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DiCampli v. Korman Comm, 06-4490 (2007)

Court: Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit Number: 06-4490 Visitors: 14
Filed: Dec. 12, 2007
Latest Update: Mar. 02, 2020
Summary: Opinions of the United 2007 Decisions States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit 12-12-2007 DiCampli v. Korman Comm Precedential or Non-Precedential: Non-Precedential Docket No. 06-4490 Follow this and additional works at: http://digitalcommons.law.villanova.edu/thirdcircuit_2007 Recommended Citation "DiCampli v. Korman Comm" (2007). 2007 Decisions. Paper 83. http://digitalcommons.law.villanova.edu/thirdcircuit_2007/83 This decision is brought to you for free and open access by the Opinions o
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                                                                                                                           Opinions of the United
2007 Decisions                                                                                                             States Court of Appeals
                                                                                                                              for the Third Circuit


12-12-2007

DiCampli v. Korman Comm
Precedential or Non-Precedential: Non-Precedential

Docket No. 06-4490




Follow this and additional works at: http://digitalcommons.law.villanova.edu/thirdcircuit_2007

Recommended Citation
"DiCampli v. Korman Comm" (2007). 2007 Decisions. Paper 83.
http://digitalcommons.law.villanova.edu/thirdcircuit_2007/83


This decision is brought to you for free and open access by the Opinions of the United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit at Villanova
University School of Law Digital Repository. It has been accepted for inclusion in 2007 Decisions by an authorized administrator of Villanova
University School of Law Digital Repository. For more information, please contact Benjamin.Carlson@law.villanova.edu.
                                                           NOT PRECEDENTIAL

                   UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
                        FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT
                             ____________

                                 No. 06-4490
                                ____________

                     JENIFER WONSETLER DICAMPLI,

                                                  Appellant,

                                       v.

                           KORMAN COMMUNITIES

                                ____________

                  On Appeal from United States District Court
                    for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania
                         District Court No. 04-cv-2363
                   District Judge: Honorable Louis H. Pollak
                                  ____________

                  Submitted Under Third Circuit LAR 34.1(a)
                             December 10, 2007

         Before: McKEE, CHAGARES and HARDIMAN, Circuit Judges.

                           (Filed: December 12, 2007)

                                ____________

                           OPINION OF THE COURT
                                ____________




HARDIMAN, Circuit Judge.
      This employment discrimination case is an appeal from the District Court’s grant

of summary judgment in favor of Korman Communities. Plaintiff Jenifer Wonsetler

DiCampli brought claims of pregnancy discrimination and retaliation under federal and

state statutes after Korman demoted her while on maternity leave and subsequently

terminated her when she refused to accept a transfer to another position. DiCampli

appeals only the District Court’s dismissal of her claim under the Family Medical Leave

Act of 1993 (FMLA), 29 U.S.C. § 2601 et seq. Because we conclude that DiCampli

cannot demonstrate that the reasons proffered by Korman for the demotion are pretextual,

or that the proposed job transfer was an adverse employment action, we will affirm.

                                            I.

      Because we write for the parties, we repeat only the facts essential to our decision.

DiCampli joined Korman in 1998 as the Assistant Manager of Korman’s 222 West

Rittenhouse Square apartment building (the Rittenhouse Building). Her duties as

Assistant Manager revolved primarily around managing the Rittenhouse Building’s

payables and receivables, and she acquired detailed knowledge of Korman’s information

technology systems and administrative procedures. Her effective management of these

“back of the house” functions was widely recognized by her supervisors and colleagues.

      In the Spring of 2001, the position of General Manager of the Rittenhouse

Building became available. Although Korman management was confident in DiCampli’s

administrative and management skills, there were doubts that she could effectively handle

the sales and revenue-generating aspects of the General Manager’s position.

                                            2
Accordingly, while Korman decided to promote DiCampli to General Manager, it hired

an additional salesperson at the Rittenhouse Building to counter DiCampli’s perceived

weaknesses in sales. Korman also established a bonus structure under which DiCampli

would receive quarterly bonuses for meeting planned revenue targets. DiCampli’s tax

records indicate that she received over $7000 in bonuses during 2001. The bonus

structure in place at the time of DiCampli’s termination provided for quarterly bonuses of

$3000 and a potential year-end bonus of $5000, all contingent upon meeting the target net

operating income (NOI) for the Rittenhouse Building.

       Regrettably, Korman’s concerns about DiCampli’s ability to generate sales and

revenue were soon realized. By the end of 2001, NOI for the Rittenhouse Building was

approximately $260,000 under budget. In DiCampli’s first and only performance review

as General Manager in March 2002, Korman Chief Operating Officer William B.

Hackenburg advised DiCampli that she needed to improve on the sales aspect of her

position. Korman management believed that DiCampli struggled with customer relations

and was not sufficiently visible to tenants at the front desk.

       In January 2002, DiCampli notified Korman that she was pregnant and intended to

take maternity leave under the FMLA. Shortly after DiCampli’s maternity leave

commenced in late April 2002, Korman decided to reorganize the management of the

Rittenhouse Building in an attempt to improve the decline in revenue. DiCampli was

informed that she was being removed as General Manager and would assume the role of

Operations Manager upon her return from maternity leave. Korman hired a new General

                                              3
Manager, Justine Florian, who started work around the time that DiCampli’s maternity

leave ended in June 2002.

       In addition to reorganizing the management at the Rittenhouse Building, Korman

was also beginning to expand its information technology (IT) department. DiCampli had

impressed Korman’s information technology manager, Robert Mahon, during a transition

to new property management software a year earlier, and she was his first choice for a

new IT trainer position that was being created at Korman’s offices in Plymouth Meeting,

Pennsylvania. Accordingly, DiCampli was offered the IT trainer position soon after she

returned from maternity leave. The salary and benefits of the IT trainer position were the

same as what DiCampli was receiving as Operations Manager, although the bonus

structure was more subjective.

       A number of Korman’s corporate officers urged DiCampli to accept the transfer,

but she ultimately declined, writing in a letter to Larry Korman that she could not accept

the position “due to financial hardship.” The IT position would require a substantially

longer commute, which DiCampli suggested would require that she purchase another

family vehicle. Although she had not been told that she could remain at the Rittenhouse

Building if she declined the IT trainer position, DiCampli also declared in her letter that

she would remain at her current position.

       Soon thereafter, DiCampli was contacted by Korman’s Vice President of Sales

Marketing, Mary Regina Paschall (Paschall), who urged DiCampli to reconsider the

transfer. DiCampli admits that Paschall made it clear that the IT trainer position was the

                                              4
only position that was available to her. Nevertheless, DiCampli again refused the

transfer. Korman terminated DiCampli in August 2002, along with two other Rittenhouse

Building employees.

                                             II.

       Korman requested summary judgment, arguing that neither DiCampli’s removal

from the General Manager position nor the proposed transfer to the IT department

constituted an adverse employment action. Korman also argued that DiCampli could not

establish that Korman’s stated nondiscriminatory reason for these decisions was

pretextual. The District Court found that material issues of fact existed with respect to

whether DiCampli’s removal as General Manager was an adverse employment action, but

that she had failed to adduce sufficient evidence to allow a reasonable jury to disbelieve

Korman’s stated reason for the change. The District Court also held that the transfer to

the IT trainer position was not an adverse employment action, and, alternatively,

DiCampli had not demonstrated that Korman’s asserted rationale for the transfer was

pretextual.

       To recover for retaliation under the FMLA, DiCampli must demonstrate that: (1)

she took FMLA leave; (2) she suffered an adverse employment action; and (3) the

adverse employment action was causally connected to her taking of FMLA leave.

Conoshenti v. Pub. Serv. Elec. & Gas Co., 
364 F.3d 135
, 146 (3d Cir. 2004). FMLA

retaliation claims are analyzed using the familiar three-step framework of McDonnell

Douglas Corp. v. Green, 
411 U.S. 792
(1973). At issue with respect to DiCampli’s

                                             5
removal from the General Manager’s position is the third step of that burden-shifting

framework, in which the plaintiff bears the burden of demonstrating that the employer’s

asserted justification is simply a pretext designed to mask discrimination.

       To avoid summary judgment under the third step of the McDonnell Douglas

framework, the plaintiff must “point to some evidence, direct or circumstantial, from

which a factfinder could reasonably either (1) disbelieve the employer’s articulated

legitimate reasons; or (2) believe that an invidious discriminatory reason was more likely

than not a motivating or determinative cause of the employer’s action.” Fuentes v.

Perskie, 
32 F.3d 759
, 764 (3d Cir. 1994). The plaintiff must adduce evidence sufficient

to “allow a factfinder reasonably to infer that each of the employer’s proffered non-

discriminatory reasons was either a post hoc fabrication or otherwise did not actually

motivate the employment action.” 
Id. (emphasis in
original)(internal citation omitted). To

do so, the plaintiff must “demonstrate such weaknesses, implausibilities, inconsistencies,

incoherencies, or contradictions in the employer’s proffered legitimate reason for its

action that a reasonable factfinder could rationally find them unworthy of credence and

hence infer that the employer did not act for [the asserted] non-discriminatory reasons.”

Id. at 765
(emphasis in original)(internal quotations and citations omitted). It is not

sufficient to show that the employer’s decision was wrong, mistaken, imprudent or

incompetently made. 
Id. DiCampli argues
that her overall favorable performance review and the quarterly

bonuses she received throughout her time as General Manager belie the consistent

                                              6
assertions of Korman’s executives that she was removed from her General Manager

position because of declining sales at the Rittenhouse Building. Yet a closer examination

of DiCampli’s performance review actually bolsters Korman’s account. Indeed, that

review explicitly notes that DiCampli needed to become more involved with sales, the

precise issue that motivated Korman to remove DiCampli. Likewise, DiCampli overlooks

the consistent testimony of Korman’s corporate officers that she did not reach her revenue

goals but nevertheless received partial bonuses in an effort to incentivize her to improve.

DiCampli’s receipt of quarterly bonuses does not mean, as she suggests, that she was

meeting her revenue goals and that Korman was entirely satisfied with her sales

performance. That granting DiCampli partial bonuses despite her poor performance may

have been an imprudent or misguided business decision is, of course, beside the point.

See, e.g., Keller v. Orix Credit Alliance, Inc., 
130 F.3d 1101
, 1109 (3d Cir. 1997).

       DiCampli also challenges the District Court’s holding that the proposed transfer to

the IT trainer position was not an adverse employment action. A plaintiff claiming

retaliation must show that a reasonable employee would have found the alleged

retaliatory action “materially adverse” in that it “well might have dissuaded a reasonable

worker” from exercising a right under the FMLA. See Moore v. City of Phila., 
461 F.3d 331
, 341 (3d Cir. 2006) (citing Burlington N. & Santa Fe Ry. Co. v. White, 
126 S. Ct. 2405
, 2415 (2006)).

       In this case, DiCampli was asked to transfer to a position with identical pay and

benefits to what she received as Operations Manager. DiCampli argues that the IT trainer

                                             7
position was a “desk job” that offered less prestige and fewer opportunities for

performance bonuses. Yet she offers no objective evidence to suggest that the IT trainer

position was less desirable or prestigious than that of Operations Manager. See O’Neal v.

City of Chicago, 
392 F.3d 909
, 913 (7th Cir. 2004) (finding that “purely subjective

preferences for one position over another” do not establish adverse employment action);

Cf. Burlington 
Northern, 126 S. Ct. at 2417
(transfer from position that was “objectively

considered a better job” to a position that was “by all accounts more arduous and dirtier”

can be adverse employment action). Nor does she present any evidence that the

opportunities for bonuses in the IT trainer position were markedly different. Indeed, as

the District Court observed, the record suggests that DiCampli might have done better in

the new position given that her bonuses as Operations Manager were linked to revenues

that were in steep decline. Finally, the mere fact that the IT position would have required

a change in location and a longer commute is not sufficient to constitute an adverse

action. See, e.g., Hoffman v. Rubin, 
193 F.3d 959
, 964 (8th Cir. 1999) (transfer from St.

Paul to Chicago not adverse employment action because rank, pay, and other benefits

unaltered). Under these circumstances, we are unable to conclude that the proposed

transfer to the IT department was so materially adverse as to deter a reasonable employee

in DiCampli’s position from exercising her FMLA rights.

       Even if we were inclined to find that a reasonable trier of fact could find that the

transfer to the IT position was an adverse action, we are in full agreement with the

District Court that DiCampli has adduced no evidence that Korman’s asserted rationale

                                              8
for transferring her was pretextual. DiCampli offers nothing, save her own subjective

belief, to suggest that the demotion to Operations Manager and subsequent transfer offer

was simply a ruse meant to provide Korman with a plausible excuse to terminate her.

Moreover, the record evidence that DiCampli had demonstrated strong administrative and

IT skills and would be a strong fit for the IT trainer position is entirely uncontradicted.

       For the foregoing reasons, we will affirm the District Court’s grant of summary

judgment in favor of Korman.




                                              9

Source:  CourtListener

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