Eric Flynn GROSS, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. PPG INDUSTRIES, INC., Defendant-Appellee.
No. 10-1405
United States Court of Appeals, Seventh Circuit.
Argued Sept. 16, 2010. Decided March 7, 2011.
635 F.3d 884
Before CUDAHY, ROVNER, and EVANS, Circuit Judges.
Eric Flynn Gross sued his employer, PPG Industries, Inc., alleging that PPG‘s handling of his military deployment violated the Uniformed Services Employment and Reemployment Act (“USERRA“),
I.
Following six years of active military duty as an enlisted Marine, Gross began working for PPG Industries in 1997. At the time of argument, Gross continued to work at PPG‘s Oak Creek, Wisconsin facility, which is one of many PPG facilities throughout the United States providing “coatings and specialty products and services” to construction, consumer, industrial, and transportation markets. Gross is employed at PPG as a “General Industrial Technician.” Gross has continued to serve in the United States Marine Corps Reserve while employed at PPG.
Gross was deployed to active military service in Iraq from June 2004 until May 2005.1 Before his deployment, Gross met with human resources advisor Kristi Price, who provided him with a document outlining the benefits PPG would provide to Gross while deployed. Before 2001, PPG provided employees serving in the National Guard or reserves up to four weeks per year of supplemental pay equal to the difference between the employee‘s PPG base salary and his or her military base pay. After the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks, PPG adopted its “Attack on America” policy applicable to military leave. This policy increased the differential pay available to employees on military leave from four weeks to 180 days. PPG‘s military leave policy also guaranteed that a salaried employee like Gross would be entitled to return to his job following a military leave of absence. From 2001 onward, PPG maintained this differential pay policy relatively unchanged except that it increased the availability of differential pay progressively from 180 calendar days in 2001 up to 720 calendar days in 2004.
In particular, the 2004 version of the policy in effect during Gross‘s leave provided that:
A salaried employee who is actively at work (not on layoff) and is called to active duty as a result of the terrorists’ activities shall be paid by the Company an amount equal to the difference between his or her monthly salary for their regular work schedule and the amount of his or her monthly military base pay, exclusive of allowances (adjusted monthly base salary) for a total of 720 calendar days. Payment will be made on the same frequency as normally and via direct deposit only.
PPG Indus. Inc., Military Leave‘s [sic] of Absence—Attack on America Revised, (Apr. 15, 2004) (italicized emphasis added).
From 2001 through May 2007, PPG employed the following basic formula to calculate the pay differential for employees taking a leave of absence for military service: PPG compared an employee‘s regular monthly base salary against the military pay that employee received (exclusive of allowances, such as housing), and then is-
When Gross completed his deployment in 2005, he returned to his position at PPG. At that time, he began questioning the formula PPG had used to calculate his differential pay while he was deployed. Gross submitted a complaint about the pay calculation through PPG‘s “RESOLVE” Employee Dispute Resolution Process. Gross complained that because he was required to work extra days during his deployment (weekends and holidays that he would not have worked at PPG), PPG should have calculated a daily military pay rate and then deducted military pay only for days in a given month that he would have worked at PPG. This formula is based on the 30-day month the Department of Defense uses to pay members of the military regardless of the actual number of days in any given month. Using the same figures as above, it would be calculated using the following formula: (1) $2,000 monthly military pay divided by 30 days equals a $66 per day military pay rate; (2) $66 per diem military pay multiplied by the number of PPG monthly work days—ordinarily 21—equals $1386; (3) this amount is then subtracted from the PPG monthly base pay—$4,000—yielding $2614 in differential pay, as opposed to the $2,000 paid under PPG‘s simple base pay less military pay calculation. PPG declined to revisit its formula for calculating military pay for Gross‘s 2004-05 deployment. It did, however, adopt the calculation urged by Gross (which was the calculation already used for short term military leaves of absence) for military deployments going forward, effective May 1, 2007. Thus, Gross received differential pay for a 2007-08 deployment according to the formula he wanted applied retroactively to his 2004-05 deployment.
Gross sued PPG, alleging that its calculation of his differential pay during his 2004-05 deployment as well as an alleged failure to retrain him upon his return violated provisions of USERRA addressing the reemployment rights of individuals who serve in the military. See
II.
We review the district court‘s decision on the parties’ cross-motions for summary judgment de novo, construing all facts and inferences in favor of the party against whom summary judgment was granted. E.g., Sellers v. Zurich Am. Ins. Co., 627 F.3d 627, 631 (7th Cir. 2010). Summary judgment is appropriate when there are no genuine issues of material fact and judgment as a matter of law is warranted for the moving party. See, e.g.,
We begin with his claim that the pay calculation employed by PPG violated USERRA. Enacted in 1994, USERRA is the most recent iteration of a series of laws dating back to 1940 intended to protect the employment and reemployment rights of members and former members of the armed forces. The stated goals of USERRA are (1) “to encourage noncareer service in the uniformed services by eliminating or minimizing the disadvantages to civilian careers and employment which can result from such service“; (2) “to minimize the disruption” to the service member and others “by providing for the prompt reemployment” of such service members upon their return; and (3) “to prohibit discrimination against persons because of their service in the uniformed services.”2
As relevant here, two related provisions of USERRA govern service members’ employment rights. The first,
The district court considered Gross‘s claim under
First, as the district court recognized, we recently considered and rejected a claim that
The Department later rescinded the policy of allowing Guard employees (who had become more numerous on the force) to reschedule their weekend work shifts on drill weekends. Thus the plaintiff, Crews, could no longer receive a full week‘s pay from the City if he missed a weekend work shift for drill unless he used his finite paid time off days. Id. We rejected Crews‘s assertion that the scheduling benefit previously extended by the police department was a “benefit of employment” protected by
Gross proposes that we overrule Crews to the extent that it holds that a benefit of employment under
Despite Gross‘s insistence that the language guaranteeing “any benefit of employment” under
More importantly, Gross‘s contentions are largely academic, because even if we accepted the interpretation of
Gross attempts to shore up his claim with an unpublished opinion from the Sixth Circuit where the court upheld a damages award under USERRA to an employee serving in the Army Reserve who received no differential pay for a six-month absence for active duty military service. Koehler v. PepsiAmericas, Inc., 268 Fed.Appx. 396 (6th Cir.2008). But Koehler does not help Gross. The plaintiff in Koehler, an employee of Pepsi, received no pay from the company while on military leave. This occurred despite a Pepsi policy entitling certain military employees “pay coordination” intended to “bridge the gap between Military Pay and normal pay received.” Id. at 399. After the plaintiff complained that he had not received differential pay, Pepsi deposited the net pay allegedly owed into his account and then unexpectedly
As the above facts demonstrate, Koehler is inapplicable to Gross‘s situation. The plaintiff there had been promised differential pay by both a company policy and at least one company employee, and received none. In contrast, Gross did receive differential pay under PPG‘s Attack on America Policy. And unlike Pepsi, PPG never admitted a USERRA violation nor acceded to Gross‘s demand that differential pay be calculated according to his preferred formula.
The general premise underlying Gross‘s argument—that an employee may contract with his company for greater benefits than USERRA provides—is uncontroversial. See Crews, 567 F.3d at 867; see also 20 C.F.R. § 1002.7(c) (“USERRA does not supersede, nullify or diminish any . . . contract, agreement, policy, plan, practice or other matter that establishes an employment right or benefit that is more beneficial than . . . a right or benefit provided under the Act.“). It simply does not assist Gross here. PPG‘s Attack on America policy was a voluntary company policy. Gross presents no evidence to the contrary. Moreover, as discussed above, PPG did not fail to perform under the policy or in any way rescind it. The policy in effect during Gross‘s 2004-05 deployment extended differential pay in “an amount equal to the difference between his or her monthly salary for their regular work schedule and the amount of his or her monthly military base pay, exclusive of allowances.” This language says nothing about how that difference will be calculated. The method PPG employed during Gross‘s 2004-05 deployment ensured that Gross suffered no loss of pay or benefits on account of his service. Gross‘s proposed calculation was not guaranteed by the language of the policy. There is thus no need to rely on Crews’ “equal benefits” holding to see that Gross‘s claim fails. There is no evidence in the record that any employee during the relevant time period, military or otherwise, received differential pay according to the calculation Gross proposes. Because PPG did extend differential pay to Gross, overruling Crews would not assist Gross with his argument that
That leaves what Gross characterizes as his retaliation claim under
Section 4311(b)(1) prohibits an employer from taking “any adverse employment action against any person because such person . . . has taken an action to enforce a protection” guaranteed by USERRA. Thus, Gross must demonstrate that he engaged in activity protected under USERRA and that PPG took an adverse employment action against him as a result. See Francis v. Booz, Allen, & Hamilton, Inc., 452 F.3d 299, 309 (4th Cir.2006); see also Crews, 567 F.3d at 868-69. As we noted in Crews, the same requirement of a “materially adverse” employment action that applies under other civil rights statutes is applicable under USERRA. Crews, 567 F.3d at 868-69. That is to say, Gross must point to an employment action such as termination, demotion accompanied by a loss of pay, or a material loss of benefits or responsibilities that “significantly alters the terms of conditions” of his employment. Id. at 869 (quoting Griffin v. Potter, 356 F.3d 824, 829 (7th Cir.2004)).
Gross claims that he engaged in protected activity by complaining about PPG‘s calculation of his differential pay, and that PPG retaliated when it decided to “deny [him] differential pay.” He also seems to be arguing that PPG‘s original calculation of his differential pay was an adverse employment action, despite the fact that this calculation obviously preceded his RESOLVE complaint about this very issue. It is easy to see that Gross‘s claim fails on multiple levels. First, contrary to the assertion in Gross‘s brief, PPG never “denied” him differential pay—it simply did not calculate that pay according to Gross‘s preferred formula.
Second, the calculation employed by PPG does not amount to an adverse employment action. PPG considered his RESOLVE complaint and determined that its calculation of differential pay conformed with both USERRA and its internal Attack on America Policy. As discussed above, Gross suffered no loss of pay or benefits as a result of his 2004-05 deployment, and PPG was entirely within its rights to interpret its policy as it did. Moreover, on a temporal level it is difficult if not impossible to understand how PPG‘s calculation of Gross‘s military pay in 2004-05 could have been caused by his RESOLVE complaint some time after he returned from his deployment. At best, Gross seems to be arguing that the continued refusal to calculate the pay as he wished following his complaint amounted to retaliation. For the reasons outlined above, this argument too goes nowhere—the calculation, which left Gross in the same financial position while deployed as if he had never left—can hardly be considered a materially adverse employment action. See Stephens v. Erickson, 569 F.3d 779, 790 (7th Cir.2009) (“Federal law protects an employee only from retaliation that produces an injury, and, therefore, an employer‘s retaliatory conduct is actionable only if it would be materially adverse to a reasonable employee.“); Cole v. Illinois, 562 F.3d 812, 816-17 (7th Cir.2009) (“[N]ot everything that makes an employee unhappy is an actionable adverse action.“) (internal quotations and citation omitted). Thus, whether considered on the merits or as a result of failure to raise the claim below, Gross‘s retaliation claim fails as a matter of law and PPG is entitled to summary judgment.
There is one final matter. Gross also argues that the district court erred by taxing costs against him in contravention of USERRA. Specifically, USERRA provides that, “[n]o fees or court costs may be charged or taxed against any person claiming rights under this chapter.”
III.
For the foregoing reasons, we AFFIRM the judgment of the district court granting summary judgment to PPG Industries, and REMAND solely for the district court to correct the error identified above regarding the taxation of costs.
