JOSEPH C. WILKINSON, JR., Magistrate Judge.
In this employment discrimination case, plaintiff, Gregory Morris, alleges that his former employer, Pellerin Milnor Corporation ("Milnor"), subjected him to a racially hostile work environment and retaliated against him for having complained about the harassment, ending in his termination, in violation of Title VII 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-5 et seq., and 42 U.S.C. § 1981a.
Milnor moved for summary judgment on all of plaintiff's claims, arguing that Morris cannot establish a prima facie case of any of his claims or that, if he can make out a prima facie case, he has no evidence to rebut Milnor's legitimate reasons for its actions. Record Doc. No. 17. The motion is supported by the declaration under penalty of perjury of defendant's Human Resources Director, Sidney J. Lacoste, Jr.; excerpts from Lacoste's and plaintiff's depositions; and exhibits from the depositions and from plaintiff's employment records. Morris filed a memorandum in opposition, which is supported by exhibits, excerpts from Lacoste's deposition, an affidavit and a sworn statement. Record Doc. No. 20.
Milnor received leave to file a reply memorandum that included a new declaration under penalty of perjury and other new exhibits. Record Doc. Nos. 21, 22, 23. Plaintiff was provided an opportunity to file a surreply memorandum to respond to the new evidence. Record Doc. No. 24; Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(e)(1). He filed a surreply to which he attached additional evidence. Record Doc. No. 27.
Having considered the complaint, the record, the submissions of the parties and the applicable law,
"A party may move for summary judgment, identifying each claim or defense—or the part of each claim or defense—on which summary judgment is sought. The court shall grant summary judgment if the movant shows that there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law." Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a).
Rule 56, as revised effective December 1, 2010, establishes new procedures for supporting factual positions:
Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(c).
Thus, the moving party bears the initial burden of identifying those materials in the record that it believes demonstrate the absence of a genuinely disputed material fact, but it is not required to negate elements of the nonmoving party's case.
A fact is "material" if its resolution in favor of one party might affect the outcome of the action under governing law.
To withstand a properly supported motion, the nonmoving party who bears the burden of proof at trial must cite to particular evidence in the record to support the essential elements of its claim.
"Factual controversies are construed in the light most favorable to the nonmovant, but only if both parties have introduced evidence showing that an actual controversy exists."
"Moreover, the nonmoving party's burden is not affected by the type of case; summary judgment is appropriate in
The competent summary judgment evidence establishes the following material facts, which are accepted as undisputed solely for purposes of the pending summary judgment motion. Milnor designs and manufactures industrial laundry equipment at its facility in Kenner, Louisiana. Employees in the positions of Assembler I, II, III and IV wire controls and harnesses for different product lines in the facility's Electrical Shop.
Morris, who is African-American, began working for Milnor through a temporary agency as an Assembler I in December 2011. He was promoted to Assembler III and was hired full-time in September 2013. He held that job until Milnor terminated him on October 22, 2015.
Milnor distributes and explains its anti-harassment, anti-retaliation and conflict resolution policies to new employees during every employee orientation. Declaration of Milnor's Human Resources Director Sidney J. Lacoste, Jr., Defendant's Exh. A at ¶¶ 8-10; Sexual Harassment Policy; Policy Against Harassment, Discrimination, and Retaliation; and Problem Resolution Policy, Defendant's Exhs. C and D. At his fulltime employee orientation, Morris signed a sheet stating that he had received the policies. Defendant's Exh. E, Employee Orientation Sheet dated September 26, 2013. Although he did not recall having received the policies, he knew throughout his employment that they existed, that discrimination was illegal and that he could report incidents of discrimination or harassment to his supervisor, management or human resources. Deposition of Gregory Morris, Defendant's Exh. B at pp. 78, 80-84.
Javier Cruz was plaintiff's hourly work coordinator. Jim Slay was Cruz's and plaintiff's salaried supervisor until early January 2015, when Slay was transferred to a different department and was replaced by Danny Randolph. When they were plaintiff's supervisors, Slay and Randolph reported to Cell Manager Frank Zito, who supervised the Electrical Shop.
Morris neither saw nor experienced any race discrimination or harassment at Milnor before July 28, 2014.
Morris immediately reported the noose to his work coordinator, Cruz. Plaintiff testified that Cruz said he would take care of it. To remind Cruz, Morris hung the wire on the wall by his desk, where it remained for about a month. Deposition of Gregory Morris, Defendant's Exh. B at pp. 110, 113-14, 117-18, 121. According to defendant's evidence, Cruz later denied that Morris had reported the noose to him. Memorandum to file by Steve Harris regarding events of September 1-17, 2014, Defendant's Exh. G; Javier Cruz's undated, handwritten statement, Defendant's Exh. H. This factual dispute is resolved in favor of plaintiff's testimony that he reported the noose to Cruz.
Cruz neither investigated nor reported plaintiff's complaint to any higher level supervisor. Morris believes that Cruz forgot about it and that Cruz's failure to act and his later denial that Morris had reported the noose to him were
Morris did not report the noose to any manager until September 1, 2014, when he complained to Employee Relations Manager Steve Harris that Zito had been intimidating him by watching him work, questioning what he was doing and complaining about his use of his cell phone at work, which Zito had not done before July 28, 2014. During their conversation, Morris showed Harris the noose.
Harris immediately conducted an investigation. He obtained a written statement from Cruz, who did not recall Morris complaining about a noose. Harris memo to file, Defendant's Exh. G; Cruz statement, Defendant's Exh. H. Harris spoke to Zito, who denied that he watched Morris more than he watched anyone else in the Electrical Shop. Zito explained that he had been in the shop more often because he was monitoring it while Slay was absent and was also checking frequently on the progress of an inventory count in a nearby storage area. Zito admitted having counseled Morris about using his cell phone at work. Harris determined that the wire was not a noose because it was typical of wires found in the shop and, unlike a noose, had no adjustable knot. He advised Morris on September 4 and 17, 2014, that no one whom Harris had interviewed had any information about a noose. Harris memo, Defendant's Exh. G.
On Thursday, September 25, 2014, Human Resources Director Lacoste orally warned Morris about violating his confidentiality agreement by posting photographs of Milnor's proprietary designs on plaintiff's Facebook page. Lacoste also orally counseled Morris about the need to wear safety glasses while working. Morris had never had any prior contact with Lacoste. Lacoste testified that the oral counseling was "no big deal," "didn't result in an issue" and was not a disciplinary warning or write-up. During their conversation, Morris told Lacoste that he was dissatisfied with the outcome of Harris's investigation into the noose incident. Lacoste, who was hearing about the incident for the first time, told Morris that he would personally reinvestigate it. Deposition of Sidney J. Lacoste, Jr., Defendant's Exh. N at pp. 48-50; Lacoste declaration, Defendant's Exh. A at ¶ 11; Morris deposition, Defendant's Exh. B at pp. 125, 142-44, 153-60; Lacoste memorandum to file dated September 25, 2014, Defendant's Exh. I.
At that time, Milnor employees did not work on Fridays. Lacoste deposition, Defendant's Exh. N at p. 86. Between Monday, September 29 and Thursday, October 2, 2014, Lacoste investigated plaintiff's complaint. He began by trying to view security videotape of plaintiff's work station from July 28, 2014, but the videotape had already been overwritten. Lacoste interviewed several of Morris's coemployees and asked Harris to re-interview the same individuals and obtain their written statements.
On Tuesday, September 30, 2014, Morris filed a discrimination charge regarding the noose with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission ("EEOC"). Lacoste received notice of the charge on October 8, 2014. Lacoste deposition, Defendant's Exh. N at pp. 86-87.
On October 8, 2014, Lacoste reported to Morris that, while Lacoste had found no evidence that the wire was a noose or that the incident was racially motivated, Milnor was committed to its anti-harassment policies. Lacoste told Morris that he would re-circulate the policies to all employees. Lacoste offered Morris a lateral transfer to another department that would have afforded plaintiff a faster track for advancement to Assembler IV, but Morris declined the offer. Lacoste asked Morris to report directly to him any future harassing or discriminatory incidents.
Morris never complained to any manager about further discrimination or harassment. On October 15, 2014, Lacoste distributed updated versions of Milnor's anti-harassment and conflict resolution policies to all employees and conducted a managers' meeting to reiterate Milnor's commitment to equal employment opportunities and a harassment-free work environment. Lacoste declaration, Defendant's Exh. A at ¶ 16.
Plaintiff does not know who put the noose on his work table, but speculates that it was Zito, with whom he had previously had very little contact. Morris suspected Zito because Zito usually arrived at work before plaintiff and because Zito began to harass Morris the day after the noose appeared. Morris claims that the harassment intensified after he filed his discrimination charge on September 30, which Lacoste received on October 8, 2014. On December 22, 2014, plaintiff filed a charge of retaliation with the EEOC.
The incidents that Morris claims were retaliatory or harassing consisted primarily of Zito watching Morris more closely than other employees, questioning what he was doing and "constantly scrutiniz[ing]" him. Morris deposition, Defendant's Exh. B at pp. 127-28, 149-53, 167-70, 206; plaintiff's "Documentation of Events at Pellerin Milnor" provided to the EEOC, detailing all significant acts of alleged harassment from August 28, 2014 through March 25, 2015, Defendant's Exh. M. Specific incidents of which plaintiff complains include: (1) installation of a video camera aimed at his desk for a brief period in October 2014, which Morris attributed to Zito, after plaintiff reported that tools had been stolen from his work station, Morris deposition, Defendant's Exh. B at pp. 174-75; Lacoste declaration, Defendant's Exh. A at ¶ 17; plaintiff's "Documentation of Events at Pellerin Milnor," Defendant's Exh. M at ¶ 20; (2) Lacoste's statement on September 25, 2014 that Milnor could sue plaintiff for revealing trade secrets after Morris posted photographs of Milnor's proprietary circuit on Facebook, Morris deposition, Defendant's Exh. B at pp. 98-99; (3) plaintiff's reassignment for several weeks from an Assembler IV table to "the box section" to perform tasks usually done by less skilled workers, while a man whom Morris was training worked in plaintiff's own section,
Morris was not formally disciplined at any time from July 28, 2014 until his termination on October 22, 2015, except for a written warning for dishonesty on March 27, 2015. During that time, he occasionally received oral counseling or warnings regarding deficiencies in his work performance, failing to wear his safety glasses, using his cell phone during work hours and a sexual harassment claim by a female employee. None of the oral or written warnings resulted in any demotion, decreased pay or hours, or materially adverse change in his working conditions.
In January 2015, Randolph and Lacoste informed Milnor's employees that "overtime" work on Fridays was now mandatory. Morris testified that Lacoste pushed him three times during an overtime meeting, but could not recall the date. Morris deposition, Defendant's Exh. B at pp. 170-71.
A former co-worker, Rene Artur Paige, states in an affidavit that he and Morris attended a meeting about mandatory overtime on February 5, 2015, at which Lacoste stated that Paige was in his way and pushed Paige into Morris. Paige avers that he fell onto another seated employee. He states that he was then turned away from Morris, but when he looked back, he saw Morris getting up off another employee. Paige states that Morris said that Lacoste had pushed him. Plaintiff's Exh. IV. Paige's affidavit is clear that he did
On March 25, 2015, plaintiff's supervisor Randolph gave him a written warning after Randolph determined that Morris had provided false information regarding why he had neither called in nor returned to work following a mid-day doctor's visit on March 17, 2015. Although Morris could have been terminated for dishonesty, he was given a written warning and advised that "future unexcused absences from work and/or future misrepresentations to management regarding this matter, or any other matter, may warrant further disciplinary action, up to and possibly including termination of employment." Morris deposition, Defendant's Exh. B at pp. 209-13; written warning dated March 25, 2015, Defendant's Exh. Q.
During the week of October 12, 2015, almost 15 months
On Monday, October 19, 2015, Morris gave a doctor's note to Lacoste and Harris, which indicated that plaintiff had seen a doctor in Baton Rouge on the morning of October 16, 2015. Morris told the managers that he had missed work on October 16th because he had gone to a doctor in Baton Rouge. Because he had obviously falsified the doctor's note and had previously been warned about being dishonest, Milnor terminated plaintiff's employment on October 22, 2015 for the stated reasons of dishonesty and falsifying documents.
Morris filed a claim for and was awarded unemployment compensation benefits. He testified falsely under oath at his unemployment hearing in January 2016 that he had seen a doctor on October 16, 2015 and had presented a valid doctor's note to Milnor. However, Morris admitted during his deposition in the instant lawsuit that he did
Morris relies on a fact dispute concerning Milnor's written documentation of five instances when he was orally counseled by his supervisor, Jim Slay, between February 6 and July 24, 2014, before plaintiff found the noose on July 28, 2014. It is undisputed that Slay kept contemporaneous notes on his calendar of these five minor incidents on February 6, April 16, July 21, July 22 and July 24, 2014. It is also undisputed that Lacoste, not Slay, prepared the typewritten documentation of these events. Defendant's Exh. P. Lacoste testified that he typed the notes based on information that Slay orally provided to him from Slay's contemporaneous notes and that Slay signed the typed notes in Lacoste's presence. The typed notes were never placed in plaintiff's personnel file, but Lacoste kept them in a work file. Lacoste decided that he needed written documentation after he learned that Morris had a contentious incident with a supervisor, Donald Adams, on July 22, 2014, which is described in one of the notes. Morris admitted that he had a confrontation with Adams, although he disputed the details of how it happened. Morris deposition, Defendant's Exh. B at pp. 219-20. Lacoste could not recall when he learned of the incident between plaintiff and Adams. When Lacoste contacted Slay to find out whether Slay had counseled Morris about that incident, Lacoste asked Slay to tell him about any similar, minor incidents involving any employee, not just Morris, so that those could also be documented. Some of the typed notes in the record concern other employees. Lacoste typed the notes "way after" the dates of the incidents documented in them. He thought he did so while Morris was still employed at Milnor and probably after Slay was transferred to a different department on January 6, 2015. Slay was transferred in part because of his failure to keep up with company paperwork as he should have. Lacoste deposition, Plaintiff's Exh. III at pp. 58-65, 67-68, 69-73; Oral statement of James F. Slay, Jr., Plaintiff's Exh. V, at p. 6; Declaration under penalty of perjury of James F. Slay, Jr., Defendant's Exh. V at ¶ 6.
The fact dispute arises because Slay orally answered questions from plaintiff's counsel in a sworn statement before a court reporter on July 28, 2017. Slay oral statement, Plaintiff's Exh. V. Slay said in this statement that the signature on the note dated February 6, 2014 "doesn't look like mine,"
About two months after his oral statement, Slay provided defendant with a written declaration under penalty of perjury on October 4, 2017. Slay declaration, Defendant's Exh. V. He stated in this declaration that he
Morris contends that Slay's conflicting statements are evidence that Milnor "manufactured" evidence to discredit plaintiff and that defendant's proffered reasons for its actions were pretextual. The conflicts in the statements undermine Slay's credibility, and credibility determinations cannot be made on summary judgment.
Plaintiff's vague contention in his original opposition memorandum and his more specific argument in his surreply memorandum that some discovery requests are outstanding, which should preclude summary judgment, is meritless. "Discovery is
The court may defer considering a summary judgment motion or may allow time for discovery
Plaintiff has failed to "demonstrate how additional discovery will create a genuine issue of material fact" or to "set forth a plausible basis for believing that specified facts, susceptible of collection within a reasonable time frame, probably exist and indicate how the emergent facts, if adduced, will influence the outcome of the pending summary judgment motion."
The competent summary judgment evidence establishes that Morris cannot make out a prima facie case of a race-based hostile work environment. To establish this claim, he must show that (1) he belongs to a protected group; (2) he was subjected to unwelcome harassment; (3) the harassment was based on race; (4) the harassment affected a term, condition, or privilege of employment; and (5) defendant knew or should have known of the harassment and failed to take prompt remedial action.
"To be actionable, the work environment must be `both objectively and subjectively offensive, one that a reasonable person would find hostile or abusive, and one that the victim in fact did perceive to be so.'"
As required on a summary judgment motion, the court resolves in favor of Morris and accepts as undisputed for present purposes his testimony that a piece of cable and wires in the shape of a noose was left on his work table. I agree that a lynching noose in the workplace, especially when displayed to African-American workers, is a particularly heinous and inflammatory indicator of racial animus. Thus, plaintiff in this case has produced evidence to satisfy the first three prongs of the hostile work environment test.
However, binding Fifth Circuit precedent is clear that an isolated incident of the sort occurring in this case is neither sufficiently severe nor pervasive enough to alter the conditions of plaintiff's employment and thereby support a cognizable hostile work environment claim. The Fifth Circuit has found that somewhat similar racially charged, but isolated, incidents were
District courts in the Fifth Circuit, while treating a noose in the workplace as a serious and troubling matter, have found that a single, isolated incident regarding a noose is not severe or pervasive enough to alter the conditions of employment and thereby create a working environment so abusive that an actionable hostile work environment can be found under Title VII. Judge Barbier of this court recently discussed such cases as follows.
As in these cases, the single appearance of what appeared to plaintiff to be a noose on his work table one morning, without any previous or subsequent instances of overtly racial harassment or discrimination, falls far short of establishing an actionable hostile working environment under the binding precedent set out above. Morris himself was the only person who perpetuated the presence of the noose in the workplace when he hung it on his wall for about a month. The subjective offensiveness of the incident is undermined by plaintiff's lack of follow up on his complaint to Cruz for about six weeks, until September 1, 2014, when Morris approached Harris to complain about other actions by Zito. Its objective offensiveness is undercut by the conclusions of Harris and Lacoste that the wires did not look like a noose because there was no adjustable knot, by the lack of complaint from anyone else when Morris hung it in plain view for a month, and because it was typical of wires and cables ordinarily found in the shop.
Morris testified that he believed, but he presented
Even though there is
Given these undisputed facts, Morris has failed to carry his burden to produce competent evidence that Milnor knew or should have known of the harassment earlier or that it failed to take prompt remedial action.
The other incidents of which Morris complains are that Zito subjected him to increased scrutiny after July 28, 2014; Lacoste warned plaintiff on September 25, 2014 to wear his safety glasses and not to reveal defendant's trade secrets on plaintiff's Facebook page; a camera was installed near his work table for a brief period in October 2014; Zito told him not to use his cell phone while working; Lacoste falsely accused Morris of sexual harassment and gave him an oral warning in September 2015; and plaintiff was transferred to another work table two weeks before his termination, which he perceived as less advantageous for possible future promotion, but which was not a demotion and did not decrease his pay or hours. According to Lacoste, Morris performed Assembler III work at the new table that he had not previously performed, but that he was required to master to become eligible for an Assembler IV position. Lacoste declaration, Defendant's Exh. A at ¶ 19; Morris deposition, Defendant's Exh. B at pp. 77-78, 222-28.
In the totality of the circumstances, these incidents, alone or in combination, were not sufficiently severe or pervasive to create a hostile work environment, nor has plaintiff proffered any competent evidence that any of these incidents was motivated by racial animus. A supervisor's temporary changes to schedule and duty assignments and careful monitoring of an employee's job performance, absent any other evidence of prohibited discrimination, do not support a hostile work environment claim.
The eight unverified photographs that Morris submitted to support his allegation that white workers were treated differently than he when they violated company policy regarding cell phone use or safety glasses establish no such thing requiring a trial. Photographs, Plaintiff's Exh. II. First, one of the photographs is undated and five are dated in 2012, a time period that is irrelevant to plaintiff's claim of a hostile work environment, which he testified did not begin until July 28, 2014, and to his claim of alleged retaliation after that date. Only two photographs are dated in 2015 during the relevant time period. Second, plaintiff's counsel asked Lacoste at his deposition to view 18 photographs in globo, but none are individually identified during the testimony and there is no evidence that the eight photographs that Morris submitted to the court were among those Lacoste viewed. Even if these eight were among the 18 shown to Lacoste, he testified without contradiction in the record that the 18 photographs either do not show any violation of company policy regarding cell phone use or safety glasses or, if some photographs depicted a violation
Morris testified that Lacoste pushed him three times during an overtime meeting. Morris deposition, Defendant's Exh. B at pp. 170-71. Paige avers in his affidavit that he and Morris attended a meeting about mandatory overtime on February 5, 2015, at which Lacoste pushed Paige, but Paige did
Finally, Lacoste's decision to order surveillance of Morris as a way to investigate plaintiff's request to be excused from mandatory overtime on Friday, October 16, 2015 because of a purported doctor's appointment was based on plaintiff's history of missing overtime Fridays because of doctors' appointments or other excuses, of resisting Friday work and of having received a written warning for lying about his reason for not calling in or returning to work after a doctor's appointment in March 2015. This single incident of investigation was not sufficiently severe or pervasive to alter a term, condition or privilege of employment, nor is there any competent evidence that Lacoste initiated the surveillance because of racial animus, as opposed to because of the previous incident of Morris lying under similar circumstances.
Plaintiff's continuing denial that he lied about his doctor's appointment in March 2015 (Morris deposition, Defendant's Exh. B at pp. 210-12) does not create a material fact issue that Milnor's reasons for conducting surveillance of him in October 2015 were a pretext for discrimination or retaliation.
"`Simply disputing the underlying facts of an employer's decision is not sufficient to create an issue of pretext.'"
The same principles apply to plaintiff's allegation that Lacoste falsely accused him of sexual harassment in September 2015. Although Morris denied that he had engaged in the conduct of which a female employee complained, Lacoste investigated the complaint by questioning and orally warning Morris. Plaintiff's denial of the conduct does not create a material fact issue when he has produced no competent evidence that Lacoste's investigation and warning were racially motivated or that Lacoste's actions affected a term, condition or privilege of plaintiff's employment.
In sum, Morris has proffered
Morris alleges that the same incidents that occurred after July 28, 2014 discussed above in connection with his hostile work environment claim and the termination of his employment were in retaliation for his protected activity of complaining about the noose and filing two EEOC charges.
It is undisputed that Morris engaged in protected activity. However, he cannot establish the second prong of a prima facie case of retaliation with respect to events that occurred before he was fired because he has produced
To establish the second prong of a prima facie case, Morris must show that "a reasonable employee would have found the challenged action materially adverse, which in this context means it well might have dissuaded a reasonable worker from making or supporting a charge of discrimination."
None of the complained-of actions that occurred before Morris was fired were materially adverse. Not only would these actions not objectively deter a reasonable employee from making or supporting a charge of discrimination,
A counseling letter or "written reprimand, without evidence of consequences, does not constitute an adverse employment action."
An employee's allegations that personal items were taken from his or her desk, locks on his or her office were changed, and he or she was not allowed to close an office door and was "chastised by superiors and ostracized by co-workers" do not, "[a]s a matter of law, . . . rise to the level of material adversity but instead fall into the category of petty slights, minor annoyances, and simple lack of good manners that the Supreme Court has recognized are not actionable retaliatory conduct."
Heightened scrutiny by supervisors is not a materially adverse action.
"Indeed, courts have even held that a supervisor's statements to a plaintiff's coworkers that he would `get rid of' the plaintiff because he was `creating problems,' and `[b]admouthing or being mean to an employee within the workplace,' are not materially adverse actions capable of sustaining a retaliation claim."
A reassignment to different duties without any negative effects on plaintiff's job title, grade, hours, salary or benefits or any diminution in prestige or change in standing among his co-workers is not a materially adverse action.
In the absence of competent evidence of a materially adverse employment action, plaintiff's "subjective belief that the incidents were retaliatory, without more, is not sufficient to survive summary judgment."
Milnor's termination of plaintiff's employment was a materially adverse employment action that satisfies the second prong of prima facie case. The court assumes without deciding that Morris could make out the third prong of a prima facie case by showing a causal connection between his termination and his protected activity. The causal connection at the prima facie stage is much less stringent than the "but for" causation standard by which Morris must carry his ultimate burden to demonstrate pretext, once defendant has provided evidence of legitimate reasons for its actions.
Even assuming that Morris could establish a prima facie case concerning his termination, Milnor is entitled to summary judgment because it has produced evidence of a legitimate, non-retaliatory reason for firing him, which shifts the evidentiary burden to plaintiff to provide competent evidence to create a fact issue that Milnor's reason was a pretext for retaliation,
Defendant's burden to articulate a legitimate, non-retaliatory reason "is one of production, not persuasion . . . ."
Milnor has met its burden of production. Lacoste's declaration and deposition testimony and Milnor's contemporaneous documentation show that Lacoste decided to place Morris under surveillance on Friday, October 16, 2015, based on plaintiff's history of missing overtime Fridays because of doctors' appointments or other excuses, of resisting Friday work and of past dishonesty about why he had missed work because of doctors' appointments. The results of the surveillance contradicted Morris's presentation of a doctor's note and his statement to Lacoste and Harris on Monday, October 19, 2015, that he had missed work on Friday because he had gone to a doctor in Baton Rouge. Because Morris had obviously falsified the doctor's note (which he finally admitted in his deposition in this case) and had previously been warned about being dishonest, Milnor terminated his employment on October 22, 2015 for dishonesty and falsifying documents. These are legitimate, non-retaliatory reasons.
Morris has presented
Plaintiff's complaint does
"Rule 56(a) contemplates a filed motion, but a district court may grant summary judgment without a motion provided the party opposed has notice. Where a district court fails to provide notice, the error is considered harmless if the party opposed has no additional evidence anyway . . . ."
"Fed. R. Civ. P. 56 requires the prompt disposition of cases in the absence of any genuine issues of material fact for the court to consider. Rule 56 requires a court, under the proper conditions, to grant relief to that party which is entitled to such even if it has not been demanded."
Accordingly, the court addresses plaintiff's claim of racially discriminatory termination, if any, under the familiar burden-shifting framework. First, Morris must demonstrate a prima facie case with evidence that (1) he was a member of a protected class, (2) he was qualified for the position, (3) his employment was terminated and (4) he was replaced by an individual of a different race, or that defendant treated similarly situated individuals of a different race more favorably than it treated him.
Morris has proffered
Even if Morris could demonstrate a prima facie case of racially discriminatory termination, defendant is entitled to summary judgment in its favor for the same reasons discussed in the preceding section regarding plaintiff's retaliatory termination claim. Milnor has produced legitimate reasons for his termination. Plaintiff has presented only speculation and subjective belief, but
Accordingly,