Williams v. Solvay Chemicals Inc. , 385 F. App'x 820 ( 2010 )


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  •                                                                         FILED
    United States Court of Appeals
    Tenth Circuit
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    July 7, 2010
    FOR THE TENTH CIRCUIT
    Elisabeth A. Shumaker
    Clerk of Court
    EDWARD WILLIAMS,
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    v.                                                  No. 09-8095
    (D.C. No. 2:09-CV-00037-ABJ)
    SOLVAY CHEMICALS INC.,                                (D. Wyo.)
    Defendant-Appellee.
    ORDER AND JUDGMENT *
    Before McKAY, Circuit Judge, BRORBY, Senior Circuit Judge, and EBEL,
    Circuit Judge.
    The plaintiff, Edward Williams, sued his former employer, Solvay
    Chemicals Inc. (Solvay), for breach of contract after Solvay fired him for sleeping
    on the job. The district court’s jurisdiction was based on diversity of citizenship.
    See 28 U.S.C. § 1332. Our appellate jurisdiction arises under 28 U.S.C. § 1291.
    *
    After examining the briefs and appellate record, this panel has determined
    unanimously that oral argument would not materially assist the determination of
    this appeal. See Fed. R. App. P. 34(a)(2); 10th Cir. R. 34.1(G). The case is
    therefore ordered submitted without oral argument. This order and judgment is
    not binding precedent, except under the doctrines of law of the case, res judicata,
    and collateral estoppel. It may be cited, however, for its persuasive value
    consistent with Fed. R. App. P. 32.1 and 10th Cir. R. 32.1.
    In his complaint, Mr. Williams alleged that Solvay had breached an implied
    employment contract in which Solvay promised to fire him only for good cause.
    Solvay moved for summary judgment. It argued that even assuming that such an
    implied contract existed, sleeping on the job constituted good cause for the
    termination. Mr. Williams responded that Solvay applied its policies against
    sleeping on the job so inconsistently that a jury could reasonably infer that his
    firing was arbitrary and pretextual. Because of this, he argued, his firing violated
    the good-faith standard applicable to the enforcement of employment contracts
    under Wyoming law.
    The district court concluded that the Wyoming cases discussing the
    good-faith standard do not mandate that an employer act with good faith in any
    general sense. Rather, the court concluded that Wyoming law requires only that
    an employer have a good-faith belief that the employee committed a
    dischargeable act before firing him. Because Mr. Williams admitted that he fell
    asleep on the job, and because the employee handbook that created the alleged
    contract expressly permitted Solvay to terminate employees caught sleeping on
    the job, the court resolved that no genuine issue of material fact existed
    concerning whether Solvay acted in good faith. The district court therefore
    granted summary judgment to Solvay on Mr. Williams’s contract claim.
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    Mr. Williams now appeals. We affirm, but for a slightly different reason
    than that relied on by the district court.
    BACKGROUND
    At the time it terminated his employment, Solvay employed Mr. Williams
    as a steam plant operator at its soda ash processing plant in Sweetwater County,
    Wyoming. He had worked there since 1982, when he was hired by Tenneco, the
    company that owned the plant prior to Solvay. When Tenneco hired
    Mr. Williams, it provided him with an employee handbook. Although Solvay
    subsequently distributed one or more new employee handbooks to its employees,
    the parties agree for summary judgment purposes that it was the Tenneco
    handbook that governed Mr. Williams’s employment with Solvay at all times
    relevant to this case. The parties also have stipulated that under the terms of the
    Tenneco handbook, Mr. Williams could only be fired for good cause.
    The Tenneco handbook provided a four-step progressive disciplinary
    procedure to correct on-the-job problems. Aplt. App., Vol. II at 258. The first
    step (“Counseling Session”) required a supervisor to orally notify the employee of
    the problem and to discuss it with him. 
    Id. The supervisor
    would then work with
    the employee to correct the problem. 
    Id. At the
    second step (“Formal Oral
    Notice”), the supervisor would again notify the employee of the problem, but a
    written record (known as a “first notification”) would be made and placed in the
    employee’s personnel file. 
    Id. At the
    third step (“Formal Written Notice”),
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    disciplinary time off might be given and/or the employee would be given a
    written reprimand (known as a “second notification”), with a formal probationary
    period and notice in the employee’s record. 
    Id. Only at
    the fourth and final step
    (“Final Action”) would the employee be discharged. 
    Id. The handbook’s
    policies offered a form of forgiveness for employees who
    had improved their conduct after disciplinary action. It provided that “[i]f an
    employee has not had a formal written reprimand for a period of twelve (12)
    months, all reprimands will be removed from the employee’s permanent record.”
    
    Id. at 259.
    On the other hand, for certain “more serious offenses,” Tenneco
    reserved the right to terminate the employee immediately, “without the benefit of
    other disciplinary procedures.” 
    Id. at 254.
    One of these listed serious offenses
    was “[s]leeping on the job.” 
    Id. On February
    8, 2008, Mr. Williams was caught sleeping on the job in the
    boiler control room during his shift at the Solvay plant. Solvay immediately
    terminated his employment. Two other employees who were caught sleeping on
    the job with him in the same place at the same time were suspended but not fired.
    In justifying Mr. Williams’ dismissal, Solvay relies primarily on the
    “immediate termination” provision of the handbook rather than on its
    “progressive discipline” provisions. The record reveals, however, that during his
    employment with Solvay, Mr. Williams had been subject to other disciplinary
    notifications as well. On July 1, 1999, he received a “first notification” for
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    failing to check the “dryer cyclone,” which had become clogged with particulate
    matter during his shift. 
    Id., Vol. I
    at 77-78. On June 12, 2001, he again received
    a “first notification” charging him with failing “on two different days in May [to]
    perform up to expectations.” 
    Id. at 79.
    On January 17, 2006, he received another
    “first notification” after he was found in the smoking room “reclined in a chair
    with his feet up and the lights out.” 
    Id. at 80.
    In connection with this
    notification, Mr. Williams was given the opportunity to dispute the discipline, but
    he instead signed the form indicating he agreed to alter his behavior in the future.
    On October 16, 2007, Mr. Williams was issued a “second notification.”
    
    Id. at 81.
    The notification stated that he “requested Funeral Leave for September
    18th through September 21st for the death of his Grandfather. After further
    investigation it was discovered the deceased was not his Grandfather. Only
    eligible family members qualify for paid funeral leave.” 
    Id. This time,
    because
    he “currently [had] a First Behavioral Notification in his personnel file,” he was
    issued a second notification. 
    Id. He was
    warned that “[v]iolations of company
    policies and/or poor work performance may result in further disciplinary action up
    to and including termination.” 
    Id. Mr. Williams
    again was given the opportunity
    to dispute the discipline, but instead signed the form indicating that he agreed
    with it. 
    Id. Mr. Williams
    testified that Mr. Maxfield, who eventually recommended
    that he be fired, warned him at the time of the funeral leave incident that he had
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    “one leg out the door.” 
    Id. at 53.
    Within four months of this incident, he was
    fired for sleeping on the job. 1
    ANALYSIS
    1. Standard of Review
    Because this case is grounded on diversity jurisdiction, we apply the
    appropriate state substantive law as announced by the highest court of the forum
    state, Wyoming. See Blanke v. Alexander, 
    152 F.3d 1224
    , 1228 (10th Cir. 1998). 2
    “[B]ut we are governed by federal law in determining the propriety of the district
    court’s grant of summary judgment.” Eck v. Parke, Davis & Co., 
    256 F.3d 1013
    ,
    1016 (10th Cir. 2001). Under this standard, we review the grant of summary
    judgment to Solvay de novo, applying the same standard as the district court.
    Brammer-Hoelter v. Twin Peaks Charter Acad., 
    602 F.3d 1175
    , 1184 (10th Cir.
    1
    Mr. Williams also received verbal notices several times in 2007, the year
    before he was fired. On February 1, a supervisor caught him sleeping in the
    steam plant control room and told him sleeping was not allowed and that he
    should wake up. Aplt. App., Vol. I at 95. On May 7, Mr. Williams called a
    co-worker to remind him to come to work, angering the co-worker. He was
    counseled that it was not his place to contact his co-workers about coming to
    work. 
    Id. On November
    11, Mr. Williams came “out of the storage room in the
    control room with dark glasses and a pretend walking stick,” pretending to be
    blind as a joke. A supervisor told him this was unacceptable behavior,
    particularly in light of the fact that one of his co-workers had trouble seeing. 
    Id. at 97.
    In December, Mr. Williams was told to stop wasting time in a class he was
    taking. 
    Id. at 98-99.
    On January 17, 2008, a supervisor warned him that he had
    left a precipitator hopper full of ash. 
    Id. at 99.
    All of these violations were
    recorded in a written disciplinary log. See 
    id. at 109-10
    (written disciplinary log).
    2
    The parties cite no choice of law provision in the handbook that might
    override the default rule that Wyoming law applies.
    -6-
    2010). “That is, summary judgment is appropriate where no genuine issue of
    material fact exists, and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of
    law.” 
    Id. (quotation omitted).
    “In applying this standard, we examine the factual
    record and draw reasonable inferences therefrom in the light most favorable to
    [Mr. Williams].” 
    Id. (quotation omitted).
    2. Good-Faith Standard
    As noted, the district court concluded that Wyoming’s good-faith standard
    requires only that an employer have a good-faith belief that the employee
    committed a dischargeable act before firing him. We conclude, however, that the
    Wyoming courts require the trier of fact to determine not only whether the
    contract permitted termination for the cause the employer specified, but also
    whether the reason given by the employer was applied in good faith.
    A number of Wyoming cases support a broader reading of the “good faith”
    requirement than the district court applied to this case. In Worley v. Wyoming
    Bottling Co., 
    1 P.3d 615
    , 623 (Wyo. 2000), the Wyoming Supreme Court
    suggested that an employee’s mere admission to the misconduct used to fire him
    does not automatically satisfy the good-faith standard, provided the employee can
    demonstrate a triable issue concerning pretext. Worley was a handbook case in
    which the employer claimed that the plaintiff’s violation of three personnel
    policies provided good cause for firing him. The plaintiff apparently did not
    contest the facts surrounding his commission of these offenses. But this alone did
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    not justify summary judgment for the employer, because the plaintiff did contest
    whether his termination for these alleged offenses truly constituted firing “for
    cause” or was merely pretextual:
    [A] question also remains whether Worley was discharged for cause.
    Wyoming Bottling claims Worley was terminated for violating three
    personnel policies. Worley counters that termination for these
    violations was pretextual since the alleged violations were common,
    ordinary practices, and two fellow employees corroborated his claim.
    Whether an employee has been terminated for cause is generally a
    question of fact and, thus, summary judgment is premature under
    these disputed facts.
    
    Id. The concept
    that the employee should be permitted to present evidence that
    the employer’s stated reason is unworthy of belief also finds support in Capshaw
    v. WERCS, 
    28 P.3d 855
    (Wyo. 2001). The employee in that case, Capshaw,
    worked as president of his employer’s subsidiary, WERCS. WERCS fired him for
    (among other things) “engag[ing] in a campaign intended to disparage
    management.” 
    Id. at 856.
    Capshaw argued that the “pretextual termination
    reasons [WERCS] cited did not satisfy the good cause standard.” 
    Id. at 857.
    He admitted that he had been openly critical of management, but argued that
    his criticism of management was made in good faith and WERCS therefore
    lacked good cause for firing him. See 
    id. at 858.
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    The state district court entered an order in limine prohibiting Capshaw
    from arguing about or presenting evidence of corporate mismanagement.
    On interlocutory appeal from that order, the Wyoming Supreme Court reversed.
    It stated that Capshaw “clearly has the right to argue and attempt to persuade the
    jury that his criticism of management was in good faith and his discharge was in
    violation of his contract requiring good cause for termination.” 
    Id. Citing Worley,
    the court stated:
    Where the employer alleges that the employee was discharged
    for one reason . . . and the employee presents evidence that he was
    really discharged for another reason . . . the question . . . is one of
    fact for the jury. The jury is always permitted to determine the
    employer’s true reason for discharging the employee.
    
    Capshaw, 28 P.3d at 858
    (quoting Toussaint v. Blue Cross & Blue Shield of
    Mich., 
    292 N.W.2d 880
    , 896 (Mich. 1980) (emphasis in original)).
    Another key case that illustrates Mr. Williams’s point about pretext is Life
    Care Centers of America, Inc. v. Dexter, 
    65 P.3d 385
    (Wyo. 2003). Life Care
    Centers (Life Care) employed Ms. Dexter as the activities director in its nursing
    center. It later terminated her employment, listing “Lack of effort/unsatisfactory
    performance” as the reason for her discharge. 
    Id. at 391
    (quotation omitted).
    After a bench trial, the district court determined that Life Care had breached an
    implied employment contract with Ms. Dexter by terminating her employment.
    Life Care appealed.
    -9-
    The Wyoming Supreme Court determined that the district court had failed
    to make adequate factual findings concerning whether Life Care had good cause
    to immediately terminate Ms. Dexter’s employment. As part of its remand for
    further fact-finding, the court instructed the district court to consider Life Care’s
    evidence concerning its reasons for terminating Ms. Dexter, but also to consider
    her evidence “that the reasons given for her discharge were pretextual and Life
    Care’s executive director took a personal dislike to her, terminated her
    employment without cause, and attempted to justify these actions by later adding
    supporting documentation to her personnel file.” 
    Id. at 392.
    After advising the district court what evidence to consider, the Wyoming
    Supreme Court instructed it on how to apply the law of good faith:
    In addition to applying the terms of the handbook in
    determining whether there was cause for termination, we also ask the
    trial court to apply the good faith standard for review of employer
    firing decisions applied by the majority of other jurisdictions that
    have addressed the issue. Under this standard, the question to be
    resolved by the fact finder is not, “Did the employee in fact commit
    the act leading to dismissal?” Rather, it is, “Was the factual basis on
    which the employer concluded a dischargeable act had been
    committed reached honestly, after an appropriate investigation and
    for reasons that are not arbitrary or pretextual?”
    
    Id. (citations and
    quotations omitted) (first emphasis added).
    -10-
    The Life Care court continued by defining “cause” in terms of good faith,
    stating:
    “Cause” is defined under this standard as
    fair and honest reasons, regulated by good faith on the part of the
    employer, that are not trivial, arbitrary or capricious, unrelated to
    business needs or goals, or pretextual. A reasoned conclusion, in
    short, supported by substantial evidence gathered through an
    adequate investigation that includes notice of the claimed misconduct
    and a chance for the employee to respond.
    
    Id. (quoting Cotran
    v. Rollins Hudig Hall Int’l, Inc., 
    948 P.2d 412
    , 422
    (Cal. 1998)) (emphasis added).
    This language suggests that even a reason given by an employer that passes
    muster under the express terms of the employment contract, and is supported by a
    good-faith belief that the offending conduct actually occurred, would not be a
    “good faith” reason if the employer applied it in an arbitrary and capricious or
    pretextual manner. In other words, it is not enough for the employer simply to
    identify a reason for termination listed in the handbook, if the employee can show
    that reason was advanced in bad faith. It is most notable that the Wyoming
    Supreme Court began its discussion of good faith by requiring the district court to
    make its good-faith determination “[i]n addition to applying the terms of the
    handbook in determining whether there was cause for termination.” 
    Id. (emphasis added).
    -11-
    Mr. Williams has asserted that Solvay did not act in good faith. The
    district court concluded, however, that according to Life Care, the only question
    under the good-faith standard is whether the employer had “a good-faith belief
    that the employee engaged in the proscribed conduct.” Aplt. App. at 374
    (emphasis in original). This interpretation of Life Care is inconsistent with the
    language quoted above and with other Wyoming cases dealing with good-faith
    termination. Life Care requires that an employer who has agreed to terminate
    only for cause must act in good faith in determining that misconduct constitutes
    “good cause” for termination. Having clarified the appropriate standard, we now
    turn to the evidence on the good-faith issue.
    3. Application of Good-Faith Standard
    In exercising our de novo review, we may affirm summary judgment for
    any basis that appears in the record, whether or not relied on by the district court.
    Vaughn v. Epworth Villa, 
    537 F.3d 1147
    , 1150 (10th Cir. 2008), cert. denied,
    
    129 S. Ct. 1528
    (2009). We will therefore examine whether, under the appropriate
    standard, Solvay has demonstrated its entitlement to summary judgment on the
    “good faith” issue.
    As noted previously, Solvay has advanced a legitimate reason for
    Mr. Williams’s termination, specifically authorized under his employment
    contract and factually undisputed. But Mr. Williams contends that this reason is
    arbitrary and pretextual in light of Solvay’s inconsistent application of its policy
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    against sleeping on the job. He claims he was treated more harshly than his
    somnolent comrades, who, like him, were found sleeping on the job but, unlike
    him, were not fired for it. This, he argues, shows Solvay lacked good faith.
    A. Alleged Comparators Were Not Similarly Situated
    Sleeping on the job appears to have been a fairly regular occurrence at
    Solvay. Mr. Williams asserts that this was due to the long shifts employees
    worked during late-night hours. Specifically, the evidence he has cited shows:
    •     Mel Wallendorff fell asleep once and was given a verbal warning.
    •     Derek Pever and Dave Busey were caught sleeping on the job and
    each received a second written warning and three days off without
    pay.
    •     Rick Garcia, Russ Stewart, and Ken Broadbent all had a reputation
    for sleeping on the job, but they were not fired for it.
    •     Rick Coon stated that he had been caught sleeping on the job at least
    twice but had not been written up, with the exception of the occasion
    when he was caught along with Mr. Williams in February 2008,
    leading to Mr. Williams’s termination.
    •     Mr. Zimmerman caught Lyle Simon, Shawn McGarvey, and Kyle
    Dillard sleeping once on the job, but he did not write them up. He
    stated he did not write them up because he never caught them
    sleeping on the job again.
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    •      Mr. Zimmerman also caught Pete Hart sleeping, according to
    Rick Coon, but he merely yelled at him to wake up and did not write
    him up for it. Mr. Coon stated that Mr. Hart was found sleeping a
    total of three times without a write-up.
    •      Randy Lowseth, a supervisor at Solvay, was observed by other
    employees sleeping in the control room on occasion.
    In order to use these other employees as a comparison point for pretext
    purposes, Mr. Williams needs to show that he was similarly situated to them.
    See, e.g., Timmerman v. U.S. Bank, N.A., 
    483 F.3d 1106
    , 1115 (10th Cir. 2007)
    (describing inference of pretext created by showing disparate treatment between
    comparable individuals). He has failed to make this showing. Mr. Williams does
    not identify any other employee who had a second notification in his file (the
    penultimate warning prior to termination under the handbook policy), and then
    was caught sleeping on the job but not fired for it.
    Mr. Williams compares himself to Mr. Zimmerman, who was caught
    sleeping twice, in incidents that occurred eight months apart. Mr. Zimmerman
    received write-ups each time and was given three-day suspensions each time.
    After the second incident he received a second notification. Nine months after
    this second notification, he allowed an unauthorized person to ride on a “surface
    maintenance mule,” a serious violation of both company policy and applicable
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    law. 
    Id. at 309.
    He was given a “notification” marked “other” rather than “first”
    or “second” notification, but was not fired. 
    Id. Like Mr.
    Williams, Mr. Zimmerman had a second notification in his file
    when he was found to have committed another serious offense. Unlike
    Mr. Williams, he was not fired. But this evidence alone is insufficient to create a
    genuine issue of material fact concerning whether he was “similarly situated” to
    Mr. Williams, resulting an proof of arbitrary or pretextual action. Under the
    handbook, Solvay was not required to terminate an employee for a “serious”
    incident, but reserved discretion to do so. See 
    id. at 254
    (“more serious offenses
    can lead to immediate termination”) (emphasis added); 258 (“As a last resort, the
    employee will be discharged.”) (emphasis added). More importantly, different
    supervisors issued the final discipline to Mr. Zimmerman and to Mr. Williams.
    See 
    id. at 155-56
    (depo. pp. 45-47); 202 (depo. pp. 19-20). Mr. Zimmerman’s
    disciplinary history therefore does not show that Solvay’s actions were arbitrary
    or pretextual in Mr. Williams’s case. See, e.g., 
    Timmerman, 483 F.3d at 1121
    (stating fact that employee had different supervisor tends to undermine pretext
    claim based on differential treatment of allegedly similarly-situated employees).
    B. Prior Discipline Was Not Itself Pretextual
    Mr. Williams argues that the very fact that he had a second disciplinary
    notice in his file demonstrates pretext, separate and apart from the incident that
    resulted in his termination. We believe, however, that while an employee could
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    certainly attempt to show that prior disciplinary notifications were themselves
    pretextual, the evidence Mr. Williams adduces does not create a genuine issue of
    material fact on this point.
    Mr. Williams targets his second notification, which he received for misuse
    of funeral leave. He attempts to show that the discipline meted out to him for that
    incident was itself pretextual. The Tenneco manual provides that “[w]hen a death
    occurs in your immediate family you may receive up to three (3) consecutive
    work days off with pay to attend the funeral.” Aplt. App., Vol. II at 267. It
    defines “[y]our immediate family” to include “your spouse, children, parents,
    brothers, sisters, and any of these related to you by marriage. Funeral leave may
    also be granted in case of a grandparent or someone who permanently resides in
    your household if you attend the funeral.” 
    Id. Mr. Williams
    received forty-eight hours of funeral leave to attend the
    funeral of a man he claimed was his grandfather. According to the disciplinary
    notification, “[a]fter further investigation it was discovered the deceased was not
    his Grandfather.” 
    Id., Vol. I
    at 81. Mr. Williams did not contest the notification.
    He now claims, however, that the man whose funeral he attended, should be
    considered his mother’s father, even though his mother’s actual father had died
    previously, at a very young age, and the man neither married Mr. Williams’s
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    mother nor adopted him. The man whose funeral he attended was the person who
    took care of his mother after her father died, perhaps his uncle, though this is
    unclear. 3 Significantly, Mr. Williams did not reveal the nature of this relationship
    when he requested the leave; he just asked for leave to attend his “grandfather’s”
    funeral. 
    Id., Vol. I
    I, at 211 (depo. pp. 70-71).
    Mr. Williams, who is Hispanic, now argues that in the Hispanic community,
    this man would have been considered his grandfather. But he provides no
    evidence that he explained this to Solvay when requesting and receiving funeral
    leave. Moreover, when given the opportunity to provide a written response to the
    disciplinary action, he declined. 
    Id. at 81.
    If he had a basis for claiming that the
    man whose funeral he attended was his grandfather, this would have been his
    chance to explain it. In sum, while Mr. Williams’s view concerning his
    compliance with the funeral leave policy may differ from Solvay’s, there is no
    indication that Solvay acted pretextually in disciplining him for attending the
    funeral of someone whom it did not consider his grandfather.
    Mr. Williams also argues that the “first notification” on which Solvay
    relied, the incident in the smoking room, was itself arbitrary or pretextual. He
    states: “Inasmuch as [supervisor] Zimmerman chose to write Williams up on an
    earlier occasion when he was simply reclined in a chair with the lights out and not
    3
    In his deposition, Mr. Williams explained that the man lived with his aunt,
    but was not married to her. Aplt. App., Vol. II at 211 (depo. pp. 72-73).
    -17-
    sleeping, at the same time he chose not to write up Rick Coon or Pete Hart for the
    two or three occasions he found them sleeping, it is not surprising that Williams
    would have more discipline in his file than the others.” Aplt. Opening Br. at 14.
    Again, this incident has only limited relevance because, under Solvay’s policy,
    the written reprimand from the smoking room incident should have been removed
    from the file and disregarded due to the passage of time by the time Williams was
    caught sleeping on the job in 2008. 4 Indeed, although the smoking room incident
    was in the back of Mel Wallendorff’s mind when he recommended that
    Mr. Williams be fired, he stated that it was the funeral leave time and the
    February 2008 sleeping incident that resulted in the recommendation for
    termination. Aplt. App., Vol. II at 202 (depo. p. 20).
    But even if the smoking room incident is relevant and Solvay relied on it, it
    Mr. Williams did not protest at the time of that incident that the discipline was
    unfair. Instead, he signed off on the discipline, stating that “I have read,
    understand and agree to alter the above behavior by following the given
    expectations.” Aplt. App., Vol. I at 80.
    C. Alleged “Favoritism” Does Not Show Pretext
    Mr. Williams argues that Mr. Garcia, Mr. Stewart, and Mr. Broadbent were
    favorites of supervisor Wallendorff and this somehow explains why they were not
    4
    Mr. Williams could therefore have protested about receiving a “second
    notification” for the funeral leave incident, since the smoking room incident was
    more than a year old. But he did not.
    -18-
    disciplined, even though they were caught sleeping on the job. But a careful
    reading of the deposition testimony shows that while Mr. Wallendorff admitted
    that he had been accused of favoring these employees (among others) in their job
    assignments and discipline, he denied that he had caught any of these men
    sleeping on the job. 
    Id., Vol. I
    I at 201 (depo. p. 17). So he could not have
    exercised favoritism on their behalf with regard to sleeping on the job.
    Finally, although Mr. Williams complains that other employees who slept
    on the job sometimes received no discipline at all, and were just awakened and
    told to get back to work, he neglects to mention that the same is true of himself.
    Mr. Williams was caught sleeping on February 1, 2007, for example, but was
    merely told to wake up and was not written up for it. There is also evidence that
    he was repeatedly found sleeping on the job by a frustrated co-worker who
    complained to a supervisor that he had to call to wake him up, but Mr. Williams
    points to no evidence he was formally disciplined for those incidents. 
    Id. at 205
    (depo. pp. 62-63).
    In sum, Mr. Williams has failed to demonstrate that his firing for sleeping
    on the job was either arbitrary or pretextual. He fails to show Solvay did not act
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    in good faith in firing him. The district court therefore properly granted summary
    judgment to Solvay on his breach-of-contract claim.
    CONCLUSION
    The judgment of the district court is therefore AFFIRMED.
    Entered for the Court
    Wade Brorby
    Senior Circuit Judge
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