NOT RECOMMENDED FOR FULL-TEXT PUBLICATION
File Name: 10a0468n.06
Nos. 09-5235, 09-5492 FILED
Aug 02, 2010
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS LEONARD GREEN, Clerk
FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
WILL SINGLETON, )
)
Plaintiff-Appellant, )
)
MONICA HALL; ROTASHA JACKSON; CABRINA )
LOGAN; TISHA SPENCER; PAULINE ROBINETTE, )
) ON APPEAL FROM THE
Plaintiffs, ) UNITED STATES DISTRICT
) COURT FOR THE EASTERN
v. ) DISTRICT OF KENTUCKY
)
SELECT SPECIALTY HOSPITAL - LEXINGTON, )
INC.; SELECT MEDICAL CORPORATION, )
)
Defendants-Appellees. )
Before: KEITH, BOGGS, and GRIFFIN, Circuit Judges.
BOGGS, Circuit Judge. Will Singleton (“Singleton”), who was employed as a Registered
Nurse by the appellees (collectively “Select”), appeals from a decision of the district court granting
Select’s motion for summary judgment on Singleton’s claim of unlawful retaliation under Title VII
of the Civil Rights Act and its Kentucky state-law equivalent.1 Select alleges that it terminated
Singleton for numerous and ongoing errors pertaining to Singleton’s documentation of narcotics
administration and patient pain levels, which it discovered during an investigation it initiated
following the discovery of a discrepancy in the count of a narcotic Singleton was responsible for
1
Singleton’s complaint was originally consolidated with another civil rights action involving
former employees of Select for purposes of discovery and trial, but that action is not before us.
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administering. Because Singleton cannot establish that this rationale was a pretext for unlawful
retaliation, we affirm the judgment of the district court.
I
Singleton, who is white, is a Registered Nurse who began employment with Select on August
30, 2004. Select operates a long-term acute care facility on one floor of Good Samaritan Hospital,
in Lexington, Kentucky; among Select’s 42 beds are a four-bed intensive-care unit. During the
approximately 19 months he worked for Select, Singleton was generally assigned to the ICU beds.
Singleton’s performance during much of his time at Select was considered at least adequate.
Toward the end of his tenure at Select, however, Director of Clinical Services Kim McGowen began
noting problems with Singleton’s documentation. The record indicates that she had a “counseling
session” with Singleton on December 16, 2005, and recorded the following summary:
It was brought to my attention that Will’s charting needed improvement by
Supervisor. Talked with Will on this night about improving his charting. Areas
needed to improve Legibility and pain scale correlation. Will stated he had Dyslexia
and at times he would get a few of his letters backwards. Told Will he needed to take
his time so anyone that reviewed charts could read them. That I could hardly read his
writing some nights and his pain documentation was terrible. He was told he needed
to correlate the pain meds he was giving with the pain scale and Nurses[’] notes.
A follow-up note, dated February 1, 2006, indicated that McGowen “[t]alked to Will Singleton on
the phone Feb 1st about pain documentation. Stated he understood the issue at hand and would
improve. Charting has not improved . . . .” At her deposition, McGowen testified that “I always felt
like Will was a good nurse. I didn’t have any problems with Will until probably sometime in
November [2005].” In November 2005, McGowen said, Singleton “just sort of changed”; his
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writing became more illegible, and his attitude worsened to the point that he began having conflicts
with other RNs working in his unit.
In the meantime, Singleton had begun making formal complaints. On October 5, 2005, he
wrote to McGowen to make various allegations about Pam Clouse, a “Charge Nurse” who
supervised shifts. One of those complaints alleged that Clouse had told him two racist jokes. In
response, McGowen conducted an investigation that eventually determined that, though no one else
claimed to have heard Clouse tell racially offensive jokes, one employee had heard her use the term
“wetback” on one occasion. McGowen informed Clouse that the term was offensive, unacceptable,
and against Select policy, and could be grounds for termination.
Singleton again complained to McGowen about Clouse on November 5, 2005. On that date,
he wrote a letter “to inform you of the racial jokes that Pam Clouse is telling to people at work.
Tonight she told 2 jokes about blacks and Mexicans. She is continually talking about blacks.”
McGowen investigated, but despite speaking with (she believes) every night-shift employee she
again could find no one who had heard Clouse tell these jokes. Nevertheless, she told all employees
that racial comments would not be tolerated and that any such comments should be brought to her
attention; she also spoke to Clouse and told her that “if there were any further reports that she had
engaged in additional conduct of the type Will reported, she would be fired.” No further accusations
of racist language or jokes were brought against Clouse by anyone.
Singleton’s next complaint occurred on February 27, 2006, when he faxed a letter to Select’s
Regional Human Resources Director, Josceylon Buchs. After making several unrelated complaints,
Singleton included a section under the heading “It pays to be Married to Rosa” in which he
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complained that “Bill is a prn aid here at select. Yet if is Bill- vs- black tech -vs- woman. Bill works
and ‘they’ stay home.” He then included a list of dates and names, purporting to demonstrate that
“Bill” had worked on instances when the hospital had called off others who should have received
priority. The letter itself did not identify which of the listed employees were black, white, male, or
female; however, according to Singleton’s brief on appeal, the list showed that four black employees
had been called off a total of twelve times, whereas three white employees had been called off only
three times.
In response to Singleton’s February 27 letter, McGowen conducted an investigation and
wrote a two-and-a-half page email to Select Specialty Hospital Lexington, Inc.’s CEO Rick
Daugherty, in which she appears to have reconstructed the scheduling decisions on the dates
identified by Singleton. In so doing, her email appears to establish that every such decision either
conformed with Select’s policies with respect to the order in which employees were to be called off
or, if they deviated from that order, they did so for a legitimate reason (typically because the
employees not utilized had requested that they be called off earlier than they would otherwise be).
No further action was taken to investigate.
The next significant occurrence happened on March 4–5, 2006, while Singleton was working
a 7:00 p.m.-to-7:00 a.m. shift. On that shift, as on his others, Singleton had access to a “Med
Dispense” machine, which is an electronically locked cabinet that stores and dispenses
pharmaceuticals. Nurses administering drugs contained in the Med Dispense machine are required
to enter an employee I.D. and password, perform a count of the drug present in the relevant drawer
and match that number to the count kept by the machine, and then adjust the machine’s count to
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account for whatever number of pills/capsules they are removing. Among the pharmaceuticals
stored in the Med Dispense machine was Dilaudid, a Schedule II narcotic.
The “end of shift” count of Dilaudid conducted at 7:14 p.m. on March 4, 2006—fourteen
minutes after Singleton’s shift began—indicated that there were 36 Dilaudid tabs in the Med
Dispense machine. The dispense report generated by the machine indicated that, following the end-
of-shift count, Singleton was the next person to access Dilaudid. At 8:42, he was shown on the
report as removing three tabs. He then accessed Dilaudid again at 1:15 a.m. to remove another three
pills, with no one else having done so in the interim. At that time, Singleton notified Clouse, who
was the supervisor on duty, that the physical count prior to his removing medication was 30, whereas
the machine’s count was 33. A subsequent “full system count” revealed that a different medication,
Versed, was three pills over its machine count. Clouse filled out a Confidential Incident Report in
which she reported the discrepancy and which used the word “resolved” in the account; the incident
was then investigated by the hospital’s Director of Pharmacy, Keith Thomas, who came to the
conclusion that the missing three pills were not accounted for.2
Under a Select policy titled “Guidelines for Suspicion of Controlled Substance Diversion,”
any time an employee is suspected of diverting controlled substances intended for patient use, an
2
Singleton, arguing that the discrepancy was immediately resolved and attributed to a
miscount, cites a report that indicates “At 1900 the correct shift count was 33, at 2042-33, and at
0115 there [] were 27, should have been thirty. [Director of Pharmacy] fixed in med dispense—the
dispense did not remove 3 at 2042, when actually three tabs were taken out.” The Director of
Pharmacy, however, later filed an affidavit denying that the incident had been resolved in such a
way, and pointing out that the typed report cited by Singleton was prepared by someone with no
actual knowledge of the incident. Thomas points instead to the handwritten notes of Clouse, which
indicate that the discrepancy was “discovered as a med error [on employee], 3 pills missing.”
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investigation is required. Such an investigation was initiated in Singleton’s case, which included an
examination of his documentation and narcotics control practices over the most recent six weeks.
While the investigation was ongoing, Singleton was suspended with pay beginning March 13, 2006.
The investigation was conducted by McGowen and her immediate supervisor, Molly Persby, the
Division Director of Clinical and Quality Services. The results were circulated to Daughtery, Buchs,
and Senior Vice President of Clinical and Quality Services Mary Burkett. On March 27, 2006,
Daughtery, Persby, Buchs, McGowen, Burkett, and Human Resources Coordinator Janet Whitlock
discussed the results of the investigation via conference call. On that occasion, Singleton’s
documentation practices were described as “horrific,” in terms of his failure to properly control
narcotics, his lack of patient pain assessment, and his poor medical documentation. Specifically, in
addition to having nearly-illegible handwriting and failing to properly record medication on patient
charts, Singleton was also criticized for giving narcotics (or at least documenting that he gave
narcotics) to patients who had not been in pain.
Daugherty fired Singleton on March 28, 2006, with Whitlock present. On that date,
Daugherty presented Singleton with a dismissal form indicating that “Will Singleton has consistently
failed to meet nursing practice standards related, but not limited to, control of narcotic medications
and proper documentation of pain assessment and narcotic administration. Due to these
circumstances, we are terminating his employment with Select Specialty Hospital.” Singleton signed
the form, acknowledging that the had reviewed it and had an opportunity to comment on it.
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Singleton filed his complaint in the district court on July 18, 2007. The district court granted
summary judgment to Select on Singleton’s federal claims on January 27, 2009, at which time the
court also declined to retain jurisdiction over his state claims. This timely appeal followed.
II
We review a district court’s grant of summary judgment de novo. Int’l Union v. Cummins,
Inc., 434 F.3d 478, 483 (6th Cir. 2006). We will uphold such a grant “if the pleadings, depositions,
answers to interrogatories, and admissions on file, together with affidavits, if any, show that there
is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to judgment as a
matter of law.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(c). In considering a motion for summary judgment, we must view
the inferences to be drawn from the underlying facts in favor of the non-moving party, in this case
the plaintiff. See Matsushita Elec. Indus. Co. v. Zenith Radio Corp., 475 U.S. 574, 587 (1986). The
central issue is “whether the evidence presents a sufficient disagreement to require submission to a
jury or whether it is so one-sided that one party must prevail as a matter of law.” Anderson v. Liberty
Lobby, Inc., 477 U.S. 242, 251–52 (1986).
III
Title VII forbids an employer from “discriminat[ing] against any of his employees . . .
because [the employee] has opposed any practice made an unlawful employment practice by [Title
VII], or because [the employee] has made a charge, testified, assisted, or participated in any manner
in an investigation, proceeding, or hearing under [Title VII].” 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-3(a).
Where, as here, a plaintiff presents only circumstantial evidence to support a Title VII
retaliation claim, we utilize the same McDonnell Douglas/Burdine evidentiary framework that is
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used to assess claims of discrimination. See Wrenn v. Gould, 808 F.2d 493, 500 (6th Cir. 1987).
The plaintiff has the initial burden under this framework to establish a prima facie case of retaliation
by showing that (1) he engaged in activity protected by Title VII; (2) this exercise of protected rights
was known to the defendant; (3) the defendant thereafter took adverse employment action against
the plaintiff, or the plaintiff was subjected to severe or pervasive retaliatory harassment by a
supervisor; and (4) there was a causal connection between the protected activity and the adverse
employment action or harassment. Morris v. Oldham County Fiscal Court, 201 F.3d 784, 792 (6th
Cir. 2000).
Assuming that the plaintiff establishes a prima facie case, “the burden of production of
evidence shifts to the employer to ‘articulate some legitimate, nondiscriminatory reason’ for its
actions.” Canitia v. Yellow Freight Sys., 903 F.2d 1064, 1066 (6th Cir. 1990) (quoting McDonnell
Douglas Corp. v. Green, 411 U.S. 792, 802 (1973)). In this case, importantly, the “legitimate,
nondiscriminatory reason” for Select’s action was not the Dilaudid count discrepancy of March 5,
2006, but rather the problems with narcotics control and documentation expressed by the disciplinary
action form signed by Singleton on March 28, 2006.
Once the defendant in a Title VII retaliation action satisfies the burden to put forth a
legitimate nondiscriminatory reason for its conduct, the plaintiff must then demonstrate by a
preponderance of the evidence that the legitimate reason offered by the defendant was not its true
reason, but instead was a pretext designed to mask retaliation. McDonnell Douglas, 411 U.S. at 802.
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It is at this stage of the McDonnell Douglas/Burdine analysis that the district court found Singleton’s
claim to be lacking, and so it is with us.3
In Manzer v. Diamond Shamrock Chemicals Co., 29 F.3d 1078, 1084 (6th Cir. 1994), we
identified three ways in which a plaintiff may rebut a defendant’s legitimate, nondiscriminatory
reason and demonstrate pretext. The plaintiff may show that (1) the employer’s stated reason for
terminating the employee has no basis in fact, (2) the reason offered for terminating the employee
was not the actual reason for the termination, or (3) the reason offered was insufficient to explain
the employer’s action. Ibid. Regardless of which rebuttal method is employed, the plaintiff retains
the ultimate burden of producing “sufficient evidence from which the jury could reasonably reject
[the defendants’] explanation and infer that the defendants intentionally discriminated against him.”
Johnson v. Kroger Co., 319 F.3d 858, 866 (6th Cir. 2003) (alteration in original).
Singleton attempts to demonstrate pretext under all three Manzer methods. He first argues
that the legitimate non-discriminatory reason relied upon by Select was “factually false” because the
Dilaudid count discrepancy was “immediately resolved and attributed to a counting error, and was
only later seized upon by Select as purported grounds to intensify its scrutiny of Singleton and
eventually terminate his employment.” However, this analysis does not address the first Manzer
method properly. An attempt to show pretext by demonstrating that the proffered reasons have no
basis in fact “is easily recognizable and consists of evidence that the proffered bases for the
3
We note Select’s arguments that Singleton has not made out a prima facie case. We decline
to reach the question of whether Singleton presents such a case, because we find the issue of pretext
dispositive.
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plaintiff’s discharge never happened, i.e., that they are ‘factually false.’” Manzer, 29 F.3d at 1084.
Here, Select’s proffered nondiscriminatory reason was not that Dilaudid was missing on one
particular occasion, but rather that Singleton’s documentation and narcotics control were deficient
over a period of several weeks. Hence, a demonstration of pretext under the first method would
focus on establishing a question of fact that there were no such deficiencies. Instead, Singleton
argues that Select ought not to have been looking at his documentation practices at all, and that it
examined them only as a cover for its retaliatory action. This is more properly conceived as going
to the second Manzer method.
In fact, Singleton’s deposition contains multiple instances in which he was shown charts
prepared by him that contained inconsistencies or errors that he could not account for. With respect
to more than one patient to whom Singleton had given morphine, for example, Singleton admitted
that there was no place on their charts where he had documented how many milligrams of the drug
he had administered. Singleton was also unable to explain why, on one chart, he had administered
morphine to a patient that had been resting comfortably for several hours, and whom Singleton had
rated a “zero” on a pain scale of zero to ten. On another occasion, Singleton charted that he had
administered Ativan, an addictive sedative and anti-anxiety drug, an hour earlier than the medication
sign-out sheet showed him accessing it.
Singleton does, in a different part of his brief, dispute the factual basis for Select’s conclusion
that his documentation was deficient. However, his responses are not sufficient to address the wealth
of documentary evidence supplied by Select. In reply to the allegation that his handwriting was often
illegible, Singleton points to one instance in which Persby said “from what I can read from Will’s
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note at eight o’clock, assessment at charted, no signs and symptoms of pain” (emphasis
added)—hardly an admission that his handwriting was consistently or even frequently legible. In
response to allegations that he failed to document patient pain scales, Singleton argues that his
assessment of “zero” constitutes documentation, but does not address Select’s contention that, if
such was the case, he was clearly giving narcotics to patients that ought not to have been receiving
them. Further, in answer to Select’s evidence demonstrating that he failed to document dosages
properly on patients’ charts, Singleton asserts that he was recording dosages on the medication sign-
out sheets, which, even if true, is irrelevant to the question of whether he was recording those
dosages in other places required by hospital policy. Hence Singleton’s explanations fail to raise a
genuine issue of material fact as to the factual falsity of Select’s proffered explanation, and do not
show pretext under the first Manzer method.
A plaintiff using the second Manzer method, by contrast, must show that the proffered
reason(s) “did not actually motivate the defendant’s challenged conduct.” Johnson, 319 F.3d at 866
(internal quotation marks omitted). In this type of showing,
the plaintiff attempts to indict the credibility of his employer’s explanation by
showing circumstances which tend to prove that an illegal motivation was more
likely than that offered by the defendant. In other words, the plaintiff argues that the
sheer weight of the circumstantial evidence of [retaliation] makes it “more likely than
not” that the employer’s explanation is a pretext, or coverup.
Manzer, 29 F.3d at 1084 (emphasis in original). As indicated above, Singleton argues that he has
put forth evidence that his documentation practices did not actually motivate Select to fire him, in
the form of evidence that Select’s reason for looking at his documentation at all was pretextual.
However, Singleton’s evidence does not meet this burden. He claims that the Dilaudid discrepancy
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was immediately resolved at the time it was discovered, but such a claim ignores the affidavit of the
hospital’s Director of Pharmacy, Keith Thomas, who indicated that he personally investigated the
incident and that the discrepancy was not due to employee miscount, erroneous inputting of numbers,
“or other such human error mistakes,” and was never resolved. Moreover, the affidavit points out
that the use of the term “resolved” on the Confidential Incident Report filed by supervisor Clouse
on the night in question was mandated by the machine’s software, and referred only to the fact that
the machine’s running count had been adjusted to match the number of tabs observed to be
physically present in the drawer at the time the discrepancy was reported. Hence there is no evidence
that this discrepancy was the kind of easily-understood error of the kind that might not have called
for a full investigation under Select’s policy.4
Singleton compares his case to Imwalle v. Reliance Medical Products, Inc., 515 F.3d 531 (6th
Cir. 2008), in which we upheld a jury verdict finding that a defendant had engaged in unlawful
discrimination under the Age Discrimination in Employment Act. In Imwalle, we held that the
plaintiff had introduced sufficient evidence to permit a jury to disbelieve the employer’s proffered
performance-based explanation by demonstrating that (1) the company had been successful for 14
years under Imwalle’s management, and (2) he had not been responsible for the industry-wide
decline that had more recently affected its sales figures. Id. at 547–48. Further, we held that, though
4
Singleton also argues that the fact that the hospital waited until March 13 to suspend him
after the discrepancy was discovered demonstrates that Select was not motivated by the Dilaudid
discrepancy. We do not find this to be evidence of pretext; indeed, one may as well ask why, if
Select had been ready to pounce on any pretext for retaliation (as Singleton believes), they waited
for a week to suspend him once the discrepancy was discovered.
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it was a “close question,” a rational jury could conclude that retaliation was the true motive for
Imwalle’s dismissal because (1) even prior to his termination, other retaliatory actions (such as
cutting Imwalle out of important meetings) had occurred, and (2) Imwalle’s discrimination claim was
discussed in a prepared statement read at his termination meeting. Id. at 549–51. Singleton argues
that his situation is analogous to Imwalle’s, because, he alleges, Select’s CEO falsely told him that
he had failed a drug test (which Singleton was required to take as part of the investigation) and
refused to give him copies of the investigation reports. Singleton also points to an email written on
February 28, 2006 by Daughtery in which Daughtery mentioned that Singleton had “attempted to sue
his former employer for issues involving scheduling.”
These comparisons are inapposite. Unlike in Imwalle, the “retaliatory atmosphere” Singleton
claims to have existed consisted only of the investigation into his documentation procedures, and
hence was part and parcel of the adverse action of which he ultimately complains; to permit him to
argue that the investigation makes it more likely that Select’s true motivation was retaliatory would
in effect permit him to argue that the adverse action itself is evidence of motive. Singleton presents
no evidence that the process by which this investigation went forward was different from
investigations into similar incidents, or that the process was inconsistent with hospital policy.
Moreover, the email by Daughtery that Singleton references as evidence that Singleton’s complaint
was at the forefront of Daughtery’s mind was dated February 28, 2006, weeks before Singleton’s
termination; in contrast with Imwalle, where reference was made to the plaintiff’s discrimination
complaint at the termination meeting itself, here the reference merely demonstrates the unremarkable
fact that, one day after Singleton sent a letter alleging that Select was engaging in unfair scheduling
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practices, Select’s CEO was thinking about the fact that Singleton had attempted to sue a prior
employer on similar grounds.
Singleton additionally relies on an entirely speculative argument that the evidence of his poor
documentation procedures was a post-hoc fabrication by McGowen. Singleton himself denies that
any of the conversations she alleges that she had with him occurred, and argues that McGowen
manufactured the handwritten notes of those conversations once her own judgment began to come
under scrutiny. As we are required to do on summary judgment, we resolve this question of fact in
favor of Singleton, and presume that these conversations never took place. However, McGowen’s
handwritten notes merely purported to document occasional attempts by her to correct a problem;
the actual evidence relied upon by the management team that decided to terminate Singleton
included charts, drug logs, and other documents that were indisputably filled out by him. Hence
even if McGowen’s notes were entirely fabricated, they were not essential to the decision-making
process. Even if they were, it is also true that “[w]hen an employer reasonably and honestly relies
on particularized facts in making an employment decision, it is entitled to summary judgment on
pretext even if its conclusion is later shown to be ‘mistaken, foolish, trivial, or baseless.’” Chen v.
Dow Chem. Co., 580 F.3d 394, 401 (6th Cir. 2009).
Singleton also argues that a “Confidential Incident Report” filled out by nurse supervisor
Chris LeMaster on March 16, 2006, is evidence that the investigation into his documentation
practices was a sham because it refers to him as already having been terminated. There is no
evidence that LeMaster, however, was privy to the decision-making process by which Singleton was
terminated, or that he would know if there had been some kind of consensus reached by management
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on that issue prior to the date Select says that decision was reached, March 27; hence, his belief that
Singleton had been terminated is not probative with respect to the question of pretext. Instead, it
appears highly likely that the reference to Singleton being “terminated” is instead a reference to his
having been suspended.
Similarly unavailing are Singleton’s attempts to demonstrate pretext under the third Manzer
method, a type of showing that typically consists of evidence that other employees were not
terminated even though they engaged in substantially identical conduct. Manzer, 29 F.3d at 1084.
Singleton first claims that he was treated differently in that others were not investigated following
discrepancies with their Med Dispense machine counts. This misses the point of the test, which is
to compare an employer’s treatment of other employees who had engaged in the conduct that is
claimed to be the legitimate nondiscriminatory reason for termination, not conduct that allegedly
gave rise to the discovery of that reason. Even so, Singleton does not point to any comparable
employee that was treated differently. He alleges that, during his tenure at Select, approximately 343
discrepancies were reported with the machine, many of which involved narcotics. Yet he does not
indicate how many of these were, as was true in his case, found to be unexplained even after an
investigation by the Director of Pharmacy, and indeed the Director of Pharmacy’s affidavit clarifies
that Singleton’s discrepancy was not one of the “many” that could be chalked up to a human error
mistake. Singleton does point to one incident in which a single Dilaudid pill was unaccounted for
on March 19, 2006, which “apparently was not investigated by Select nor any disciplinary action
taken against the nurse in question.” However, Singleton does not appear to have obtained any
evidence as to the factual circumstances of that case; there is no testimony from the nurse in question
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or the nurse supervisor on duty that would clarify whether the discrepancy was actually one that
ought to have triggered an investigation like the one undertaken in Singleton’s case. “The jury may
not reject an employer’s explanation . . . unless there is a sufficient basis in the evidence for doing
so.” Manzer, 29 F.3d at 1083 (emphasis in original).
Singleton also argues that he was treated differently from other employees with respect to
his documentation errors, a theory that would properly fall within the third Manzer method of
demonstrating pretext. His evidence of that proposition, however, is simply insufficient. He first
argues that Select treated him differently because it did not follow its “progressive discipline policy,”
which calls for employees to first receive a documented verbal warning, followed by a written
warning and then termination of employment. Select points to the deposition of Persby, who
testified that the use of the progressive policy was not mandatory, but Singleton responds that in an
email concerning the plaintiffs in the case that was originally consolidated with his, Persby wrote
that “[w]e do insist that everyone go through the process (verbal, written, then termination).” The
employees referenced in that email, however, were not being disciplined for the same kinds of
infractions as Singleton; rather, they were “caus[ing] a great deal of disturbance . . . creat[ing] a
hostile work environment, try[ing] to intimidate the other staff, talk[ing] about staff when they are
present . . . .”
As Persby testified, the foundational concern with Singleton’s behavior was that it could
affect patient safety. While we have held that “[e]vidence that [a] progressive-discipline policy
asserted as a rationale for an employee’s termination was not uniformly applied is evidence of
pretext,” Lamer v. Metaldyne Co. LLC, 240 F. App’x 22, 33 (6th Cir. 2007), in this case it does not
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appear that the progressive-discipline policy was even “asserted as a rationale” for Select’s action.
Singleton appears to read Lamer as holding that, when an employer utilizes a progressive-discipline
policy in any circumstances, it must utilize it in all circumstances, which is plainly not the case;
rather, Lamer holds that when an employee is discharged pursuant to such a policy, it must have
been applied consistently with other such actions. In his deposition testimony, CEO Daughtery
indicated that the progressive disciplinary policy at Select was “for issues that are not totally
egregious. . . . For behaviors that are just totally out of line, and we list those in the handbook, you
can have immediate termination without going through the process.” Though the record does not
appear to contain a list of offenses that would not require progressive discipline before termination,
the fact that Singleton’s offenses could have endangered patients, whereas his proposed comparators’
offenses merely disrupted the working environment, renders the comparison Singleton seeks to make
inapposite. Indeed, the same Select policy that required an investigation into any suspected diversion
of controlled substances further mandates that “[t]he employee will be terminated, regardless of
truthful admission if there are clearly documented practice issues.” (emphasis in original).
While Singleton does argue that others who committed documentation errors were given
verbal or written warnings, moreover, he fails to show that these other employees had a record of
documentation problems similar to his. In reviewing the disciplinary action forms he submits
pertaining to these other employees, there is no evidence that any of them reflect ongoing problems
as opposed to occasional lapses. Indeed, as discussed above, the decision-makers in this case had
ample evidence before them that Singleton had received multiple warnings about his documentation
errors.
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Because Singleton is unable to demonstrate that Select’s proffered reason is a pretext for
illegal retaliation, his Title VII claim fails. The judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED.
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Nos. 09-5235, 09-5492
Singleton v. Select Specialty Hospital et al.
DAMON J. KEITH, Circuit Judge, dissenting. I disagree with the majority’s analysis
under Manzer’s second prong. Cf. Manzer v. Diamond Shamrock Chemicals, Co., 29 F.3d 1078,
1084 (6th Cir. 1994). Singleton offered sufficient circumstantial evidence to persuade a jury that the
Defendant’s proffered reasons for firing him were pretextual. As the non-moving party, “his
evidence is to be believed, and all justifiable inferences are to be drawn in [his] favor.” Martin v.
Toledo Cardiology Consultants, Inc., 548 F.3d 405, 410 (6th Cir. 2008).
The majority does not properly apply the applicable standard of review here. “Without
weighing the evidence or judging the credibility of witnesses, and drawing all inferences in favor of
the non-moving party, a district court usually undertakes to determine whether there is sufficient
evidence to permit reasonable jurors to find for the non-moving party.” Aparicio v. Norfold &
Western Ry. Co., 84 F.3d 803, 807 (6th Cir. 1996). A reasonable juror, viewing the facts as well as
any inferences in the light most favorable to Singleton, could find by a preponderance of the
evidence that he is entitled to relief. See Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc., 477 U.S. 242, 252 (1986).
I would therefore reverse the district court’s grant of summary judgment and would remand for
further proceedings because there are three triable issues relating to Singleton’s termination. See
Matsushita Elec. Indus. Co. v. Zenith Radio Corp., 475 U.S. 574, 587 (1986).
Singleton satisfied his burden to demonstrate that “an illegal motivation was more likely than
that offered by the defendant.” Manzer, 29 F.3d at 1084 (emphasis in original). First, Singleton
presented data logs that outlined the commonplace carelessness with which Select managed its
pharmaceuticals and punished alleged diverters. Neither party disputes that a Dilaudid discrepancy
prompted Select’s extensive investigation into Singleton’s nursing practices. However, whether the
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Nos. 09-5235, 09-5492
Singleton v. Select Specialty Hospital et al.
investigation was routine or exceptional is a genuine issue of material fact. Select contends that even
the possibility of diverted narcotics required not only that the alleged diverter undergo drug testing,
but also a thorough evaluation of her medical and attendance records. Select solicited, but never
received or reviewed, Singleton’s drug test. Further, in the approximately seventeen month period
between August 2, 2005, and December 31, 2006, the Med Dispense machine in question
experienced nearly 343 discrepancies. In one instance, “Nurse Therisa Hughes ‘resolved’ a
discrepancy with [Dilaudid] by noting[,] ‘I don’t know what I did.’” There is no evidence that
Therisa’s records were photocopied, sent to the corporate office, analyzed in an ongoing
investigatory report, and made to serve as the basis for termination, as Singleton’s were. Indeed,
pursuant to Singleton’s request for discovery, Select identified only one other employee of whom
a drug test was requested. The record does not indicate that Select ever thoroughly reviewed her files
- or that it reviewed them at all. Taken together, this evidence and silence could convince a jury that
Singleton was singled out.
The significance of the temporal proximity between Singleton’s complaint and firing is
likewise best left to a jury. Our precedents concerning this issue stand for the principle that timing
matters. See, e.g., Lindsay v. Yates 578 F.3d 407, 421 (6th Cir. 2009) (while temporal proximity
“cannot alone prove pretext ... it can be used [as] ‘indirect evidence’ to support an employee’s claim
of pretext”) (citing Asmo v. Keane, 471 F.3d 588, 593); Mickey v. Zeidler Tool and Die Co., 516
F.3d 516, 524 (6th Cir. 2008) (“none [of our precedents] squarely stands for the proposition that
temporal proximity alone may never show a causal connection”); McNett v. Hardin Cmty. Fed.
Credit Union, 118 F. App’x 960, 965 (6th Cir. 2004) (finding causation when “only 13 days”
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Nos. 09-5235, 09-5492
Singleton v. Select Specialty Hospital et al.
separated protected activity from adverse action, reasoning that an “employer's knowledge of the
protected activity coupled with an adverse action occurring close in time can create an inference of
causation where the particular circumstances strengthen the inference of causation”); DiCarlo v.
Potter, 358 F.3d 408, 421 (6th Cir. 2004) (twenty-one day lapse between protected activity and
adverse employer action fell within close temporal proximity); Moore v. KUKA Welding Sys.,171
F.3d 1073, 1080 (6th Cir. 1999) (“[t]he causal connection ... may be established by demonstrating
that the adverse action was taken shortly after plaintiff filed the complaint [with the EEOC] and by
showing that he was treated differently from other employees”).
Plaintiff was suspended fourteen days following his February 27, 2006 letter; his employment
was terminated sixteen days later. In that letter, Singleton alleged that African-American employees
were routinely “called off” more frequently than their white counterparts. The complaint compared
the frequency of “calls off” between a white, male nurse with that nurse’s black and female co-
workers and suggested that black employees were being called off at a disproportionate rate.
According to Singleton, Black employees were called off twelve times while the white employees
were called off only three. Director of Clinical Services Kim McGowen investigated the matter and
submitted an explanatory report to Select’s CEO, Rick Daugherty, on March 10, 2006. She stated
that while “[Plaintiff] is an excellent ICU nurse,” the “call off” schedule properly reflected “staff that
request first call off due to family issues . . . [as well as] acuity, census, call-in’s, overtime [and]
continuity of care.” The incident nonetheless prompted a series of e-mails among Select’s higher-
ups. For example, McGowen referred to Plaintiff as a “disgruntled employee” who might “complain
to corporate.” Daugherty, Regional HR Manager Josceylon Buchs (“Buchs”), and Human Resources
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Nos. 09-5235, 09-5492
Singleton v. Select Specialty Hospital et al.
Coordinator Janet Whitlock corresponded about their belief that Plaintiff had sued a former
employer. Within days, Singleton was fired. Indeed, a “Confidential Incident Report” filled out by
nurse supervisor Chris LeMaster on March 16, 2006, referred to Singleton as already having been
terminated, prior to the conclusion of the investigation. But Select maintains that the firing decision
was not made until March 27. The close temporal proximity would permit a reasonable juror to find
it more likely than not that racial animus, rather than the results of the investigation, motivated
Select’s decision to fire. Also, the majority’s assumption that “the reference to Singleton being
‘terminated’ is instead a reference to his having been suspended” would best be tested before a jury.
Finally, summary judgment was inappropriate because the parties dispute the central issue
of which documents gave rise to the firing. Singleton had received solid performance reviews for
much of his employment. Indeed, in their written evaluations of his work between July 9 and
December 9, 2005, Singleton’s supervisors described him as an “exceptional asset,” a “very strong
ICU nurse,” and a skilled and “excellent . . . clinic[ian].” His July 9 evaluation awarded him the
highest possible rating for pain assessment. And in her response to Singleton’s February 27, 2006
complaint, his supervisor characterized him as “an excellent ICU nurse.” The tides turned only a
week after Singleton submitted a racial complaint. On March 5, 2006, the day the Dilaudid
discrepancy was discovered, Select initiated an investigation which purportedly revealed “errors .
. . so extreme,” in the words of investigation report author Molly Persby, “that they [we]re beyond
education.” Singleton’s “documentation regarding assessment of pain or anxiety” was deemed
“terrible;” his “correlation between signing out narcotics and documenting administration,” “poor.”
Select therefore argues that the results of the investigation prompted the firing. Singleton counters
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Nos. 09-5235, 09-5492
Singleton v. Select Specialty Hospital et al.
that despite his diagnosed dyslexia, he received reviews that would warrant retaining him. The
majority opinion appears to make improper credibility determinations, weighs the evidence, and
makes factual assessments that are best left for juries. If the facts, and all inferences, are drawn in
Singleton’s favor, a reasonable fact-finder could find for Singleton by a preponderance of the
evidence.
For the foregoing reasons, I do not agree that Select was entitled to summary judgment. At
least three genuine issues of material fact remain, all of which should be left to a jury.
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