NOT RECOMMENDED FOR FULL-TEXT PUBLICATION
File Name: 13a1007n.06
No. 12-4424 FILED
Dec 02, 2013
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS DEBORAH S. HUNT, Clerk
FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
ANGELA POWELL-PICKETT, )
)
Plaintiff-Appellant, )
) ON APPEAL FROM THE UNITED
v. ) STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE
) SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF OHIO
A.K. STEEL CORPORATION, )
)
Defendant-Appellee. )
)
Before: BOGGS and SUTTON, Circuit Judges, and CLELAND, District Judge.*
CLELAND, District Judge. December 20, 2011, was a defining day for Appellant Angela
Powell-Pickett. That morning she sat for a deposition in her lawsuit against her former employer,
Appellee AK Steel, which she was accusing of discrimination, retaliation, and harassment. It was
the third deposition scheduled for her; she had (apparently) fainted during the first and had not
shown up to the second. On her important day, at the third deposition, she dissembled. When she
was asked if she had ever filed another lawsuit, she said she did not recall. Confronted with her own
resume, and asked whether she had made it, she said she did not recall. She answered almost every
question this way. Asked in what decade (decade) she had left a previous employer, she said she
did not recall. When she was asked repeatedly what discrimination, retaliation, and harassment she
had suffered, she said that she had no idea. Although she became agitated when shown glaring
*
The Honorable Robert H. Cleland, United States District Judge for the Eastern District
of Michigan, sitting by designation.
No. 12-4424
Powell-Pickett v. AK Steel
inconsistencies in a bankruptcy petition she had filed, she was not berated or otherwise coerced. She
simply refused to testify about her own case.1
After AK Steel moved for summary judgment, Powell-Pickett submitted an affidavit in
which she declared that she had endured “a very, very, very hostile work environment” and in which
she provided examples of alleged mistreatment. Although her lawyer speculated on her behalf, she
herself offered no explanation for the return of her memory. The district court struck the affidavit
because it contradicted Powell-Pickett’s sworn testimony and then, finding no dispute of material
fact, granted AK Steel’s motion. Seeking to undo what she did on a very important day, Powell-
Pickett appeals.
I. BACKGROUND
The chain of events leading to this appeal begins in February 2006, when a collective
bargaining agreement between AK Steel and a steelworkers union expired. AK Steel locked out the
union workers and hired replacements, of which Powell-Pickett was one. As part of her application
Powell-Pickett underwent a medical exam, reported her medical history, and swore to her reported
medical history’s completeness and accuracy. In her application she reported no medical issues and
no workplace injuries—claims that were to become important. At the time, all went smoothly,
however, and Powell-Pickett started work as an inspector of a production line in AK Steel’s largest
plant. She reported to a shift manager, who in turn reported to a supervisory manager, William
Belding. In July 2007, after the lockout ended, Belding hired Powell-Pickett as a permanent
1
Her approach brings to mind the attitude of Bartleby, the title character of a Melville
short story, who reflexively responded to every request, “I would prefer not to.” See Herman
Melville, Bartleby, the Scrivener: A Story of Wall Street (1853).
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Powell-Pickett v. AK Steel
employee; she remained an inspector. She says that to become a regular worker she had to undergo
another medical exam and that during this exam she told the doctor her full medical history. That
history includes an old workplace injury, a thyroid condition, and the removal of a cyst.
In September 2007 Powell-Pickett applied to become a shift manager. The following
January, however, Belding awarded the position to someone else—someone who is, like Powell-
Pickett, black, female, and a former replacement worker. The day she learned of Belding’s choice,
Powell-Pickett called AK Steel’s ethics hotline and complained that Belding had based his decision
on favoritism, promoting a person he had trained. AK Steel investigated and found the complaint
groundless. Two months later, in March 2008, Powell-Pickett submitted a charge of discrimination
to the EEOC. See R. 59 at 6, n.5 (discussing Powell-Pickett’s shifting assertions about when she
filed an EEOC charge and concluding, based on a statement in her response to summary judgment,
that only her claim of March 2008 is coherent). She objected to missing the promotion, alleged that
she was being assigned shifts unfairly, and claimed that she was suffering retaliation for calling the
ethics hotline. In June 2008, a supervisor sent Belding and others an email with pointed questions
about Powell-Pickett’s schedule. The email did not mention harassment. Apparently the EEOC
charge did not either. Both focused on shift assignments and asserted that Powell-Pickett had been
demoted to a “floater” position. AK Steel says Powell-Pickett was merely rotated among different
lines, for training, after she became a regular worker. At any rate, in mediation conducted by the
EEOC, Powell-Pickett agreed not to sue, and AK Steel agreed to forget about the EEOC charge.
In February 2009, Powell-Pickett submitted a doctor’s note saying that, due to an irritable
bowel, back pain, and anxiety, she needed a month’s leave. AK Steel granted the time but, in accord
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Powell-Pickett v. AK Steel
with company policy, required Powell-Pickett to attend a medical exam before returning to work.
At the exam, Powell-Pickett raised the old work injury, the thyroid condition, and the removed cyst.
AK Steel promptly suspended her, and then terminated her, for providing an incomplete medical
history in 2006. She is one of about thirty people at her plant fired in the 2000s for giving AK Steel
false information. The union at first challenged the termination, but, in the end, it declined to seek
arbitration.
Powell-Pickett filed another EEOC charge and, in May 2010, began this action. In a fifteen-
count complaint, she alleged discrimination, harassment, and retaliation based on race and gender,
in violation of Title VII and duplicative Ohio law. She also alleged a violation of the Family
Medical Leave Act (“FMLA”), as well as breach of a contract (the EEOC mediation agreement).
According to the complaint:
During the fall of 2007, Plaintiff began being discriminated against and harassed
because of her race and gender. She was subjected to racial slurs and sexist
comments. Plaintiff was subjected to unwelcome and offensive touching. Her locker
was sprayed with profanity directed at [her] gender. An employee urinated in
containers and placed them in the ceiling above Plaintiff. A noose was found
hanging in her work area. Offensive photographs, pictures and posters were
displayed on the lockers of others.
R. 1 at ¶ 18. The complaint also asserts that a nurse’s erroneous instructions caused Powell-Pickett
to provide the incomplete medical history.
Powell-Pickett’s first deposition occurred in June 2011. It was, it is fair to say, a shambles.
AK Steel’s counsel began by asking Powell-Pickett questions about her conduct shortly after her
termination. In July 2009, a few months after she lost her employment, she filed for her third
bankruptcy under Chapter 13, which “authorizes an individual with a regular income to obtain a
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discharge after the successful completion of a payment plan,” Marrama v. Citizens Bank of Mass.,
549 U.S. 365, 367 (2007); distinct from Chapter 7’s trustee-in-possession schema, Chapter 13 allows
the debtor to “retain[] possession of his property,” id. In her petition, she declared an ongoing salary
from AK Steel. Counsel pressed her to explain why she had told the bankruptcy court that she still
had an income. Soon, Powell-Pickett was claiming not to recognize documents that minutes earlier
she had acknowledged signing under penalty of perjury. Things drew to a close when, after less than
half an hour, she said she could not recall declaring bankruptcy, asked for a break, fainted, and was
removed by the paramedics. A few weeks later, her attorneys withdrew on the ground that “a lawyer
may withdraw from representing a client if the client insists upon taking action . . . with which the
lawyer has a fundamental disagreement.” R. 14 (quoting Rule 1.16(b)(4), ABA Model Rules of
Professional Conduct).
After Powell-Pickett missed the second deposition, the district court ordered her to appear
at the third. It began much like the first: AK Steel’s counsel asked about Powell-Pickett’s
bankruptcy papers, and Powell-Pickett claimed to remember nothing. She eventually gave some
direct answers, saying, for instance, that a nurse had told her to report only her recent medical
history in her 2006 application. But she rejected every invitation to explain how she had been
mistreated. Near the end there occurred the following exchange:
Q. Why do you believe Bill Belding discriminated against you? Tell the court
why.
A. Because I was a replacement worker.
....
Q. Any other reason why you think he discriminated against you besides you
were a replacement worker?
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Powell-Pickett v. AK Steel
A. I don’t recall at this time.
Q. Okay. Any other reasons why you think that Bill Belding discriminated
against you?
A. Don’t recall at this time.
Q. Okay. Any other reasons why you think that Bill Belding harassed you
because of your race?
A. Retaliation.
....
Q. All right. Well, . . . tell me how he harassed you because of your race.
A. I don’t recall at this time.
Q. Okay. Tell me how he retaliated against you because of your race.
A. I don’t recall at this time.
Q. Okay. Tell me why you think anybody in supervision at AK Steel
discriminated against you because of your race.
A. I don’t recall at this time.
Q. Tell me why you think anybody in management at AK Steel discriminated
against you because of your gender.
A. I don’t recall.
Q. Okay. Tell me why you think anybody in AK Steel management retaliated
against you because of any protected activity you engaged in.
A. Don’t recall.
....
Q. What proof do you have . . . that the company fired you because of your
filings with the EEOC?
A. That’s just what I feel.
Q. Do you have any other reason why you feel that way?
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A. I have plenty of reasons.
Q. Well, now is the time to tell them.
A. Don’t recall them at this time.
R. 35 at Dep. 82-85.
Powell-Pickett’s present attorney entered the case, and AK Steel moved for summary
judgment. Powell-Pickett supported her response in opposition with affidavits from herself, two
co-workers, and a supervisor, the one whose June 2008 email on her behalf raised only scheduling
issues. These affidavits affirmed the complaint’s main allegations of mistreatment, and they added
that a co-worker had touched Powell-Pickett’s hair, that a manager had called her “Buckwheat,” and
that a couple managers had spread rumors that she was once a “hooker in Alaska.” AK Steel moved
to strike Powell-Pickett’s affidavit and hold her to her testimony under oath.
Observing simple facts—that Powell-Pickett lost a promotion to a fellow former replacement
worker who was both female and black; that no record evidence showed management discovering
the worst alleged wrongs (the noose, the urine); and that Powell-Pickett’s deposition and subsequent
affidavit were irredeemably inconsistent—the district court granted the motion to strike and the
motion for summary judgment.
II. STANDARD
We review the decision to strike an affidavit for an abuse of discretion. Aerel, S.R.L. v. PCC
Airfoils, L.L.C., 448 F.3d 899, 906 (6th Cir. 2006). And we review the grant of summary judgment
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de novo, drawing each reasonable inference in favor of the non-moving party. Entm’t Prods., Inc.
v. Shelby Cnty., Tenn., 721 F.3d 729, 733 (6th Cir. 2013). Summary judgment is proper if “there
is no genuine dispute as to any material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a mater of
law.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a).
III. DISCUSSION
A. The Motion to Strike
When a party says one thing live at a deposition but another thing in a written statement, the
change is conspicuous. The written words—often composed by the party’s lawyer—look too
contrived to deserve any weight. The rule therefore is that a party opposing summary judgment with
an affidavit that contradicts her earlier deposition must explain why she disagrees with herself.
White v. Baptist Mem’l Health Care Corp., 699 F.3d 869, 877 (6th Cir. 2012). Although in this case
it seems equally likely that the plaintiff simply lied under oath, see, e.g., Battaglia v. United States,
653 F.2d 419, 421 (9th Cir. 1981) (“A witness who testified that he does not remember an event can
be convicted of perjury if it can be proven . . . that he does, in fact, remember the event.”), as that
she filed a contrived affidavit, in either event a convincing explanation of the conflicting evidence
is required. A party may neither duck her deposition, nor hold her cards in anticipation of later
advantage.
Powell-Pickett resists the conclusion that she even contradicted herself. She contends that
her affidavit did no more than supplement her deposition, at which, she claims, she just lacked “skill
in presenting facts.” That is not accurate, however; she said next to nothing. She rejected each of
many chances to provide the basics of her lawsuit. It is “impossible logically to distinguish between
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the case of a downright refusal to testify and that of evasion by obvious subterfuge and mere formal
compliance.” United States v. Appel, 211 F. 495, 495 (S.D.N.Y. 1913) (L. Hand, J.). A deponent
who professes a comprehensive and incredible lack of memory in fact declines to present evidence.
Because Powell-Pickett was asked specific questions about, yet denied knowledge of, the material
aspects of her case, the material allegations in her affidavit directly contradict her deposition.
The district court may not strike an affidavit if “the alleged inconsistency [it] created . . .
existed within the deposition itself.” O’Brien v. Ed Donnelly Enters., Inc., 575 F.3d 567, 593 (6th
Cir. 2009). Powell-Pickett argues that her deposition contradicts itself and that her affidavit is a
permissible clarification. She focuses this argument on the FMLA claim, a claim that was barely
discussed at the deposition, and a claim that, as we shall see, fails regardless. So far as she employs
the argument for her claims of mistreatment based on race or gender, she is mistaken. Only once
did she come close to discussing these claims. When counsel asked what problems she had had with
Belding, she said, “harassment, discrimination, retaliation.” When counsel then asked her to say
what mistreatment she had suffered, she said instead why she thought mistreatment had
occurred—because of the EEOC charge. That oblique response does not conflict with the direct
answer, “I don’t recall,” that Powell-Pickett habitually gave when asked, again and again, to say
what AK Steel had done to her.
Powell-Pickett says the hard questioning by AK Steel’s counsel would cause any person
uneducated in the law to become forgetful or silent. But she submits no evidence that she felt that
way; her lawyer merely speculates. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(c)(1). Actually there is no sign that she
suffered harsher questioning than a reasonable person can handle. And she never expressed fear or
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stopped answering questions altogether. Counsel reminded her of her oath to speak the truth and
of the importance of speaking up (“now is the time”). And although at times she plainly withdrew,
she did so mainly when presented with her own apparent lies or inconsistencies. Under the
circumstances, her lack of memory about the alleged wrongs she suffered was too complete to
appear unintended. No one suppressed or hoodwinked her. She made no disguise of the fact that
in support of her case, she just had nothing to say.
B. The Motion for Summary Judgment
The law of harassment is indifferent to a plaintiff who did not herself regard workmates’
conduct as abusive. Warf v. U.S. Dep’t of Veterans Affairs, 713 F.3d 874, 878–79 (6th Cir. 2013).
Although there exists some evidence of objectively cruel behavior, Powell-Pickett, principal
saboteur of her own deposition, made a record bereft of evidence that she considered her workplace
hostile or offensive. She would invite a fact finder to guess at what she witnessed and how she felt;
her harassment claim therefore fails. In any case, if a plaintiff alleges harassment by a co-worker,
rather than a supervisor, only conduct the employer knew or should have known about can create
liability. Clark v. United Parcel Serv., Inc., 400 F.3d 341, 348 (6th Cir. 2005). No evidence
establishes that Powell-Pickett reported the noose or the urine planting at her work station. She now
says that she mentioned both to a supervisor, the one who sent an email for her complaining about
her schedule, but she said nothing whatever about this at her deposition. The supervisor, who also
submitted an affidavit, says nothing about it either. Most of the other allegations of harassment are
either supported only by vague assertion in an affidavit or are unsupported altogether. See Bsharah
v. Eltra Corp., 394 F.2d 502, 503 (6th Cir. 1968) (“In summary judgment proceedings, affidavits
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containing mere conclusions have no probative value.”); see also Ladd v. Grand Trunk W. R.R., Inc.,
552 F.3d 495, 501 (6th Cir. 2009); 10B Charles Alan Wright & Arthur R. Miller, et al., Federal
Practice & Procedure § 2738 n.33 (3d ed. 2013). The allegations that are supported—the name-
calling (“Buckwheat”), the rumor-spreading (“hooker in Alaska”), and the touching of Powell-
Pickett’s hair—constitute sporadic mean conduct but not the severe or pervasive harassment of a
hostile work environment. See Williams v. CSX Transp. Co., Inc., 643 F.3d 502, 512–13 (6th Cir.
2011).
Powell-Pickett argues that AK Steel discriminated against her by not promoting her to shift
manager, by scheduling her work shifts unfairly, and by terminating her. Her complaint about not
becoming shift manager fails because she lost the promotion to someone of the same race and
gender. See Younis v. Pinnacle Airlines, Inc., 610 F.3d 359, 363–64 (6th Cir. 2010). She says
Belding undercut her by not training her, but she cites no record evidence, and anyway her point is
a red herring; it remains the case that Belding treated favorably the black female whom he promoted.
Powell-Pickett objects to being scheduled as a “floater,” but she never rebuts AK Steel’s reasonable
claim that she was merely being trained to inspect different production lines. See Russell v. Univ.
of Toledo, 537 F.3d 596, 604 (6th Cir. 2008). She says Belding refused her requests for time off,
but again she ignores a reasonable explanation—that she always sought leave too late, after Belding
set the week’s shift schedule. Although she claims that AK Steel terminated her because of her race
or her gender, she identifies no one of a different race or gender who replaced her. See Younis, 610
F.3d at 363–64. She never establishes, moreover, that AK Steel used the omitted parts of her
medical history as a mere pretext for dumping her. See Russell, 537 F.3d at 604. She says both that
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a nurse told her what to omit and that she first gave AK Steel her full history long before she lost
her job. These allegations do not help her, because no evidence suggests that AK Steel’s mistakes,
if any, in firing her served as cover for animosity. See Michael v. Caterpillar Fin. Servs. Corp., 496
F.3d 584, 598–99 (6th Cir. 2007).
An employer may not retaliate against an employee who objects to potential workplace
discrimination. Warf, 713 F.3d at 880. Powell-Pickett’s first protected objection was her call to the
ethics hotline after she missed the promotion, so the promotion decision itself could not have been
retaliation. The unsupported claim that Powell-Pickett was deprived of training, the rebutted claim
that she was scheduled unfairly, and the unsupported and rebutted claim that she was vindictively
terminated, all reveal no sign of retaliation. And because she never shows that AK Steel retaliated,
Powell-Pickett cannot establish retaliation based on her EEOC charge. There was therefore no
breach of contract.
Finally, the FMLA claim. When responding to the motion for summary judgment, Powell-
Pickett treated it as an afterthought. She quoted two affidavits saying that she had needed FMLA
leave after her daughter had knee surgery, but she offered no law and no analysis. The district court,
which could easily have found the claim forfeited, decided that Powell-Pickett raised an FMLA
claim based on the need to care for her daughter, and it then concluded, correctly, that she had not
shown she was denied requested leave. Powell-Pickett says that “the framing of the issue by the
district court was in error”—this of an issue that Powell-Pickett did not frame at all. She raises parts
of the record that she never mentioned to the district court and tries to revive her neglected claim
on appeal. That she may not do. The district court need not search the record for probative evidence
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a party fails to identify, and the court of appeals need not consider facts never presented to the
district court. Street v. J.C. Bradford & Co. 886 F.2d 1472, 1479–1480 (6th Cir. 1989); Chicago
Title Ins. Corp. v. Magnuson, 487 F.3d 985, 995 (6th Cir. 2007); Tucker v. Tennessee, 539 F.3d 526,
531 (6th Cir. 2008); Fed. R. App. P. 28(a)(7) and (e); 6th Cir. R. 28(a).
IV. CONCLUSION
The judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED.
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