Young v. Stelter & Brinck, Ltd.

881 N.E.2d 874, 174 Ohio App. 3d 221, 2007 Ohio 6510
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 7, 2007
DocketNo. C-070259.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 881 N.E.2d 874 (Young v. Stelter & Brinck, Ltd.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Young v. Stelter & Brinck, Ltd., 881 N.E.2d 874, 174 Ohio App. 3d 221, 2007 Ohio 6510 (Ohio Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

Mark P. Painter, Judge.

{¶ 1} In this employment-discrimination and retaliatory-discharge case, plaintiff-appellant, James Young, appeals the trial court’s entry of summary judgment in favor of defendant-appellee, Stelter & Brinck, Ltd. We affirm.

I. Employment and Injury

{¶2} Stelter is an international company that manufactures air heaters, afterburners, incinerators, and other thermal products. Due to a downturn in business, between September 2001 and September 2005, Stelter had reduced its full-time employee base from 44 to 26 people. In its appellate brief, Stelter states that between August 2005 and June 2007, it terminated three additional employees.

{¶ 3} Young worked for Stelter from 2001 through 2005. Stelter terminated Young’s employment shortly after he had injured his back at work and filed a workers’ compensation claim.

{¶ 4} Young had begun working for Stelter in 2001 as a service technician. For the next three years, Young’s job evaluations were good. Young had received a bonus- and praise from customers, supervisors, and coworkers.

{¶ 5} After three years of employment, Young requested that he be reassigned to Stelter’s on-site shop as a fabricator. Stelter granted his request, and Young began working as a fabricator in late 2004.

{¶ 6} According to Stelter, Young’s performance deteriorated after he switched positions. In April 2005, Stelter decided to offer a fabricating position to another employee. Dale Witsken, Stelter’s operations manager, e-mailed supervisors Jerry Sebald and Steve Price to ask them for feedback on Young’s performance because he would “probably need to let [Young] go.” Sebald’s and Price’s reply e-mails stated that Young had been irresponsible with tools that Stelter had issued to him, had taken too long to complete job reports, had not been reliable, had poor hygiene, and had demonstrated a lack of fabricating skills.

{¶ 7} Stelter did not terminate Young’s employment immediately, but both Witsken and Sebald stated that Young’s quality of work, attention to detail, time- *224 management skills, and attitude continued to deteriorate after April 2005. Stelter allowed Young to continue his employment for another four months.

{¶ 8} Two events happened shortly before Young injured his back. First, Stelter had requested that Young work on a Saturday. According to Stelter, Young told Sebald that he could not work, because of childcare issues. On that Saturday, another employee had been assigned to a job and was unable to complete it. He called Young and asked him to finish the job for him. Young claimed that he had been with his children, but then had found a babysitter and had called Sebald several times to explain the situation. Stelter claimed that Young had lied about having childcare issues and had been working for another employer that day.

{¶ 9} The second incident involved a company credit-card charge. The chai*ge was for a hotel in New Jersey — the receipt stated “no show.” Young was not in New Jersey on the date listed. Sebald produced a copy of an e-mail he had sent to Young inquiring about the charge. Young claimed that he had never received the e-mail and that there was no mention of the charge during a subsequent phone conversation or during the meeting at which he was terminated.

{¶ 10} On August 11, 2005, Young spent a day at work lifting 20-foot metal bars. His back began to hurt. Young reported to work the next day, but he left early because he was in severe pain and wanted to see a doctor. The doctor gave him pain pills and told him to return in a few days. At Young’s next appointment, the doctor referred him to physical therapy. At some point, Young’s doctor told him that he had sprained his back and might have a slipped disk or a sciatic-nerve problem.

{¶ 11} Young was unable to work between the day of the injury and August 29, the day his employment was terminated. Young said that he had called Sebald daily between August 13 and 17 to inform him of his condition.

{¶ 12} Sebald said that Young did not contact him between August 13 and 17. Sebald said that he had received an e-mail from Young on August 18, after he had speculated in front of Young’s coworkers about whether Young was quitting. Young’s e-mail described his doctor’s diagnosis, informed Sebald that Young was in severe pain, and discussed the need to miss more work for physical therapy and recovery.

{¶ 13} On August 19 or 20, Young filed a workers’ compensation claim. (It is not clear on which day the claim was filed.) On August 23, Sebald called Young and asked him to come in for a meeting the following Monday, August 29. Young’s employment was terminated at that meeting. But Young said in his deposition that he was still on Stelter’s schedule to perform jobs for customers well past August 2005.

*225 {¶ 14} Young sued Stelter, alleging that it had violated R.C. 4123.90, by retaliating against an employee for instituting a workers’ compensation claim, and R.C. 4112.02, by discriminating against an employee on the basis of a disability.

{¶ 15} Stelter denied that it had discharged Young as a result of his workers’ compensation claim or that it had discriminated against Young on the basis of a disability. Stelter set forth a myriad of reasons why Young’s work performance had been unsatisfactory despite a positive job evaluation in 2004. Stelter also pointed to its overall reduction in staff since 2001 and to e-mail exchanges discussing Young’s termination well before he filed his workers’ compensation claim.

{¶ 16} Young disputed all allegations that his performance was lacking. He pointed out that his last evaluation had been very good, that the company had never documented or approached him about any of the trouble areas Stelter had identified until after his termination, and that he was on Stelter’s job schedule past his termination date.

{¶ 17} The trial court granted summary judgment to Stelter, and this appeal followed.

II. Assignment and Standard

{¶ 18} In his sole assignment of error, Young argues that the trial court’s entry of summary judgment for Stelter was improper because he had presented sufficient evidence to avoid summary judgment under either R.C. 4123.90 or 4112.02.

{¶ 19} We review a grant of summary judgment de novo. 1 Stelter was entitled to summary judgment only if (1) there was no genuine issue of material fact, (2) Stelter was entitled to judgment as a matter of law, and (3) reasonable minds, when viewing the evidence in favor of Young, could only reach a conclusion that was adverse to him. 2

III. Retaliatory Discharge: Prima Facie Case

{¶ 20} It is illegal in Ohio for an employer to discharge an employee for initiating or pursuing a workers’ compensation claim. 3 Courts analyze retaliatory-discharge claims under a burden-shifting approach. The initial burden of *226

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Bluebook (online)
881 N.E.2d 874, 174 Ohio App. 3d 221, 2007 Ohio 6510, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/young-v-stelter-brinck-ltd-ohioctapp-2007.