Employer's Post-Resignation Statements Are Not Evidence Of Hostile Work Environment Or Discrimination
OVERLY v. KEYBANK NATIONAL ASSOCIATION (November 10, 2011)
Krysten Overly was a financial advisor at KeyBank in central Indiana. Rick Bielecki became her immediate supervisor in early 2007 but their interaction was limited because of his broad regional supervisory obligations. One day, while he was working with her, he observed that she was using procedures that were not in compliance with the Bank's policies. After an investigation, the compliance office recommended her termination. With Bielecki’s and his supervisor’s support, Overly escaped with a warning and a small fine. Overly complained to the Human Resources Department about the disciplinary action as well as some sexist remarks she alleged were made by Bielecki. The Bank reorganized beginning in 2007 and almost tripled the number of financial advisors nationwide. Bielecki added one advisor to Overly's region and realigned branch bank assignments. Overly registered a complaint with KeyBank's CEO. She cited the disciplinary action and the sexist remarks, as well as the loss of territory. The Bank conduct an investigation and concluded that there was no evidence of discrimination or retaliation. Overly submitted her resignation to Bielecki on October 1, 2007. Upon receipt of the resignation, Bielecki applauded, pushed her toward the door, and yelled "Good Riddance Bitch." Overly filed suit alleging hostile work environment, constructive discharge, and gender discrimination. Judge Barker (S.D. Ind.) granted summary judgment in KeyBank's favor. Overly appeals.
In their opinion, Seventh Circuit Judges Evans (who, as a result of his death, took no part in the decision) and Williams and District Judge Conley affirmed. The Court first addressed the hostile work environment claim and concluded that Overly's work conditions did not meet the "severe or pervasive" requirement. Bielecki called her "cutie" five or 10 times, referred to her "pretty face," and made her leave her purse outside of a meeting room. None of this was threatening, it did not occur very frequently, and it did not unreasonably interfere with her work. The Court conceded that adding the disciplinary incidents to the mix might approach the actionable level, but declined to do so because there was no evidence that the discipline was related to her gender. Furthermore, she admitted the noncompliant activities. Likewise, the territory realignment was not shown to be related to gender. The Court acknowledged that there was evidence of gender bias after her resignation. But Bielecki's conduct and remarks after receiving her resignation cannot support a hostile work environment claim. The Court quickly dispensed with her constructive discharge claim since it imposes a higher standard than the hostile work environment claim - which it had just rejected. The Court also rejected the gender discrimination claim, again refusing to consider the resignation remarks as direct or circumstantial evidence of discrimination because of the timing of those remarks. Finally, the Court rejected her Title VII retaliation claim. Her complaint to the Bank does constitute protected activity but there is no evidence in the record of a causal link between the activity and Bielecki's conduct.
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Thirty years ago, the Chicago Public School System hired Jessica Benuzzi, a white woman now in her fifties, as one of its first female custodial assistants. A promotion in 2004 qualified her to be the senior custodian at a large school. She was granted a transfer to a school that was closed and undergoing major renovation -- and was scheduled to be opened as the John J. Pershing West Magnet School in the fall 2005. In March of 2005, however, the Board of Education named Cheryl Watkins as the new Pershing principal. Watkins is an African-American woman in her forties. From their first encounter, the two women did not get along. Over the next several school years, Benuzzi complains that Watkins refused to accommodate her request for a shift change, unfairly reprimanded her on numerous occasions, treated her very roughly, demanded a fitness for duty examination, and suspended her without pay on more than one occasion. Benuzzi filed a gender discrimination charge with the EEOC in October 2006. She updated the charges several times thereafter. She filed suit against Watkins and the Board in June 2009 alleging, among the things, gender discrimination and retaliation under Title VII. A few days after Watkins waived service, she reprimanded Benuzzi again. When Benuzzi wouldn't sign the reprimand, she asked the Board to remove her from the school. The Board refused. Watkins was present at Benuzzi's deposition on February 25, 2010. The very next day, Watkins restricted Benuzzi's presence at Pershing and also issued a Notice of Disciplinary action that referred to nine different instances going back several months. Judge Conlon (N.D. Ill.) granted summary judgment to the defendants. In doing so, she did not consider most of Benuzzi's factual submissions because their length violated a local rule. Benuzzi appeals.
From 1993 to 2006, Dr. Christine Leitgen was a physician in the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology at a hospital owned by
Sherry DeTata had a rather short career at
Claudette Goodman was hired in August 2004 as a private security guard by the National Security Agency (National). Her initial pay was $8.25 an hour. National assigned her to an overnight shift at a housing complex. For family reasons, Goodman desired a daytime shift. She soon transferred to a different location on the more desirable dayshift. Although she was promoted to supervisor with a raise to $8.75, her employment was not without problems. National had difficulty with its payroll -- paying late, paying less than owed, bouncing checks, etc. In mid-2005, she began suspecting that National paid its male employees more than she. The owner denied it. In any event, in October 2005, she found another job at $10.00 an hour and quit her job at National. She brought suit against National under the Equal Pay Act and Title VII of the Civil Rights Act. Judge Norgle (N.D. Ill.) granted summary judgment to the defendants. Goodman appeals.
Katherine Weber had been employed at Universities Research Association (URA) for almost twenty years when she received a negative performance review. She believed the review was unfair and filed a grievance. The grievance was ultimately resolved in her favor and the negative review was removed from her record. Weber claims that a number of bad things began to happen to her after the grievance, ultimately including the elimination of her position in early 2004. She accepted another position with the organization under a new supervisor. Weber had difficulty with her new supervisor from the beginning. She complained that she was the victim of retaliation and that her new supervisor treated her differently than other employees. Her supervisor complained that she was not getting her work completed and became suspicious of her computer usage. URA decided to monitor her Internet usage. The results of its trace showed that Weber spent more than 16 hours in one workweek visiting websites unrelated to her work. Her usage included accessing dog-related sites and her personal e-mail accounts in connection with her dog training business. URA terminated Weber's employment for violating its policies: a) requiring disclosure and authorization of outside employment and b) prohibiting the use of URA computer equipment in connection with outside employment. Weber brought suit pursuant to Title VII for gender discrimination and retaliation. Judge Andersen (N.D. Ill.) granted summary judgment to URA. Weber appeals.
During the 2003-2004 school year, Major Lee Redmon supervised the
David Scott owned and operated Scott Truck Systems, a commercial trucking company. Sherry Hantzis, his wife, was its general manager. In 2004, on Hantzis’ recommendation, Scott hired 51-year-old Diana Everroad as a dispatcher. Things did not go very well -- her supervisor complained, two large customers complained, and she had several run-ins with her coworkers. On the other hand, she was the target of several gender-based derogatory comments from those coworkers, one of which came during a conversation she secretly recorded. Within months, Scott and Hantzis created a new job for Everroad as a "data administrator." The hours and the pay were identical to her dispatcher job, but she had to share an office. Her officemate had a habit of making lengthy personal phone calls. Everroad’s complaints resulted in a meeting with Scott, Hantzis, and the officemate in an attempt to resolve the conflict. The meeting lasted a long time and became very tense. Everroad again secretly recorded much of the meeting. There was shouting, crying, eye-rolling, and accusations -- but the meeting did end with some constructive proposals. Scott and Hantzis were upset with Everroad's conduct during the meeting and considered it insubordinate. They were still considering their options when, upon arrival at the office the next morning, Everroad ignored Hantzis' greeting and overreacted to Scott's greeting. Scott terminated her employment at the end of that workday. Everroad sued Scott Truck for gender discrimination and retaliation under Title VII and for age discrimination and retaliation under the Age Discrimination in Employment Act (ADEA). The district court granted summary judgment to Scott Truck. Everroad appeals.
Iyare Egonmwan was a black male jail guard at the Cook County Jail. In 2001, he was transferred into the women's division. The following year, the female superintendent of the division disciplined him for conduct that had occurred prior to his transfer. Several days later, Egonmwan accused the superintendent of sexual harassment. The claim was investigated and determined to be unfounded. In 2003, during a general investigation into allegations of sexual misconduct between guards and prisoners, a female detainee informed the investigators that she and at least one other prisoner had had a sexual encounter with Egonmwan. Although Egonmwan was acquitted of criminal charges in 2004, an administrative hearing board terminated his employment in January of 2005 for violation of institutional rules. Egonmwan brought suit against, among others, Cook County and the Sheriff's Department. He alleged § 1981 race discrimination and § 1983 gender and race discrimination. The district court granted summary judgment to the defendants. Egonmwan appeals.
Swearnigen-El was a black male guard in the women's division at the
Paul Turner was a waiter at The Saloon restaurant. After working there for several years, Turner and one of his supervisors carried on a sexual relationship that lasted for about nine months. According to Turner, the supervisor retaliated against him after she ended the relationship. He alleges that she changed his table assignments, disciplined him without cause, and sexually harassed him on a number of specific occasions. Turner also alleges that he was discriminated against because of his psoriasis. He wears no underwear as a result of that condition and therefore occasionally exposes himself while changing clothes. He claims that his supervisors failed to accommodate his condition. Instead, he was forced to change in a “vile” men’s room. One day, in the middle of a shift and with no other waiters on duty, Turner left the restaurant to run an errand. When he returned, he was fired. Turner sued the restaurant and several managers for gender and disability discrimination under Title VII and the Americans with Disabilities Act. He also made a claim for overtime. The court granted summary judgment to the defendants. Turner appeals.
Angela LaFary was a field clerk for Rogers Group, Inc. (RGI), a producer of crushed stone. In 2003, she was performing primarily administrative duties but longed for a chance to get into sales. Michael DeMartin, her supervisor, indicated she was on a track to do so. Unfortunately, she got derailed in 2004. In February, she married a man who worked as an independent trucker for the same RGI office. She found out she was pregnant on March 15. On March 24, DeMartin proposed, in an e-mail, to transfer LaFary to another RGI office. He noted business needs as well as a concern about the possible conflict of interest presented by LaFary's marriage. He recommended a transfer based solely on the business needs, however. On April 1, RGI assigned LaFary's husband to work with a different RGI office. In the same month, they transferred LaFary to the same office. Although DeMartin knew she was pregnant when he transferred her, he asserts that he was unaware of her pregnancy at the time of his recommendation. The transfer resulted in a pay increase but may have negatively affected LaFary's opportunities for a sales position. LaFary suffered complications from her pregnancy. She was hospitalized for two weeks in June and never returned. In January of 2005, although LaFary indicated her desire to return, DeMartin informed her that, pursuant to RGI policy, she was terminated because she did not return when her leave expired. LaFary filed an EEOC complaint, alleging sex discrimination. She then brought suit under Title VII. The court granted summary judgment to RGI. LaFary appeals.
Donna Lewis was an officer in the tactical unit of the Chicago Police Department in 2002 when Lt. Terrence Williams became her supervisor. When she volunteered for a special security detail in Washington DC, Williams took her off the list. Lewis filed a grievance, alleging that it was a gender-based decision. She claims that she was the victim of several instances of retaliation after she filed the grievance. She filed an EEOC charge concerning both the security detail and retaliation. She alleges that the very next day Williams directed her to assist a narcotics team operation. During the operation, another officer accidentally struck her with a sledgehammer, breaking her neck. She is now on permanent disability. She filed suit. Although the court originally granted summary judgment to the defendants, the Seventh Circuit reversed her gender discrimination claim against Williams and the City and the retaliation claim against the City. At trial, a jury found in favor of the defendants. The court denied Lewis' motion for new trial. Lewis appeals.
Dayna Scruggs worked for Garst Seed Company as a Research Technician. Curtis Beazer became her supervisor in 1995. Scruggs and Beazer did not get along. In fact, Beazer did not get along with a number of people. He made many derogatory remarks directed at Scruggs, several of them with a gender bias. In 2004, company management decided to demote or sever Beazer. Before they could do so, however, Garst was purchased by a competitor. New management decided to eliminate Scruggs' position. Scruggs filed an EEOC charge in December 2004 in response. In 2005, Scruggs applied for a Research Assistant position as part of the restructuring. New management did not hire Scruggs -- instead selecting the incumbent (a man) in the Research Assistant position with Garst. Scruggs filed a lawsuit, alleging retaliation and hostile work environment. The district court granted summary judgment against Scruggs. Scruggs appeals.
David Farr was a respiratory therapist at St. Francis Hospital. In 2000, he was the only male among the seven respiratory therapists in his department. There was a single computer in the department for the use of all the therapists. Although the hospital policy was for each therapist to log on with a unique password before each use, the practice was quite different. Typically, the first user of the day logged on with his or her password and all later users piggybacked on that login. When one of the therapists discovered inappropriate material on the computer, the hospital conducted an investigation. It found that: a) pornographic and hacking sites were accessed at the computer, b) Farr was logged on to the computer at the time the sites were accessed, and c) that Farr was the only one working on one particular day when a substantial amount of the activity took place. Farr eventually admitted that he was responsible for visiting some of the sites and that the others may have been generated by a computer virus during his use of the computer. The hospital terminated Farr's employment. Farr sued the hospital, alleging gender discrimination and a breach of implied covenant of fair dealing based on the employee handbook. The court granted summary judgment to the hospital. Farr appeals.
Mary Alice Greene worked for the post office. She worked five days a week and was allowed to volunteer for overtime on her days off. Each quarter, the post office generated a list of employees who wanted overtime. The assignments were supposed to rotate according to seniority, but the post office was not required to schedule an employee for more than one overtime shift a week. Greene’s off days were Sunday and one weekday. She always requested overtime on both of her off days, although she preferred Sunday overtime. During a two-year period, Greene was offered 22 overtime shifts, only five of which were Sundays. Greene brought an action against the post office for gender discrimination. She claimed that her supervisor favored his male friends to the detriment of the female employees in scheduling the more desirable Sunday overtime. During Greene's case-in-chief, the court granted the post office's motion for judgment as a matter of law. Greene appeals.