Court Opinion

ID: 6334098
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-04-22 14:06:42.281752+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:23:34.053128
License: Public Domain

RENDERED: APRIL 15, 2022; 10:00 A.M.
                        NOT TO BE PUBLISHED

                Commonwealth of Kentucky
                           Court of Appeals

                              NO. 2021-CA-0560-MR

THOMAS LIGHTFOOT                                                      APPELLANT

                APPEAL FROM FAYETTE CIRCUIT COURT
v.             HONORABLE ERNESTO M. SCORSONE, JUDGE
                       ACTION NO. 18-CI-02302

FORTERRA PRESSURE PIPE, INC.;
FORTERRA CONCRETE
INDUSTRIES, INC.; FORTERRA PIPE
& PRECAST, LLC; AND JOHN DOE                                           APPELLEES

                                    OPINION
                                   AFFIRMING

                                   ** ** ** ** **

BEFORE: CALDWELL, COMBS, AND L. THOMPSON, JUDGES.

COMBS, JUDGE: Thomas Lightfoot appeals a summary judgment of the Fayette

Circuit Court dismissing his action for unlawful workplace discrimination brought

against his former employer, Forterra Concrete Industries, Inc., (Forterra

Concrete). While his notice of appeal also identifies Forterra Pipe & Precast, LLC,

and Forterra Pressure Pipe, Inc., as appellees, Lightfoot conceded before the trial
court that these business entities were not his employers, and he agreed to a

dismissal of the action with respect to them. Consequently, we do not treat them as

parties on appeal. Moreover, we regard as a mere oversight Lightfoot’s

misidentification of Forterra Pipe & Precast as the only appellee on the cover of his

appellant’s brief and the erroneous naming of Forterra Pressure Pipe, Inc., as the

only appellee within the body of that brief. Finally, Lightfoot makes no claim of

error with respect to the appellee identified as “John Doe.” Consequently, we

make no further comment with respect to him.

            On appeal, Lightfoot argues that the trial court erred by granting

summary judgment with respect to his claims of race discrimination, hostile work

environment, and unlawful retaliation. After our review, we affirm.

             Lightfoot, an African-American man, was hired by Sherman-Dixie

Concrete Industries, Inc., (Sherman-Dixie), in June 2005. He was working as a

maintenance technician earning an hourly wage when he was promoted to plant

manager by Sherman-Dixie in June 2014. Lightfoot became a salaried

employee and held the position as plant manager for four to five months. After

that time, Bruce Stamper, plant manager at Sherman-Dixie’s Hermitage,

Tennessee, facility, transferred to the Lexington facility as plant manager.

Lightfoot accepted the title of assistant plant manager and continued to be paid a

salary rather than an hourly wage (as is typical for maintenance personnel).

                                         -2-
However, his focus returned to maintenance and training employees to operate the

production equipment.

             At the time of his deposition, Stamper was working for Foley

Products as operations manager. However, he remembered that Sherman-Dixie’s

Lexington plant was in such bad shape when he arrived in Lexington that he

worked eighteen-hour days to sort out the production issues. Stamper indicated

that upon his arrival to the Lexington plant, Lightfoot explained to him that

Sherman-Dixie had not given him a fair opportunity to run the facility. Stamper

testified that Lightfoot “wasn’t giving me the full effort” because he (Lightfoot)

was embittered by the personnel decision. Stamper experienced a number of

performance issues with Lightfoot. He indicated that Lightfoot had been “pencil-

whipping some paperwork that things had been done when they really weren’t

done”; told a lie that cost the plant two and one-half days’ production and massive

expenses when he allowed cement to harden in a mixer; took an inordinate amount

of time to repair machines; failed to address safety issues on a timely basis; and

was so disorganized as to be ineffective at his job duties.

             In January 2016, Sherman-Dixie was acquired by Forterra Concrete.

Several months later, Stamper was promoted to area operations manager. In

August 2016, Stamper promoted Casey Edmonson, a machine operator, to be

Lexington’s plant manager. Stamper continued to be in the Lexington facility at

                                         -3-
least two days per week, and he testified that once Edmonson was promoted,

Lightfoot’s work performance continued to deteriorate. Nevertheless, Lightfoot

retained the title of assistant plant manager and continued to be paid a salary. He

remained focused on maintenance and training employees.

             In his deposition, Lightfoot testified that before Edmonson was

promoted to plant manager, he (Edmonson) “started being more, I guess,

argumentative towards me, refusing to listen to what I was asking him to do, and

just more confrontational.” Lightfoot also recalled that Edmonson made a “whip

sound” either on his cellphone or with his mouth to encourage people to get going.

He admitted that he had never heard the sound himself, but he had heard rumors.

He explained that he had discussed this with Stamper, saying, “you know, I didn’t

actually witness it and I can’t say something that I didn’t actually witness. I can’t

-- I mean, I don’t feel right just trying to add to something that I have no idea what

I am adding to.” He stated that fellow employees told him (Lightfoot) that they

had approached Edmonson to explain that they regarded the sound as racist.

Lightfoot could not recall whether Edmonson was still a machine operator or if he

was transitioning into management at the time this sound was made.

             Lightfoot indicated that during the year following Edmonson’s

promotion, Edmonson’s “whole demeanor changed.” Lightfoot testified that

“there seemed like there was always incidents where I was getting blamed [by

                                         -4-
Edmonson] for things that was [sic] getting broken.” Lightfoot acknowledged that

he had been issued five written reprimands related to his work performance

between December 2016 and March 2017.

             In May 2017, Lightfoot learned from a fellow employee that his

(Lightfoot’s) contact information in Edmonson’s personal cellphone was

designated by the “poop emoji”-- the ubiquitous swirl of chocolate, soft-serve ice

cream with large eyes and a wide smile often used in electronic communication to

designate bathroom topics, disappointment, or rejection. Lightfoot reported this

information to Stamper. When Stamper asked Lightfoot how he felt about it,

Lightfoot indicated that he was “very hurt, I feel very humiliated, and I feel like he

[Edmonson] was being racist.” When asked how the image was racist, Lightfoot

explained that “of all the black employees in here, [Edmonson] shows it to a white

employee and laughed about it.” Lightfoot told Stamper that he wanted

Edmonson terminated immediately because this behavior violated the company’s

code of conduct. Instead of termination, Edmonson was reprimanded by Stamper.

Edmonson removed the emoji from Lightfoot’s contact information and never used

it again. Lightfoot stated that Stamper also asked Edmonson to apologize but that

when Edmonson did so, it was a sarcastic apology.

             Stephen Knotts became area operations manager for the region --

including Forterra Concrete’s Lexington plant on September 1, 2017. He left the

                                         -5-
company in December 2018. In his deposition, Knotts testified that “[i]t was

obvious when I first got here” that Lightfoot lacked the “ability to do the

maintenance” required at the plant. He explained that Lightfoot’s failure to turn

off the cement mixer for the weekend could have caused the complete loss of the

facility through a fire and that destruction of critical machine parts resulting from

his negligence had been costly to the company both in terms of their replacement

costs and an extended period of lost production. Knotts indicated that he and Tim

Jones, a senior operations manager, determined that a “complete lack of

maintenance” was the single impediment to the Lexington plant’s efficient

operation.

             In his deposition, Lightfoot also described a heated encounter between

Edmonson and himself concerning Lightfoot’s inability to repair a machine.

Lightfoot admitted to Knotts that it was his (Lightfoot’s) fault that the machine was

down but stated to Knotts that “he [Edmonson] didn’t have no [sic] right to come

up in my face and point his finger at me.” Lightfoot reported that Edmonson

communicated through text with him thereafter and that they had no further verbal

disagreements. He adamantly denied that there had ever been any physical

violence between them.

             Knotts explained that in October 2017, as Forterra Concrete was

transferring employees’ classification (job titles) from Sherman-Dixie to their own

                                          -6-
system, he realized that there was no classification for Lightfoot as a salaried

maintenance person. He confirmed to counsel that “there is typically not a salary

maintenance guy.” After he decided to convert Lightfoot to an hourly rate of pay,

he asked a resource manager in an email “have you run any numbers on what we

need to pay [Lightfoot] hourly compared to a salary?” It was confirmed that

Lightfoot’s earnings would increase substantially if he were re-classified as

“Machine Operator II” and even more substantially if he were re-classified as

“Maintenance I.” Knotts indicated to the resource manager that he did not “think

[Edmonson, the Lexington plant manager] wants him in Maintenance, so its sounds

like a Machine Operator II might be the best option.” He explained that machine

operators are expected to do some of the maintenance on the equipment they

operate and that “a position like this might be a good fit.”

             Knotts stated in his deposition that he had a meeting with Lightfoot on

October 10, 2017, to explain to him that “we didn’t want him in maintenance and

we had a position we were wanting him to look at as a Machine Operator II.” He

asked Lightfoot to take a couple of days to consider the offer. According to

Knotts, Lightfoot “didn’t feel like that was a good step for him. He felt like he was

going backwards. Even though the money was going forwards.” Knotts indicated

that Lightfoot was reassigned to operating and maintaining a wire draw machine

and “still doing some light maintenance stuff that he could accomplish. . . .” By

                                          -7-
mid-November 2017, the company had decided to eliminate Lightfoot’s salaried

maintenance position. Lightfoot was terminated days later. Thereafter, a man of

color was hired in a classified, hourly-wage maintenance position with no

management responsibilities.

             On June 25, 2018, Lightfoot filed a civil action against Forterra

Concrete alleging that he had been subjected to harassment, discrimination,

retaliation, and disparate treatment based on his race in violation of Kentucky law.

The circuit court granted summary judgment to Forterra Concrete. It concluded

that Lightfoot’s allegations concerning Edmonson’s use of the “poop emoji” and

his confrontational management style were insufficient to show unlawful

workplace discrimination or a hostile work environment and that there was no

evidence to support the allegation that Lightfoot suffered unlawful retaliation as a

result of his complaint regarding the “poop emoji.” The circuit court concluded

that Forterra Concrete was entitled to judgment as a matter of law. This appeal

followed.

             Summary judgment is properly granted where “the pleadings,

depositions, answers to interrogatories, stipulations, and admissions on file,

together with the affidavits, if any, show that there is no genuine issue as to any

material fact and that the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of

                                          -8-
law.” CR1 56.03. Upon our review, we must consider whether the trial court

correctly determined that there were no genuine issues of material fact concerning

Lightfoot’s civil rights claim and properly concluded that Forterra Concrete was

entitled to judgment as a matter of law. See Scifres v. Kraft, 916 S.W.2d 779 (Ky.

App. 1996). Because summary judgment involves only questions of law and not

the resolution of disputed material facts, we do not defer to the trial court’s

decision. Goldsmith v. Allied Building Components, Inc., 833 S.W.2d 378 (Ky.

1992). Instead, we review the trial court’s interpretations of law de novo.

Cumberland Valley Contrs., Inc. v. Bell County Coal Corp., 238 S.W.3d 644 (Ky.

2007).

                The Kentucky Civil Rights Act makes it unlawful for an employer to

discharge (or otherwise discriminate against) an employee based on race. KRS2

344.040(1)(a). Because Lightfoot’s evidence is entirely circumstantial, the matter

requires analysis under the burden-shifting framework established by the United

States Supreme Court in McDonnell Douglas Corporation v. Green, 411 U.S. 792,

93 S. Ct. 1817, 36 L. Ed. 2d 668 (1973). Norton Healthcare, Inc. v. Disselkamp,

600 S.W.3d 696 (Ky. 2020); Jefferson County v. Zaring, 91 S.W.3d 583 (Ky.

2002). Pursuant to this approach, an employee must first establish a prima facie

1
    Kentucky Rules of Civil Procedure.
2
    Kentucky Revised Statutes.

                                          -9-
case of discrimination. Williams v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc., 184 S.W.3d 492 (Ky.

2005). The employee must show that: (1) he was a member of a protected class;

(2) he was discharged or suffered an adverse employment action; (3) he was

qualified for the position; and (4) he was replaced by a person outside of the

protected class. Mitchell v. Toledo Hosp., 964 F.2d 577, 582 (6th Cir. 1992).

           Where an employee establishes this initial case by fulfilling these

criteria, a burden of production shifts to the employer to articulate a legitimate,

nondiscriminatory reason for the adverse employment action. Id. If the employer

does so, the burden then shifts back to the employee to prove intentional

discrimination by showing that the employer’s articulated reason was merely a

pretext, masking its discriminatory motive. Id.

              In his brief, Lightfoot identifies three types of adverse employment

action upon which he bases his argument that Forterra Concrete discriminated

against him because of race: (1) the multiple written reprimands prepared between

December 2016 and March 2017; (2) a “piling on” of tasks engineered to persuade

him to leave his job; and (3) his eventual termination. He presents the court with

little in the way of argument. Nevertheless, we comment on each of these three

claims.

             Lightfoot, Edmonson, and Stamper offered extensive deposition

testimony concerning the numerous, written reprimands issued to Lightfoot

                                         -10-
between late December 2016 and mid-March 2017. Lightfoot was written up in

December 2016 for leaving a cement mixer operating unattended over a weekend.

In his deposition, he explained that he had simply forgotten that he had turned it

on. Lightfoot admitted that he had been written up again in February 2017 for

failing to adequately supervise a new operator -- resulting in the destruction of

critical machine parts and the loss of production. In his deposition, Lightfoot

admitted that he had made a mistake “because I should have went ahead and

double-checked.”

            Lightfoot acknowledged that he had been written up again on March

15, 2017. In his deposition, he admitted that he had lied to Edmonson and Stamper

about his ability to continue to work on a machine critical to production. Lightfoot

conceded that he had been written up on March 16, 2017, for failing to inspect and

clean a cement silo bag that had been installed in January. In his deposition, he

admitted that he had not inspected or cleaned the equipment as directed and did not

think it was necessary as the equipment was new. Finally, Lightfoot conceded that

he had been written up on March 17, 2017, for failing to perform necessary

maintenance on a machine critical for production. In his deposition, he explained

that he had lacked the time and had forgotten to oil the machine per the

manufacturer’s recommendation.

                                         -11-
             Lightfoot’s deposition testimony indicates that each of these written

reprimands was issued with good cause. The nature of the reprimands suggests

that Lightfoot was not qualified for his maintenance position with Forterra

Concrete. Consequently, he could not establish a prima facie case of

discrimination. Lightfoot’s acknowledgment with respect to the reprimands and

Forterra’s explanations with respect to his dismissal indicate that Forterra Concrete

had legitimate, nondiscriminatory reasons for the adverse employment

action. Id. Lightfoot did not offer any proof that Forterra Concrete’s articulated

reason was merely a pretext disguising a discriminatory motive. The circuit court

did not err by concluding that the employer was entitled to judgment as a matter of

law with respect to this claim.

             Next, Lightfoot argues that he was unlawfully subjected to a piling on

of assignments designed to cause him to leave his position in maintenance. In his

deposition, Lightfoot explained that from late September forward, he experienced

“a lot of harassing things,” including “a magical list that I was supposed to try to

get done every day.” In his deposition testimony, Knotts indicated that within a

few weeks of onboarding with Forterra Concrete, he and Tim Jones decided that

“we had to -- to come up with a plan to get the maintenance up to snuff to get that

plant running like it is supposed to and being efficient.” In an effort to achieve that

goal, they consulted with a sister facility in Minnesota operating the same

                                         -12-
equipment. When they returned to Lexington, Knotts began to implement an

equipment maintenance schedule and protocol. While Lightfoot objected to this

schedule, there is absolutely no indication that Forterra Concrete’s decision to

adopt a maintenance protocol was anything other than legitimate and

nondiscriminatory business decision. There were no genuine issues of material

fact, and the circuit court ruled accordingly. We perceive no error.

             Next, Lightfoot contends that his dismissal was unlawfully

discriminatory. Because Forterra Concrete offered a legitimate, nondiscriminatory

reason for Lightfoot’s discharge, the burden shifted back to Lightfoot to produce

sufficient evidence from which a jury could reasonably reject the employer’s

explanation and conclude that the articulated reason was merely a pretext.

            As recounted above, the undisputed facts indicate that Lightfoot made

numerous maintenance errors that created safety risks, slowed production, and

caused Forterra Concrete to incur costs to correct. Lightfoot was not meeting his

employer’s legitimate expectations. The conduct legitimately warranted his

discharge. Moreover, he has failed to show that his termination was racially

motivated instead of the result of the elimination of the salaried maintenance

position as part of the ongoing reorganization of what was once Sherman-Dixie.

Consequently, Forterra Concrete was entitled to judgment as a matter of law.

                                        -13-
             With respect to the separate allegation of error concerning his claim of

a hostile work environment, Lightfoot argues that the circuit court “intentionally

disregarded” the relevant circumstantial evidence he offered. He contends

specifically that the trial court “devalued” evidence concerning the “whip sound”

produced by Edmonson by observing that Lightfoot did not personally experience

the sound and only heard rumors about it. He argues that the circuit court failed to

consider that Edmonson had a volatile temper; that he told an employee that he

hoped that Lightfoot would die in a fiery crash; and that he was the subject of

complaints by other employees. He also points to “Forterra’s blatant refusal to

allow Lightfoot to file a formal complaint.”

             Kentucky’s Civil Rights Act “is not intended to make all offensive

conduct actionable.” Gray v. Kenton County, 467 S.W.3d 801, 805 (Ky. App.

2014). In order to be actionable, the conduct must be “sufficiently severe or

pervasive” so as to create a truly “abusive working environment,” and the conduct

must be “continuous and concerted in order to be deemed pervasive.” Ammerman

v. Board of Educ. of Nicholas County, 30 S.W.3d 793, 798 (Ky. 2000).

             Whether the harassment is severe and pervasive is
             determined by a totality of the circumstances test --
             circumstances including frequency and severity of the
             conduct, whether the conduct is physically threatening or
             humiliating, and whether it unreasonably interferes with
             the employee’s work performance.

                                        -14-
Gray, 467 S.W.3d at 805 (citation omitted). The harassment must be both

objectively and subjectively offensive. Harris v. Forklift Sys., Inc., 510 U.S. 17,

23, 114 S. Ct. 367, 371, 126 L. Ed. 2d 295 (1993). The circuit court did not err by

concluding that Lightfoot failed to establish a prima facie case with respect to this

claim.

             Lightfoot failed to establish that he was subject to harassment based

on his race. By his own testimony, Lightfoot admitted that he could not remember

if the “whip sound” produced by Edmonson was made while he was a machine

operator -- a point at which Edmonson was Lightfoot’s subordinate and subject to

Lightfoot’s supervision -- rather than the other way round. Moreover, the evidence

indicated that the sound was used indiscriminately in the presence of both black

and white employees. Similarly, Edmonson’s tendency to lash out in frustration

when production slowed and his ugly comment hoping that Lightfoot would die

bore no indication that the conduct was necessarily related to Lightfoot’s race. Nor

was it pervasive or severe. Lightfoot may have been subjectively offended by

Edmonson’s comments or conduct. However, there was no indication that an

objectively reasonable person would be so unsettled as to suffer in his work

performance as a result.

            With respect to the claims of two other employees alleging racial

discrimination, the circuit court observed that one of those had been filed by

                                         -15-
Jeremiah Mabson. While Mabson filed an internal complaint concerning

Edmonson’s conduct, he testified in his deposition that the complaint prompted a

management change at Forterra Concrete with which he was satisfied. The other

complaint was filed by Antonio Reed. Lightfoot himself testified that Reed’s

dismissal was not based on race. He indicated that Reed was terminated with good

reason and that he should have been fired long before he was. The circuit court did

not err by concluding that the complaints of Mabson and Reed were not helpful in

its analysis of Lightfoot’s discrimination claims.

            Lightfoot also points to “Forterra’s blatant refusal to allow Lightfoot

to file a formal complaint.” In his deposition, Lightfoot conceded that he

understood from Forterra Concrete’s human resources team that there was a strict

code of conduct in place and that the company would not tolerate any kind of

abuse or disrespect toward employees. He understood that he could report

anything he regarded as abuse to his area operations manager. Lightfoot

specifically agreed that Stamper believed he had dealt with the “poop emoji” issue

to Lightfoot’s satisfaction and admitted that he did not lodge a more formal

complaint with the company concerning Stamper’s resolution of the matter. There

was no evidence to suggest that Forterra Concrete blatantly refused to permit

Lightfoot to file any complaint. Forterra Concrete was entitled to judgment as a

matter of law on this issue. There was no error.

                                        -16-
              Finally, in his last allegation of error, Lightfoot argues with respect to

his claim of unlawful retaliation that the circuit court erred by requiring “temporal

proximity” between his report concerning the “poop emoji” and his termination

and by overlooking the fact that he complained to Knotts that Edmonson was still

picking on him by directing his maintenance tasks just weeks before he was

dismissed. We disagree.

              KRS 344.280(1) makes it unlawful “[t]o retaliate or discriminate in

any manner against a person . . . because he has made a charge, filed a complaint,

testified, assisted, or participated in any manner in any investigation, proceeding,

or hearing under this chapter[.]” A prima facie case of retaliation requires an

employee to demonstrate that: (1) he engaged in protected activity; (2) the

exercise of his rights was known by this employer; (3) that, thereafter, the

employer took employment action adverse to him; and (4) there was a causal

connection between the protected activity and the adverse employment

action. Brooks v. Lexington-Fayette County Housing Authority, 132 S.W.3d 790

(Ky. 2004).

              In cases where there is no direct evidence of a causal connection, the

causal connection of a prima facie case of retaliation must be established through

circumstantial evidence. Id. (citing Nguyen v. City of Cleveland, 229 F.3d 559 (6th

Cir. 2000)). Circumstantial evidence of a causal connection is “evidence sufficient

                                          -17-
to raise the inference that [the] protected activity was the likely reason for the

adverse action.” Nguyen, 229 F.3d at 566 (internal quotation marks and citation

omitted). In most cases, proof is required that: (1) the decision maker responsible

for making the adverse decision was aware of the protected activity at the time that

the adverse decision was made and (2) there is a close temporal relationship

between the protected activity and the adverse action. Brooks, 132 S.W.3d at 804.

The burden then shifts to the employer to articulate a legitimate, nondiscriminatory

reason for the employment action. The employee must then show that “but for”

the protected activity, the adverse employment action would not have

occurred. Kentucky Center for the Arts v. Handley, 827 S.W.2d 697, 701 (Ky.

App. 1991); Asbury Univ. v. Powell, 486 S.W.3d 246, 254 (Ky. 2016).

             The circuit court did not err by concluding that Lightfoot failed to

make a prima facie case of unlawful retaliation because he failed to establish a

causal link between his report concerning Edmonson’s use of a “poop emoji” and

his subsequent dismissal. Lightfoot failed to establish a causal connection due -- in

part -- to the passage of time between the complaint and his dismissal. The

Kentucky Supreme Court has held that four months between the protected activity

and an adverse employment action was “too long to create, by itself, an inference

of causality.” Brooks, 132 S.W.3d at 804.

                                          -18-
             The record indicates that Lightfoot made his complaint about

Edmonson’s use of the “poop emoji” in early May 2017; he was dismissed in

November 2017. Moreover, Knotts testified that the salaried maintenance position

was eliminated as part of corporate reorganization. The fact that Forterra Concrete

subsequently hired an hourly wage maintenance worker with no managerial role is

immaterial to the analysis. Even considering Lightfoot’s brief conversation with

Knotts several weeks before his dismissal (wherein he explained that Edmonson

“was still just finding ways to pick on me, telling Jason Elder what I am not doing

that I am supposed to be doing. . . . You know, it’s not getting any better.”),

Lightfoot failed to counter the alternative, non-retaliatory purpose for the action as

explained by Forterra Concrete. Consequently, the circuit court did not err by

concluding that Lightfoot failed to show that “but for” his complaint, he would not

have been dismissed.

             Finally, with respect to the fourth criterion of the burden-shifting

analysis under McDonnell Douglas, supra, and its progeny, we note that Lightfoot

was not replaced by a person outside of his protected class. On the contrary, he

was replaced by a man of color according to the record, wholly negating this

statutory factor.

             The summary judgment of the Fayette Circuit Court is affirmed.

                                         -19-
         ALL CONCUR.

BRIEF FOR APPELLANT:     BRIEF FOR APPELLEE:

Kamp Townsend Purdy      Stephen H. Price
Lexington, Kentucky      Brian C. Neal
                         Nashville, Tennessee

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