CARLTON W. REEVES, District Judge.
In 2004, CenterPoint Energy, Inc. hired Arthea Grace as a service technician.
The analysis for a Title VII discrimination claim is straightforward. First, Grace must establish a prima facie case that her firing was motivated by "a protected factor."
CenterPoint's motion for summary judgment makes only one argument: that Grace has failed to establish her prima facie case.
In a work-rule violation case like this one, Grace can establish her prima facie case in two ways.
CenterPoint argues that Grace indisputably violated the relevant rule — that is, the rule that CenterPoint fired her for breaking. In its briefings, CenterPoint suggests that Grace was fired for a host of rule violations, including a "failure to perform a gas leak investigation" and "expos[ing] CenterPoint's customer, a pregnant woman, to potential injury or death."
Grace states that she did not falsify any company documents. To support her claim, she has given highly detailed testimony regarding what occurred during the relevant leak investigation. That testimony is as follows.
In the early hours of March 31, 2015, a CenterPoint dispatcher tasked Grace with investigating a reported gas leak. Grace knew the reported leak was located in a gated community, and asked the dispatcher for the gate code. The dispatcher informed her that he did not have the code because CenterPoint's "computers were down" — a claim verified by internal records submitted to this Court by CenterPoint.
Upon arrival at the gated community, Grace spent half an hour attempting to get beyond the locked gate. During this time, the dispatcher suggested the leak report was "old" and "left over" in the system, and "probably wasn't a leak" because a prior CenterPoint technician had "probably" turned off the gas at the residence. The dispatcher "question[ed] the validity" of the leak report, saying it was "probably an error." Grace concluded that there was not an active leak at the location. She left the entrance of the gated community an hour after being tasked with the leak report, and returned home to take care of her sick children.
CenterPoint requires technicians to resolve leak reports by entering one of three options into their computer system: no leak found, leak found, or leak repaired. About three hours after leaving the entrance to the gated community,
CenterPoint does not dispute Grace's story. Instead, they argue that Grace's entry amounts to falsifying a company document. This argument assumes that CenterPoint had a rule that technicians could enter "no leak found" only under certain circumstances, and that such circumstances were not present when Grace her entry.
This assumption finds no support in the record. Perhaps CenterPoint had a rule that "no leak found" could be entered only after physically examining a gas line, something Grace failed to do. But no evidence has been submitted that indicates what, if any, rules were in place in March 2015 regarding the entry of "no leak found." The record's silence on the existence of any rule requires this Court to assume that there was no rule about when "no leak found" could be entered.
On this assumption, Grace may not have lied when she made her entry into CenterPoint's computer system. This conclusion is not changed by Grace's subsequent statement, when confronted by management, that she "kind of dropped the ball" by failing to turn off the gas line upstream of the site of the reported leak.
Assuming Grace did violate CenterPoint's ban on falsifying company documents, she still may establish her prima facie case by showing that one or more "similarly situated" employees outside the protected class "were not punished similarly."
CenterPoint argues that Grace cannot make these showings because she has provided "no evidence CenterPoint treated any male, non-African American employee more favorably under substantially similar circumstances."
Here, Grace has presented evidence that CenterPoint discriminated against her because she was a woman. She has not, however, presented any evidence that CenterPoint discriminated against her because she was black or because she was a black woman.
The first prong requires that Grace show that "similarly situated" male employees "held the same job or responsibilities."
The second prong requires that Grace show that she and the male employees "shared the same supervisor or had their employment status determined by the same person."
The third prong requires Grace to establish that she and the male employees had "essentially comparable" disciplinary records.
CenterPoint disputes this testimony by presenting a single piece of evidence regarding Grace's disciplinary record. That evidence, a 2007 internal memorandum from Supervisor Smith to Grace, told her she was being disciplined for three recent "serious violations" of company policy.
The tension in the 2007 memorandum between Supervisor Smith's allegations of work violations and Grace's denial of those allegations can be resolved by Grace's own testimony.
If Grace's testimony is to be believed, then the only infractions appearing on her disciplinary record at the time of her firing were a sham. Grace's record would therefore have been "essentially comparable" to those of Mr. Childers and Mr. McCornell. Given this testimony, there is a genuine dispute of material fact as to whether Grace has met the third prong of the "similarly situated" test.
The final prong requires Grace to show that the male employees had "nearly identical" rule violations that led to different punishments. Grace testified that both Mr. Childers and Mr. McCornell were not fired despite falsifying company documents. That testimony is as follows.
In 2014, Grace was called to an uninhabited house at 159 Lake Harbour Drive in Ridgeland, Mississippi to investigate a gas leak report. Upon arrival, she found a leak caused by malfunctioning equipment, which was resolved by shutting off the gas to the house (but not fixing the equipment). Later, after a family moved into the house, Mr. Childers was called to turn on gas at the residence. Mr. Childers resolved the call by submitting documentation to CenterPoint which stated that he had turned on the gas and "tested everything." In fact, Mr. Childers had failed to test the malfunctioning equipment. That failure caused a gas leak, which Grace personally resolved. Supervisor Smith was informed of Mr. Childers' wrongdoing, but Mr. Childers was never fired from CenterPoint. Mr. Childers also falsified company documents in a similar fashion while responding to a gas leak report in 2015. Once again, despite Grace reporting Mr. Childers' wrongdoing, Mr. Childers was not fired.
Mr. McCornell falsified company documents while responding to a gas leak report at 110 Twin Cedars in Florence, Mississippi in 2014. After resolving the report, he submitted documentation to CenterPoint stating that he had conducted a series of gas leak tests and had re-lit a gas stove and single water heater. The customer who submitted the report called CenterPoint the next day to report another gas leak. Grace responded to the new report, and was told by the customer that Mr. McCornell had not completed the necessary testing during the initial visit. Grace verified this complaint, because — contrary to the documents submitted to CenterPoint by Mr. McCornell — the customer's house had an electric stove (as opposed to a gas stove) and two water heaters (as opposed to one). Mr. McCornell's failure to re-light the second water heater also indicated that he had not performed the proper gas leak tests. Grace reported Mr. McCornell's wrongdoing to Supervisor Smith, but Mr. McCornell was never fired.
CenterPoint has presented no evidence that disputes Grace's testimony on these points.
This argument is beside the point. The rule Grace allegedly violated was not a ban on falsifying company documents intentionally, nor was it a ban on falsifying company documents in a way that could put customers at serious risk of injury of death. It was a ban on falsifying company documents, period. Grace's testimony establishes a genuine dispute of material fact as to whether she met the fourth and final prong of the "similarly situated" test by showing that the male employees violated a "nearly identical" company rule.
In sum, even if Grace violated CenterPoint's ban on falsifying company documents, there is a genuine dispute as to whether she established her prima facie case by showing that similarly situated male employees were not punished similarly.
CenterPoint's motion for summary judgment is narrowly focused on Grace's alleged failure to establish a prima facie case of employment discrimination. The record shows there to be genuine disputes of material fact as to whether Grace has established that case in regards to gender-based discrimination. CenterPoint has consequently failed to meet their burden, and their motion must be DENIED.