DocketNumber: No. C-960018.
Citation Numbers: 690 N.E.2d 897, 117 Ohio App. 3d 351
Judges: Gorman, Painter, Sundermann
Filed Date: 12/31/1996
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 353
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 354
The plaintiff-appellant, Evelyn C. Frantz, appeals from the order of trial court granting summary judgment to the defendants-appellees, the Beechmont Pet Hospital and Stewart Smith, D.V.M., on her claim that she was terminated from her employment in contravention of R.C.
By Frantz's own admission, Smith told her that her pregnancy did not present a problem and to let him know when she would be going on maternity leave. *Page 355 Sometime around June 16, following a period of dizziness, Frantz was advised by her obstetrician-gynecologist to begin maternity leave. When she reported this to Smith, he acquiesced without apparent objection, and she went on maternity leave the next day, June 18.
According to Frantz, there was no discussion at that time between her and Smith or anyone else concerning a possible return date. However, Smith and Amy Parker, the office manager, stated that before she left on maternity leave on June 18 Frantz expressed an intention to return to work on August 1, and that she was consequently rescheduled to return to work on August 2.
Frantz testified that her next conversation with anyone at work occurred on July 7, the date that she delivered the baby, at which time she called to tell her co-workers of its sex and weight. Two weeks later she brought the baby into work. Smith was not present on the occasion, but Parker was. Parker gave to Frantz a gift that Smith had bought for her and asked when she thought she would be able to return to work. According to Frantz, she told her that she would not know until she had seen her doctor on August 19. She denied speaking to anyone else concerning a possible return date or ever stating that she would be back earlier.
Frantz testified that she could not have returned at the time because she was still bleeding very heavily. She recounted that she received a telephone inquiry from Parker approximately two weeks before her August 19 doctor's appointment concerning a possible return date. Frantz stated that she advised Parker that she could not return until after she had seen her doctor, and that Parker indicated that this was "fine" and that she should recontact the hospital after the appointment.
Parker disputed Frantz's version of events after her July visit to the hospital with her newborn. According to Parker, she called Frantz on July 28, leaving a message on her answering machine requesting information regarding her scheduled return to work on August 2. Parker stated that when she did not receive an answer, she called Frantz the next day and this time reached her and made the same request. She stated that Frantz told her that she would call her back the next day with a definitive answer, but did not do so.
According to Frantz, she was advised by her doctor on August 19 that she was ready to go back to work. On the evening of August 19, Frantz telephoned Smith and advised him that she wanted to start back to work the next day. The next day, according to Frantz, she had a conversation with Parker in which she was informed that it was a slow season and that, essentially, there would be no work for her until March of the following year. Frantz testified that Parker also indicated that she could not guarantee whether the work would be full-time. According to Frantz, she had no further contact with the hospital and discovered *Page 356 that she had been terminated only after she unsuccessfully applied for unemployment benefits.
In her affidavit, Parker stated that Frantz was terminated effective August 15 because her failure to communicate with the hospital regarding her return date caused scheduling problems and was ultimately interpreted as lack of interest in continuing her employment. Contrary to Frantz's recollection of events, Parker stated that she informed Frantz in their discussion on August 19 that she was terminated.
Frantz's duties were reallocated to two part-time nonpregnant female employees, both of whom were elevated to full-time status.
R.C.
"For any employer, because of the * * * sex of any person, 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."
R.C.
"For the purposes of division (A) to (F) of section
According to Ohio Adm. Code
"(2) Where termination of an employee who is temporarily disabled due to pregnancy is caused by an employment policy under which insufficient or no maternity leave is available, such termination shall constitute unlawful sex discrimination." *Page 357
A victim of such conduct has a private right of action under R.C.
As noted recently by the Franklin County Court of Appeals, "an employer need not have a policy allowing unlimited maternity leave: an employer is required only to have a reasonably adequate policy of maternity leave which should be applied on the same terms and conditions as for other disabilities."Frazier v. Practice Resource Mgt. Group, Inc. (June 27, 1995), Franklin App. No. 95APE01-46, unreported, 1995 WL 390792. As further observed by the same court, the Pregnancy Discrimination Act, Section 2000e, Title 42, U.S. Code, "does not require accommodation of pregnant women which amounts to preferential treatment." Id., citing Armstrong v. Flowers Hosp. Inc.
(M.D.Ala. 1993),
We note initially that Smith and the hospital do not assert in their arguments that Frantz was fired because she attempted to take a longer maternity leave than hospital policy allowed. They assert, rather, that she was terminated because she failed to adequately communicate to the hospital when she would be returning. We are, therefore, not confronted with the issue of the adequacy of the length of the hospital's maternity leave. Rather, as briefed and argued by the parties, this case is concerned solely with the issue of whether Frantz presented sufficient evidence to create a factual issue of whether the hospital's stated reason for discharging her — her alleged failure to communicate her plans for returning to work — was pretextual.
In order to support a claim of sex discrimination in employment, the employee is required first to establish a prima facie case by a preponderance of the evidence. McDonnell DouglasCorp. v. Green (1973),
Frantz contends that the evidence was sufficient to establish a prima facie case because she was pregnant during the events leading to her discharge, and because her workload after she was discharged was absorbed by two nonpregnant female employees who were elevated from part-time to full-time. Smith and the hospital, however, do not concede that even a prima facie case was established on these facts. While not disputing that her workload was reallocated to two other nonpregnant employees, they argue that legally this does not constitute replacement since no one new was hired. Furthermore, they argue that it is necessary for Frantz to have demonstrated disparate treatment — in other words, to show that she was treated differently compared to nonpregnant employees — before a prima facie case can be established.
In support of their argument that Frantz was not replaced in the sense necessary to trigger a prima facie case of sex discrimination against them, Smith and the hospital cite only one case, Barnes v. GenCorp, Inc. (C.A.6, 1990),
The present case clearly does not fall within the ambit of a work-force-reduction case. Neither Smith nor the hospital alleges this as the reason for Frantz's termination. There was, in fact, no reduction in the work force; rather, two part-time employees were elevated to full-time to take Frantz's former full-time position. It ignores practical reality to suggest, as do Smith and the hospital, that in a case not involving a work-force reduction an employee is not replaced so long as the company does not hire somebody new. To adopt such a position would allow a company with a flexible work force merely to reshuffle its staff to avoid a prima facie case of discrimination. *Page 359
We hold, therefore, that Frantz presented sufficient evidence that she was replaced in the work force by nonpregnant personnel, and that consequently, in accordance withMcDonnell Douglas and Marvel, she established all the elements of a prima facie case of sex discrimination. Contrary to the assertion by Smith and the hospital, there is no further requirement that Frantz present evidence of additional disparate treatment before establishing a prima facie case.1 Were this the law, it would be virtually impossible for a plaintiff who is either the sole employee or the first-time victim of an employer's discrimination to prove a prima facie case. As explained by the Supreme Court in Furnco Constr. Corp. v. Waters
(1978),
As noted, once a prima facie case of sex discrimination has been established, the burden switches to the employer to articulate nondiscriminatory reasons for Frantz's discharge. Smith and the hospital accomplished this by alleging that Frantz was terminated because she failed to contact the hospital regarding her scheduled return to work. The burden then shifted back to Frantz to show that this reason was pretextual. As explained by the court in Manzer v. Diamond Shamrock Chem. Co.
(C.A.6, 1994),
Although Smith and the hospital argue emphatically that Frantz's allegations fail to create a genuine issue of material fact,2 we fail to see how they cannot. Smith and the hospital claim that Frantz was fired for failing to communicate her return plans; she says that she did. Granted, it seems unlikely that an employer who first declines an employee's offer to resign when she discloses her pregnancy, readily acquiesces in her taking maternity leave, and then gives her a gift once the child is born — and who has no prior history of discriminating against pregnant employees — would later make up a reason to fire her out of some animus or unwillingness to reasonably accommodate her postpartum recovery. The purpose of summary judgment, however, is not to weigh a plaintiff's chances at trial based upon the credibility of his or her evidence but, rather, to determine if there is any factual conflict which would preclude judgment in favor of the moving party as a matter of law. With respect to this determination, moreover, the nonmoving party is entitled to have all reasonable inferences drawn in her favor. Civ.R. 56(E). In other words, for the purposes of summary judgment, Frantz was entitled to have her version of events believed — that she did, in fact, communicate her plans to the hospital and was always told that they were "fine" with her superiors.
We hold, therefore, that, under the constraints of Civ.R. 56(E), there was evidence of record from which one could reasonably conclude that the reason given for Frantz's discharge was pretextual. Furthermore, should this conclusion be reached, one could then circumstantially infer from the giving of a false reason, and her replacement by nonpregnant personnel, that the real reason for Frantz's discharge was discriminatory. Frantz's sole assignment of error is, therefore, well taken.
Accordingly, the judgment of the trial court is reversed, and this cause is remanded to the trial court for further proceedings.
Judgment reversedand cause remanded.
PAINTER and SUNDERMANN, JJ., concur.