Adam Wiercinski, a Polish man of Jewish descent, immigrated to the United States in 1981 with the assistance of Rav-Tov International Jewish Rescue Organization (“Rav-Tov”), a community organization helping Jews resettle in Israel and the United States. Starting in approximately 1984 and continuing until December 2007, Wiercinski worked as a deliveryman for Mangia, a food catering company with sev
There were only two notable breaks in Wiercinski’s employment by Mangia during this 23 year period. Wiercinski left the Mangia 56 location in approximately 1989 and worked as a security officer until he returned to work at the Mangia 48 location in 1992. In 1998, Wiercinski was fired by his manager at the Mangia 48 location, allegedly because of that manager’s anti-Semitism. Shortly thereafter Wiercinski asked his friend and Rav-Tov sponsor, Zindel Zelmanovitch, to help him get his job back. Zelmanovitch approached Muniak and Cymanow and convinced them to rehire Wiercinski. They did so and Wiercinski then worked at Man-gia’s Wall Street branch.
In 1999, Wiercinski asked Zelmanovitch to help him transfer from the Wall Street location to the Mangia 57 location because it “was the busiest location in the midtown” and Wiercinski believed he would “be able to earn some decent money” at that branch. JA 89, 91. Wiercinski worked at Mangia 57 until he took an extended leave of absence to visit family in Poland in late 2007. When he returned in early 2008, he asked to be rehired at Man-gia and was rejected.
In October 2009, Wiercinski sued Man-gia 57 and six individual defendants (together, “Mangia”), alleging discrimination on the basis of religion and national origin, retaliation, conspiracy, wrongful termination, and violation of various New York State and City laws. Wiercinski alleged that a night shift manager, Artur Zbozien, verbally harassed and abused him with anti-Semitic slurs such as “stinking jew,” “dirty Jew,” “Jewish pederast,” and “kike” throughout Wiercinski’s eight year period of employment at Mangia 57. In October 2013, following several years 'of motion practice, the parties proceeded to trial on Wiercinksi’s sole remaining claim — hostile work environment under Section 1981.
The evidence presented by both sides was almost entirely testimonial. Wiercin-ski recounted multiple instances of Zbo-zien’s harassing conduct. For example, Wiercinski testified that on the first day of work, he accidentally bumped into Zbozien while carrying boxes, to which Zbozien responded, “did anybody ever fuck you up, you stupid fucking Jew.” JA 93. Wiercin-ski also said that, on several occasions, Zbozien paid out Wiercinski’s tips in pennies and threw them on the floor. JA 96-97. Wiercinski recalled that Zbozien sometimes passed gas in front of him, laughed, and said, “here is your Zyklon B that was used to gas Jews in the concentration camps.” JA 100. According to Wiercinski, Zbozien used anti-Semitic slurs “at least a dozen times” over the eight years during which Wiercinski worked at Mangia 57. JA 102.
Wiercinski also introduced testimony from three former coworkers, who testified in detail about the specific instances described above and explained that Wiercin-ski commonly complained to them and others about the anti-Semitic slurs he .was subject to. See, e.g., JA 106-107, 179-180, 195, 202. Nevertheless, Wiercinski admitted that he never looked for another job during the eight years of harassment from Zbozien, and in fact, asked to be transferred to Zbozien’s night shift, a request that Mangia granted.
On cross-examination, Mangia undertook to impeach Wiercinski’s credibility but was thwarted as a result of his repeated invocation of the Fifth Amendment privilege against self-incrimination. Specifically, Wiercinski invoked the Fifth Amendment privilege when cross-examined about his use of a different name for payroll purposes while at Mangia, his failure to report income earned at Mangia on tax returns, his application for and receipt of Social Security and other public assistance benefits without reporting income earned at Mangia, and his failure to report income earned at Cucina, a catering company where Wiercinski worked after his termination in 2007.
2
See
JA 125-131, 134-136,153159. Although Mangia was, at times, able to impeach Wiercinski using prior deposition testimony,
see, e.g.,
JA 130 (Wiercinski deposition testimony admitting that he used a different name to receive income earned at Mangia in order to conceal it from government authorities), its ability to present a defense was significantly hampered by Wiercinski’s obstructive behavior during cross-examination.
Mangia also attacked the credibility of Wiercinski’s witnesses by impeaching their trial testimony with prior inconsistent deposition testimony. See, e.g., JA 182 (deposition testimony of Marian Krajewski stating that he could not remember instances of anti-Semitic slurs directed at Wiercinski); JA 202, 215-216 (deposition testimony of Marcin Swiderski and Jaros-law Ubowski stating that Wiercinski never complained to them about anti-Semitism). At the conclusion of plaintiffs case, Man-gia moved for a directed verdict on the ground that Wiercinski’s testimony was not credible, citing to the inconsistencies in his testimony and his pervasive invocation of the Fifth Amendment. The district court denied the motion because it was “based on questions of credibility,” which are in the domain of the jury. JA 221.
Mangia introduced five witnesses in its case-in-chief. Robert Ranfranz, a former co-worker of Wiercinski’s and Mangia’s current director of operations, testified that he received a phone call from Wiercin-ski in August 2007, shortly before Wiercin-ski left the company and that he offered him a bribe. Specifically Wiercinski told Ranfranz that “he is not happy with the way that things are going at Mangia [or] Zbozien, and he said he is thinking about opening a case, suing the company, and he asked [Ranfranz] if [he] will testify for him. [Wiercinski] said that he will offer [Ranfranz] [one] thousand or $2,000 as an exchange, and that if he wins the lawsuit [they] can speak about additional money after the case.” JA 225.
Zelmanovitch also testified about his extensive relationship with Wiercinski, and recalled that even though Wiercinski frequently spoke to him about work and compensation issues, he never mentioned that he was subject to anti-Semitic harassment at work. Zbozien testified and denied using anti-Semitic slurs against Wiercinski. Zbozien admitted that Cymanow transferred him to Mangia Wall Street for a brief period because of Wiercinski’s complaints, but could not remember whether he knew at the time that those complaints alleged anti-Semitic remarks. Cymanow denied ever being told by Wiercinski of alleged anti-Semitic remarks, and claimed that she fired Wiercinski in 2007 because of job performance issues and because he requested too much vacation time. Finally, another former deliveryman testified that he never heard Zbozien make antiSemitic remarks, and that Wiercinski never complained to him about anti-Semitism in the office, even though they were both Jewish and discussed Jewish holidays and other topics.
The jury found Mangia liable under Section 1981, concluding on a special verdict form that Wiercinski was subjected to a hostile work environment based on conduct “perpetrated by his supervisor(s)” but not “perpetrated by his coworker(s).” The jury awarded Wiercinski nominal damages in the amount of $1 and punitive damages in the amount of $900,000. The verdict form did not require the jury to name which supervisor, or supervisors, subjected Wiercinski to a hostile work environment.
3
Following the verdict, Wiercinski applied for an award of attorneys’ fees and costs, and Mangia moved, pursuant to Rules 50
Although Mangia moved only for relief as to the punitive damages award, the district court vacated the jury’s liability verdict, conditionally granted Mangia’s motion for a new trial on the issue of punitive damages, and denied Wiercinski’s application for fees and costs.
Wiercinski v. Mangia 57, Inc.,
[hjaving seen and heard the witnesses and having a firm hold on and not merely a feel, for every jot and title of this case, I am driven to the determination that a judgment entered for the defendant pursuant to Rule 50(b) notwithstanding the verdict, is the only determination that reasonable and fair-minded persons could arrive at and to do less would be to endorse a gross miscarriage of justice.
Id. at 128. The district court found that Wiercinski’s repeated invocation of the Fifth Amendment severely impacted his credibility and limited Mangia’s opportunity to mount a defense. The district court was, no doubt, also deeply troubled by essentially unrebutted testimony that Wiercinski had offered to purchase the testimony of a witness. Further, the district court found the plaintiffs witnesses to be incredible, finding that “[tjheirs was the glib testimony of school witnesses reciting a lesson, a parody of Wiercinski’s. The glaring inconsistencies between their testimony at trial and at depositions years earlier are vital to note for their relevance in arriving at a reasoned and comprehensive disposition.... ” Id. at 134 (internal quotation marks omitted). The district court also concluded there was no evidence in the record to support a conclusion that Zbozien was a supervisor as that term has been defined by the Supreme Court. See id. at 136.
By contrast, the district court found the testimony of Mangia’s witnesses to be more credible. Specifically, the district court noted that Cymanow had been family friends with Wiercinski for 30 years, and testified that she never directed or heard anyone direct any anti-Semitic remarks at Wiercinski at work. The district court also noted that Zelmanovitch testified that he knew Wiercinski for 25 years, and that Wiercinski had never told him that he was facing this kind of harassment at work, even though Wiercinski had come to him with many other problems over the years. See id. at 133. Finally, the district court cited evidence that Wiercinski stayed at the job for years, despite the allegedly hostile environment and in fact, asked to be assigned to the night shift where Zbo-zien is the dispatcher, as undermining Wiercinski’s testimony and supporting Mangia’s witnesses. See id. at 134. Wiercinski filed a timely appeal from this decision.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
This Court reviews
de novo
a district court’s decision to vacate a jury verdict pursuant to Rule 50(b).
See Tepperwien
v.
Entergy Nuclear Operations, Inc.,
DISCUSSION
I. Liability Verdict
Section 1981 provides, in pertinent part, that “[a]ll persons within the jurisdiction of the United States shall have the same right ... to make and enforce contracts ... as is enjoyed by white citizens_” 42 U.S.C. § 1981(a). “This section thus outlaws discrimination with respect to the enjoyment of benefits, privileges, terms, and conditions of a contractual relationship, such as employment. ...”
Patterson v. Cnty. of Oneida,
To prove a hostile work environment claim under Title VII, a plaintiff must show that his “workplace is permeated with discriminatory intimidation, ridicule, and insult that is sufficiently severe or pervasive to alter the conditions of the victim’s employment and create an abusive working environment.”
Harris v. Forklift Sys., Inc.,
An employer’s liability for hostile work environment claims depends on whether the 'underlying harassment is perpetrated by the plaintiff’s supervisor or his non-supervisory co-workers. If the harassment is perpetrated by the plaintiffs “non-supervisory coworkers, an employer’s vicarious liability depends on the plaintiff showing that the employer knew (or reasonably should have known) about the harassment but failed to take appropriate remedial action.”
Petrosino v. Bell Atl.,
In
Vance v. Ball State University,
the Supreme Court explained that an employee is a “supervisor” for purposes of the employer’s vicarious liability under Title VII if he or she is empowered by the
The district court “determined that a judgment should be entered for the defendant notwithstanding the verdict (pursuant to Rule 50(b)) because [it] ha[d] a feel of this case that is indelibly engraved upon [its] consciousness for having seen and heard the witnesses and with an awareness of the nuances of their testimony. ...”
Wiercinski,
Alternatively, the district court found that the jury’s verdict of supervisory liability could not be sustained because Zbozien was not a “supervisor” as defined by the Supreme Court in
Vance.
The district court held that Zbozien “was merely a dispatcher who assigned catering orders to individual delivery boys, one of whom was Wiercinski. Although these assignments could affect the amount earned in tips [because larger deliveries typically have larger tips], this is insufficient to establish supervisor status because such assignments do not constitute tangible employment action.”
Wiercinski,
Similarly, in light of the circumstances of this case, we cannot accept this alternative basis. We need not determine whether Zbozien satisfies the
Vance
definition of “supervisor,” because the district court failed to acknowledge that the jury’s conclusion that the harassment was
not
perpetrated by co-workers is necessarily based on its determination that Zbozien is a supervisor. Neither party requested an instruction as to the definition of “supervisor” under
Vance,
nor was the jury provided a list of potential supervisors or coworkers who allegedly harassed Wiercin-ski. Thus, even if the jury had been instructed that Zbozien could not be a “supervisor” as a matter of law, he certainly would have been a “co-worker.” The jury could have credited Wiercinski’s testimony
II. Punitive Damages
Punitive damages are “ ‘a discretionary moral judgment’ that the defendant has engaged in conduct that is so reprehensible that it warrants punishment.”
Tolbert,
“A plaintiff may establish the requisite state of mind for an award of punitive damages with evidence (1) that the defendant discriminated in the face of a perceived risk that its actions violated federal law, or (2) of egregious or outrageous acts that may serve as evidence supporting an inference of the requisite evil motive.”
United States v. Space Hunters, Inc.,
There is no evidence in the record that Mangia “discriminated (or retaliated) against [Wiercinski] with conscious knowledge it was violating the law, or that it engaged in egregious or-outrageous .conduct from which an inference of malice or reckless indifference could be drawn.”
Tepperwien,
Even if we credit Wiercinski’s version of the facts, the remaining evidence shows that Wiercinski “was a friend of [ ] Cyma-now’s family for years, was a frequent visitor in her home, invited to participate on festive occasions!,] and was re-hired by her after he was discharged.”
Wiercinski,
III. Attorneys’ Fees and Costs
A plaintiff who recovers only nominal damages is still a prevailing party and may be entitled to fees and costs in Title VII cases.
Farrar v. Hobby,
CONCLUSION
For these reasons, we AFFIRM the district court’s judgment to the extent that it vacates the award of punitive damages, REVERSE to the extent that it vacates the jury’s finding of liability and award of nominal damages, and REMAND for determination of appropriate fees and costs.
Notes
. For purposes of this opinion, "Mangia” refers either to the umbrella entity, or to the appellees. All references to specific Mangia locations will include the branch name.
. The district court instructed the jury about the invocation of the Fifth Amendment as follows:
During the course of the trial, you have heard Mr. Wiercinski assert the Fifth Amendment to a series of questions which were put to him. You may, I suppose, during the course of your common experience and life, have heard references to a person taking the Fifth. It is refusing to answer a question because the claim is that if I answered it I might be incriminating myself. That's the basis of the Fifth Amendment. In a civil case when a person takes the Fifth Amendment, the jury has a right to infer— they may, but they are not required to infer — an adverse inference by virtue of the fact that the witness asserted the Fifth Amendment. The jury may infer but they are not required to infer that the answer which the witness would have given, had he answered it, would have been unfavorable to him.
JA 345.
. Neither party requested a more detailed verdict form or a jury instruction on the definition of "supervisor,” which was the subject of the Supreme Court’s decision in
Vance v. Ball State
Univ., — U.S. —,
