Court Opinion

ID: 4664120
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2021-03-02 17:00:50.805056+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:02:33.740144
License: Public Domain

United States Court of Appeals
                           FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA CIRCUIT

No. 20-7029                                                  September Term, 2020
                                                             FILED ON: MARCH 2, 2021

JOSEPH D. RASSA,
                      APPELLANT

v.

AMTRAK, DOING BUSINESS AS NATIONAL RAILROAD PASSENGER CORPORATION,
                   APPELLEE

                          Appeal from the United States District Court
                                  for the District of Columbia
                                      (No. 1:18-cv-02024)

       Before: HENDERSON, PILLARD and RAO, Circuit Judges.

                                        JUDGMENT

        The court considered this appeal on the record from the United States District Court and
the briefs of the parties. D.C. Cir. R. 34(j). The panel has accorded the issues full consideration
and has determined that they do not warrant a published opinion. See D.C. Cir. R. 36(d). It is
hereby

       ORDERED AND ADJUDGED that the judgment of the district court be AFFIRMED.

        Joseph Rassa, a white man, contends that his employer, the National Railroad Passenger
Corporation (Amtrak), discriminated against him on the basis of race in violation of 42 U.S.C.
§ 1981. Rassa was medically disqualified from his job as a Passenger Engineer for eight months
after he failed a mandatory color-vision acuity examination and subsequent color-vision field test,
and he claims that Amtrak refused to reassign him to a position that did not require color vision
even as it reassigned black employees who failed the same vision tests. He does not question the
validity of the vision testing. As Rassa puts it, his “discrimination claim is about others [who
failed vision testing] being transitioned to jobs that Rassa was not even interviewed for.” Reply
7. Amtrak reinstated Rassa to his prior position following his successful completion of a color-
vision field test, and Rassa remains employed there.

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        Rassa appeals the district court’s grant of Amtrak’s motion for summary judgment and its
related motion to strike two exhibits. Rassa did not produce the exhibits in discovery but
nonetheless attached them to his opposition to Amtrak’s summary judgment motion. We need not
decide whether the district court permissibly excluded the exhibits because, even considering
them, Amtrak is entitled to summary judgment. As we have acknowledged, it is “unnecessary to
rule upon the[] actual admissibility” of exhibits submitted in opposition to summary judgment
when “there would not be a genuine dispute over a material fact even if [they] were admitted.”
Galvin v. Eli Lilly & Co., 488 F.3d 1026, 1030 (D.C. Cir. 2007).

        Amtrak is entitled to judgment because the record—with or without the excluded
exhibits—does not include evidence on which a reasonable jury could find Rassa similarly situated
to the black Amtrak employees he claims as comparators, or that Rassa even requested
reassignment to another position that did not require color vision. One of Rassa’s late-proffered
exhibits consists of emails that appear to be from a third-party service that facilitated Amtrak’s
screening of employees to fill open positions. On their face, the emails acknowledge Rassa’s
expressions of interest in job openings but also describe “mandatory next steps for new
applications” that he did not show he completed. E.g., App. 47 (formatting modified). Indeed, he
does not acknowledge having ever seen those emails prior to this litigation, and speculates that
they may have been caught in his email spam filter and later automatically deleted. See Appellant’s
Br. 16-17. The other exhibit at issue is an expert report by someone not identified as an expert in
this case who opined on commonalities among various Amtrak jobs. The report was written in
2012 and submitted in another case to which Amtrak was a party. It does not speak to the particular
jobs held by Rassa or his claimed comparators.

         We review the district court’s grant of summary judgment de novo. See, e.g., Brady v.
Office of Sergeant at Arms, 520 F.3d 490, 492 (D.C. Cir. 2008). To prevail under Section 1981,
Rassa must show that he was subjected to intentional racial discrimination in violation of the equal
“right . . . to make and enforce contracts”—a right defined to include “the enjoyment of all
benefits, privileges, terms, and conditions of the contractual relationship.” 42 U.S.C. § 1981(a)-
(b); see Ayissi-Etoh v. Fannie Mae, 712 F.3d 572, 576 (D.C. Cir. 2013) (“Section 1981 prohibits
private employers from intentionally discriminating on the basis of race with respect to the
‘benefits, privileges, terms, and conditions’ of employment.” (citations omitted)). Section 1981
“was ‘meant, by its broad terms, to proscribe discrimination in the making or enforcement of
contracts against, or in favor of, any race.’” Gratz v. Bollinger, 539 U.S. 244, 276 n.23 (2003)
(quoting McDonald v. Santa Fe Trail Transp. Co., 427 U.S. 273, 295-96 (1976)). “In Section
1981 and Title VII cases, courts use the same framework for determining whether unlawful
discrimination occurred.” Ayissi-Etoh, 712 F.3d at 576 (citations omitted). Under Section 1981,
as under Title VII, a litigant may rely on circumstantial evidence “suggesting that the employer
treated similarly situated persons who were not the same race as the plaintiff more favorably than
it treated the plaintiff.” Burley v. Nat’l Passenger Rail Corp., 801 F.3d 290, 296-97 (D.C. Cir.
2015) (citing Brady, 520 F.3d at 495).

       Even taking the exhibits as admissible, the evidence raises no genuine factual dispute as to
Rassa’s claim of discriminatory intent. The evidence falls short in two ways, each of which is
independently fatal to his claim: The employees Rassa says failed vision tests but continued to
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work either simply did not fail any test or were not in positions materially similar to Rassa’s when
they did. The record also lacks evidence that, upon failing his vision tests, Rassa applied for or
otherwise asked Amtrak to reassign him to a position not requiring color vision, as his identified
comparators had. We explain each defect, and the inability of the excluded evidence to remedy it.

        First, the employees Rassa identifies are not valid comparators. Rassa’s intent claim rests
on his assertion that similarly situated black employees were accommodated after failing vision
tests, whereas he was not. But the three employees that Rassa identifies—Rodney Peters, Nigel
Thierens, and Rodney Brown—are not similarly situated to Rassa in “all of the relevant aspects of
[his] employment situation.” Burley, 801 F.3d at 301 (quoting Holbrook v. Reno, 196 F.3d 255,
261 (D.C. Cir. 1999)). Amtrak’s evidence confirms that Peters was never medically disqualified,
see App. 43, and Rassa adduced no evidence to dispute the point. As for Thierens and Brown,
evidence shows that, when they were medically disqualified, they both had different jobs from
Rassa’s and worked under different supervisors. See App. 37-38, 43-46. The record shows that
they, like Rassa, were placed temporarily on inactive status without pay. See App. 44-45, 93-94.
Rassa objects that they were then placed in alternate positions, but he points to no evidence that
they were subject to the same policies, or that their supervisors followed the same practices as his,
regarding alternate job placements of medically disqualified employees.

        The record, sparse as it is, reflects the lack of material similarity. At the time of his
disqualification, Rassa was a Passenger Engineer, i.e., someone who operated locomotive engines.
The “essential functions” of his job included “[a]dher[ing] to and compl[ying] with train orders,
bulletin orders, wayside signals, [and] railroad operating rules”; “[p]erform[ing] transit operations
ensuring movement orders are clearly understood with the Conductor, Yardmaster and
Dispatchers”; and “[p]erform[ing] required tests and inspections before and after all runs.” App.
38. By contrast, Thierens was an Assistant Passenger Conductor within the train’s passenger
compartments. He was responsible for “supervis[ing], observ[ing] and adher[ing] to all safety
requirements and work operations while ensuring operating procedures are clearly understood”;
“[a]ssist[ing] passengers boarding and detraining at station stops” and “[e]nsur[ing] all revenue is
collected”; and “[c]heck[ing] and control[ling] ventilation, lighting, water, heating and cooling
systems.” App. 43-44. Brown, whose job description as an On-Corridor Yard Engineer was closer
to Rassa’s, see App. 45, drove trains within a railyard as opposed to on a route and worked on a
different team and under a different supervisor than Rassa, compare App. 45 (at the time of his
disqualification, Brown worked on the “‘YD PENN/SUNNY’ Cost Center/Team under the
supervision of Charles J. Lawrence”), with App. 39 (at the time of his disqualification, Rassa “was
a member of Amtrak’s ‘RD PSGR CRW BAL/MDOT’ Cost Center/Team, and he was supervised
by Edward T. Downes”). Rassa says that Howard Carter, not Downes, was his supervisor at the
time of his disqualification, see App. 22, 103, but any dispute is immaterial because Rassa does
not contest Amtrak’s evidence that neither Brown nor Thierens was supervised by Carter or
worked on the same team as Rassa. Thierens’ and Brown’s different treatment in their distinct
jobs and situations is not, without more, probative of employer bias. See Burley, 801 F.3d at 301-
02.

        The expert report that Rassa sought to introduce—to the extent that Rassa even challenges
its exclusion here, compare Appellant’s Br. 5-7 (providing detail on the report), with id. at 15-19
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(discussing only the district court’s decision to strike his exhibit of emails)—cannot make up the
shortfall. The report’s broad assertions about the “fundamentally shared function” of Amtrak’s
employee groups, App. 69, and statements that “the work performed within the craft and within
the classification[] is the same” “[r]egardless of work site,” App. 70, are far too general to establish
that any of the three employees Rassa identifies is an appropriate comparator. The report says
nothing about the various different types of engineers employed by Amtrak or whether they were
subject to the same policies or practices regarding accommodation of color blindness; if anything,
it suggests that engineers like Rassa and conductors like Thierens do not even share the same
“occupation[].” See App. 66.

        Second, Rassa fails to show that he actually sought reassignment to any particular Amtrak
job for which he was qualified during his period of medical disqualification, as Thierens and
Brown undisputedly did. See App. 45-46; see also App. 93-94. Even if we consider with the rest
of the evidence the emails the district court struck, Rassa’s proof on this point, too, falls short.
Rassa’s only request for accommodation was that he be reinstated to the position he held when he
was medically disqualified. See App. 121; see also Ex. 2, Pl.’s Reply Mem. Supp. Mot. Summ.
J., ECF No. 25-2, Rassa v. Amtrak, No. 18-cv-02024-TJK (D.D.C.) (Aug. 23, 2019) (Rassa’s
request for accommodation). The emails in Rassa’s proffered exhibit do not show otherwise; to
the contrary, they merely acknowledge Rassa’s expression of interest in a handful of positions and
state mandatory next steps for completing applications to the positions at issue. See, e.g., App. 47.
There is no evidence—nor even any direct assertion on Rassa’s part—that he completed those
steps. See Appellant’s Br. 24-25. More fundamentally, beyond asserting that, “to the best of [his]
knowledge,” the other positions did not require color vision, App. 108; cf. App. 110 (stating that
“[m]any” of those positions did not require color vision), Rassa adduced no evidence that he was
qualified for them. See also App. 134-36 (district court commenting on the lack of any evidence
that Rassa was qualified for any of the positions referenced in the exhibit).

           Rassa claims that, in light of the emails he proffered, Amtrak’s interrogatory response
stating that “Plaintiff never requested reassignment to a position that did not require him to meet
the . . . color vision acuity standards,” App. 94 (emphasis omitted), is false, so supports an inference
of discriminatory intent. But, as discussed above, even considering the emails, the record lacks
evidence that Amtrak was aware of any reassignment request on Rassa’s part. There is thus no
basis on which a reasonable jury could “infer that [Amtrak’s] explanation is not only a mistaken
one in terms of the facts, but a lie” concealing racial animus. Burley, 801 F.3d at 296 (quoting
Aka v. Wash. Hosp. Ctr., 156 F.3d 1284, 1293 (D.C. Cir. 1998) (en banc)).

        One would expect in a case like this one that Rassa would have sought at least a deposition
of an Amtrak manager, perhaps under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 30(b)(6), to make a record
of the process for reassignments of employees on medical leave, including the relationship and
information flow between Amtrak and the third-party service that sent the emails. But Rassa did
very little discovery, taking no depositions at all, then failed to show good cause for an extension
of the discovery period. See Appellant’s Br. 8; see also App. 122. In response to Amtrak’s
summary judgment motion, Rassa did not supply evidence from which a jury could fairly infer
that he was subjected to discrimination based on his race.

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       For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the judgment of the district court.

        Pursuant to D.C. Circuit Rule 36, this disposition will not be published. The Clerk is
directed to withhold issuance of the mandate until seven days after resolution of any timely petition
for rehearing or rehearing en banc. See Fed. R. App. P. 41(b); D.C. Cir. R. 41.

                                           Per Curiam

                                                              FOR THE COURT:
                                                              Mark J. Langer, Clerk

                                                      BY:     /s/
                                                              Daniel J. Reidy
                                                              Deputy Clerk

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