RICHARD D. ROGERS, District Judge.
This is an employment discrimination action in which plaintiff alleges that she suffered from a hostile work environment because she is a woman and that she was terminated from her employment because she complained about the hostile work environment. Plaintiff claims that defendant's actions violated Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 42 U.S.C. § 2000e. Plaintiff has also alleged a supplemental state law claim asserting that her termination violated Kansas public policy.
This case is before the court upon defendant's motion for summary judgment. Defendant alleges that plaintiff is incapable of proving the necessary elements of her Title VII claims. Defendant also argues, and plaintiff has conceded in response, that there is no legal basis for the supplemental Kansas law claim. Therefore, in this order the court shall focus only upon the Title VII claims.
Summary judgment is warranted if the materials on record show that there is "no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law." FED.CIV.P. 56(a). The court views "all of the facts in the light most favorable to the non-movant and reasonable inferences from the record must be drawn in favor of the non-moving party."
During the time relevant to this lawsuit, plaintiff worked as a computerized tomography technician (a "CT Tech") for a hospital owned by defendant. Plaintiff started her employment on August 29, 2005. She was terminated on or around August 24, 2012.
On February 19, 2012, plaintiff emailed Anna Johnson and Wilma Jenkins, her supervisors, stating:
Prior to writing this email, plaintiff had complained about the incident with Kinyanjui to Bernadette Sims, her shift supervisor.
Kinyanjui was a registered nurse at the hospital. He did not work in plaintiff's department.
Jenkins, the Director of Imaging, and Connie Miller, the Director of Human Resources, met with plaintiff on February 20, 2012 to discuss her complaint of the previous day. Miller also discussed the complaint with Debbie Galant, the director of Kinyanjui's department, and with Kinyanjui. Galant said that Kinyanjui was quiet, had good patient skills, and got along with other staff. Kinyanjui said he merely explained to plaintiff during their phone call that his unit was very busy and he would call the doctor to see if the needed scan could be performed at a different time.
As a result of her investigation, Miller concluded that she could not substantiate plaintiff's complaint. But, she advised Kinyanjui that any further concerns with his behavior would be addressed and could lead to disciplinary action if substantiated.
Plaintiff has testified that Kinyanjui harassed plaintiff by yelling angrily at her and by staring at her — not in a sexual way but in a hostile way. She testified that he had yelled at plaintiff prior to the February 19, 2012 phone call and that that Kinyanjui interacted with her unpleasantly about "a half dozen times" before the February 19th incident. Each time, plaintiff alleges, Kinyanjui yelled angrily and threateningly at plaintiff. His "threats" involved telling a doctor if plaintiff did not do what Kinyanjui wanted done. But, he never yelled at her after the February 19th incident. He did, however, stand and stare at her when he saw her after February 19th until June 2012. The record is not clear as to how often this happened. Plaintiff has stated that Kinyanjui was physically intimidating, but she has not alleged that he threatened her physically, only that, on February 19, 2012, he "threatened" to call a doctor and say that plaintiff refused to do a scan when plaintiff tried to explain that she was too busy in the ER.
Plaintiff testified in her deposition that she did not know if Kinyanjui ever yelled at male employees, but she didn't believe he would have yelled at a male employee as he yelled at her.
Plaintiff alleges that on two occasions, once in April and once in May 2012, Kinyanjui asked other hospital employees about plaintiff's schedule. Plaintiff says that this frightened her. Each time, plaintiff emailed Jenkins to complain. Miller investigated but failed to corroborate plaintiff's complaints. Plaintiff has no complaints about Kinyanjui's conduct after May 2012.
About August 12, 2012, plaintiff responded to an anonymous employee survey. She stated that she had received no response to her complaints of Kinyanjui allegedly inquiring about plaintiff's schedule.
On August 20, 2012, the hospital received a report from a CT Tech that plaintiff brought a gun to work, showed it to an employee in a public area and then placed it in a drawer inside a cabinet. The hospital has a policy prohibiting weapons in the workplace. This policy existed throughout plaintiff's years of employment at the hospital. Plaintiff has acknowledged that employee handbooks have stated versions of the policy.
Miller and the Chief Operating Officer, Dean Carucci, investigated the report that plaintiff brought a gun into the hospital on August 20, 2012. They spoke with plaintiff (who denied the report), with the person who made the report (who repeated the charge), and with a doctor (who corroborated the report). Miller and Carucci believed plaintiff brought a gun into the hospital. Thereafter, plaintiff was terminated. According to the August 24, 2012 letter mailed to plaintiff from the hospital, plaintiff was terminated "due to violation of policy prohibiting weapons of any kind to be carried on the premises."
During the discovery phase of this litigation, plaintiff has admitted that she brought a gun to the hospital on various occasions at the request of persons at the hospital who wanted to see it.
To ultimately succeed upon her hostile work environment claim, plaintiff must show: 1) that she was discriminated against because of her sex; and 2) that the discrimination was sufficiently severe or pervasive such that it altered the terms or conditions of her employment and created an abusive working environment.
Defendant makes three arguments to dismiss plaintiff's hostile work environment claim. As explained below, defendant's first two arguments are meritorious. Therefore, for purposes of brevity, the court will not address the third argument.
Defendant contends, first, that plaintiff cannot establish that she was harassed or suffered a hostile work environment on the basis of her sex. As just mentioned, the intent to discriminate on the basis of sex is a required element of proof.
Second, defendant argues that plaintiff cannot establish that Kinyanjui's alleged conduct was sufficiently severe or pervasive to constitute a hostile work environment. The court agrees with this contention. This court has described the level of proof necessary to establish a hostile work environment in
In this case, plaintiff alleges that Kinyanjui yelled at her over the phone or in person five or six times, on and before February 19, 2012, and said that if plaintiff did not do what Kinyanjui wanted done then he would tell a doctor. Thereafter, Kinyanjui did not speak to plaintiff, but when he happened to see her he would stare at her, but not in a sexual way. Plaintiff also alleges that once in April 2012 and once in May 2012, Kinyanjui asked other employees about plaintiff's work schedule. Plaintiff had no complaints about Kinyanjui's conduct after May 2012.
Assuming these allegations are true, the court does not believe a reasonable person would consider this severe or pervasive misconduct for the purposes of a Title VII hostile work environment claim. These actions were not physically threatening or humiliating. They were not offensive in a sexual sense. Nor do they appear to have interfered with plaintiff's work performance. Plaintiff does not describe a workplace permeated with discriminatory intimidation, ridicule or insult. Plaintiff does not indicate that profane or opprobrious language was used. Instead, this appears to be a situation in which there where a half-dozen instances of ill-tempered communication with a person who was not plaintiff's supervisor. This is not sufficient for a hostile work environment claim, even if one adds that plaintiff was told (by someone other than Kinyanjui) that he had inquired twice about her work schedule. See
Defendant makes two arguments against plaintiff's retaliation claim. First, defendant argues that plaintiff cannot establish a prima facie case of retaliation because plaintiff cannot present proof of a causal connection between the protected activity and plaintiff's termination.
As for defendant's first claim, plaintiff contends that the temporal proximity between her termination on August 24, 2012 and plaintiff's completion of an anonymous survey earlier that month is adequate to meet her prima facie burden of showing a the causal connection between her alleged protected activity and her termination. Plaintiff alleges that her responses to the survey should be considered protected opposition to discrimination because she outlined her complaints about Kinyanjui in the survey and stated that Jenkins and Miller had not investigated her complaints. We acknowledge defendant's rejoinder that Kinyanjui, Jenkins and Miller were not mentioned in any of the survey responses. But, for the purposes of this order, the court shall assume plaintiff is correct and move forward to consider defendant's second argument against plaintiff's retaliation claim.
Defendant's second argument asserts that there is no material issue of fact as to pretext. While plaintiff has presented facts indicating a temporal relationship between plaintiff's alleged protected activity and her termination, this is only sufficient to establish a prima facie case of retaliation, not to demonstrate that defendant's non-retaliatory reason for termination was actually a pretext for retaliation. The Tenth Circuit has stated that "temporal proximity is sufficient to establish a prima facie case, but
Plaintiff has set forth no information directly indicating that defendant's claim of a valid nondiscriminatory reason for its termination of plaintiff is incoherent, weak, inconsistent or contradictory. Plaintiff suggests that temporal proximity itself is sufficient to create a jury issue and avoid summary judgment. But, as mentioned, this is not the position of the Tenth Circuit in
Plaintiff also makes citation to
Plaintiff has no adequate and convincing evidence from which a reasonable jury could conclude that her termination was motivated by retaliation, rather than the violation of the hospital's prohibition of guns on hospital grounds. Therefore, defendant is entitled to summary judgment against plaintiff's retaliation claim.
As already mentioned, plaintiff has conceded that summary judgment is proper against plaintiff's state law claim. Because plaintiff's other two claims lack sufficient factual support even when viewing the evidence in a light most favorable to plaintiff, the court shall grant defendant's summary judgment motion.