Michael Threat v. City of Cleveland, Ohio ( 2021 )


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  •                              RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION
    Pursuant to Sixth Circuit I.O.P. 32.1(b)
    File Name: 21a0168p.06
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
    ┐
    MICHAEL THREAT; MARGARITA NOLAND-MOORE;
    │
    PAMELA BEAVERS; LAWRENCE WALKER; REGINALD
    │
    ANDERSON,
    │         No. 20-4165
    Plaintiffs-Appellants,           >
    │
    │
    v.                                                 │
    │
    CITY OF CLEVELAND, OHIO; NICOLE CARLTON,                 │
    Personally and in her official capacity as               │
    Commissioner,                                            │
    Defendants-Appellees.             │
    ┘
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Northern District of Ohio at Cleveland.
    No. 1:19-cv-02105—James S. Gwin, District Judge.
    Argued: July 13, 2021
    Decided and Filed: July 26, 2021
    Before: SUTTON, Chief Judge; SUHRHEINRICH and NALBANDIAN, Circuit Judges.
    _________________
    COUNSEL
    ARGUED: Jared S. Klebanow, KLEBANOW LAW, LLC, Cleveland, Ohio, for Appellants.
    William M. Menzalora, CITY OF CLEVELAND, Cleveland, Ohio, for Appellees. Anna M.
    Baldwin, UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE, Washington, D.C., for Amicus
    Curiae. ON BRIEF: Jared S. Klebanow, KLEBANOW LAW, LLC, Cleveland, Ohio, Brian
    Wolfman, GEORGETOWN LAW APPELLATE COURTS IMMERSION CLINIC,
    Washington, D.C., Avery Friedman, AVERY FRIEDMAN & ASSOCIATES, Cleveland, Ohio
    for Appellants. William M. Menzalora, CITY OF CLEVELAND, Cleveland, Ohio, for
    Appellees. Anna M. Baldwin, Tovah R. Calderon, UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF
    JUSTICE, Washington, D.C., for Amicus Curiae.
    No. 20-4165             Threat, et al. v. City of Cleveland, Ohio, et al.                    Page 2
    _________________
    OPINION
    _________________
    SUTTON, Chief Judge. Five municipal employees sued the City of Cleveland and their
    supervisor under a host of federal and state grounds, the most prominent being that the city
    illegally determined night and day shifts based on the color of the officers’ skin. The district
    court rejected many of the claims at the pleading stage and rejected the unlawful discrimination
    claims at summary judgment. Triable issues of fact remain over the anti-discrimination claims,
    however, because the employees’ shifts count as “terms” of employment under Title VII. We
    thus reverse that component of the district court’s decision and affirm the rest.
    I.
    Reginald Anderson, Pamela Beavers, Margerita Noland-Moore, Michael Threat, and
    Lawrence Walker work for the City of Cleveland in its Emergency Medical Service division.
    They are captains in the division, they belong to the same union, and, pertinent to this dispute,
    they are black.
    Each fall, captains bid on their schedules for the upcoming year, choosing different days
    to work and opting for day or night shifts. The city uses a seniority-based bidding system to
    assign shifts, giving longer-tenured captains shift preference.              The collective bargaining
    agreement also allows Nicole Carlton, the city’s EMS Commissioner, to transfer up to four
    captains to a different shift, even if it conflicts with a captain’s first choice.
    In 2017, the captains bid on shift assignments for 2018. The bidding process generated a
    schedule in which Anderson, Noland-Moore, and Walker were slated to work a day shift
    together. That meant only black captains would staff the shift. Exercising her power under the
    collective bargaining agreement, Carlton removed Anderson from that day shift and replaced
    him with a white captain to “diversify the shift[].” R.29 at 69. As it happens, the white captain’s
    family visitation agreement prevented him from working that shift. The scheduling conflict
    spurred Threat to phone Carlton on behalf of all the captains. Threat explained the scheduling
    predicament and voiced his frustration with race-based assignments.
    No. 20-4165            Threat, et al. v. City of Cleveland, Ohio, et al.                 Page 3
    When these informal discussions went nowhere, Threat filed a discrimination charge with
    the Ohio Civil Rights Commission and with the federal Equal Employment Opportunity
    Commission on behalf of himself and his fellow black captains. Carlton, meanwhile, asked the
    captains to rebid their preferences. But the rebidding generated a schedule in which Anderson
    was slated for a day shift staffed only by black captains. Carlton reassigned Anderson to a night
    shift. She did so to “create diversity” among what otherwise would have been a day shift staffed
    entirely by black captains. Id. at 83.
    The conflict festered. A local news station ran a story about the shift situation. The story
    quoted Carlton’s statements at a grievance hearing between the union and the city. In response,
    the city filed an unfair-labor-practice charge with the Ohio Employment Relations Board,
    alleging that the union violated Ohio’s Collective Bargaining Act. According to the charge,
    several captains waged a media campaign against the city by leaking audio recordings. The State
    Employment Relations Board investigated the city’s unfair-labor-practice charge and made a
    preliminary finding in the city’s favor. The Board directed the city and the union to work out
    their differences in mediation. The union agreed to refrain from disseminating recordings of
    conversations held during grievance meetings.
    In 2019, the captains sued the city and Carlton in federal court.            They brought
    discrimination and retaliation claims under Title VII and Ohio law, § 1983 claims based on the
    federal constitution, and claims for intentional infliction of emotional distress under Ohio law.
    The city and Carlton moved for partial judgment on the pleadings. The court granted the motion
    in part, dismissing the state and federal retaliation claims, the § 1983 claims, the emotional
    distress claims, and the Title VII discrimination claims against Carlton but not against the city.
    Left standing were federal discrimination claims against the city and state discrimination claims
    against the city and Carlton.
    After discovery, the parties filed cross-motions for summary judgment on the
    discrimination claims. The district court granted the city’s and Carlton’s motion. The court
    acknowledged that transferring a captain to a different shift on account of race amounted to
    discrimination under Title VII. But the claims failed anyway because the captains could not
    No. 20-4165           Threat, et al. v. City of Cleveland, Ohio, et al.                   Page 4
    show that the shift change subjected them to a “materially adverse employment action.” R.53 at
    7.
    II.
    Claims of Unlawful Discrimination under Title VII. Do discriminatory shift changes
    based on race violate Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964? We think so.
    Section 703(a)(1) of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 makes it an “unlawful
    employment practice” to “discriminate against any individual with respect to his compensation,
    terms, conditions, or privileges of employment, because of such individual’s race, color, religion,
    sex, or national origin.” 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-2(a)(1). For today’s purposes, the key words are
    “discriminate,” “race,” and “terms” and “privileges” of employment.
    There is little room for debate that the city discriminated against the plaintiffs—that it
    treated them differently. Webster’s Third New International Dictionary 648 (1961). When it
    comes to “discriminate,” precedent and dictionaries row in the same direction. To discriminate
    under Title VII means to treat similarly situated individuals differently. See Newport News
    Shipbuilding & Dry Dock Co. v. EEOC, 
    462 U.S. 669
    , 682–83 (1983).
    There also is little room for debate that the city treated the black captains differently
    “because of” their “race.” Carlton admitted that she switched out a black captain for a white one
    to adjust the shift’s racial makeup. That counts as direct evidence of discrimination based on
    race. Kline v. Tenn. Valley Auth., 
    128 F.3d 337
    , 348 (6th Cir. 1997).
    The main debate in this case turns on the meaning of “compensation, terms, conditions,
    or privileges of employment.” 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-2(a)(1). Do the city’s shift schedules amount
    to “terms” of employment? Does getting priority because of seniority in choosing shifts amount
    to a “privilege” of employment?
    At one level, that seems easy.       If the words of Title VII are our compass, it is
    straightforward to say that a shift schedule—whether, for example, the employee works the night
    shift or the day shift—counts as a term of employment. It’s not even clear that we need
    dictionaries to confirm what fluent speakers of English know. A shift schedule is a term of
    No. 20-4165           Threat, et al. v. City of Cleveland, Ohio, et al.                  Page 5
    employment. Surely an 8:00 start time is a term of employment. And surely the distinction
    between an 8:00 a.m. and an 8:00 p.m. start time is a term of employment. How could the when
    of employment not be a term of employment? A similar conclusion applies to “privileges” of
    employment. Benefits that come with seniority may count as privileges of employment. And
    losing out on a preferred shift may diminish benefits that a senior employee has earned. See
    NAACP, Detroit Branch v. Detroit Police Officers Ass’n, 
    900 F.2d 903
    , 907 n.5 (6th Cir. 1990)
    (“In the area of labor relations, ‘seniority’ is a term that connotes length of employment.
    A ‘seniority system’ is a scheme that allots to employees ever improving employment rights and
    benefits as their relative lengths of permanent employment increase.”).
    Dictionary definitions contemporaneous with the enactment of Title VII confirm this
    reading. See Webster’s Third New International Dictionary 2358 (1961) (defining “terms” as
    “propositions, limitations, or provisions stated or offered for the acceptance of another and
    determining (as in a contract) the nature and scope of the agreement”); id. at 1805 (defining
    “privilege” as “a right or immunity granted as a peculiar benefit, advantage, or favor”);
    Webster’s New International Dictionary 1969 (2d ed. 1934) (defining “privilege” as the same).
    Consistent with these definitions, a shift change fits comfortably within the statutory phrase.
    Moving an employee from the day to the night shift over the employee’s seniority-based
    objection alters the “terms” and the “privileges” of an individual’s employment.
    Pulling the meaning of these key terms together, the city decided when Anderson had to
    work based on his race—and in the process discriminated against him based on race with respect
    to his terms and privileges of employment. The race-based shift change controlled when and
    with whom he worked, prohibited him from exercising his seniority rights, and diminished his
    supervisory responsibilities when the city imposed the night shift on him. All told, the action
    amounted to discrimination with respect to his terms and privileges of employment under
    § 703(a)(1).
    The city and Carlton (collectively the city from now on) fight this conclusion on several
    fronts. The first line of attack invokes our cases that construe the phrase “terms, conditions, or
    privileges of employment” in Title VII to cover only a materially “adverse employment action.”
    See, e.g., White v. Baxter Healthcare Corp., 
    533 F.3d 381
    , 402 (6th Cir. 2008); Laster v. City of
    No. 20-4165           Threat, et al. v. City of Cleveland, Ohio, et al.                  Page 6
    Kalamazoo, 
    746 F.3d 714
    , 719 (6th Cir. 2014).             As the city sees it, no matter what
    “discriminate,” “race,” “terms,” and “privileges” of employment mean, these shift changes do
    not rise to the level of materially adverse employment actions under our cases.
    We do not see the same gap between the words of Title VII and our liquidation of those
    words. The point of our cases is to convey that an employer’s alteration of the “terms” or
    “privileges” of an employee’s work is actionable only when it is “adverse” and “material” to the
    work. To “discriminate” reasonably sweeps in some form of an adversity and a materiality
    threshold. It prevents “the undefined word ‘discrimination’” from “command[ing] judges to
    supervise the minutiae of personnel management.” Washington v. Ill. Dep’t of Revenue, 
    420 F.3d 658
    , 661 (7th Cir. 2005). It ensures that a discrimination claim involves a meaningful
    difference in the terms of employment and one that injures the affected employee. And it
    ensures that any claim under Title VII involves an Article III injury—and not, for example,
    differential treatment that helps the employee or perhaps even was requested by the employee.
    See TransUnion LLC v. Ramirez, 
    141 S. Ct. 2190
    , 2200 (2021). Surely those are reasonable
    assumptions.
    At the same time, our approach honors a de minimis exception that forms the backdrop of
    all laws. The “doctrine de minimis non curat lex (the law does not take account of trifles)” has
    “roots [that] stretch to ancient soil.” Sandifer v. U.S. Steel Corp., 
    571 U.S. 220
    , 233 (2014). So
    ancient, the “old law maxim” was already venerable at the founding. Ware v. Hylton, 3 U.S.
    (3 Dall.) 199, 268 (1796). From the beginning, the de minimis canon has been “part of the
    established background of legal principles against which all enactments are adopted, and which
    all enactments (absent contrary indication) are deemed to accept.” Wis. Dep’t of Revenue v.
    William Wrigley, Jr., Co., 
    505 U.S. 214
    , 231 (1992); see Bowman v. Shawnee State Univ.,
    
    220 F.3d 456
    , 462 (6th Cir. 2000).
    When Congress enacted Title VII, the National Legislature provided no indication that it
    sought to disregard these considerations or to use the word “discriminate” to cover any
    difference in personnel matters. Yes, “hundreds if not thousands of decisions say that an
    ‘adverse employment action’ is essential to the plaintiff’s prima facie case” even though “that
    term does not appear in any employment-discrimination statute.” Minor v. Centocor, Inc.,
    No. 20-4165            Threat, et al. v. City of Cleveland, Ohio, et al.                  Page 7
    
    457 F.3d 632
    , 634 (7th Cir. 2006). And, yes, the same could be said about a “materiality”
    requirement. But we take these innovations to be shorthand for the operative words in the statute
    and otherwise to incorporate a de minimis exception to Title VII.
    But de minimis means de minimis, and shorthand characterizations of laws should not
    stray. Else, like “the children’s game of telephone,” we risk “converting the ultimate message
    into something quite different from the original message—indeed sometimes into the opposite
    message.” Sexton v. Panel Processing, Inc., 
    754 F.3d 332
    , 337 (6th Cir. 2014). “[T]o give the
    de minimis rule too broad a reach would contradict congressional intent by denying proper effect
    to a statute.” Perez v. Mountaire Farms, Inc., 
    650 F.3d 350
    , 378 (4th Cir. 2011) (Wilkinson, J.,
    concurring in part and concurring in the judgment). That concern, however, must be balanced
    against the reality that “we cannot just toss the de minimis rule aside.” 
    Id.
    In this instance, employer-required shift changes from a preferred day to another day or
    from day shifts to night shifts exceed any de minimis exception, any fair construction of the
    anchoring words of Title VII, and for that matter any Article III injury requirement. Whether we
    refer to claims of discrimination based on race in “terms” or “privileges” of employment or to
    claims of discrimination based on race in “materially adverse” terms of employment, the
    conclusion is the same: They state a cognizable claim under Title VII when they refer to shift
    changes of this sort and under these circumstances.
    That leads to the city’s second line of attack. It points out that we have several decisions,
    many of them unpublished, that have said that shift changes do not count as materially adverse
    employment actions under Title VII. See Regan v. Faurecia Auto. Seating, Inc., 
    679 F.3d 475
    ,
    482 (6th Cir. 2012); Tepper v. Potter, 
    505 F.3d 508
    , 516–17 (6th Cir. 2007); Policastro v. Nw.
    Airlines, Inc., 
    297 F.3d 535
    , 539 (6th Cir. 2002); Harper v. Elder, 803 F. App’x 853, 857 (6th
    Cir. 2020); Wade v. Automation Pers. Servs., Inc., 612 F. App’x 291, 300 (6th Cir. 2015); Amann
    v. Potter, 105 F. App’x 802, 808 (6th Cir. 2004); Monak v. Ford Motor Co., 95 F. App’x 758,
    765 (6th Cir. 2004); Virostek v. Liberty Twp. Police Dep’t/Trs., 14 F. App’x 493, 504 (6th Cir.
    2001); Miller v. Peck-Hannaford & Briggs Co., 
    142 F.3d 435
     (6th Cir. 1998) (unpublished table
    decision); Kocsis v. Multi-Care Mgmt., Inc., 
    97 F.3d 876
    , 885 (6th Cir. 1996). Invoking these
    cases and related reassignment cases, the city makes a categorical argument—that “the Sixth
    No. 20-4165             Threat, et al. v. City of Cleveland, Ohio, et al.                 Page 8
    Circuit and its district courts have held that shift changes do not constitute adverse employment
    actions.” Appellee Br. at 26.
    But we have no such categorical rule. None of these cases creates an across-the-board
    directive that actionable discrimination claims never cover shift changes, whether in connection
    with seniority prerogatives or not. That is not what they say. Even Kocsis, one of the more
    frequently cited and far-reaching decisions in this line of cases, emphasizes the contextual nature
    of these inquiries. 
    97 F.3d at 886
    . It noted that “indices that might be unique to a particular
    situation” could show that the adverse action was “more disruptive than a mere inconvenience”
    or a mere “alteration of job responsibilities.” 
    Id.
     (quotation omitted).
    Not all shift changes are the same. And some shift changes and reassignments may
    constitute, say, race-based discrimination in “terms,” “privileges,” and other aspects of
    employment. Deleon v. Kalamazoo Cnty. Rd. Comm’n, 
    739 F.3d 914
    , 919 (6th Cir. 2014); Spees
    v. James Marine, Inc., 
    617 F.3d 380
    , 392 (6th Cir. 2010). That is just what happened here for
    the reasons already given.
    The city worries that this approach will turn the anti-discrimination provision into a
    “general civility code” that federal courts will use to police the pettiest forms of workplace
    misconduct. Oncale v. Sundowner Offshore Servs., Inc., 
    523 U.S. 75
    , 80 (1998). But that is the
    point of the de minimis exception.        Plus, the provision “protects an individual only from
    employment-related discrimination” based on a protected characteristic, not just any distinction
    in terms of employment. Burlington N. & Santa Fe Ry. Co. v. White, 
    548 U.S. 53
    , 61 (2006).
    Also misplaced is the city’s view that § 703(a)(1) reaches only employment decisions
    that cause the employee economic harm. Cabining the provision to pocketbook harms would
    render meaningless many of the words in the statutory phrase “compensation, terms, conditions,
    or privileges of employment.” As the words after “compensation” suggest, Title VII indeed
    extends beyond “economic” discrimination. Meritor Sav. Bank v. Vinson, 
    477 U.S. 57
    , 64
    (1986).
    All in all, § 703(a)(1) means what it says and means what we have said it means,
    particularly when it comes to the context of each claim and the de minimis nature of any
    No. 20-4165            Threat, et al. v. City of Cleveland, Ohio, et al.                   Page 9
    exceptions to the language of the statute. When an employee’s race is a basis for a shift change
    that denies the privileges of that employee’s seniority, the employer has discriminated on the
    basis of race in the terms and privileges of employment.
    One loose end remains on this claim. In contrast to Captain Anderson, the city did not
    alter the shifts of the other claimants. They brought claims for unlawful discrimination on the
    ground that the city’s race-based assignment policy affected their bidding schedule, controlled
    when and with whom they worked, reduced the benefits of seniority, and diminished their
    supervisory responsibility. The district court did not review this theory, and we will allow it to
    do so in the first instance on remand.
    Claims of Unlawful Discrimination under the Ohio Civil Rights Act. The Ohio Civil
    Rights Act applies when an employer decides “to discharge without just cause, to refuse to hire,
    or otherwise to discriminate against that person with respect to hire, tenure, terms, conditions, or
    privileges of employment, or any matter directly or indirectly related to employment.” Ohio
    Rev. Code § 4112.02(A). Despite the differences in language, Ohio courts generally mimic their
    interpretation of O.R.C. § 4112 with the federal courts’ interpretation of Title VII. See Plumbers
    & Steamfitters Joint Apprenticeship Comm. v. Ohio C.R. Comm’n, 
    421 N.E.2d 128
    , 131 (Ohio
    1981). That requires us to reverse and remand the state law claims as well.
    Claims of Third-Party Retaliation under Title VII.        Title VII’s retaliation provision
    forbids actions that “discriminate against” employees because they “opposed” a practice that
    Title VII forbids or because they have “made a charge, testified, assisted, or participated in” a
    Title VII “investigation, proceeding, or hearing.” 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-3(a). Generally speaking,
    to establish a case for third-party retaliation under Title VII, the claimant must show that (1) her
    close contact engaged in a protected activity, (2) the employer took an adverse action against the
    employee because of the close contact’s engagement in a protected activity, and (3) a causal
    chain links the materially adverse action to the protected activity. Thompson v. N. Am. Stainless,
    LP, 
    562 U.S. 170
    , 174 (2011); Nailon v. Univ. of Cincinnati, 715 F. App’x 509, 516 (6th Cir.
    2017).
    No. 20-4165            Threat, et al. v. City of Cleveland, Ohio, et al.                   Page 10
    But this theory of retaliation does not apply here—namely to a claim by these employees
    based on an unfair-labor-practice charge filed by the city against the union. The statute says that
    “a civil action may be brought . . . by the person claiming to be aggrieved,” 42 U.S.C.
    § 2000e-5(f)(1), and thus “permits a person ‘claiming to be aggrieved’ to bring ‘a civil action,”’
    Thompson, 
    562 U.S. at 175
    . But it does not permit an individual not aggrieved to sue for
    someone else’s injury. Thompson “merely stands for the proposition that a person aggrieved by
    retaliation has standing to sue for it even if that person did not engage in the protected activity
    but someone else did.” Scheidler v. Indiana, 
    914 F.3d 535
    , 543 (7th Cir. 2019). In this instance,
    when the city allegedly filed a retaliatory unfair-labor-practice charge against the union, that
    injured the union. And that action might have permitted the union to sue even if the alleged
    retaliation responded to actions of the employees. But that is not what happened here. The
    union never filed a retaliation lawsuit. Notably, the claimants have not identified any case in
    which Thompson was applied in this distinct setting. The district court correctly dismissed these
    claims under Civil Rule 12(c).
    Claims of Unlawful Retaliation under Ohio Law. Ohio’s retaliation provision, see O.R.C.
    § 4112.02(I), mirrors the federal counterpart, and Ohio courts use federal law to interpret the
    Ohio provision. See Braun v. Ultimate Jetcharters, LLC, 
    828 F.3d 501
    , 510 (6th Cir. 2016). We
    therefore affirm the district court’s dismissal of the retaliation claims under Ohio law.
    Captain Beavers’s Claim of Unlawful Retaliation. Captain Beavers alleges that she
    brought a standalone retaliation claim against the city because it singled her out for selective
    enforcement of the city’s attendance policy in retaliation for reporting Carlton’s discriminatory
    behavior to management and her union stewards. But Beavers has forfeited this claim by failing
    to respond to the city’s argument against it in its motion for judgment on the pleadings.
    KSA Enters., Inc. v. Branch Banking & Tr. Co., 761 F. App’x 456, 463 (6th Cir. 2019).
    Equal Protection Claims. The district court did not err when it dismissed the claimants’
    equal protection claims because they failed to pursue them before the district court. A claim for
    relief not pursued below is forfeited on appeal. See Swanigan v. FCA US LLC, 
    938 F.3d 779
    ,
    786 (6th Cir. 2019).
    No. 20-4165            Threat, et al. v. City of Cleveland, Ohio, et al.                Page 11
    In their complaint, the captains asserted six Counts for relief. Count III sought relief for
    “violations of due process ensured under the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the
    United States, Civil Rights Act of 1871, 
    42 U.S.C. § 1983
    .” R.1 at 15. Neither Count III’s
    header nor the underlying analysis mentioned the Equal Protection Clause.
    In response to the complaint, the city moved for a more definite statement, asking for
    clarification about whether the captains sought relief for a violation of the Due Process Clause or
    the Equal Protection Clause or both. Opposing the motion, the captains asserted that Count III of
    the complaint “put the Defendants on notice that an allegation of a violation of due process has
    been set forth.” R.5 at 5. At that point, the court denied the city’s motion for a more definite
    statement, reasoning that the captains had sufficiently pleaded the “legal theory of Count Three
    (Due Process Violations).” R.7 at 3. After that, the captains never amended their complaint to
    set the record straight. Tucker v. Union of Needletrades, Indus. & Textile Emps., 
    407 F.3d 784
    ,
    788 (6th Cir. 2005). Because the claimants failed to present an equal protection argument below,
    they forfeited any such claims on appeal. See Vance v. Wade, 
    546 F.3d 774
    , 781 (6th Cir. 2008).
    We reverse the district court’s resolution of the discrimination claims under Title VII and
    Ohio law. We affirm the district court’s resolution of the other claims.