Implementation of MOD 4 Software Caused Numerous Problems

In 1993, users of Defendant PMS’s computer system informed Plaintiff that the MAPICS version 2 software still was not adequate to meet the company’s needs. Plaintiff assured Defendant PMS’s computer users, however, that the newly available MAPICS version 4 (“MOD 4”) would address the company’s computer needs. Defendant PMS scheduled to complete the implementation of MOD 4 by March 1,1994.

Plaintiff experienced numerous difficulties in implementing MOD 4. Among other things, the Administrative Manager of Defendant PMS’s Chicago Division, Bohdan Pihanuik, wrote to Plaintiff noting (a) that the division had received inadequate information concerning the new data fields in MOD 4 and (b) that there had been a number of data processing problems. Also, users of Defendant PMS’s computer system did not receive adequate information regarding differences in MAPICS version 2 and MOD 4 and thus did not know how to employ properly the new software.

In early March 1994, Plaintiff met with Timm Scott, Plaintiffs direct supervisor and a Vice President of Defendant PMS, and Joseph Bauer, Defendant PMS’s President. Other members of Defendant PMS’s management also attended the meeting. At the meeting, Plaintiff informed Bauer that Plaintiff would not be able to meet the March 1, 1994 deadline to implement MOD 4 and that he would not be ready to implement until June 1, 1994. Bauer informed Plaintiff that the June 1, 1994 target date was unacceptable and instructed Plaintiff to implement the upgrade by May 1,1994.

The eventual implementation of MOD 4 caused several problems. Plaintiff admits that May and June 1994 were extremely difficult periods because of the implementation of MOD 4 and the number of bugs and data processing problems that occurred following the implementation. In May and June, Defendant PMS’s employees, including Bohdan and Penny Grigg, Administrative Manager of Defendant PMS’s North Carolina Division, complained of numerous serious problems with the MOD 4 and the MIS department itself. Bohdan noted thirteen specific problems with the MOD 4 and Grigg noted problems with the MOD 4 and the fact that no member of Plaintiffs staff had communicated to Grigg or members of her staff about the problems Grigg’s staff experienced with the MOD 4.

B. Defendant PMS Had Additional Problems With Plaintiffs Performance

The problems implementing the MOD 4 were not the only problems Defendant PMS experienced with Plaintiff. In his deposition, Plaintiff testifies that during his tenure, the growth of the processing/storage capacity of Defendant PMS’s computer system did not keep pace with Defendant PMS’s business growth. Plaintiff also testifies that, at times, others criticized his work and that there was a perception at Defendant PMS that some of the operating divisions did not trust Plaintiffs department. Additionally, Plaintiff testifies that a number of the operating divisions believed that there was poor communication between Plaintiffs department and these operating divisions.

These problems were exemplified by the difficulties Bill Sehwori, Defendant PMS’s Materials Manager, had with Plaintiff and the MIS department. Sehwori was a major user of the MIS department’s services and had extensive interactions with Plaintiff. Among the problems Sehwori encountered were (1) Plaintiffs failing to develop a program in a timely fashion to provide a report and raw data on material costs; (2) Plaintiffs faffing to implement timely modifications to Defendant PMS’s accounts payable system; and (3) Plaintiffs faffing to provide Sehwori with necessary information to process vendor invoices, thereby causing an estimated 1,800 invoices not to be processed. Based on these and other problems, Sehwori felt that Plaintiff was not the right person for the position of Manager of MIS. Sehwori and a number of other PMS managers and executives explained to Bauer and Scott the difficulties these managers were having with Plaintiff’s department.

*1474 After perceiving the problems a number of Defendant PMS’s managers were having with Plaintiffs department, and the fact that Plaintiff did not meet a number of goals that Plaintiff and Scott had established, Bauer retained Anderson Consulting to evaluate Defendant PMS’s existing computer system and the MIS department.

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Bluebook (online)
978 F. Supp. 1471, 1997 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15044, 1997 WL 610483, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wisdom-v-ma-hanna-co-gand-1997.