Alvin Moore v. Coca-Cola Consolidated, Inc.
Citation113 F.4th 608
Date Filed2024-08-22
Docket23-3775
Cited19 times
StatusPublished
Full Opinion (html_with_citations)
RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION
Pursuant to Sixth Circuit I.O.P. 32.1(b)
File Name: 24a0194p.06
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
ALVIN MOORE, â
Plaintiff-Appellant, â
â
> No. 23-3775
v. â
â
â
COCA-COLA BOTTLING COMPANY CONSOLIDATED nka â
Coca-Cola Consolidated, Inc., â
Defendant-Appellee. â
â
Appeal from the United States District Court for the Southern District of Ohio at Cincinnati.
No. 1:18-cv-00486âMatthew W. McFarland, District Judge.
Argued: March 21, 2024
Decided and Filed: August 22, 2024
Before: BATCHELDER, MOORE, and CLAY, Circuit Judges.
_________________
COUNSEL
ARGUED: Donyetta D. Bailey, BAILEY LAW OFFICE, LLC, Cincinnati, Ohio, for Appellant.
Pamela E. Palmer, ELARBEE THOMPSON SAPP & WILSON LLP, Atlanta, Georgia, for
Appellee. ON BRIEF: Donyetta D. Bailey, BAILEY LAW OFFICE, LLC, Cincinnati, Ohio,
for Appellant. Pamela E. Palmer, Brent L. Wilson, Gillian G. Furqueron, ELARBEE
THOMPSON SAPP & WILSON LLP, Atlanta, Georgia, for Appellee.
MOORE, J., delivered the opinion of the court in which CLAY, J., joined.
BATCHELDER, J. (pp. 24â36), delivered a separate dissenting opinion.
No. 23-3775 Moore v. Coca-Cola Page 2
_________________
OPINION
_________________
KAREN NELSON MOORE, Circuit Judge. Alvin Moore (âMooreâ) held various
positions at Coca-Cola Bottling Company (âCCBCâ) from 2015 to 2018. In March 2017, Moore
was involved in an accident at work and underwent drug testing, pursuant to CCBCâs drug and
alcohol policy. Moore tested positive for marijuana, although the amount in his sample was less
than the amount that CCBCâs drug policy prohibits. CCBC nevertheless negotiated a Second
Chance Agreement (âSCAâ) with its employeesâ union and Moore, which stated that Moore
would be subject to twenty-four months of random drug testing. Later, in June 2017, Moore was
cited as being insubordinate for swearing and inciting a work slowdown during a pre-shift
meeting. Moore was terminated, but his union negotiated a Last Chance Agreement (âLCAâ)
with CCBC. In a meeting with his supervisor, David Boland (âBolandâ), and the union vice
president, Frank Arrington (âArringtonâ), Moore signed the LCA, which stated that he
discharged CCBC from any and all liability relating to his employment. In 2018, while Moore
was still under the SCA and the LCA, he tested positive for marijuana. He was terminated from
CCBC on July 31, 2018, when he was still subject to the SCA, but at which point Mooreâs LCA
had expired. He sued CCBC for racial discrimination and retaliation, in violation of Title VII
and Ohio law, and CCBC moved for summary judgment. The district court granted CCBCâs
motion for summary judgment, and Moore timely appealed. For the reasons explained below,
we REVERSE and REMAND for further proceedings.
I. BACKGROUND
Moore, a Black man, was hired on March 24, 2015 as a pallet builder by Coca-Cola
Refreshments, which became CCBC in October 2016. R. 67 (Moore Dep. at 65â66) (Page ID
#649â50). He also worked as âa forklift operator [for which he received brief training] and a
backup lab technician.â Id. at 68 (Page ID #652). Moore graduated from high school in 2002,
after which he attended âsome [real estate] courses at Cincinnati Stateâ before receiving his
âassociateâs [degree] in fashion merchandising and designâ in 2009 from the Art Institute of
No. 23-3775 Moore v. Coca-Cola Page 3
Chicagoâs Ohio campus. Id. at 42â43 (Page ID #626â27). Moore also received a bachelorâs
degree in health-care administration from the University of Phoenix. Id. at 43 (Page ID #627).
He âworked at Childrenâs [Hospital] for a while, but [he] needed a masterâs [degree] to move up
further,â which is why he took a warehouse job at CCBC. Id. at 44â45 (Page ID #628â29).
The International Brotherhood of Teamsters, Local No. 1199 (âthe unionâ), represents
CCBCâs non-management employees. R. 76-5 (Collective Bargaining Agreement (âCBAâ) at 2)
(Page ID #2500). As part of the CBA, the union and employees are not permitted to âauthorize,
instigate, cause[,] or participate in any . . . work stoppage[] . . . [or] slowdown.â Id. at 6 (Page
ID #2504). The union also addresses grievances between employees and CCBC âconcerning the
interpretation or application of [the CBA] arising from an alleged violation of the terms of [the
CBA].â Id. Local 1199 provided Moore with a copy of the CBA, both in person and
electronically, which he reviewed âas necessary.â R. 67 (Moore Dep. at 80â81) (Page ID #664â
65). Moore stated that his understanding of the CBAâs ânondiscriminationâ terms was that
âdiscrimination was handled by HRâ and that he could grieve a âfinal determination, but []
couldnât grieve the discrimination part of it.â Id. at 83 (Page ID #667).
CCBCâs Drug and Alcohol Abuse Policy provides that âemployees who test positive for
drugs, alcohol, or like substances . . . as a result of reasonable suspicion testing shall be subject
to immediate discharge.â R. 76-8 (CCBC Drug & Alcohol Abuse Policy at 1) (Page ID #2555).
The prohibited level of cannabinoids, including marijuana, is set at 50 nanograms (ângâ) per
milliliter. Id. at 6 (Page ID #2560). Per the drug policy, employees who have tested positive for
the first time may be suspended without pay and allowed to return if, âas a condition of
continued employment,â they sign an SCA. Id. at 4, 8 (Page ID #2558, 2562). If an employee
âtests positive [a] second time for drugs or alcohol within sixty (60) months of [their] initial first
positive test result,â they are âsubject to immediate termination.â Id. at 4 (Page ID #2558).
On March 28, 2017, Moore âhad an accident on the forklift,â after which he was drug
tested pursuant to company policy. R. 67 (Moore Dep. at 131â32) (Page ID #715â16); R. 69
(Boland Dep. at 115) (Page ID #1341). While Moore was driving the forklift, he saw that some
products were âleaning off [of a sizer] platformâ and he âinadvertently parkedâ his forklift in an
automated guided vehicleâs (âAGVâ) path when he got off to straighten the product. R. 79-3
No. 23-3775 Moore v. Coca-Cola Page 4
(Moore Decl. at 3) (Page ID #2940). The AGV crashed into Mooreâs forklift, and when Moore
tried to move his forklift, the AGVâs bumper came off. Id. Mooreâs supervisors considered this
to be a workplace accident. Id. Company employees who are involved in an accident at work
that does not require them to get medical treatment are drug tested on-site by a third-party
vendor. R. 69 (Boland Dep. at 117â18) (Page ID #1343â44). Supervisors or managers are
responsible for informing the third-party vendor that they must come to the worksite and conduct
drug testing. Id. at 118 (Page ID #1344). Mooreâs results came back positive for cannabinoids,
at a level of 25 ng per milliliter, id. at 110â11 (Page ID #1336â37), which is below CCBCâs
50 ng per milliliter threshold, R. 76-8 (CCBC Drug & Alcohol Abuse Policy at 6) (Page ID
#2560).
On April 11, 2017, Moore signed an SCA with CCBC, with Boland signing for CCBC.
R. 69 (Boland Dep. at 96) (Page ID #1322).1 The SCA required Moore to âundergo random
drug testing for 24 months[] after he sign[ed] it.â Id. at 96â97 (Page ID #1322â23). Although
Boland was the individual who signed the SCA on CCBCâs behalf, he had not personally
reviewed Mooreâs drug-test results but relied on what the supervisors had told him. Id. at 99
(Page ID #1325). Moore did not believe that he should have had to sign the SCA, because he
had only 25 ng per milliliter in his system. R. 67 (Moore Dep. at 133) (Page ID #717). Boland
told Moore that âif they said you failed it, you failed it,â and that Moore could either sign the
SCA or lose his job with CCBC, so Moore signed the SCA. Id. Moore stated that he tried to
submit a grievance after the fact but was told he could âonly grieve the instance of the accident
happening and not what happened after the accident,â id. at 134 (Page ID #718), which Moore
did not know at the time he signed the SCA, id. at 136â37 (Page ID #720â21). Randy Verst
(âVerstâ), who was the union president, later told Moore that he âshouldnât have signed [the
SCA] without talking to him.â Id. at 139â40 (Page ID #723â24).
Once Moore was âaware [he] would be placed on second chance,â he was directed to
Coca-Colaâs Drug and Alcohol Policy, which was âposted [on] one of the bulletin boards.â Id. at
87â88 (Page ID #671â72). Before he was directed to the bulletin board, Moore was unaware of
1
According to Boland, the policy of permitting workers who fail a drug test to sign an SCA and return to
work is not part of the unionâs CBA but is a âwritten understanding between Coke and [Local 1199].â R. 69
(Boland Dep. at 101â02) (Page ID #1327â28).
No. 23-3775 Moore v. Coca-Cola Page 5
the posting. Id. at 88â90 (Page ID #672â74). Moore stated that he would not consider the
posting public, because if an employee did not work on the mezzanine, they were unlikely to be
familiar with the bulletin board and because a piece of paper had been posted on top of part of
the policy. Id. Per the SCA, employees who violate its terms or CCBCâs Drug and Alcohol
Abuse Policy can be âterminated from [their] job without recourse[.]â R. 76-8 (CCBC Drug &
Alcohol Abuse Policy at 8) (Page ID #2562). Mooreâs understanding was that it was up to
âmanagerâs discretion to fire who [they] felt deserved to be fired.â R. 67 (Moore Dep. at 140)
(Page ID #724).
On June 21, 2017, Moore attended a pre-shift meeting, which his team had before every
shift and which âwere[] typically[] r[u]n by managers.â Id. at 97 (Page ID #681). At the
meeting, one of the managers, Anthony Cundiff (âCundiffâ), â[told] the team that [they] could
no longer stage [their] product outside the warehouseâ to speed them up, because it was âa food
safety issue.â Id. at 98 (Page ID #682). Several of the employees at the meeting took issue with
this and Moore heard âa lot of people . . . [say] this is BS, F that, or whatever.â Id. Another
employee called it âbullshit,â to which Cundiff responded that he âkn[e]w it[] [was] bullshit . . .
but you have to do it.â Id. at 98â99 (Page ID #682â83). After the managers and employees went
back and forth on the announced policy for a few minutes, Moore intervened and said âF it, if
they want you to slow down, slow the hell down and letâs get back to work.â Id. at 99 (Page ID
#683). The discussion died down after Moore spoke up, and people went back to their shifts. Id.
at 100 (Page ID #684).
Later that day, Karen Daniels, another CCBC supervisor, approached Moore and told him
that other managers were accusing him of attempting to instigate a work stoppage. Id. Moore
then met with managers Cundiff, Boland, Michelle Couch, Darryl Taylor, and Chris Chaney;
they told him he was âbeing let go for stopping the build.â Id. Moore later found out that he was
fired for insubordination and âsaying the four letter word in a meeting.â Id. at 106, 109 (Page ID
#690, 693). Moore claims that he heard other people cursing during the meeting, including Dave
Hall, Glen Smith, Kenny McGuire, David Shavers, Kenny Cunningham, Brian Crooks, Andrew
McIntire, Larry Voss (âVossâ), Lonnie Walters, Leavell Adams, Ronshayla Newby, Michael
No. 23-3775 Moore v. Coca-Cola Page 6
Chenault, Jonathan Desnoyer, and Russell Mundy, all of whom âwere in [Mooreâs] direct
vicinity,â in which âeverybody was just shouting profanities.â Id. at 103â04 (Page ID #687â88).
After Moore was terminated on June 17, 2017, the union and CCBC negotiated to bring
him back if he agreed to sign an LCA, R. 69 (Boland Dep. at 69â70) (Page ID #1295â96), which
Moore signed on July 14, 2017, R 67 (Moore Dep. at 123) (Page ID #707). The union requesting
an LCA was âvery unusualâ because they ânever ever took [LCAs].â R. 69 (Boland Dep. at 90)
(Page ID #1316). Before executing the agreement, which would be in effect for twelve months,
Moore spoke with Boland and Arrington, the unionâs vice president. R. 67 (Moore Dep. at 124â
25) (Page ID #708â09). Moore has stated that no one was in the room when he signed the LCA
other than himself, Arrington, and Boland. Id. at 125 (Page ID #709). According to Moore, the
whole meeting took ten minutes, only two of those minutes were dedicated to discussing the
LCA, and Arringtonâs âwhole thing was, just sign it and get back to work. Itâs better to fight
with a job than fight without a job.â Id. Part of the LCA stated that Moore agreed to ârelease[]
and forever discharge[] the Company and the Union . . . from any and all liability of any kind
whatsoever, relating to his employment with the [c]ompany, arising prior to the date of [the
LCA.]â R. 76-6 (LCA) (Page ID #2545).
Moore did not feel that his signing the LCA was voluntary because he âwas in dire need
of getting [his] job back.â R. 67 (Moore Dep. at 127) (Page ID #711). He also stated that he
made the decision to sign the LCA only because of his âunfortunate circumstances created by []
Boland,â who he asserted âfired [Moore] without just cause . . . [and] eliminated [Mooreâs]
overtime.â Id. at 128 (Page ID #712). Although Moore stated that he verbalized his âfeelings
[that] this contract was unjust,â his objection is not written in the agreement. Id. at 129 (Page ID
#713). He also stated that he was under the impression that he would be able to grieve his
signing the SCA and the events that led up to him doing so. Id. at 137 (Page ID #721). Boland
informed Moore that Moore would be able to grieve only the accident, not the âincident itself.â
Id. at 136 (Page ID #720).
After Moore signed the SCA and LCA, he was randomly drug tested six times. Id. at 149
(Page ID #733). On July 12, 2018, Moore submitted a positive test for cannabinoids. Id. at 151
(Page ID #735). This time, the concentration was âgreater than 300 [ng] per milliliter,â which is
No. 23-3775 Moore v. Coca-Cola Page 7
above the CCBC Drug and Alcohol Abuse Policyâs 50 ng per milliliter threshold. Id. at 152
(Page ID #736). Moore was officially terminated on July 31, 2018. Id. at 164 (Page ID #748).
Although Moore does not contest that on July 12 he tested above the threshold, he stated that he
should not have been subject to the random drug testing in the first place, because he did not fail
the first drug test when he tested positive for only 25 ng per milliliter of cannabinoids. Id. at
152â53 (Page ID #736â37).
Starting in August 2016, Moore had been submitting claims of discrimination to CCBCâs
human-resources department. Id. at 232â33 (Page ID #816â17). Moore complained about
several incidents, including one in February 2017, when Moore was suspended for three days
without pay for insubordination. Id. at 111â13, 233 (Page ID #695â97, 817). After Moore
returned from his February 2017 suspension, he filed a grievance and received backpay for two
of the three days but claimed that Boland withheld the final dayâs pay to âteach [Moore] a
lesson.â Id. at 114â15 (Page ID #698â99). Moore also stated that Boland told him to stop
calling HR with his discrimination complaints. Id. at 233 (Page ID #817). After Moore was
drug tested and cited for insubordination, he took his discrimination complaints âstraight to the
Ohio Civil Rights Commission [OCRC]â in July 2017. Id. at 233â34 (Page ID #817â18).
Moore stated that he was denied backpay from the time between when he was terminated and
brought back, whereas he âknew of several white guys that were getting their backpay from
insubordination cases.â Id. at 264 (Page ID #848). Part of Mooreâs racial-discrimination claim
in federal court is that he was retaliated against for making these complaints about discrimination
in the workplace.
On July 18, 2017, after Moore signed the LCA, he submitted a Charge of Employment
Discrimination with the OCRC. R. 70-21 (OCRC First Charge) (Page ID #2151). In his First
Charge, Moore claimed that the actions leading to his being placed on the LCA (insubordination
and inappropriate language) were the results of racial discrimination, because white employees
had used similar language but were not likewise penalized. Id. Nearly two years later, on May
24, 2019, Moore filed a second claim with the EEOC, asserting that CCBC had racially
discriminated and retaliated against him by penalizing him for actions that similarly situated
white employees also committed without discipline. R. 37 (Am. Compl. at 11) (Page ID #143).
No. 23-3775 Moore v. Coca-Cola Page 8
Moore stated in his deposition that CCBC does not âha[ve] an interest in having
employees who are not consuming drugs or alcohol,â because there was âobvious drug use on
the grounds on lunch breaks.â R. 67 (Moore Dep. at 91) (Page ID #675). He claimed that
managers had not exercised their discretion to fire other people who tested positive, like another
employee, John Wermeling (âWermelingâ), who came âin[to work] drunk and high every[]day.â
Id. at 157 (Page ID #741). In one incident, Wermeling passed out at work and was taken by
ambulance to the hospital. R. 79-12 (Wermeling Incident Email at 1) (Page ID #2977).
Wermeling was apparently stumbling around and smelled of alcohol prior to losing
consciousness. Id. Despite Wermelingâs actions, CCBC managers and supervisors did not take
disciplinary measures against him. R. 79-9 (Adams Decl. at 4) (Page ID #2965). Another Black
employee, Leavell Adams (âAdamsâ), stated that he has had accidents at both CCBCâs Duck
Creek and Erlanger, Kentucky locations and has been subjected to a drug and alcohol test after
each accident. Id. at 4â5 (Page ID #2965â66). Adams claimed that a white employee, Paul
Minland, âwas involved in two accidents at work, but [CCBC] didnât require him to take a
mandatory drug and alcohol test.â Id. at 5 (Page ID #2966). On June 5, 2015, another white
employee, Voss, was placed on an SCA that, like Mooreâs, subjected Voss to twenty-four
months of random drug testing. R. 72-5 (Hadam Decl. at 1) (Page ID #2240). Voss tested
positive after a post-accident drug test in May 2017, R. 79-11 (Drug Test Results) (Page ID
#2976), but remained a CCBC employee until October 3, 2018, when CCBC terminated Voss for
failing a September 2018 random drug test, R. 72-5 (Hadam Decl. at 2) (Page ID #2241).
After Moore filed his complaint, CCBC moved for summary judgment, which the district
court granted. The district court found that Moore had waived his pre-LCA claims when he
signed the LCA. Moore v. Coca Cola Bottling Co. Consol., No. 1:18-cv-486, 2023 WL
5647825, at *4 (S.D. Ohio Aug. 31, 2023). Because the district court found that Moore âknowingly and voluntarilyâ entered the LCA, it considered only his claims from July 14, 2017, to July 31, 2018.Id.
The district court presumed that Moore had made out a prima facie case for
racial discrimination and retaliation, id. at *5, but found that Moore had failed to establish that
CCBCâs proffered reasons for terminating Moore were pretextual, id. at *6.
No. 23-3775 Moore v. Coca-Cola Page 9
II. DISCUSSION
A. Standard of Review
âWe review de novo a district courtâs grant of summary judgment.â Griffin v.
Finkbeiner, 689 F.3d 584, 592(6th Cir. 2012). At this stage, we must âview the evidence in the light most favorable to the non-movant and resolve all factual disputes in his favor.âId.
Summary judgment is appropriate if âthe movant shows that there is no genuine dispute as to any
material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.â Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a).
B. Mooreâs Pre-LCA Claims
1. Voluntary Waiver
Moore claims on appeal that the district court erred in finding that he had voluntarily
waived âall claims of racial discrimination or retaliation regarding situations or circumstances
that occurred beforeâ Moore signed the July 2017 LCA. Moore, 2023 WL 5647825, at *4;
Appellant Br. at 16. In light of the factors relevant to determining whether an employee
voluntarily waived their Title VII rights, we conclude that Moore has demonstrated that there
exists a genuine dispute of material fact regarding whether he involuntarily waived his pre-LCA
rights. We therefore REVERSE the district courtâs finding that it could not consider Mooreâs
discrimination and retaliation claims that preceded his signing the LCA and REMAND for
proceedings consistent with our opinion.
âWe have recognized that under particular circumstances employers and employees may
negotiate a valid release of . . . Title VII claims.â Adams v. Philip Morris, Inc., 67 F.3d 580, 583(6th Cir. 1995). Determining whether an employeeâs waiver of their rights was valid is a question of federal common law, McClellan v. Midwest Machining, Inc.,900 F.3d 297
, 302â03 (6th Cir. 2018), and we âappl[y] ordinary contract principles in determining whether such a waiver [was] valid,â Adams,67 F.3d at 583
. In reaching a conclusion about whether such a waiver was valid, we consider: â(1) [the] plaintiffâs experience, background, and education; (2) the amount of time the plaintiff had to consider whether to sign the waiver, including whether the employee had an opportunity to consult with a lawyer; (3) the clarity of the waiver; No. 23-3775 Moore v. Coca-Cola Page 10 (4) consideration for the waiver; as well as (5) the totality of the circumstances.âId.
While weighing these factors, we also âmust âremain[] alert to ensure that employers do not defeat the policies of . . . Title VII by taking advantage of their superior bargaining position.ââ McClellan,900 F.3d at 303
(quoting Adams,67 F.3d at 583
).
In finding that Moore had voluntarily waived his rights in the July 2017 LCA, the district
court relied on the fact that: (1) Moore possessed both an associateâs degree in fashion
merchandising and a bachelorâs degree in health-care administration; (2) â[n]othing in the record
suggest[ed] that Moore had to sign the LCAâ on the day it was provided to him or that Moore
had requested additional time to review the LCA; (3) nothing in the record suggested that Moore
could not consult with a lawyer before signing the LCA; (4) Arrington, the unionâs vice
president, âwas in the room when Moore signedâ the LCA; (5) âthe release [was] clear and
unambiguousâ; and (6) sufficient consideration supported the LCA. Moore, 2023 WL 5647825,
at *3â4. The district court also rejected Mooreâs argument that he had signed the LCA under
economic duress, reasoning that the economic pressures that accompany any bargaining do not
amount to economic duress. Id. at *4.
The waiver factors, taken as a whole and in the context of Mooreâs particular situation,
show that there is a genuine dispute of material fact over whether Moore voluntarily waived his
preexisting discrimination and retaliation claims by signing the July 2017 LCA. Moore has
stated that the entire meeting in which he signed the LCA lasted ten minutes, R. 67 (Moore Dep.
at 125) (Page ID #709), with only two of those ten minutes dedicated to discussing the LCA, id.
It is unclear from the record whether Moore was required to sign the LCA the same day that he
was presented with it, or if he was able to request additional time to consider the contractâs
terms. Similarly, the record indicates that Moore did not have an attorney present but does not
provide any information as to whether Moore would have been permitted to request one prior to
his signing the LCA. Most telling is that Arrington, the union representative in the room with
Moore when he signed the LCA, told Moore to just sign the LCA and that it was âbetter to fight
with a job than fight without a job.â R. 67 (Moore Dep. at 127) (Page ID #711). Reasonable
jurors could find that Arringtonâs statements indicated that Mooreâs discrimination claims would
survive his signing the LCA and that they influenced Mooreâs signing the agreement.
No. 23-3775 Moore v. Coca-Cola Page 11
Although Moore holds associateâs and bachelorâs degrees, his education does not provide
him with any type of legal, managerial, or contractual background that would be relevant to
interpreting the LCAâs terms in a manner essentially at odds with what the union representative
told Moore. Cf. Seawright v. Am. Gen. Fin. Servs., Inc., 507 F.3d 967, 974(6th Cir. 2007); Morrison v. Circuit City Stores, Inc.,317 F.3d 646, 668
(6th Cir. 2003) (en banc). Nor does it appear from the record that Moore had any previous experience with this type of agreement during his time with CCBC or elsewhere. The district court relied exclusively on our unpublished case Hank v. Great Lakes Construction Co., in determining that Moore did not need âto have any legal education or experience to find that a release was entered into voluntarily,â Moore,2023 WL 5467825
, at *3. However, in our previous published cases finding voluntary waiver, we have generally emphasized that the individuals possessed education and experience that was relevant to their ability to comprehend the terms of the agreements they have signed, especially when the agreement was otherwise unclear or ambiguous. Cf. Seawright,507 F.3d at 974
(noting that the plaintiff was âan educated, managerial employeeâ); Morrison,317 F.3d at 668
(same). By contrast, a reasonable juror could find that Mooreâs fashion merchandising and
health-care administration degrees did not provide him with sufficient education or experience to
understand that he was specifically waiving his rights to bring past discrimination and retaliation
claims by signing the opaque LCA in light of contrary assertions by the union representative and
in the full context of the signing of the agreement.
The district court found that the LCAâs terms were sufficiently clear and unambiguous as
to Mooreâs discrimination and retaliation claims. Moore, 2023 WL 5647825, at *4. In relevant part, the LCA states that âMoore releases and forever discharges the Company and the Union . . . from any and all liability of any kind whatsoever, relating to his employment with the Company, arising prior to the date of this Agreement[.]â R. 76-6 (LCA) (Page ID #2545). We conclude that there exists a genuine dispute over whether the LCAâs terms were sufficiently unambiguous. In other cases where we have found that such provisions are straightforward in their terms, the contracts have explicitly stated that the employee was waiving the right to bring a discrimination suit, Seawright,507 F.3d at 974
, or that an individual must âarbitrate any legal dispute relating to their employment . . . , including all state and federal statutory claims,â Morrison,317 F.3d at 654
. The LCA that Moore signed is not precise in explaining what was meant by âany and all
No. 23-3775 Moore v. Coca-Cola Page 12
liability of any kind whatsoever relating to his employment withâ CCBC, and Moore lacks a
background that would help him to interpret this term. Most important in Mooreâs case is
Arringtonâs statement in the context of signing the LCA that it was âbetter to fight with a job
than fight without a job.â R. 67 (Moore Dep. at 127) (Page ID #711).
The dissenting opinion has a different view of Mooreâs waiver. But the dissenting
opinion misunderstands the inquiry that we must undertake. For one, the dissenting opinion
spends nearly its entire waiver analysis focused on Mooreâs educational background, despite
acknowledging that âthe signorâs experience, background, and educationâ form just one
consideration in a totality-of-the-circumstances test. Dissenting Op. at 32. We may disagree
over whether Mooreâs background cuts in favor of or against a finding of knowing and
intentional waiver, but regardless, it is only one consideration. As discussed above, particularly
important in this case are the facts that (1) the union representative effectively suggested that
Moore would be able to seek legal recourse notwithstanding Mooreâs signing of the agreement;
(2) the agreement was not clear with respect to what rights Moore was waiving; and (3) CCBC
was in a better bargaining position.2 In other words, consistent with our caselaw, Mooreâs
education and experience are not âdispositive,â but rather are considered in the full context of the
other waiver factors. Contra id. at 34. Indeed, the union representativeâs comments alone
suggest that the waiver was not likely knowing and voluntary: it is natural for an employee to
trust that their representativeâs representations concerning that employeeâs rights are fair and
accurate. This would be true whether Moore was extremely well-educated or not educated at all.
Setting these points to the side, the dissenting opinion is also mistaken that Mooreâs
background and experience unambiguously support a finding of knowing and voluntary waiver
and that fact issues do not exist on this point. Without a doubt, our circuit has not spoken with
2
The dissenting opinion suggests that we are misreading precedent related to educational background, but
in the same breath the dissenting opinion casts doubt on binding circuit precedent that plainly states that we must
consider the waiver analysis in the context of the superior bargaining position of employers. Dissenting Op. at 32
n.4. Notwithstanding the dissenting opinionâs incorrect simplification of contract principles, our waiver analysis in
this case concerns civil-rights claims under federal statutory law. There is good reason to guard against the
hollowing out of those rights specifically conferred on employees by statute. See, e.g., Adams v. Philip Morris, Inc.,
67 F.3d 580, 583(6th Cir. 1995). This has been the law of the circuit for decades. That â[m]ere inequality in bargaining powerâ is not a reason to invalidate a knowing and voluntary waiver does not mean we can blind ourselves to objective reality or that we cannot consider the partiesâ relative positions as part of our analysis. Gilmer v. Interstate/Johnson Lane Corp.,500 U.S. 20, 33
(1991). No. 23-3775 Moore v. Coca-Cola Page 13 perfect consistency about exactly how education and background ought to factor into the waiver calculus, as the caselaw relied on by the dissenting opinion shows. See, e.g., Soltis v. J.C. Penney Corp.,635 F. Appâx 245, 250
(6th Cir. 2015) (âWe have found a waiver to be knowing
and intelligent where an employee took post-graduate courses, was a managerial employee, had
twenty-one days to review the agreement and seven days thereafter to change her mind, and
consulted a divorce attorney before signing the agreementâ but not âwhere the employees were
educated and did not indicate they did not understand the waiver, but were not informed of their
right to revoke the waiver and were not given documentation about the procedures to be used in
place of judicial proceedings until after they began their employmentâ). Put differently, contrary
to the dissenting opinionâs apparent view, there are no hard-and-fast rules for whose background
and education suggests a knowing and voluntary waiver and whose does not. And inquiring into
Mooreâs level of education and type of education does not turn the objective waiver test into a
subjective one. Dissenting Op. at 33â35 & n.6. Our waiver inquiry has always had both
objective and subjective elements: we ask whether a reasonable person (objective) would have
understood that they were waiving their rights based on a number of factors particular to the
employee at issue (subjective). Overall, this remains an objective testâindeed, the look at
Mooreâs education and background is the exact inquiry done by any and all of our waiver cases.
See id. at 34 (âOur precedent requires that we consider whether the signorâs âexperience,
background and educationâ generally indicate whether the signor entered the waiver knowingly
and voluntarily while considering the other factors.â).
Properly understood, the background and education factor principally considers how a
personâs experience would help or hinder them in understanding the contract at issue. For
example, the clearer the waiver or the more assistance a person receives in understanding an
agreement, the less significant is any particular experience or background to finding knowing
and voluntary waiver. See, e.g., Tillman v. Macyâs, Inc., 735 F.3d 453, 461(6th Cir. 2013) (plaintiffâs high-school-level education supported finding knowing and voluntary waiver when the waiver was written in âunderstandable termsâ); Sako v. Ohio Depât of Admin. Servs.,278 F. Appâx 514, 518
(6th Cir. 2008) (per curiam) (less education and experience necessary to
understand waiver in context of document that was âbrief and could easily be read and
understoodâ and when plaintiff was âassisted throughout by union officialsâ (internal quotation
No. 23-3775 Moore v. Coca-Cola Page 14
marks omitted)). In the context of this case and for all of the reasons discussed above, a
reasonable juror could find that Mooreâs education and background would have hindered him
from understanding the full scope of the rights that he was waiving.3 At a minimum, a
reasonable juror could find that Mooreâs background and experience does not support a finding
of knowing and voluntary waiver.
We must consider the totality of the circumstances in determining the voluntariness of
Mooreâs waiving his rights by signing the LCA. Although Moore holds bachelorâs and
associateâs degrees in unrelated fields, neither of them would provide him with any type or level
of expertise concerning how LCAs work. That is especially true here, given that Arrington, the
unionâs vice president and the only union representation present with Moore during his brief
meeting about the LCA, suggested that Moore would still be able to pursue his claims after he
signed the LCA. Taking into account all of the factors, there exists a genuine dispute of material
fact over the voluntariness of Mooreâs waiver, particularly given the fact that Moore had been
explicitly told by the sole union representative with him in the room to sign the LCA and that it
was better to fight with a job. Considering all relevant factors alongside our duty to account for
CCBCâs relatively âsuperior bargaining position,â McClellan, 900 F.3d at 303, we REVERSE
the district courtâs finding that Moore voluntarily waived his Title VII claims by signing the
LCA and REMAND for proceedings consistent with our opinion.
2. Failure to Exhaust
CCBC also claims on appeal that even if Moore involuntarily waived his pre-LCA
claims, those claims are nevertheless barred because Moore âdid not exhaust his administrative
remedies by addressing them in his First Charge [to the EEOC].â Appellee Br. at 17. Moore
contends that â[t]he crux of [his] claims for what happened prior to him signing the LCA on July
14, 2017, is, and has always been,â his July 6, 2017 termination for alleged insubordination.
Appellant Reply Br. at 3. He states that this claim, which is addressed in his first EEO
complaint, âhas nothing to do withâ the SCA, which is related to his claims of race
3
It is hardly necessary to engage with the dissenting opinionâs parade of horribles, Dissenting Op. at 33 n.5,
which is entirely divorced from the facts of this case and has nothing to do with whether a reasonable person who
was similarly situated to Moore would have understood that they were waiving their rights.
No. 23-3775 Moore v. Coca-Cola Page 15
discrimination and retaliation that culminated in his termination on July 31, 2018, and that were
addressed in his second EEO complaint, submitted in May 2019. Id. at 3â4.
Individuals who bring Title VII discrimination claims in federal court must exhaust their
administrative requirements first. See Williams v. CSX Transp. Co., 643 F.3d 502, 507â08 (6th Cir. 2011) (citing 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-5(e)). Failure to exhaust in the context of Title VII claims is an affirmative defense that defendants âbear[] the burden of pleading and proving.â Lockett v. Potter,259 F. Appâx 784, 786
(6th Cir. 2008); see also Laouini v. CLM Freight Lines, Inc.,586 F.3d 473, 475
(7th Cir. 2009); cf. Zipes v. Trans World Airlines, Inc.,455 U.S. 385, 393
(1982).
In their motion for summary judgment before the district court, CCBC did not argue that Moore
had failed to exhaust his administrative remedies before the EEOC. See generally R. 72-1
(Mem. in Supp. Def.âs Mot. for Summ. J.). Although CCBC now encourages us to uphold the
district courtâs ruling on the ground that Moore failed to exhaust administrative remedies with
regards to his pre-LCA claims, Appellee Br. at 17â19, we hold that CCBC has forfeited this
affirmative defense by failing to raise it in the district court below.
C. Disparate-Treatment Claim
Moore claims that CCBC discriminated against him on the basis of race when it
ultimately fired him for a positive drug test. He does not identify any direct evidence of racial
discrimination but argues that CCBC had âsingled out and targeted [Moore]â while treating
white employees more favorably. Appellant Br. at 22. CCBC argues that the actions of Voss
and Wermeling, the two employees Moore asserts were similarly situated to him, were
insufficiently comparable to Mooreâs own situation. Appellee Br. at 27â31. We hold that Moore
has raised a genuine issue of material fact regarding his disparate-treatment claim, and that the
district court therefore erred in granting summary judgment to CCBC on this ground.
When plaintiffs do not support their claims with direct evidence of racial discrimination,
we use the âMcDonnell Douglas burden-shifting approachâ to evaluate their allegations. Clay v.
United Parcel Serv., Inc., 501 F.3d 695, 703(6th Cir. 2007). The plaintiff must sufficiently show âthat he [] suffered an adverse employment action under circumstances which give rise to an inference of unlawful discrimination.âId.
(quoting Macy v. Hopkins Cnty. Sch. Bd. of Educ., No. 23-3775 Moore v. Coca-Cola Page 16484 F.3d 357, 365
(6th Cir. 2007)). To make out this prima facie case, the plaintiff must âshow that he was (1) a member of a protected class, (2) subject to an adverse employment action, (3) qualified for the position, and (4) replaced by a person outside the protected class or treated differently than similarly situated nonminority employees.â Tennial v. United Parcel Serv., Inc.,840 F.3d 292, 303
(6th Cir. 2016). The district court below assumed that Moore had made out his prima facie case of racial discrimination. Moore,2023 WL 5647825
, at *5.
On appeal, CCBC âdoes not contest the district courtâs analysisâ with respect to its
assumption that Moore had established a prima facie case for his discrimination and retaliation
claims. Appellee Br. at 19â20. We conclude that Moore has met the ânot onerousâ burden of
establishing his prima facie case of discrimination. See Tex. Depât of Cmty. Affs. v. Burdine, 450
U.S. 248, 253(1981). The parties do not dispute that Moore is Black, was terminated from his position at CCBC, and was qualified for his position.4 On appeal, Moore focuses on the fourth prong of our prima facie analysis and argues that he was treated differently than similarly situated white employees with regards to CCBCâs drug-testing policy. Appellant Br. at 17â20. Moore points to Voss and Wermeling specifically, arguing that Voss had also failed a drug test while subject to an SCA but was not terminated until he failed a second drug test and that Wermeling had not been tested for drugs and/or alcohol after a workplace accident.Id.
at 19â20.
We conclude that Moore has sufficiently made out a prima facie case of discrimination.
Under the McDonnell Douglas framework, the burden shifts to CCBC to proffer a
nondiscriminatory reason for its actions. Clay, 501 F.3d at 703. In order to meet this burden,
4
Oddly, the dissenting opinion opens by suggesting that we are treating random drug testing as an âadverse
employment action.â Dissenting Op. at 24. Of course, the dissenting opinion points to nothing in our opinion that
states as much. Nothing in our analysis depends on treating the drug tests that Moore was required to take as
âadverse employment actionsâ; indeed, we all agree that Moore was fired twice and that termination is a
quintessential adverse employment action. Perhaps the dissenting opinion is confused about the relevance of the
drug testing with respect to establishing pretext on the part of CCBC and to show that Moore was treated differently
from similarly situated comparators. See, e.g., Carter v. Bowman, 172 F. App'x 915, 918(11th Cir. 2006) (per curiam) (â[The plaintiff] belongs to a protected class and he was subjected to an adverse employment action when he was terminated. As to the third prong [of the prima facie case], [the plaintiff] must establish that [the employer] treated similarly-situated white employees more favorably. Viewing the facts most favorable to [the plaintiff], a reasonable person could find there were three employees who were injured on-the-job, who reported the injury soon thereafter, and were not required or asked to take a drug test.â). Regardless, as discussed, Voss and Moore engaged in substantially similar conductâa failed drug test while on SCAsâand were treated differentlyâVoss suffered no consequences, whereas Moore was fired. This is a classic case of disparate treatment and does not require breaking new ground. No. 23-3775 Moore v. Coca-Cola Page 17 CCBC ââmust clearly set forth . . . the reasonsâ for its decision[s].âId.
(quoting Tex. Depât of Cmty. Affs.,450 U.S. at 255
). On appeal, CCBC argues that it has a legitimate,
nondiscriminatory reason for each of the actions that it took against Moore. CCBC states that it
administered a drug test to Moore in March 2017 because corporate policy dictated that it
administer a drug test after every accident in the warehouse and points out that it continued to
employ Moore after he signed the SCA. Appellee Br. at 20â21. CCBC states that its later
decision in 2017 to terminate Moore happened after Moore stated âF*** it, if they want you to
slow down, slow the hell downâ in a meeting, which CCBC viewed as insubordinate. Id. at 21.
The periodic drug testing that Moore underwent âthroughout his employmentâ was based on
Mooreâs signing the SCA, which included a 24-month random-drug-testing period as one of the
conditions of Mooreâs continued employment. Id. Finally, CCBC states that it terminated
Moore in 2018 because he tested âabove the cannabinoid threshold levelâ in one of those
mandatory random drug tests. Id.
If CCBC articulates a legitimate and nondiscriminatory reason for its actions, we shift the
burden back to Moore âto show that the reason[s] put forth by the defendant [are] pretextual.â
Clay, 501 F.3d at 704. Moore can do so by demonstrating âthat the proffered reason (1) has no basis in fact, (2) did not actually motivate the defendantâs challenged conduct, or (3) was insufficient to warrant the challenged conduct.âId.
(quoting Johnson v. Kroger Co.,319 F.3d 858, 866
(6th Cir. 2003)). At the summary-judgment stage, showing that a proffered reason is insufficient requires the employee to show that a âreasonable factfinder could find that [the employerâs] proffered reason was insufficient to motivate [the employeeâs] discharge.â Madden v. Chattanooga City Wide Serv. Depât,549 F.3d 666, 676
(6th Cir. 2008). Moore can demonstrate this by showing that âother employees, particularly employees not in the protected class, were not fired even though they engaged in substantially identical conduct to that which the employer contends motivated its discharge of the plaintiff.âId.
(quoting Manzer v. Diamond Shamrock Chems. Co.,29 F.3d 1078, 1084
(6th Cir. 1994), overruled on other grounds by Gross v. FBL Fin. Servs., Inc.,557 U.S. 167
(2009)).
No. 23-3775 Moore v. Coca-Cola Page 18
The district court found that CCBCâs proffered reasons for its actions against Moore were
legitimate and non-discriminatory, although it did not consider any of Mooreâs pre-LCA claims.
The district court found that CCBCâs âproffered reason for terminating Moore in July 2018â was
âbased in fact,â because Moore had failed a drug test and violated his SCA. Moore, 2023 WL
5647825, at *6. In reaching the conclusion that Moore had not sufficiently established pretext, the district court stated that ânothing in the record suggest[ed] thatâ Mooreâs failed drug test âdid not actually motivateâ his termination, and that âthe failed drug test was sufficient to terminate Moore.âId.
On appeal, Moore argues that there exists a genuine dispute of material fact as to whether
he was singled out for random drug testing and treated differently than similarly situated white
employees were. Appellant Br. at 22. Moore first contends that CCBCâs explanations are not
based in fact, because he never failed his first drug test in March 2017 and because he âwas
specifically targeted for drug testing on July 12, 2018.â Appellant Br. at 26. To support his
claim that he was targeted, Moore alleges that he âwas the only employee drug tested all six
times that he was supposedly given a random drug test under his SCA.â Id. at 27. Moore then
argues that his SCA and subsequent positive drug test did not motivate his termination, because
other employees like Voss and Wermeling were permitted to come to work under the influence
of alcohol or drugs and were not likewise penalized. Id. at 27â29.
Because there exists a genuine dispute of material fact regarding whether Moore
voluntarily waived his pre-LCA claims, we REMAND to the district court for further
proceedings on Mooreâs claim that his March 2017 drug test had no basis in fact. We also
REVERSE the district courtâs conclusion that Moore has not demonstrated pretext with regards
to his post-LCA claims, and REMAND for proceedings consistent with this opinion. Moore has
shown enough with regards to CCBCâs actions after he signed the LCA that a reasonable
factfinder could find that CCBC engaged in racial discrimination. CCBC claims that it
terminated Moore because he tested positive for marijuana while he was subject to the SCAâs
terms, which stated that an employee who fails a random drug test like Mooreâs may be
immediately terminated for doing so. Appellee Br. at 21. Moore claims that Voss was likewise
on an SCA, but was not tested during this time, nor was Voss fired after he had a positive drug
No. 23-3775 Moore v. Coca-Cola Page 19
test while on an SCA.5 Voss was subject to his SCA terms from June 5, 2015, through June 5,
2017, for a total of twenty-four months. R. 72-5 (Voss SCA) (Page ID #2244â45). On May 15,
2017, Voss posted a positive result when he was given a post-accident drug test. R. 79-11 (Drug
Test Results) (Page ID #2976). However, based on the available record, it does not appear that
Voss was terminated (or even forced to sign an LCA) in the aftermath of this positive drug test.
Voss was ultimately terminated on October 3, 2018, after he failed another, random drug test. R.
72-5 (Hadam Decl. at 10) (Page ID #2249).6 CCBC argues that Vossâs post-accident drug test
was not âsubstantially identical conductâ to Mooreâs failing a random drug test in 2018, because
the impetus for the drug testing was different for each man. Appellee Br. at 29. We view both
employees submitting positive drug tests while subject to an SCA to be sufficiently similar
conduct to create a genuine issue of material fact.
The dissenting opinionâs attempts to brush aside the disparate treatment as between
Moore and Voss are unpersuasive. The dissenting opinion concedes that Voss is a fair
comparator, so if Voss was in fact treated differently based on similar conduct then Moore has at
a minimum raised fact issues concerning pretext. Dissenting Op. at 29 (âTo be sure, Voss is
similarly situated to Moore.â). Unfortunately, the dissenting opinion then contorts the analysis in
order to avoid the obvious conclusion that Moore showed disparate treatment based on the lack
of discipline Voss faced after failing a drug test while under an SCA. The dissenting opinion
declares that because Voss was eventually disciplined for failing a second drug test, Moore
cannot show pretext. Id. This is, frankly, a misunderstanding of the law. Voss and Moore both
5
At every juncture, the dissenting opinion casts doubt on the evidence of disparate treatment that Moore
has offered, including evidence concerning the different treatment as between Voss and Moore. This case comes to
us on summary judgment, however, and given that CCBC moved for summary judgment in the district court, we are
compelled to construe the record in the light most favorable to Moore. The dissenting opinion wrongly flips this
burden onto Moore. By way of an example, the dissenting opinion blindly accepts that Voss was drug tested four
times pursuant to his SCA. Yet a listing of the drug tests done by CCBC shows that Voss was not randomly drug
tested during the entire two-year span in which his SCA was in effectâJune 5, 2015, to June 5, 2017. R. 79-11
(Drug Test Results) (Page ID #2976). At this stage of the proceeding, we would call this a dispute of material fact.
It is not our place to resolve such disputes, despite the dissenting opinionâs views of the record. See also, e.g.,
Dissenting Op. at 26 (âMoore has not proffered evidence suggesting that this mistaken placement [on an SCA] was
anything other than a mistake.â).
6
Vossâs termination letter states that Vossâs SCA was signed on June 5, 2018. R. 72-5 (Hadam Decl. at 10)
(Page ID #2249). However, the signed SCA is dated June 5, 2015, and there is no indication in the record that Voss
was subjected to another SCA after the one he signed in 2015. See R. 72-5 (Hadam Decl. Âś 3) (Page ID #2240â41);
R. 72-5 (Voss SCA) (Page ID #2244â45).
No. 23-3775 Moore v. Coca-Cola Page 20
engaged in substantially similar conductâfailed drug tests while on SCAsâand yet Moore was
fired immediately whereas Voss was allowed to keep his job for nearly eighteen more months
and until he failed a second drug test. To state the facts is effectively to show different treatment
despite identical conduct. A two-strikes policy for firing Black employees and a three-strikes
policy for firing white employees would plainly constitute disparate treatment and raise pretext
concerns. At this stage, all that we look for is similarly situated comparators who âwere not
firedâ despite engaging in âsubstantially identical conduct to that which the employer contends
motivated its discharge of the plaintiff.â Jackson v. VHS Detroit Receiving Hosp., Inc., 814 F.3d
769, 779â80 (6th Cir. 2016) (citation omitted). Voss clearly provides that comparison to
Moore.7
Moore also points to Wermeling, who, like Moore, had a workplace accident involving
an AGV. R. 79-12 (Wermeling Incident Email at 1) (Page ID #2977). According to
eyewitnesses, Wermeling had been stumbling around and smelled of alcohol prior to his passing
out in the warehouse. Id. CCBC policy dictates that even when an employeeâs accident
mandated medical care, as Wermelingâs did, they still must be drug and alcohol tested. See R.
69 (Boland Dep. at 116â17) (Page ID #1342â43). Moore alleges that CCBC never drug tested
Wermeling, nor did they take any disciplinary measures against him. R. 79-9 (Adams Decl. at 4)
(Page ID #2965).
Although Moore and Wermeling are not âidentical in every way,â our circuit has never
required that a plaintiff make such a showing to establish a fair comparator, contrary to the
dissenting opinionâs view. Tennial, 840 F.3d at 304. The record shows that (1) Wermeling and
Moore were both forklift drivers; (2) both employees were involved in accidents involving
AGVs, which were considered workplace incidents; and (3) both men should have been drug and
alcohol tested, per company policy.8 See, e.g., Jackson, 814 F.3d at 782â83 (explaining that
7
No amount of inferential reasoning is required to support this analysis, contrary to the dissenting opinionâs
views. Dissenting Op. at 29. The dissenting opinionâs take that Voss not being fired despite failing a drug test
under an SCA is âimmaterial to our Title VII analysisâ is nothing more than ipse dixit.
8
The dissenting opinion states that âthe majority decides for itself that Wermeling should have been drug
testedâ and that âthe majorityâs Wermeling-should-have-been-drug-tested decision is evidence that Wermeling is
similarly situated to Moore.â Dissenting Op. at 30. These statements suggest that we somehow injected our own
judgment into this case, when in fact the record amply demonstrates that a reasonable juror could find that
No. 23-3775 Moore v. Coca-Cola Page 21
there is no requirement âthat a plaintiff and her comparator must commit exactly the same
mistake in order to permit a reasonable inference of intentional discrimination from their
differential disciplineâ and that âinfractions substantially identical in terms of severity of
potential consequencesâ and âsubstantially identicalâ in terms of âthe circumstances of the
mistakes themselvesâ allow for fair comparison). If anything, Wermelingâs conduct was more
serious than that which gave rise to Mooreâs SCA: Wermeling was seriously injured due to his
passing out in the AGVâs path and the incident caused a halt in production. R. 79-8 (Ervin Decl.
œœ 20â23) (Page ID #2958â59). And although the dissenting opinion states that âMoore has put
on little evidence about Wermeling other than some speculation that he was a supposed alcoholic
in the warehouse,â Dissenting Op. at 30, the record evidence demonstrates otherwise, see, e.g.,
R. 79-12 (Wermeling Incident Email at 1) (Page ID #2977) (internal company email about
accident stating âit has been said [Wermeling] was stumbling around prior to this and smelled of
alcoholâ); R. 79-8 (Ervin Decl. Âś 7) (Page ID #2956) (âI frequently observed Werm[eling]
coming to work drunk and under the influence of alcohol. It was common knowledge in the
warehouse amongst the employees, managers and supervisors that Werm[eling] had a drinking
problem.â).
All told, the record evidence at least raises fact issues that Wermeling, who was similarly
situated to Moore with respect to both job duties and with respect to a workplace accident, was
treated differently than Moore. Wermeling was not drug or alcohol tested when he should have
been, whereas Moore was. This was in spite of Wermeling engaging in chronic misconduct and
being involved in a more significant accident. This is far different than simply concluding that
Wermeling âwork[ed] at the same company as [Moore] and ha[d] a different work experience.â
Dissenting Op. at 30. We hold that there exists a genuine issue of material fact as to whether
Moore and Wermeling were treated differently while engaging in similar conduct.
Wermeling and Moore were treated differently. As to the former, the record indisputably shows that Wermeling
should have been drug tested. R. 79-12 (Wermeling Incident Email at 3) (Page ID #2979) (internal company email
with subject line âDid you ask to have John Wermeling drug/alcohol tested?â and response âNo. I sent Russ an e-
mail on Thursday letting him know [] [t]hat he needs [to be] drug tested.â). And as to the latter, there are myriad
issues of fact associated with CCBCâs knowledge of Wermelingâs alcohol problems, as discussed in our opinion.
That the dissenting opinion decides for itself which facts it accepts and which facts it discounts at this juncture
shows that it is usurping the juryâs proper role.
No. 23-3775 Moore v. Coca-Cola Page 22
At this stage in Mooreâs case, we hold that he has sufficiently shown that there is a
genuine dispute of material fact as to whether CCBC treated Moore less favorably than similarly
situated white employees, and REVERSE and REMAND the district courtâs granting CCBCâs
motion for summary judgment.
D. Retaliation Claims
Moore also argues that CCBC engaged in retaliation against him. Appellant Br. at 20â
25. To make out his prima facie case for retaliation, Moore must demonstrate that: â(1) he
engaged in activity protected by Title VII; (2) his exercise of such protected activity was known
by the defendant; (3) thereafter, the defendant took an action that was âmaterially adverseâ to the
plaintiff; and (4) a causal connection existed between the protected activity and the materially
adverse action.â Laster v. City of Kalamazoo, 746 F.3d 714, 730(6th Cir. 2014). As with Mooreâs disparate-treatment claim, the district court assumed that he had made out his prima facie case for retaliation. Moore,2023 WL 5647825
, at *5.
CCBC does not contest the district courtâs assumption for the purposes of this appeal.
Appellee Br. at 19â20. The parties do not dispute that Moore filed claims that he was being
discriminated against, that Boland and other managers knew about Mooreâs actions, or that
Moore was terminated from CCBC. Moore filed a number of grievances against CCBC in 2018,
including one that pre-dated the random drug test on July 12, 2018 (which ultimately resulted in
Mooreâs termination) by only six days. See R. 79-5 (Moore Grievances) (Page ID #2946â52).
Given the temporal proximity between Moore filing his EEO grievances and the adverse
employment action taken against him, Moore has shown âsufficient temporal proximity to
establish a causal connection.â Rogers v. Henry Ford Health Sys., 897 F.3d 763, 776â77 (6th
Cir. 2018).
Once a plaintiff has sufficiently established their prima facie case for retaliation, the
burden shifts to the defendant to show that they had a nondiscriminatory reason for their actions.
CCBC asserts the same reasons for its actions as it does with regards to Mooreâs discrimination
claim. Appellant Br. at 20â21. If these articulated reasons are legitimate, the burden again shifts
to Moore to produce sufficient evidence to permit a reasonable factfinder to conclude that they
No. 23-3775 Moore v. Coca-Cola Page 23
are pretextual. Again, Moore asserts that CCBCâs proffered reasons are pretextual because
similarly situated white employees were treated differently than he was. Appellant Br. at 27â29.
With his discussion of CCBCâs treatment of Voss and Wermeling, Moore has demonstrated that
there is a genuine dispute of material fact on the question of pretext. Accordingly, we
REVERSE and REMAND the district courtâs grant of CCBCâs motion for summary judgment
on Mooreâs retaliation claim, and REMAND for further proceedings.
III. CONCLUSION
We REVERSE the district courtâs judgment that Moore failed to raise disputes of
material fact concerning (1) whether he signed the LCA knowingly and voluntarily; and
(2) whether CCBCâs proffered reasons for terminating Moore were pretextual. We REMAND
for proceedings consistent with our opinion.
No. 23-3775 Moore v. Coca-Cola Page 24
_________________
DISSENT
_________________
ALICE M. BATCHELDER, Circuit Judge, dissenting. Because the majority and I see
this case differently, I must respectfully dissent. For the reasons that follow, I would affirm the
summary judgment for CCBC for the reasons contained in the district courtâs opinion.
CCBC fired Moore twiceâfor two separate reasons and two different and unrelated
circumstances. In June 2017, CCBC fired Moore for inciting a work slowdown, but his Union
representative negotiated a reprieve through a one-page Last Chance Agreement (LCA). They
had a ten-minute meeting with the CCBC supervisor, and the Union rep advised Moore to âjust
sign [the LCA] and get back to workâ because â[i]tâs better to fight with a job than fight without
a job.â So, Moore signed the LCA, which released CCBC âfrom any and all liability of any kind
whatsoever, relating to [Mooreâs] employment with [CCBC], arising prior to th[at] date.â And
Moore went back to work. Then, in July 2018, Moore failed a random drug test and CCBC fired
him again, this time permanently. Moore sued, claiming that the circumstances of his âadverse
employment actionâ established an actionable inference of unlawful racial discrimination and
retaliation.
As an initial matter, an âadverse employment actionâ is a significant adverse change in
employment status, such as a firing, reassignment with significantly different responsibilities, or
a decision causing significant change in benefits, including the denial of a raise or promotion.
Burlington Indus., Inc. v. Ellerth, 524 U.S. 742, 761(1998); Redlin v. Grosse Pointe Pub. Sch. Sys.,921 F.3d 599
, 607â08 (6th Cir. 2019). Requiring an employee to submit to a drug test does not meet this definition and we have never held that drug testing is an adverse employment action, contrary to the majorityâs characterization of the drug tests at issue here. Other Circuits have held that a compulsory drug test could be an adverse employment action if the âdrug test is not performed in a routine fashion following the regular and legitimate practices of the employer, but is conducted in a manner that harasses or humiliates employees.â E.g., Stockett v. Muncie Indiana Transit System,221 F.3d 997
, 1001â02 (7th Cir. 2000). Nothing here suggests that
No. 23-3775 Moore v. Coca-Cola Page 25
CCBCâs drug tests were the kind of harassing act that would constitute an adverse employment
action. Therefore, Mooreâs only colorable âadverse employment actionsâ are the two firings.
Take the second one first. Moore failed a drug test. Even accepting that Moore can
make out a prima facie case, that is a legitimate nondiscriminatory and nonretaliatory reason for
CCBC to fire him. So Moore argues that it was not the ârealâ reason but was just a pretextual
excuse to fire him. He argues that CCBC actually fired him because he is Black and to retaliate
against him. As explained below, I am not persuaded that Moore has produced a material
question for a jury as to whether this was pretextual. Rather, I agree with the district courtâs
assessment that he has not.
As for the first firing, Moore waived any legal claim concerning that firing when he
signed the LCA (and regained his job). I do not find the waiver ambiguous or confusing in any
way: âany and all liability of any kind whatsoeverâ appears very clear to me, particularly when
the LCA was neither a complex nor a lengthy legal document. It was one page long, including a
one-paragraph waiver. See Doc. 76-6, PageID#2545. And, as explained below, I do not agree
that Moore cannot be expected to understand this; we have never held that a waiver signor must
have a highly relevant education before entering a waiver agreement. In fact, Mooreâs education
supports the notion that a reasonable person with Mooreâs education could enter this waiver
knowingly and voluntarily. Regardless, Moore signed the LCA based on consultation withâand
upon the recommendation ofâhis Union representative, which is exactly the protection that
unions provide their members.
I.
I proceed by assuming, as the district court did, that Moore met his prima facie burden for
bringing his Title VII claims (racial discrimination and retaliation) related to his second
termination. See McDonnell Douglas Corp. v. Green, 411 U.S. 792, 802(1973); see also White v. Baxter Healthcare Corp.,533 F.3d 381, 391
(6th Cir. 2008) (race discrimination); E.E.O.C. v. Avery Dennison Corp.,104 F.3d 858
, 860 (6th Cir. 1997) (retaliation).1 In turn, CCBC argues
1
We review the district courtâs grant of summary judgment de novo, Scheick v. Tecumseh Pub. Schs.,
766 F.3d 523, 528(6th Cir. 2014), construing the evidence in the light most favorable to the nonmovant. Sloat v. No. 23-3775 Moore v. Coca-Cola Page 26 that Moore was firedâthe second timeâbecause of a positive drug test. That fact is undisputed and is a legitimate reason for Mooreâs second termination. McDonnell Douglas, 411 U.S. at 802â04 (explaining that âunlawful conductâ is a legitimate, nonretaliatory reason for adverse employment decisions). So, based on this record, Moore must show that there is a genuine issue of material fact as to whether CCBCâs proffered reason was pretextual.Id.
at 804â05; see also Blount v. Stanley Engâg Fastening,55 F.4th 504
, 510â11 (6th Cir. 2022).
After a workplace accident involving an AGV and Mooreâs operation of a forklift, Moore
was drug tested and placed on his SCA which subjected him to random drug tests for a period of
24 months. As the majority explains, Mooreâs initial post-accident drug test did not return
positive results for purposes of CCBCâs drug and alcohol policy. However, Moore was still
placed on a Second Chance Agreement (SCA). Moore has not proffered evidence suggesting
that this mistaken placement was anything other than a mistake. And an employerâs mistakes or
negligenceâeven baseless, foolish, or trivial actionsâdo not amount to pretext for Title VII
discrimination or retaliation. Seeger v. Cincinnati Bell Tel. Co., 681 F.3d 274, 285â86 (6th Cir. 2007). Moreover, âan employerâs failure to follow self-imposed regulations or procedures is generally insufficient to support a finding of pretext.â Miles v. S. Cent. Hum. Res. Agency, Inc.,946 F.3d 883, 896
(6th Cir. 2020) (internal quotation marks and citation omitted). Although
Moore cannot prove that his being placed on the SCA was pretextual, he proffers more
arguments.
Generally, Title VII plaintiffs try to show pretext through âone of three ways: (1) by
showing that the employerâs articulated reason had no basis in fact; (2) by showing that the
reason would have been insufficient to motivate the employerâs action; or (3) by showing that
the reason did not actually motivate that action.â Blount, 55 F.4th at 510(citation omitted). These three pretext categories present a convenient way of asking if the employer terminated the employee for the stated reason or not. Miles,946 F.3d at 888
. To surpass the pretext-stage of the McDonnell Douglas burden-shifting framework at summary judgment, the plaintiff must present evidence which would permit a reasonable jury to reject the employerâs proffered reason Hewlett-Packard Enter. Co.,18 F.4th 204, 209
(6th Cir. 2021). Summary judgment shall be granted âif the movant shows that there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.â Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a). No. 23-3775 Moore v. Coca-Cola Page 27 for taking the adverse action against the plaintiff. Blount,55 F.4th at 510
. Here, Moore has not
met that burden.
In essence, Moore argues pretext by trying to show that CCBCâs proffered reason for
firing him the second time was insufficient to motivate the decision to fire him.2 Typically, this
is done by presenting evidence that other employees engaged in similar conduct but were not
disciplined. Manzer v. Diamond Shamrock Chem. Co., 29 F.3d 1078, 1084(6th Cir. 1994), overruled on other grounds by Reeves v. Sanderson Plumbing Prods., Inc.,530 U.S. 133
(2000). These so-called Title VII comparators âshould be similarly situated âin all relevant respects.ââ Blount,55 F.4th at 511
(emphasis in original) (citing Wright v. Murray Guard, Inc.,455 F.3d 702, 710
(6th Cir. 2006)). âSuperficial similaritiesâ between the plaintiff and his colleagues will not make them comparators to the plaintiff.Id.
at 511â12. And, in the disciplinary context, to be similarly situated, the plaintiff and his proffered comparator must have committed acts of âcomparable seriousness.â Wright,455 F.3d at 710
. Moreover, differences in disciplinary
2
Moore also argues that his second termination had no basis in fact, and that CCBCâs proffered reason for
the second termination (the over 300 ng per milliliter positive drug test) did not actually motivate CCBCâs decision
to terminate him. Moore advances the same pretext âfactsâ for each way to demonstrate pretextâCCBC allegedly
treated similarly situated white employees better than him. These pretext arguments fail.
First, to show that an employerâs proffered reason for terminating him had no basis in fact, Moore would
have to show that the employerâs proffered reason never happened, i.e., show âthat the employer did not actually
have causeâ to terminate him. Seeger, 681 F.3d at 285(citation omitted); see also Manzer v. Diamond Shamrock Chem. Co.,29 F.3d 1078, 1084
(6th Cir. 1994) (â[This] type of showing is easily recognizable and consists of evidence that the proffered [reasons] for the plaintiffâs discharge never happened.â), overruled on other grounds by Reeves v. Sanderson Plumbing Prods., Inc.,530 U.S. 133
(2000). It is undisputed that Moore tested well-above the
threshold for a positive drug test, which is a legitimate basis for his termination. Therefore, Mooreâs second
termination had a basis in fact. Accordingly, this no-basis-in-fact method of showing pretext is not a viable
argument for Moore.
Second, to show that an employerâs proffered reason for termination did not actually motivate the decision,
Moore would have to advance an âindirectâ attack on the reason through circumstantial evidence. Manzer, 29 F.3d
at 1084. This method of showing pretext âadmits that the reason could motivate the employer but argues that the illegal reason is more likely than the proffered reason to have motivated the employer.â Joostberns v. UPS,166 F. Appâx 783, 791
(6th Cir. Jan. 9, 2006) (citing Manzer,29 F.3d at 1084
); see also Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc.,477 U.S. 242, 257
(1986). Moore simply has not presented enough circumstantial evidence to give rise to a genuine issue of material fact related to pretext under this circumstantial-pretext method. âThis method . . . is not identical to a prima facie case. Rather, it requires the plaintiff to submit additional evidence.â Joostberns,166 F. Appâx at 791
(citing Manzer,29 F.3d at 1084
). This ââadditional evidenceâ requirement is limited to the production of evidence rebutting the defendantâs proffered legitimate, nondiscriminatory reason for taking the challenged action.â Blair v. Henry Filters, Inc.,505 F.3d 517, 533
(6th Cir. 2007) (citation omitted). At summary judgment, Mooreâs âburden of producing evidence of pretext merges with the burden of persuasion, which always lies with the plaintiff.â Rosenthal v. Faygo Bevs., Inc.,701 F. Appâx 472, 480
(6th Cir. July 17, 2017) (internal quotation marks omitted) (citing Gragg v. Somerset Technical Coll.,373 F.3d 763, 768
(6th Cir. 2004)). No. 23-3775 Moore v. Coca-Cola Page 28 history may dispel any notion that a supposed comparator is similarly situated to the plaintiff. Tennial v. UPS,840 F.3d 292, 304
(6th Cir. 2016).
Moore argues that he was randomly drug tested six times pursuant to his second chance
agreement (SCA). He further alleges that he was the only employee tested. Mooreâs own
evidence shows that these claims are false. For starters, he was tested five times. See Doc. 79-
11, PageID#2976. One of the supposed âsixâ tests was duplicative. The sample that Moore had
given was unsuitable, so he had to give another sample for that test. Moreover, he was not the
only person tested on the days during which CCBC conducted random drug tests. On July 14,
2017, both Moore and Larry Voss (a white employee) were drug tested. Id.Another employeeâone who Moore does not allege is a comparatorâwas tested around the same time as Moore in July of 2018. Shonte Butts was drug tested on July 9, 2018, while Moore was tested on July 12, 2018.Id.
And the record reflects that if an employee who is subject to random drug
testing is not present on the testing day, then that employee will be drug tested on the next day
possible. Doc. 72-3, PageID#2229. So, at least two of those tests were not done in isolation.
Based on this record, the majorityâs conclusion that the district court erred in holding
âthat Moore [had] failed to establish pretextâ with regard to his second termination faces three
problems. First, this case is before us on summary judgment. Therefore, we review whether
Moore has presented evidence from which a reasonable jury could conclude that he established
pretext. Second, Larry Voss (a white employee)âMooreâs only true Title VII comparatorâwas
not treated so differently that we can conclude that Moore has presented evidence which could
permit a reasonable jury to conclude that he was pretextually terminated. Third, by concluding
that John Wermeling (another white employee) is a Title VII comparator, the majority
impermissibly expands who can be considered such a comparator.3
3
The majority also mentions âPaul Minlandâ in passing, stating that he was a white employee who had a
workplace accident but was not drug tested. To the reader of the majority opinion, the majorityâs inclusion of
Minland would suggest that another Title VII comparator was treated better than Moore. Beyond speculation and
conjecture, the record is devoid of information on Paul Minland and whether he had a workplace accident, whether
he was ever disciplined, if he was subject to an SCA, or if he was ever drug tested. âConclusory statements
unadorned with supporting facts are insufficient to establish a factual dispute that will defeat summary judgment.â
Alexander v. CareSource, 576 F.3d 551, 560 (6th Cir. 2009).
No. 23-3775 Moore v. Coca-Cola Page 29
Like Moore, Larry Voss was subject to random drug tests after being placed on an SCA,
effective from June 5, 2015, to June 5, 2017. The record reflects that Voss was tested four times
pursuant to that agreement. Doc. 80-1, PageID#3023. On May 3, 2017, Voss was drug tested
after having a workplace accident. Doc. 79-11, PageID#2976. But he was not fired until
October 3, 2018, after he failed another random drug test. This test, submitted on September 18,
2018, was conducted outside of Vossâs SCA timeframe but was conducted pursuant to the
expired SCA. Doc. 72-5, PageID#2247; Doc. 79-22, PageID#2998â3000.
To be sure, Voss is similarly situated to Moore. Both men were tested a similar number
of times pursuant to their respective SCAâsâVoss four times and Moore five times. And Voss
was tested another timeâafter his SCA had expired but still under the âauthorityâ of the expired
SCAâwhich resulted in a positive test, leading to his ultimate termination. But, to demonstrate
pretext based on a Title VII comparatorâs treatment, Moore must show that the comparator was
not disciplined for substantially similar conduct. McDonnell Douglas, 411 U.S. at 804. Here,
Voss was disciplined. This should be the end of it. Moore cannot prove pretext based on how
CCBC treated Voss.
However, the majority takes issue with the fact that Voss was not immediately fired after
a positive drug test (post-workplace accident), but that fact is immaterial to our Title VII
analysis. Both men were ultimately fired pursuant to SCA agreements. To conclude
otherwiseâthereby making that fact materialâis to give credence to an inference entirely
unsupported by the record. That inference must go something like this: CCBC wanted Moore
fired so badly that when Voss tested positive after his SCAâs expiration, CCBC had to fire Voss
to cover its firing of Moore (who tested positive within his own SCAâs timeframe). In other
words, Vossâs firing was only done as part of a discriminatory and retaliatory scheme to get rid
of Moore. This speculative inference is not supported by the record. At summary judgment, we
are not required to construe speculative inferences and conclusory allegations as genuine issues
of material fact. Alexander v. CareSource, 576 F.3d 551, 560(6th Cir. 2009); Harbin-Bey v. Rutter,420 F.3d 571, 580
(6th Cir. 2005) (explaining that circumstantial evidence of retaliation
amounting to no âmore than bare allegationsâ will not be enough to defeat a motion for summary
judgment).
No. 23-3775 Moore v. Coca-Cola Page 30
Unlike Moore, Wermeling was not subject to an SCA. Contrary to the majorityâs
characterization, Wermeling was not involved in a similar workplace accident, i.e., he was not
operating equipment when he walked into an AGV and passed out on the floor of the CCBC
warehouse. Doc. 79-8, PageID#2958â59; Doc. 79-12, PageID#2977. So, he was not subject to
the same disciplinary actions applicable to those who cause workplace accidents. Remember,
differences in disciplinary history may dispel any notion that a supposed comparator is similarly
situated to a Title VII plaintiff. Tennial, 840 F.3d at 304. In fact, Moore has put on little evidence about Wermeling other than some speculation that he was a supposed alcoholic in the warehouse. But the majority decides for itself that Wermeling should have been drug tested. Apparently, the majorityâs Wermeling-should-have-been-drug-tested decision is evidence that Wermeling is similarly situated to Moore. Not so. The record reflects that the plant managerâ who had the capability to fire warehouse employeesâwas not aware of Wermelingâs apparent alcohol problems. Doc. 72-3, PageID#2229â30; Doc. 79-12; PageID#2977â81. Moore and Wermeling were not engaged in similar misconduct; nor were Moore and Wermeling subject to similar disciplinary actions. Cf. Miles,946 F.3d at 894
. Therefore, Wermeling is not similarly
situated to Moore in all relevant respects. Wermeling is not a comparator.
The only similarity between Moore and Wermelingânot counting the majorityâs factual
characterizations and decisionsâis that both men worked for the CCBC warehouse as forklift
operators. Relying on this sole similarity, the majority has now done away with the âall relevant
respectsâ requirement. Contra Blount, 55 F.4th at 511. Under the majorityâs analysis in this opinion, only one inquiry is relevant to determine whether someone is a Title VII comparator: did he or she work at the same company as the Title VII plaintiff and have a different work experience? If so, stop there. That person is a comparator. What were formerly superficial similarities, seeid.
at 511â12, are now all that is required to establish that one is a comparator for Title VII purposes. But our binding precedent requires asking whether any proffered comparator was similarly situated in all relevant respects and if that comparator had engaged in acts of comparable seriousness. Id.; see also Tennial,840 F.3d at 304
.
No. 23-3775 Moore v. Coca-Cola Page 31
II.
The majority opinion reads as though, based on Mooreâs education and type of education,
a reasonable juror could conclude that he did not knowingly and voluntarily enter the LCA.
Once more, not so. First, the majorityâs education-factor analysis and conclusion distorts our
âknowing and voluntaryâ test for waiver agreements, twisting the test into a subjective one rather
than an objective, reasonable person test. Second, and relatedly, we have never held that a
person entering a waiver agreement (a âsignorâ) must have a specific level or type of education
to sign a waiver knowingly and voluntarily. Third, Mooreâs education actually supports the
assumption that he could enter the waiver knowingly and voluntarily. Fourth, and finally, the
other waiver factors also support the assumption that Moore could enter the waiver knowingly
and voluntarily.
We apply âordinary contract principlesâ to determine whether a waiver agreement is
valid. Seawright v. Am. Gen. Fin., Inc., 507 F.3d 967, 973(6th Cir. 2007) (citing Morrison v. Circuit City Stores, Inc.,317 F.3d 646, 668
(6th Cir. 2003) (en banc)); see also Nicklin v. Henderson,352 F.3d 1077, 1080
(6th Cir. 2003) (âFederal common law controls the validity of a release of a federal cause of action.â). In applying these principles, âas with any other contract, the partiesâ intentions control.â M&G Polymers USA, LLC v. Tackett,574 U.S. 427
, 435 (2015) (citing Stolt-Nielson S.A. v. AnimalFeeds Intâl Corp.,559 U.S. 662, 682
(2010)); see also Adams v. Philip Morris, Inc.,67 F.3d 580, 585
(6th Cir. 1995). Those intentions are marked by the contract, and when the contract is âclear and unambiguous, its meaning is to be ascertained in accordance with its plainly expressed intent.â M&G Polymers USA, LLC, 574 U.S. at 435 (citing 11 R. Lord, Williston on Contracts §30:6, p. 108 (4th ed. 2012) (Williston) (internal quotation marks omitted)). But when contractual terms are ambiguous, we give those terms their ordinary and natural meaning from the perspective of a reasonable person entering the contract (or waiver) at issue. See Stryker Corp. v. Natâl Union Fire Ins. Co. of Pittsburgh, PA,842 F.3d 422, 426
(6th Cir. 2016); Seawright,507 F.3d at 973
; Adams,67 F.3d at 583
(applying âordinary contract principles in determining whether . . . a waiver is validâ); see also Universal Health Servs. v. United States ex rel. Escobar,579 U.S. 176, 193
(2016) (explaining that â[m]ateriality
in contract lawâ depends on a reasonable person standard). In other words, when we apply
No. 23-3775 Moore v. Coca-Cola Page 32
ordinary contract principles to a waiver issue such as this, we apply an objective, reasonable-
person test. Put differently, we ask whether a reasonable person entering the waiver agreement
at issue would be able to do so knowingly and voluntarily.4
To answer this inquiry, we use a set of five factors to evaluate whether a signor entered a
waiver agreement knowingly and voluntarily. Tillman v. Macyâs, Inc., 735 F.3d 453, 461(6th Cir. 2013). We balance (1) the signorâs experience, background, and education; (2) the amount of time that the signor had to consider the waiver, including whether the signor could have consulted an attorney; (3) the clarity of the waiver; (4) consideration for the waiver; and (5) the totality of the circumstances.Id.
We use this âknowing and voluntaryâ waiver-test to compare the immediate signorâs situation with other analogous signors, directing ourselves back to ordinary contract principles and whether a reasonable person could enter the waiver knowingly and voluntarily. Seawright, 507 F.3d at 973â74 (citing Morrison,317 F.3d at 668
); Adams,67 F.3d at 583
; see also Solomon v. Carite Corp. LLC,837 F. Appâx 355
, 362 (6th Cir. Nov. 23,
2020).
The majority homes in on Mooreâs education, stating that âa reasonable juror could find
that [his] fashion merchandising and healthcare administration [post-secondary] degrees did not
4
While our precedent suggests, and the majority recognizes, that we âmust remain[] alert to ensure that
employers do not defeat the policies of . . . Title VII by taking advantage of [a] superior bargaining position,â
McClellan v. Midwest Machining, Inc., 900 F.3d 297, 303(6th Cir. 2018) (internal quotation marks and citation omitted), the jurisprudential weight of this suggestion is suspect. Principally, this suggestion places âa thumb on the scaleâ in favor of employees when considering the validity of a waiver in the Title VII context. Cf. M&G Polymers USA, LLC v. Tackett,574 U.S. 427
, 438 (2015) (discussing âplacing a thumb on the scale in favor of vested retiree benefits in all collective-bargaining agreementsâ). Such thumb placing âhas no basis in ordinary principles of contract law. And it distorts the attempt to ascertain the intention of the parties.âId.
(internal quotation marks and citation omitted). Moreover, â[m]ere inequality in bargaining power . . . is not a sufficient reason toâ claim that an agreement is invalid. Gilmer v. Interstate/Johnson Lane Corp.,500 U.S. 20, 33
(1991).
Of course, when an employer abuses his or her position in bargaining over a waiver, then we ought to
consider that abuse as a factor cutting against knowing and voluntary entry into a waiver agreement. Such abuse
could manifest itself in the form of an unconscionable contract marked by unfairness, oppression, or a lack of
meaningful choice. Morrison v. Circuit City Stores, Inc., 70 F. Supp. 2d 815, 821(S.D. Ohio 1999) affâd,317 F.3d 646
(6th Cir. 2003); see also Hayes v. Oakridge Home,122 Ohio St. 3d 63
, 67â71 (Ohio 2009); Unconscionable Agreement, Blackâs Law Dictionary (12th ed. 2024). Here, the record reflects that CCBC did not abuse that position. Cf. Solomon v. Carite Corp. LLC,837 F. Appâx 355
, 363 (6th Cir. Nov. 23, 2020); Gascho v. Scheuer Hosp.,400 F. Appâx 978, 983
(6th Cir. Nov. 17, 2020) (âAn ordinary offer to make a contract commonly involves
an implied threat by one party, the offeror, not to make the contract unless his terms are accepted by the other party,
the offeree.â (citing Restatement (Second) of Contracts § 176 cmt. a (2010))). Mooreâs union representation was
lackluster, but both CCBC and Moore had the right to rely on that representation in negotiating the LCA.
No. 23-3775 Moore v. Coca-Cola Page 33
provide him with sufficient education or experience to understand that he was specifically
waiving his rights to bring past discrimination and retaliation claims. . . .â By homing in on
Mooreâs education and the type of his education, the majority impermissibly makes the waiver-
test subjective instead of asking whether a reasonable person in Mooreâs situation could
knowingly and voluntarily enter the LCA.
Relatedly, the majority distorts our waiver precedent related to a signorâs education and
experience, making it a more subjective inquiry to the immediate signorâs level and type of
education. In effect, this distortion creates a new requirement that signors must have highly
relevant education.5 We have never held that signors must possess a certain level and type of
education to enter a waiver agreement. See, e.g., Soltis v. J.C. Penney Corp., 635 F. Appâx 245,
250(6th Cir. Dec. 18, 2015) (âRegarding the first factor, [the signor] only agues that she has not previously dealt with signing [waivers] but cites no authority to support that such experience is required under our precedent.â). And Moore has not cited to any authority in our circuit stating that a signor must have some highly relevant experience or education to enter a waiver knowingly and voluntarily. The majority looks to Seawright,507 F.3d at 974
, and Morrison,317 F.3d at 668
, for support of its new requirement. To be sure, both cases discuss each respective signorâs education and experience. In Seawright, the majority held that âan educated, managerial employeeâ was capable of understanding the waiver at issue while explaining that other factors, such as time and clarity, supported concluding that she knowingly and voluntarily entered the waiver. 507 F.3d at 973â74. In Morrison, the majority concluded that the signor knowingly and voluntarily entered her waiver agreement because she was a âhighly educated managerial employeeâ presented with a âplainâ and clear waiver, and she had three days to consider it.317 F.3d at 668
. But these cases found that the signors were capable of knowingly
5
Consider the absurdity of this distortion/requirement. Take, for instance, the agreement one signs when
getting a new cell phone or the terms and conditions that we all tacitly agree to before updating our latest technology
gadgets. As the signor, based on the majority opinion, one cannot conceivably enter those agreements (which
include waivers) knowingly and voluntarily unless he or she has a background in technology, or a legal education as
related to technology or intellectual property. And, based on the majority opinion, one might need both. It does not
take an economist to understand what happens next. The pool of potential consumers who can knowingly and
voluntarily enter these tech-agreements is virtually drained. The common men and women of this country lose in
that scenario. Do the large tech companies entrenched in a jungle of rules and regulations change their agreements
in turn? Likely not. It is not for the judiciary to act as legislators, imposing veiled requirements with no judicial or
legislative basis.
No. 23-3775 Moore v. Coca-Cola Page 34
and voluntarily entering the agreements. Neither case turned on the specific level and type of
education that a signor had or made education and experience dispositive, opting, instead, to
faithfully apply our knowing-and-voluntary test for waivers by balancing the factors while using
ordinary principles of contract law.
Our precedent requires that we consider whether the signorâs âexperience, background,
and educationâ generally indicate whether the signor entered the waiver knowingly and
voluntarily while considering the other factors, not that the signor have some certain level or type
of experience or education. See, e.g., Tillman, 735 F.3d at 461â62 (explaining that although the
signor was only a âhigh-school graduate,â she could still understand the waiver because it was
clear and she had ample time to consider it and could consult an attorney); Seawright, 507 F.3d
at 973â74; Adams, 67 F.3d at 582, 583(explaining that the experience and background of the signor, who worked for the defendant-employer for nine years, supported the conclusion that he could enter the waiver knowingly and voluntarily). No precedential opinion requires what the majority doesâthat a signor have some highly relevant experience, background, or education. And, albeit unpublished, multiple cases in our circuit directly contradict the majority opinion on this front. See Solomon, 837 F. Appâx at 362 (explaining that a high-school-level education and some post-secondary education, along with experience reviewing car sales contracts, supported the signorâs knowing and voluntary waiving of Title VII claims); Hank v. Great Lakes Constr. Co.,790 F. Appâx 690
, 699 (6th Cir. Oct. 18, 2019) (explaining that general education will support knowing and voluntary entry into a waiver); Soltis,635 F. Appâx at 250
; Sako v. Ohio Depât of Admin. Servs.,278 F. Appâx 514
, 518â19 (6th Cir. May 16, 2008) (explaining that a
French-speaking African immigrant with a high school diploma could understand the waiver at
issue even with his background and that level of education).6
6
In addition, none of our sister circuits conducts a hyper-subjective level-and-type-of-education analysis or
imposes a highly relevant requirement for experience, background, and education in Title VII waiver cases. See
Geoffroy v. Town of Winchendon, 959 F.3d 1, 8(1st Cir. 2020); Long v. Corning Inc.,847 F. Appâx 74
, 75 n.7 (2d Cir. May 10, 2021) (citing Livingston v. Adirondack Beverage Co.,141 F.3d 434, 438
(2d Cir. 1998)); Jakimas v. Hoffmann-LaRoche, Inc.,485 F.3d 770, 781
(3d Cir. 2007); Cassiday v. Greenhorne & OâMara, Inc.,220 F. Supp. 2d 488
, 493â94 (D. Md. 2002), affâd per curiam,63 F. Appâx 169
(4th Cir. May 21, 2003); Smith v. Amedisys Inc.,298 F.3d 434, 441
(5th Cir. 2002); Hakim v. Accenture United States Pension Plan,718 F.3d 675, 684
(7th Cir. 2013); Warnebold v. Union P. Railroad,963 F.2d 222
, 223â24 (8th Cir. 1992); Nilsson v. City of Mesa,503 F.3d 947, 952
(9th Cir. 2007) (explaining that work experience and college-level education was sufficient experience and
No. 23-3775 Moore v. Coca-Cola Page 35
Furthermore, Mooreâs experience, background, and education actually support the
assumption that he entered his LCA knowingly and voluntarily. He signed a similar second
chance agreement, demonstrating familiarity with the disciplinary process at the CCBC
warehouse. He had worked at the CCBC warehouse for roughly three years, beginning on
March 24, 2015. And he has two post-secondary education degrees. Cf. Seawright, 507 F.3d at
974 (describing the signor as âeducatedâ). Presumably, an individual possessing both a fashion
merchandising degree and a health-care administration degree is capable of reading and
comprehension. Granted, Moore did not go to law school, and he may not be entirely familiar
with legal terms. But we have held that signors with less experience and education have been
able to knowingly and voluntarily enter Title VII waiver agreements. See Solomon, 837 F.
Appâx at 362 (â[H]igh-school-level education [and] some post-secondary education . . . [with]
experience reviewing and executing car sales contracts.â); Hank, 790 F. Appâx at 699
(explaining that âa forty-nine-year-old man with a GED, post-high-school level proficiency in
reading and word comprehension, and high-school-level spelling skillsâ could understand the
waiver); Sako, 278 F. Appâx at 518â19. Mooreâs education, background, and experience cut in
favor of his being able to knowing and voluntarily enter the LCA waiver.
Moreover, the other waiver factors point to the fact that Moore knowingly and voluntarily
entered the LCA waiver. As mentioned, waiver of âany and all liability of any kind whatsoeverâ
in a one-page document with a one-paragraph waiver appears very clear and understandable to
me. We have held that waivers employing virtually identical language are clear or âplainâ and
âunambiguousâ to the signor. Cf. Seawright, 507 F.3d at 974(explaining that the waiver âclearly stated that employees . . . would be waiving their rights to sue in federal courtâ); Nicklin,352 F.3d at 1081
(explaining that the âplain languageâ of a âone-and-a-half page documentâ âunambiguously cover[ed] allâ of the plaintiffâs claims); Adams,67 F.3d at 582, 583
(describing a waiver that ârelease[d], remise[d], and forever discharge[d]â the defendant âof and from all and in all manner of presently existing actions, causes of action, suits, debts, claims, and demands whatsoever in law or equityâ as âplain and unambiguousâ); Solomon, 837 F. Appâx at 363 education to enter the Title VII waiver knowingly and voluntarily); Wright v. Southwestern Bell Tel. Co.,925 F.2d 1288, 1292
(10th Cir. 1991); Paylor v. Hartford Fire Ins. Co.,748 F.3d 1117
, 1124â25 (11th Cir. 2014); Russell v. Harman Intâl Indus.,773 F.3d 253
, 255â56 (D.C. Cir. 2014). No. 23-3775 Moore v. Coca-Cola Page 36 (explaining that a waiver that âwaive[d] an employeeâs right to pursue [federal] rights and remedies in a judicial forumâ was âunambiguous,â leaving âno room for doubt about [its] meaningâ (internal quotation marks omitted)). Unfortunately, here, the majority imposes another requirement for waivers in the name of interpreting our precedentâthat to be clear, waivers must specifically spell out what legal claims the signor is waiving. As explained, and yet again, not so. Additionally, Moore could have asked for more time to review this one-page agreement with a one-paragraph waiver. He did not. See Nicklin,352 F.3d at 1081
; Shupe v. Asplundh Tree Expert Co.,566 F. Appâx 476
, 482â83 (6th Cir. May 22, 2014).
In this circuit, we have said that it is the plaintiffâs âobligation to seek assistance beforeâ
signing the agreement âif [he] felt [he] did not understand [it].â Reid v. Sears, Roebuck and Co.,
790 F.2d 453, 461(6th Cir. 1986). But Moore had union representation during the meeting (albeit not the best), and the record reflects that Moore did not ask for clarification or for any additional assistance. The LCA was also supported by adequate consideration: Moore got his job back in exchange for waiving his claims against CCBC. Cf. Morrison, 317 F.3d at 667â68; see also Cuspide Props. v. Earl Mech. Servs.,53 N.E.3d 818
, 830 (Ohio Ct. App. 2015). Put
simply, the totality of the circumstances points to the fact that Moore entered the LCA
knowingly and voluntarily. Any reasonable person in his situation with prior work experience
with CCBC and two post-secondary education degrees and union representation, faced with a
one-paragraph waiver marked by plain language in a one-page document, would be able to
knowingly and voluntarily enter the waiver. Therefore, any pre-LCA claims were waived and
are no longer actionable.
III.
At least the way I read it, the majority opinion suggestsâwhether intentionally or notâ
that (1) âsimilarly situated employeesâ includes any other employee without limitation and
(2) âknowing and voluntaryâ for purposes of waiver (and presumably contract formation) is now
a subjective test based on that specific personâs level and type of education. Because I cannot
agree with any of this, I must respectfully dissent.