SUSAN RUSS WALKER, Chief Magistrate Judge.
Plaintiff William Gilley ("Plaintiff") brings this action against Defendant Kelly & Picerne, Inc., d/b/a Alabaster Bay Apartment Homes ("Defendant"), alleging employment discrimination pursuant to Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 42 U.S.C. § 2000e et seq.
This action is presently before the court on defendant's motion for summary judgment. (Doc. #22). Upon review of the motion and the record, the court concludes that summary judgment is due to be granted in part and denied in part.
A movant is entitled to summary judgment if it "shows that there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law." Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a). For summary judgment purposes, an issue of fact is "material" if, under the substantive law governing the claim, its presence or absence might affect the outcome of the suit.
Plaintiff began work at Defendant's property management company on October 10, 2012, as a maintenance supervisor at the Alabaster Bay apartment complex. Gilley Depo. 37, 46; Doc. #28-6, at 231. One of Plaintiff's benefits was free housing, and Plaintiff lived in an apartment on site with his wife and child. Gilley Depo. 48, 50. Mike Collins was the Maintenance/Safety Director for Defendant, based out of Florida. Collins Depo. 16. Greg McGinnis was Defendant's Vice President of Property Management over Alabaster Bay. McGinnis Depo. 19.
Collins did not receive training on sexual harassment or discrimination except reading the company's employee handbook. Collins Depo. 38-39. Collins could not recall when he last took the online sexual harassment course. Collins Depo. 45-50, 90-92, 96; Doc. #28-6, at 171-73. McGinnis recalled taking a sexual harassment course at least once but did not recall other training on sexual harassment, and he did not receive training on sexual discrimination or retaliation. McGinnis Depo. 53, 56-67. McGinnis and Collins did not receive training on how to conduct a sexual harassment investigation. Collins Depo. 146-47; McGinnis Depo. 115-16.
When Plaintiff began work in October 2012, he signed an acknowledgment that he had downloaded a copy of Defendant's employee handbook. Doc. #28-5, at 43. Plaintiff signed a separate document acknowledging that he was required to read the policies and procedures manual within thirty days of his start date, and that he could ask his supervisor for a copy of the manual and ask questions he might have about it after he read it. Doc. #28-5, at 48. Plaintiff did not recall going through training or orientation. Gilley Depo. 149. The sexual harassment policy in effect when Plaintiff began was dated January 2012. It provided, in part, "Any employee who believes that he/she has been subjected to sexual harassment shall immediately report the conduct to his or her supervisor. If the employee's supervisor is the person allegedly engaging in the sexual harassment, the employee should report the conduct to a higher level administrator within the Company." Doc. #28-2, at 3. McGinnis testified that the company has an open-door policy to receive complaints. McGinnis Depo. 210-02. The policy did not include an anti-retaliation component. Instead, it provided that "a bad faith claim of sexual harassment [was] a major offense. Depending on the circumstances of the incident, disciplinary action will be taken up to and including discharge." Doc. #28-2, at 3. The policy was updated in December 2012 after Plaintiff began working at Alabaster Bay. Collins Depo. 101; McGinnis Depo. 61-62; Doc. #28-5, at 43.
On January 30, 2013, Samantha Mejia was hired as property manager at Alabaster Bay, but did not live on site. Gilley Depo. 12-14. Mejia also signed an acknowledgment that she downloaded a copy of the Defendant's employee handbook. Doc. #28-7, at 241. In addition, Mejia signed a non-discrimination agreement, Doc. #28-7 at 242, and an acknowledgment that she was required to read the policies and procedures manual within thirty days of her start date, and that she could ask her supervisor for a copy of the manual and ask questions she might have about it after she read it. Doc. #28-7, at 243.
Mejia was plaintiff's direct supervisor. Collins Depo. 22-23. According to Plaintiff's charge of discrimination, Mejia began flirting with Plaintiff and making unwanted sexual advances toward him within a week of her hire, "such as telling [Plaintiff] that her fiancé was out of town and asking [Plaintiff] to come over to her place and stay with her." Doc. #28-5, at 44. In his deposition, Plaintiff testified that Mejia asked him to come over to hang out because her fiancé was out of town. Gilley Depo. 12. Plaintiff asserted that he "repeatedly turned down her advances and explained that he was not interested," but Mejia continued her advances. Doc. #28-5, at 44. Plaintiff testified that Mejia invited Plaintiff over at least four or five times. Gilley Depo. 13. Plaintiff testified that Mejia made unwanted comments to Plaintiff when he came into work, such as telling him he "was attractive today, looked good." Gilley Depo. 13. On one occasion when Mejia invited Plaintiff over to her house one night, Plaintiff said "This isn't right; we need to — you need to stop that because I'm not going to come to your house. Let's don't make it awkward at work." Gilley Depo. 145. Mejia never directly asked Plaintiff for sexual relations. Plaintiff reported Mejia's comments to Plaintiff's wife. Gilley Depo. 14, 146. The first time Plaintiff's wife met Mejia, Plaintiff's wife questioned whether Mejia "had ever come on to" Plaintiff before Plaintiff ever said anything to his wife about Mejia's behavior. Gilley Depo. 146. Plaintiff's wife never suggested that Plaintiff should quit because it bothered her that Plaintiff worked with Mejia. Gilley Depo. 148.
On Monday, February 25, 2013, Mejia sent the following text messages to Plaintiff:
Doc. #28-5, at 42. Plaintiff understood that Mejia was going to be in a meeting with corporate at 1 p.m. Gilley Depo. 19. Plaintiff interpreted "hit pipe" to mean Mejia was asking Plaintiff for sex, and that "pipe" referred to Plaintiff's penis. Gilley Depo. 15-16. Plaintiff found the messages to be sexually harassing because he interpreted them as asking Plaintiff to have sex with Mejia and telling him that he looked hot. Gilley Depo. 15-16, 19-20. Plaintiff's wife also interpreted them the same way Plaintiff did. Gilley Depo. 6. After receiving the text messages, Plaintiff "stayed away from" Mejia "because [he] wasn't going to put [himself] in that situation." Gilley Depo. 32.
Right after he received the texts, Plaintiff called Collins, the Maintenance/Safety Director, who was out of state, and informed him about the texts. Gilley Depo. 21, 26-28, Doc. #28-5, at 44; Collins Depo. 115. Plaintiff makes inconsistent allegations as to whether he also reported the earlier advances to Collins and McGinnis. In his Charge of Discrimination, Plaintiff states that he "immediately" reported to Collins the inappropriate text messages and behavior. Doc. #28-5, at 44. In his deposition, however, Plaintiff stated that he reported the invitations to come over the day after he reported the text messages because Plaintiff "felt like it was not going to go away." Gilley Depo. 14-15. Plaintiff testified that he discussed the earlier advances with McGinnis the next day, but Plaintiff also testified he told McGinnis "the exact same thing [he] told to [Collins]." Gilley Depo. 29-30. McGinnis testified that Plaintiff never told him "that there was previous questions about going to her apartment and things of that nature." McGinnis Depo. 108. McGinnis's notes from the incident regarding Gilley's and Mejia's statements also do not mention Mejia's prior advances toward Plaintiff. Doc. #28-6, at 244.
Collins never met Plaintiff in person. Gilley Depo. 28; Collins Depo. 121. Collins testified that he was unaware of Mejia's other advances toward Plaintiff. Collins Depo. 119-20. Collins asked Plaintiff to read him the texts; after hearing them, Collins responded by telling Plaintiff to go talk with Mejia. Gilley Depo. 27; Collins Depo. 115. Collins told Plaintiff to confront Mejia because "we always encourage people to try to work things out," because Collins was many hours away, and because McGinnis, the Vice President of Property Management, was out of state. Collins Depo. 132-33. Collins's "immediate thought was it was more drug-related than a sexual innuendo." Collins Depo. 115. Collins testified that he asked Plaintiff to inquire if the texts were meant for Mejia's boyfriend or husband, but Collins also admitted that, at the time, he did not know if Mejia was even dating anyone. Collins Depo. 116. Collins admitted that the scenario of an individual questioning his boss might may have been uncomfortable for the employee, Plaintiff. Collins Depo. 134. Collins testified that, looking back, he would not have done the same thing for a female, and he added, "I wouldn't have done the same thing for a male either. . . . I probably would have sent them home for the day until somebody else could have got there and mediated." Collins Depo. 145-48.
Plaintiff confronted Mejia right after she got out of the meeting, and at first Mejia said she never sent Plaintiff any texts and had no idea what Plaintiff was talking about. Gilley Depo. 21. Plaintiff testified that Mejia could tell Plaintiff was offended and "tried to cover up as much as possible." Gilley Depo. 22. Plaintiff called Collins back and said "that she blew it off and said that it was an accident," and Collins said, "[t]hat's what I figured. It's fine." Gilley Depo. 28. Plaintiff told Collins it was "not fine, because, if I was a female, this would be looked into more in depth." Gilley Depo. 28. Collins then said he would speak with McGinnis. Gilley Depo. 28. About three or four hours later, Mejia apologized to Plaintiff and said the texts were meant for her fiancé. Gilley Depo. 21.
The next day, Tuesday, February 26, 2013, Plaintiff called McGinnis. Gilley Depo. 29-30. Plaintiff told McGinnis the same thing that Plaintiff told Collins and informed McGinnis that Plaintiff talked to Collins. Gilley Depo. 30. McGinnis had not yet spoken with Collins and was unaware of the incident. He said he would look into it. Gilley Depo. 30. Plaintiff said the texts included a sexual reference, but McGinnis did not ask Plaintiff what the reference meant. McGinnis Depo. 87-88. McGinnis did not immediately report plaintiff's complaint to human resources, as company policy required him to do, and McGinnis was not disciplined for failing to comply with the policy. McGinnis Dep. 78-79. McGinnis also did not immediately begin an investigation. McGinnis Dep. 136-37.
On Wednesday, February 27, 2013, Collins reported plaintiff's complaint to McGinnis. Collins Depo. 123. Collins told McGinnis that he was concerned the messages were drug related, if they were not sexual harassment. Collins Depo. 130-31. McGinnis never spoke with Mejia about inviting employees to her office to do drugs, and he did not report possible illegal drug use on the property. McGinnis Depo. 83, 85. McGinnis was unsure if the phrase "hit pipe for 5 minutes" referred to smoking drugs or "something else." McGinnis Depo. 87.
McGinnis was already scheduled to visit Alabaster Bay to review operations from Tuesday through Thursday. Gilley Depo. 31. During the visit, Plaintiff, McGinnis, and Mejia went over a lot of work-related issues. On the first day of McGinnis's visit, he discovered a heavily water-damaged apartment. McGinnis Depo. 99-100; Collins Depo. 63. Plaintiff and Mejia appeared surprised when they learned about the flooded apartment. McGinnis Depo. 101. According to McGinnis, neither Plaintiff nor Mejia was disciplined as a result of the apartment. McGinnis Depo. 103. The next day, on Wednesday, McGinnis walked the site with Plaintiff, and they discussed issues such as "units not being turned, the conditions of the ones that were supposedly turned. . . ." McGinnis Depo. 104-05. "Being turned means getting an apartment ready for a new tenant." Collins Depo. 71. McGinnis stated that he was not disciplining Plaintiff during the discussions. McGinnis Depo. 105.
By late afternoon on Wednesday, McGinnis had not yet discussed plaintiff's complaint about sexual harassment. Gilley Depo. 31, McGinnis Depo. 104-05. McGinnis did not bring up the matter because he "thought there was a misunderstanding and it was solved." McGinnis Depo. 77, 90. McGinnis "was waiting for [Plaintiff] to come to [McGinnis]- if that's what he believed." McGinnis Depo. 91. Aggravated, Plaintiff asked McGinnis to step out of the pool room, and Plaintiff raised the issue. Plaintiff said, again, if the gender roles were reversed, it would already have been handled, and McGinnis said they would go over the matter that day. Gilley Depo. 31-32. Plaintiff told McGinnis that Mejia sent some texts that Plaintiff believed were for him. McGinnis Depo. 105. McGinnis asked Plaintiff why he believed the texts were sexual in nature, but McGinnis could not remember what Plaintiff responded. McGinnis Depo. 108. McGinnis took no notes when he spoke with Plaintiff, but he said he would call Therese in human resources. McGinnis Depo. 108-09. McGinnis said he told Plaintiff that he and the company took the claims seriously, but McGinnis did not tell Plaintiff what, if anything, he would do about it. McGinnis Depo. 126-27.
McGinnis then called Therese in human resources, who instructed McGinnis to take statements and then bring Plaintiff and Mejia together. McGinnis Depo. 76, 108, 111. After speaking with Therese, McGinnis did not go back to Plaintiff to get a statement, and he did not recall having Plaintiff write a statement of his complaints. McGinnis Depo. 113-15, 127-28. Instead, McGinnis spoke with Mejia, who said she intended the texts for her fiancé or boyfriend. McGinnis Depo. 117. At the deposition, McGinnis could not recall asking Plaintiff to read or show McGinnis the texts, he was unsure if he ever saw them while Plaintiff was employed by defendant, and he admitted it may have been helpful to see the messages when he was investigating whether they were inappropriate. McGinnis Depo. 119, 121-22. McGinnis did not recall taking steps to verify Mejia's story. McGinnis Depo. 129. At his deposition, McGinnis could not recall if he believed Mejia's story when she told it, and he still does not know if he believes Mejia's story. McGinnis Depo. 137-38.
Plaintiff then was called to a meeting with McGinnis and Mejia. Gilley Depo. 33. Mejia said she intended the texts for her fiancé, and Plaintiff said he did not believe her. Gilley Depo. 33. Plaintiff showed McGinnis the messages, and according to Plaintiff, he read them. Gilley Depo. 34. McGinnis then said they both would need to take a Grace Hill course on sexual harassment, and Mejia began accusing Plaintiff of work performance issues which she had not raised before. Gilley Depo. 33-35; McGinnis Depo. 130, 145-46, 154-55. McGinnis argued that Plaintiff knew about the flooded apartment because his personal property was in it. McGinnis Depo. 144-45. McGinnis said the meeting turned into a shouting match between Plaintiff and Mejia, and he said to them, "Look, you guys continue this right here, then I have to make a decision that nobody's going to like, and I just have to let both parties go right there, because they were just-it was like under attack mode." McGinnis Depo. 118. McGinnis could not recall if he said he would make a decision they did not like or said terminate them both. McGinnis Depo. 148. Mejia took the Grace Hill training course, but Plaintiff did not. McGinnis Depo. 150-51.
McGinnis then spoke to Plaintiff by himself. McGinnis Depo. 149. McGinnis said "[a]s long as you do what you need to do, which is turn units, address the issues that we have, from a site standpoint, he had-he didn't have to worry." McGinnis Depo. 156-57. Plaintiff expressed concerns that Mejia would fire him, and McGinnis said Mejia was not in a position in which she could fire Plaintiff. McGinnis Depo. 157. As the property manager, however, Mejia's job description gave her authority to hire and terminate all employees. Doc. #28-4, at 2. McGinnis did not report plaintiff's concerns about retaliation to human resources or anyone else at the company. McGinnis Depo. 157-58.
The parties disagree on what happened the next morning. Plaintiff testified that he went to work and was changing locks when McGinnis approached him and said he thought it was time for Plaintiff to start looking for another job. Gilley Depo. 41. Plaintiff asked why. According to Plaintiff, McGinnis said he thought it was "in the best interest of everybody." Gilley Depo. 41. Plaintiff told McGinnis it was because Plaintiff reported the texts, and if the gender roles were reversed he would not be terminated, and it was "bull crap." Gilley Depo. 41. Plaintiff states that McGinnis then said Plaintiff "need[ed] to get your stuff out of here— you need to get out and go, and you need to get your shit off of the property and move out." Gilley Depo. 41-42. Plaintiff states that he did not quit. Gilley Depo. 45-46.
During his deposition, Plaintiff recalled no conversation with McGinnis about safety glasses on his final day of work, and Plaintiff recalled that he was wearing eyeglasses. Gilley Depo. 41-42, 62. Plaintiff states that he already had drilled the lock when McGinnis approached him, and he was not drilling. Gilley Depo. 45, 62-63. Gilley also testified that McGinnis said nothing in their final conversation about Plaintiff's failing to cap off a leak, and the only time Plaintiff was aware of a leak was during the walkthrough the previous day. Gilley Depo. 59-61.
Plaintiff and his family moved out immediately, and moved in with his parents, where he paid rent when he was able to get back on his feet. Gilley Depo. 37, 49-50, 70-71. Plaintiff's marriage suffered as a result of the stress of losing his job and his living circumstances. Gilley Depo. 70-71. In the fall of 2013, Plaintiff tried to take his own life as a result of being unable to find a job, having nowhere to live, and the stress in his marriage that ended in divorce in 2013. Gilley Depo. 72-73, 75-78, 120, 132.
Mejia no longer works for the company. She was let go in June 2013 because of multiple performance issues. McGinnis Depo. 138-42; Doc #28-7, at 249.
Under Title VII, it is unlawful for an employer to discriminate against an employee on the basis of her race, color, religion, sex, or national origin with respect to the terms and conditions of her employment. 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-2(a)-(m). The
If the plaintiff establishes a prima facie case, the employer has the burden of producing "legitimate, non-discriminatory reasons for the challenged employment action."
To prevail on his Title VII hostile environment claim, Plaintiff must establish:
Viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to Plaintiff, during the course of the nineteen days they worked together, Mejia flirted with Plaintiff, telling him that he was attractive and looked good. She asked him to visit her home because her fiancé was out of town, and she invited him over four or five times. Plaintiff took Mejia's statements to be sexual propositions. One night, Mejia invited Plaintiff to her house, and he told her it was not right, she needed to stop, and she should not make things awkward at work. Gilley Depo. 145. Mejia raised the suspicions of Plaintiff's wife before Plaintiff told her of Mejia's behavior. Gilley Depo. 146. Mejia then sent Plaintiff text messages inviting him to "hit pipe for 5 min," which Plaintiff took as an invitation to sex; then Mejia immediately sent him a text that he looked "Hott." Doc. #28-5, at 42; Gilley Depo. 15-16.
After carefully considering the summary judgment record — even taking Mejia's text message, "U wanna come hit pipe for 5 min?" as an invitation to Plaintiff for sexual intercourse
Plaintiff's case is not so minimal as that on which Defendant relies,
On the other hand, the harassment in Plaintiff's case is not as pervasive or severe as that on which Plaintiff relies,
Here, based on the record, Plaintiff allegedly received unwanted advances from Mejia some ten times during the nineteen days they worked together. Although the number of incidents is high for the length of time over which they occurred, the incidents were not severe. They included invitations to come over to Mejia's home, statements to Plaintiff that he was attractive and looked good, and the text messages discussed above. Mejia never touched Plaintiff physically or made overtly gender-related remarks. Her alleged comments to Plaintiff made him uncomfortable, and she (perhaps) invited him for sexual relations through an unclear innuendo, but she did not directly ask him for sex. Mejia's conduct caused Plaintiff "to stay[] away from" Mejia to avoid the situation, Gilley Depo. 32, and Plaintiff told Mejia he did not want things to be "awkward" at work," Gilley Depo. 145, but Plaintiff does not state how, exactly, Mejia's behavior interfered with his work performance.
Under the totality of the circumstances, Plaintiff's case is no more egregious than that in
To establish a prima facie case of disparate treatment discrimination, Plaintiff must show that (1) he is a member of a protected class, (2) he was qualified for his position, (3) he suffered an adverse employment action, and (4) similarly situated employees outside of his protected class were treated more favorably than he was.
Even assuming that Plaintiff meets the first three elements of a prima facie disparate treatment claim, Plaintiff's claim falters on the fourth element — that is, whether similarly situated employees outside Plaintiff's class were treated more favorably. Plaintiff claims that he was subjected to disparate treatment when Defendant "failed to adequately address his complaints of sexual harassment and also terminated his employment and evicted him from his home." Doc. #1, at 6, ¶ 29. The only evidence that Plaintiff cites to show that similarly situated employees were treated more favorably is that Mejia was not fired after Mejia and Plaintiff got into a shouting match during their meeting with McGinnis. Doc. #27, at 35-36. McGinnis Depo. 118, 147-48; Gilley Depo. 34. Plaintiff does not explain why Mejia should have been fired or how her continued employment after the meeting constituted discrimination based on sex. The gravamen of Plaintiff's disparate treatment claim is that if the gender roles were reversed, Defendant would have responded differently to his sexual harassment complaint. In his deposition, Plaintiff testified, "I feel like that's part of the reason I got fired is because I reported that, and that's almost discrimination." Gilley Depo. 11. Plaintiff stated that he told McGinnis, "if it was a female and man — or a man on a woman, it would have already been dealt with," Gilley Depo. 31, and that "[i]f this was — the role was very reversed and I was a woman reporting a man, that I wouldn't be terminated." Gilley Depo. 41. But Mejia did not complain about sexual harassment; therefore, she is not a similarly situated comparator to Plaintiff.
Plaintiff characterizes Collins's deposition testimony as admitting that, "had the gender roles been switched, [Collins] would not have told a female employee to confront her male boss in such a situation." Doc. #27, at 14. Collins, however, did not say he would have treated similarly situated men and women differently. Instead, Collins testified that, looking back, "I wouldn't have done the same thing for a male either. . . . I probably would have sent them home for the day until somebody else could have got there and mediated." Collins Depo. 145-48. Thus, Collins's testimony is not direct evidence of discrimination.
To establish a prima facie case of retaliation under Title VII, Plaintiff must demonstrate that (1) he engaged in statutorily protected activity, (2) he suffered a materially adverse action, and (3) a causal relationship exists between his protected activity and the adverse action.
Statutorily protected activity includes formal EEOC complaints and, as in Plaintiff's case, complaints to supervisors about discrimination.
Plaintiff argues that Defendant is not entitled to summary judgment on his first retaliation claim because Plaintiff objectively and reasonably believed that he was "subjected to continuous acts of sexual harassment within a very short period of time culminating in his supervisor soliciting him for sex via text message on February 23, 2013." Doc. #27, at 34. The court cannot agree. Plaintiff's complaint to McGinnis and Collins focused on the text messages, not on the events leading up to it. Plaintiff makes inconsistent statements as to whether he alerted McGinnis and Collins to Mejia's earlier advances, but, assuming that he did, Plaintiff does not create a genuine issue of fact as to whether Defendant retaliated against Plaintiff based on his sexual harassment complaint. Although a retaliation claim need only be "close enough" to create an objectively reasonable belief,
Plaintiff also claims that he was subject to retaliation based on his complaint to Defendant that, if the gender roles had been reversed, Plaintiff would have been treated differently. Defendant moves for summary judgment on "all" of Plaintiff's claims, but Defendant makes no specific argument for summary judgment on this claim, perhaps because Defendant appears to believe that "the only conduct [Plaintiff] complained about to [Defendant] were the text messages sent to him by Ms. Mejia." Doc. #23, at 20. However, Plaintiff clearly has raised a retaliation claim with regard to evidence that he complained to McGinnis that if the gender roles were reversed, Plaintiff would have been treated differently. Doc. #1 at 6, ¶ 31; Gilley Depo. 31, 41. Plaintiff pointed out in his response that Defendant failed to address the retaliation claim based on this comment. Doc. #27, at 35. Despite Plaintiff's observation, Defendant again made no specific argument about this claim in its reply, instead focusing on the argument that Plaintiff did not have an objectively reasonably belief that Plaintiff had opposed sexual harassment. Doc. #29, at 11. Because Defendant presented no argument in favor of summary judgment on Plaintiff's claim of retaliation based on this complaint, the request for summary judgment will be denied as to this claim.
For the foregoing reasons, it is ORDERED that:
(1) Defendant's motion for summary judgment (Doc. #22) is GRANTED as to Plaintiff's sexual harassment, sexual discrimination, and retaliation based on sexual harassment claims, and that summary judgment is hereby entered in Defendant's favor as to Plaintiff's claims of sexual harassment, sexual discrimination, and retaliation based on sexual harassment claims;
(2) Defendant's motion for summary judgment (Doc. #22) is DENIED as to Plaintiff's claim of retaliation based on his complaint that women in his circumstances would have been treated differently.