CHRISTOPHER R. COOPER, United States District Judge.
Annette Copeland claims that her former employer, Arklay LLC, discriminated against her because of her race in violation of 42 U.S.C. § 1981. Specifically, she alleges that Arklay terminated her because she is African American, that it maintained a racially hostile work environment, and that it engaged in unlawful retaliation.
No reasonable factfinder could side with Copeland on any of these claims. There is no evidence suggesting that Copeland's termination was racially motivated. Assuming that her coworkers' alleged harassment was sufficiently severe to be actionable, there is no indication that Copeland's supervisor responded to it unreasonably. And because the undisputed facts show that Copeland did not engage in protected conduct, she has no viable retaliation claim. The Court will therefore grant summary judgment in favor of Arklay.
Arklay provides network-security support for defense agencies and specializes in assisting those agencies in classified operations. The firm is managed solely by its CEO and owner, Marc Pecot. Pecot hired Copeland in February 2013 to work as a full-time network administrator, paid hourly. Def.'s Mot. Summ. J. Ex. B ("Pl.'s Dep."), at 22:15-17, 32:9-33:4. During her tenure, Copeland was the company's sole African American employee.
During Copeland's tenure, Arklay was working on a subcontract with BAE Systems, which in turn was a contractor for the Defense Intelligence Agency ("DIA"). The contract required Arklay's employees to work at the "Threat Mitigation Center," a DIA facility within Bolling Air Force Base in Washington, D.C. Copeland worked in a cubicle in a shared workspace with the four other Arklay employees who were assigned to the BAE subcontract. Her primary responsibility was administering a DIA network called ITACT.
Copeland alleges several instances of workplace harassment while working on the BAE contract. Most of the purported incidents involved two Arklay data engineers, David Chesher and Dean Gull. Copeland's recounts that Chesher "frowned at [her] the whole time" during her job interview, Pl.'s Dep. 215:1, and that Chesher, Gull, and the other employees were generally unwelcoming and excluded her from conversations,
Copeland further alleges that, a few months after she was hired, Chesher — who sat in a nearby cubicle — temporarily locked her out of the ITACT network. Copeland reported this incident to Pecot in an email dated June 6, 2013. Pl.'s Dep. Ex. 19. In that message, Copeland implicated Gull in the lockout scheme.
Pecot responded to Copeland's message a few hours later, explaining that he suspected the lockout was merely a system error, but indicating that he would investigate further if the same problem happened again.
The BAE contract ended in June 2013, and Arklay furloughed its employees for about three weeks while Pecot sought
Copeland worked for Arklay part-time beginning August 29, 2013. Pl.'s Dep. 57:17-58:13. During some of this period, Pecot allowed Copeland to work remotely at a facility in Reston, Virginia, which was nearer to her home. Pecot Decl. ¶ 25. Pecot also gave her a substantial raise — from $62.50 to $70.30 per hour — because her part-time status reduced Arklay's overhead costs. Pl.'s Dep. Ex. 14.
Copeland alleges further incidents of harassment during this period of part-time work. Her primary accusation is that Gull and Chesher regularly peered at her monitor and continued to interfere with her access to the computer systems. Pl.'s Dep. 38:18-39:20. She did not report these incidents to Pecot.
Pecot originally planned to terminate Copeland's position that November, but, finding that he had billable hours to fill due to other employees' vacations, he asked Copeland to stay on until those hours were exhausted. Pecot Decl. ¶ 29. By July 2014, those hours were complete, and Pecot informed Copeland that her last day with the company would be September 20, 2014 — the last day of Arklay's DIA subcontract. As Pecot explained in a July 31 email to Copeland, the position of network administrator was being eliminated at the end of the current contract. Pecot Decl. Ex. 5.
A few months after her tenure with Arklay ended, Copeland filed a complaint with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission ("EEOC") alleging that Arklay discriminated against her on the basis of race and sex, and that it engaged in illegal retaliation. Pl.'s Opp. Ex. 4;
Granting a motion for summary judgment is proper where "the movant shows that there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact and the movant is entitled to
Though Copeland originally brought claims under both Title VII and 42 U.S.C. § 1981, she now concedes in her opposition to Arklay's motion that Arklay did not employ more than fifteen people in any month during the years of her employment, and thus does not qualify as an "employer" for purposes of Title VII. 42 U.S.C. § 2000e(b);
Copeland's remaining claims are those brought under 42 U.S.C. § 1981, which protects the right of "[a]ll persons" to "have the same right ... to make and enforce contracts." 42 U.S.C. § 1981(a). An employer violates § 1981 if it discriminates on the basis of race in "the making, performance, modification, and termination of contracts, and the enjoyment of all benefits, privileges, terms, and conditions of the contractual relationship."
Copeland alleges that Arklay violated § 1981 by (1) terminating her because of her race, (2) maintaining a hostile work environment because of her race, and (3) retaliating against her for the exercise of statutorily protected conduct with respect to race-based discrimination. The Court will address these allegations in turn.
Copeland alleges that she was terminated from her position based on her race. Compl. 6 (Count V). In evaluating these sorts of discrimination claims under § 1981, courts use the three-step framework established for race-discrimination claims under Title VII.
Here, Arklay has asserted a legitimate, nondiscriminatory reason for terminating Copeland: it is undisputed that her temporary position was eliminated. Pecot Decl. Ex. 5; Pl.'s Resp. to Stmt. of Material Facts ¶ 104. And assuming that Copeland has made out a prima facie case of discrimination, she has not produced sufficient evidence for a reasonable juror to conclude that this nondiscriminatory reason was pretextual.
A plaintiff can create a material dispute of fact as to pretext in a variety of ways. If Copeland could introduce direct evidence that race really drove the decision — for example, a racially charged comment — her claim would almost certainly survive summary judgment.
A plaintiff can also sustain a discrimination claim against an employer's assertion of a nondiscriminatory reason using circumstantial evidence — for example, evidence undermining the employer's proffered reason or showing an employer's generally biased attitude.
In any event, insofar as Copeland relies on her coworkers' alleged misconduct to imply bias on Pecot's part — absent any evidence of Pecot's bias — she invites the factfinder "to go far beyond reasonable inference and into the realm of unfettered speculation."
Copeland also contends that Arklay maintained a hostile work environment because of her race. Specifically, she alleges that her coworkers harassed her by locking her out of her computer system and generally giving her the cold shoulder, and that Pecot did not adequately police their behavior. Pl.'s Opp. at 12.
Here, even assuming that Copeland could show sufficiently severe or pervasive harassment, and that the harassment was driven by race — two long-shot assumptions, given the record — no reasonable factfinder could conclude that Arklay was liable for that harassment. As the Supreme Court has explained in the Title VII context, "an employer's liability for such harassment may depend on the status of the harasser."
Copeland admits that she informed Pecot of the alleged lockout and snooping only in one instance: her May 2013 email. Pecot responded that he would be willing to investigate if it occurred again, but that he believed the lockout was the result of a system error. He reiterated in his deposition that the problem happened regularly and thus that a network lockout raised no red flags. Moreover, in her message to Pecot describing the lockout incident, Copeland made no hint that Chesher or Gull were motivated by racial bias — only that she suspected that they believed her to be incompetent. The same is true of the closed-door meeting where Copeland apparently told Pecot that none of her coworkers were willing to show her around the office.
Section 1981, like Title VII, does not impose a generalized duty on employers to police the social conditions of the workplace.
Finally, Copeland alleges that Arklay terminated her in retaliation for taking actions protected by statute. To establish a prima facie case of retaliation, Copeland must show that she "engaged in protected activity — such as filing an EEOC complaint — and that [her] employer took an adverse employment action against [her] because of that activity."
Nothing of the sort happened here. There is no plausible allegation, let alone evidence, showing that Copeland engaged in protected activity. Copeland's EEOC complaint was filed several months after her termination. Compl. ¶ 26. She did tell Pecot in May 2013 that Chesher and Gull locked her out of the network and were unkind toward her. But "[w]hile no `magic words' are required" to render an internal complaint protected, "the complaint must in some way allege unlawful discrimination, not just frustrated ambition."
Similarly, Copeland's decision to inform Pamela Prewitt of Chesher and Gull's alleged behavior was not protected. Prewitt was a DIA employee with no employment relationship to Arklay. Even if Pecot was aware of Copeland's decision to report her coworkers to Prewitt, nothing that she reported would plausibly suggest to Pecot that she was complaining about race-based harassment. The Court will grant summary judgment against Copeland's claim that Arklay engaged in unlawful retaliation.
For the foregoing reasons, the Court will grant [25] Defendant Arklay LLC's Motion for Summary Judgment. A separate Order accompanies this Memorandum Opinion.