Winfred Beasley v. Warren Unilube, Inc.
Opinion
Winfred Beasley, an African American, claims that Warren Unilube, Inc. (Warren) fired him because of his race in violation of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 42 U.S.C. §§ 2000e to § 2000e-17, and 42 U.S.C. ' 1981. The district court 1 granted Warren's motion for summary judgment. We affirm.
I.
Warren produces motor oil and other automotive lubricants. Beasley started working as the Quality Assurance Manager at Warren in October 2012. He was generally responsible for creating and implementing systems to safeguard the quality of Warren's products. Beasley's primary job was to ensure that all products went into the correct bottles and boxes with appropriate labeling and caps. He supervised several quality inspectors who would conduct regular checks on Warren's assembly lines to detect problems. He was also responsible for troubleshooting, containing, and correcting any issues that developed. Finally, Beasley was required to handle the annual audit of Warren's quality control systems by the International Standards Organization (ISO).
Beasley was not the only one at Warren responsible for product quality. The Lab Manager, Ben Heater, and his assistants verified that the oil (or other product) met appropriate specifications. Maintenance personnel calibrated the equipment at the plant. The transportation department ensured that products were delivered on time and not damaged in transit. And although the Operations Manager-who for much of Beasley's tenure was Rusty Brown-was primarily focused on production efficiency, he also impacted product quality since Beasley relied on Brown's team to implement many of his recommendations.
Up to this point the parties agree. But they part ways when it comes to the circumstances surrounding Beasley's termination. Warren alleges that multiple factors figured into this decision: a series of customer complaints, Beasley's poor showing during the annual ISO audit, and concerns about his organizational skills. Beasley disputes much of this. Because this appeal arises in the context of a motion for summary judgment, we construe the facts in a light most favorable to him.
Torgerson v. City of Rochester
,
There were roughly three sets of customer complaints during Beasley's tenure. The first set came in 2013 from AutoZone, one of Warren's primary customers. On four occasions, AutoZone reported that Warren's products were labeled or packaged incorrectly. The underlying cause of these failures appears to have been two pieces of equipment that either maintenance or operations personnel had improperly calibrated. Beasley concedes that his team might have been able to catch or correct these problems, but he notes that these complaints occurred before his quality control systems had been fully implemented.
Warren received a second set of complaints in February 2015. Though Warren's products met appropriate performance specifications during this period, some contained too much red dye and others had a foul odor. Beasley investigated these problems and concluded that both resulted from mistakes in the oil blending process. Beasley states that he was not to blame for these problems, which would have fallen under the purview of Billy Moore, the Blending Manager. He also states his team could not have detected the issues because the oil was already bottled when it reached quality control.
Warren received a third set of complaints, this time about leaky bottles, throughout the spring of 2015. The leaks were caused by Warren's bottle capping machine, which was either improperly calibrated or was not the proper machine to use for the job. Warren's President at the time, Steve Estok, admits that the responsibility for this problem fell partly on operations personnel and the Maintenance Manager, Shawn Jamieson. Beasley also shared some blame according to Estok, because he should have been inspecting the amount of torque that the machine was applying. Beasley disputes this, stating that he had informed Estok that the company needed different or additional equipment.
Around this same time, Beasley was preparing for the annual ISO audit. In prior years, Warren had passed the audit without any problems. In May 2015, however, the auditor identified six minor deficiencies. Estok also says that the auditor was especially critical of Beasley, stating that he was "not capable of doing this job" and that Warren's quality control program was "progressively getting worse." App. 616. Estok further claims that the auditor told him Warren might lose its ISO certification if Warren did not improve.
Due to these complaints, the strain they created with Warren's customers, the audit, and other issues, upper-management at Warren took corrective action. Rusty Brown, the Operations Manager, was temporarily reassigned and received a detailed write-up about his poor job performance. The Transportation Manager, Craig Stauffer, also received a disciplinary letter. And Billy Moore, the Blending Manager, was written-up and eventually fired. These individuals were all white.
In late-June 2015, Estok met with Beasley and his supervisor, Gary Whiteside, to discuss Beasley's job performance. The meeting did not go well. According to Beasley, Estok generally discouraged any meaningful discussion. Estok claims that Beasley was unprepared and showed that he did not understand Warren's quality control program. Estok sent Beasley a letter afterward summarizing the meeting and alleging several deficiencies in his performance, including a lack of organizational skills, his failure to document non-conforming products, and his delay in following up on requests from management. On August 7, 2015, Warren fired Beasley. The termination notice stated: "[s]ystems have not improved, training is [still] non-existent, documentation has not improved and we are still reviewing complaints for the same items." App. 609. Shortly after, Warren hired Beasley's replacement, who was white.
Beasley subsequently filed an EEOC charge alleging that Warren had treated him differently from other mid-level managers because of his race. The EEOC dismissed Beasley's charge. Beasley then filed this action alleging that Warren's management violated Title VII and
II.
We review a district court's decision to grant summary judgment
de novo
.
Brown v. Diversified Distribution Sys., LLC
,
Where there is no direct evidence of discrimination, we use the burden-shifting framework from
McDonnell Douglas Corp. v. Green
,
To make a prima facie case for employment discrimination in the context of a discharge, Beasley must establish: (1) he "is a member of a protected group"; (2) he "was qualified for h[is] position"; (3) he "was discharged"; and (4) "the discharge occurred under circumstances permitting an inference of discrimination."
Elam v. Regions Fin. Corp.
,
Beasley makes a prima facie case of discrimination. He plainly meets the first and third requirements: he is a member of a protected group and was fired. Also, there is no dispute that Beasley was qualified for his position. As to the fourth requirement, our cases note that there are multiple ways "a plaintiff can establish an inference of discrimination ...."
Grant v. City of Blytheville
,
Under the second step of
McDonnell Douglas
, Warren must articulate a "legitimate, nondiscriminatory reason" for the discharge.
Torgerson
,
Warren meets this burden. The June 2015 letter Estok sent to Beasley alleged several performance-related deficiencies. Also, Warren received multiple customer complaints during Beasley's tenure and was cited for six deficiencies in the ISO audit. Even if Beasley was disproportionately blamed for these problems, the record is more than sufficient to raise a genuine issue of fact as to whether Warren intentionally discriminated against Beasley.
Under
McDonnell Douglas
's third step, Beasley must demonstrate that Warren's explanation for his termination is "mere pretext for intentional discrimination."
Torgerson
,
Ultimately, we agree with the district court's conclusion that "[t]here simply [we]ren't other employees 'similarly situated [to Beasley] ... in all relevant respects.' " App. 1107. Beasley provides an initial list of five different individuals at Warren "on the same level of management." Appellant Br. at 10. He later trims the list to three employees "who were [also] involved in conduct that was imputed to the Appellant"-Rusty Brown, Shawn Jamieson, and Ben Heater.
Id.
at 31. Yet Beasley never shows that he and any of these people shared the same supervisor, were subject to the same standards, or engaged in the same conduct. We examine each of these individuals below, but note that our neutral role in the adversarial process makes us wary of combing through the record to supplement a party's arguments.
See
Rodgers v. City of Des Moines
,
Rusty Brown is not similarly situated. Although he was in a similar level of management as Beasley, he had a much longer tenure at Warren-27 years as opposed to 3 years. He also held a number of different positions over the years, which meant that he could be more easily reassigned. Also, although Brown and Beasley both communicated regularly with Estok, they had different direct reports. Finally, Brown's role was never focused on ensuring product quality. He held the position of Plant Manager, Operations Manager, and Warehouse Manager at different times during relevant events and-under each of these roles-his job was to promote production efficiency. Brown was thus disciplined for production-related issues like the "[f]ailure to meet delivery dates" and the "[f]ailure to properly organize warehouse personnel to optimize loading of outbound shipments." App. 548-49. Brown also played no part whatsoever in helping Warren prepare for the ISO audit.
Ben Heater fails as a comparator for similar reasons. Like Brown, Heater's role as the Laboratory Manager was very different from Beasley's. His specific charge was to test the oil itself to ensure that it met appropriate technical specifications-a stage of the process in which Beasley admits he played no part. Heater's potential responsibility for customer complaints also differs from Beasley's. Even for the complaints relating to the oil (rather than labeling or capping), the record shows that the oil met the required specifications, so the fault lay with the blending department, not Heater. Heater also had a different supervisor than Beasley for some of his time at Warren. Finally, though Heater was hired the same year as Beasley, he had been employed in similar roles for 40 years beforehand.
We have less information about the Maintenance Manager, Shawn Jamieson. His deposition does not appear in the record, and Beasley does not point to where we might determine Jamieson's supervisor, the length of his tenure at Warren, his disciplinary record, and his employment and educational history. We do not have enough to go on to say that he was "similarly situated in all relevant respects."
Even if Jamieson or some other individual at Warren had been similarly situated to Beasley, he would still have to establish that he was treated differently on account of his
race
. This is the central question for a Title VII claim.
See
Torgerson
,
Beasley's primary argument is that racial animus can be inferred from Warren's (or perhaps Estok's) practices with respect to African-American employees over time. But Beasley never develops the claim by showing, for example, hiring statistics at Warren, a list of all the employees disciplined during Estok's tenure, salary information for African-American employees, or similar evidence. Nor does Beasley explain the parts of the record that cut the other way. As previously noted, two other mid-level managers, both of whom were white, were disciplined in June 2015, and another white mid-level manager was eventually fired.
Without some way to tie his termination to racial animus, Beasley's claim fails. Though Beasley's termination might have been unfair or disproportionate, this alone is insufficient under Title VII.
See
Schaffhauser
,
Because we find that Beasley has not established intentional discrimination, either by showing that Warren treated similarly-situated employees in a disparate manner or otherwise, his claims fail.
III.
The judgment of the district court is affirmed.
The Honorable D.P. Marshall, Jr., United States District Judge for the Eastern District of Arkansas.
Because "[t]he same analysis [applies] to claims of discrimination ... under Title VII and
Beasley's Complaint also included a cause of action against Warren for retaliation. Because Beasley failed to raise this claim in his opening brief on appeal, the argument is waived.
See
United States v. Rice
,
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Winfred G. BEASLEY Plaintiff - Appellant v. WARREN UNILUBE, INC. Defendant - Appellee
- Cited By
- 39 cases
- Status
- Published