We consider the legal implications of a single, rather unsavory, episode of workplace sexual harassment.
I
Our story begins when Patricia Brooks, a telephone dispatcher for the City of San Mateo, California, and her coworker, senior dispatcher Steven Selvaggio, manned the city’s Communications Center, taking 911 calls on the evening shift. At some point during the evening, Selvaggio approached Brooks as she was taking a call. He placed his hand on her stomach and commented on its softness and sexiness. Brooks told Selvaggio to stop touching her and then forcefully pushed him away. Perhaps taking this as encouragement, Selvaggio later positioned himself behind Brooks’s chair, boxing her in against the communications console as she was taking another 911 call. He forced his hand underneath her sweater and bra to fondle her bare breast. After terminating the call, Brooks removed Selvaggio’s hand again and told him that he had “crossed the line.” To this, Selvaggio responded “you don’t have to worry about cheating [on your husband], I’ll do everything.” Selvaggio then approached Brooks as if he would fondle her breasts again. Fortunately, another dispatcher arrived at this time, and Selvaggio ceased his behavior. Soon thereafter Selvaggio took a break and left the building. Brooks immediately
This, it turned out, was not the first time Selvaggio had made improper advances to co-workers. At least two other female employees, including Pat P., another senior dispatcher, had been subjected to similar treatment from Selvaggio. However, Selvaggio’s earlier victims had not reported his misconduct. Only after the city launched its investigation into Brooks’s allegations did these other incidents come to light.
While Selvaggio denied any misconduct, the investigation adopted Brooks’s version of events and concluded that Selvaggio had violated the city’s sexual harassment policy. Selvaggio resigned after the city initiated termination proceedings against him. He later pled no contest to misdemeanor sexual assault charges and spent 120 days in jail.
Despite the city’s prompt remedial action, Brooks had trouble recovering from the incident. She took a leave of absence immediately afterward and began seeing a psychologist. She returned to work six months later. According to Brooks, her work environment had changed dramatically: The male employees ostracized her and her supervisors mistreated her. Brooks alleges that she had trouble getting her desired work shift and preferred vacation dates, while other employees with less seniority got their preferences. She also alleges that the city delayed approval of her sick leave benefits, reprimanded her for conduct it overlooked in other employees
Brooks obtained right to sue notices from the EEOC and the California Department of Fair Employment and Housing. She then sued the city, the Police Department and its chief, John Stangl, for sexual harassment and retaliatory discrimination in violation of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act, see 42 U.S.C. § 2000e et. seq., and the California Fair Employment and Housing Act (FEHA), see Cal. Gov. Code § 12940 et. seq.
The district court held that Selvaggio’s assault of Brooks in the Communications Center was not severe enough to give rise to a hostile work environment claim. As for Brooks’s retaliation claims, the district court held that she failed to show that she had suffered any adverse employment consequences. Based on these rulings, the district court granted the summary judgment motion.
On appeal, Brooks complains that the district court erred in ruling that the sexual assault was not sufficient to create a hostile work environment. She also ar
II
Title VII prohibits employment discrimination based on any of its enumerated grounds: “ ‘race, color, religion, sex, or national origin.’ ” Harris v. Forklift Sys., Inc.,
Hostile Work Environment
In order to prevail on her hostile work environment claim, Brooks must show that her “workplace [was] permeated with discriminatory intimidation ... that-[was] sufficiently severe or pervasive to alter the conditions of [her] employment and create an abusive working environment.” Hams,
Brooks has alleged sufficient facts to support the subjective portion of
The single case Brooks cites to the contrary, Al-Dabbagh v. Greenpeace,
A single instance of sexual harassment might, nevertheless, be sufficient to establish a hostile work environment.
If the incident here were as severe as that in Alr-Dabbagh, we would have to grapple with the difficult question whether a single incident can so permeate the workplace as to support a hostile work environment claim. Because the incident here was much less severe, we need not answer that question. Brooks did not allege that she sought or required hospitalization; indeed, she did not suffer any physical injuries at all. The brief encounter between Brooks and Selvaggio was highly offensive, but nothing like the ordeal suffered by the unfortunate young woman in Alr-Dabbagh, who was held captive from evening until early the next morning. Utilizing the Harris factors of frequency, severity and intensity of interference with working conditions, we cannot say that a reasonable woman in Brooks’s position would consider the terms and conditions of.her employment altered by Selvaggio’s actions.
Selvaggio’s conduct is akin to that reported in cases where plaintiff was held not to have alleged harassment severe enough to support a hostile work environment claim. See, e.g., Candelore v. Clark County Sanitation Disk,
Ellison is not to the contrary. Ellison alleged a sustained campaign of harassing conduct directed at her. See Ellison,
Brooks attempts to morph Selvaggio’s single assault into a course of conduct by claiming that each of his improper touchings constituted a separate incident. While Selvaggio did touch her inappropriately on her stomach and breast, this happened within the course of a few minutes and was part of a single episode. Additionally, Selvaggio had no chance to become bolder because the city removed him from the workplace once his actions were uncovered. No reasonable woman in Brooks’s position would consider that Sel-vaggio’s misconduct had altered the terms or conditions of her employment.
This in no way condones Selvaggio’s actions. Quite the opposite: The conduct of which Brooks complains was highly reprehensible. But, while Selvaggio clearly harassed Brooks as she tried to do her job, “not all workplace conduct that may be described as harassment affects a term, condition, or privilege of employment within the meaning of Title VII.” Meritor Sav. Bank v. Vinson,
Retaliation
Six months after Selvaggio assaulted her, Brooks returned to work. While Sel-vaggio had resigned under threat of termination, Brooks claims she returned to a very different workplace than the one she had left. Brooks initially noticed that her coworkers shunned her. Specifically, the males in the office refused to speak to her about anything other than work. She also saw pictures of Selvaggio in the Dispatch Center photo album, tyhich were removed on her demand. Additionally, the city took its full 90 days to process Brooks’s worker’s compensation claim. , Later, she was required to attend group therapy sessions and discuss the incident in front of coworkers. She had problems getting the shift she had when she took her leave of absence; was assigned to work with another dispatcher, Mike C., who had been close to Selvaggio and allegedly became openly hostile to Brooks; and had difficulty securing vacation time. According to Brooks, this treatment culminated in an unfavorable job evaluation.
We recently set out the peculiar dynamics of a retaliation claim under Title VII in Payne v. Norwest Corp.,
Asserting one’s civil rights, as Brooks did by complaining of Selvaggio’s conduct, is a protected activity under Title VII and FEHA. See EEOC v. Crown Zellerbach Corp.,
The next question is whether Brooks alleged that she was subjected to an adverse employment action. In Strother v. University of S. Cal. Permanente Med. Group,
Because an employer cannot force employees to socialize with one another, ostracism suffered at the hands of coworkers cannot constitute an adverse employment action. See Strother,
The group therapy sessions about which Brooks complains were workshops designed to better inform the city’s workforce of its sexual harassment policy. Brooks does not claim she was singled out for the sessions, as all city employees were required to participate in them. Her complaint seems to boil down to the non-private character of the sessions. But the employer has an interest in educating its employees about the adverse effects of misconduct that has occurred in the workplace. An employer’s legitimate effort to deal with a traumatic workplace situation and educate its employees regarding sexual harassment cannot be the basis for a retaliation claim under Title VII.
Next, we turn to Brooks’s claims that she was scheduled with a coworker, Mike C., who was openly hostile to her. While this might be an adverse employment action under certain circumstances, the undisputed facts demonstrate that it was not here. Brooks was never scheduled to work with Mike C. He was sometimes on the dispatch floor when she worked, but Brooks has presented no evidence that the city put the two of them together knowing that Brooks would be uncomfortable. Nor did Brooks present evidence that Mike C. was openly hostile, or hostile at all, toward her. She admits that he showed her no animus, nor did he
As for the fact that the city used all of its allotted 90 days to process the worker’s compensation claim, Brooks offers no evidence that the city treated her differently from other employees seeking workers’ compensation benefits. Absent a showing of disparate treatment, the city’s delay cannot be deemed retaliatory.
Brooks also alleges that her performance review was downgraded from “satisfactory” to “needs improvement” because of her complaint about Selvaggio. We have previously held that an undeserved negative performance review can constitute an adverse employment decision. See Yartzoff,
Finally, Brooks claims that the city rescheduled her to an unfavorable shift and denied her vacation preference. However, like the evaluation, these actions were not final. When Brooks complained, the city accommodated her preferences by allowing her to switch shifts and vacation dates with other employees.
Ill
Brooks alludes briefly in her moving papers to a constructive discharge theory citing Turner v. Anheuser-Busch, Inc.,
While Watson holds that the determination of whether working conditions are sufficiently egregious to support a constructive discharge theory is usually a jury question, see Watson,
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Brooks has not renewed her argument that the reprimand was retaliatory. See Smith v. Marsh,
. Brooks also named Selvaggio as a defendant in her FEHA complaint. Unlike Title VII, FEHA grants victims a cause of action for discrimination practiced by "any other person” in addition to that practiced solely by employers. Compare 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-2(a) with Cal. Govt.Code § 12940(h). Nonetheless, the California Supreme Court has recently held that FEHA, like Title VII, does not support a claim of harassment against a fellow employee. See Carrisales v. Department of Corrections,
. See Beyda v. City of Los Angeles,
. The objective portion of Al-Dabbagh's claim was based on the severity of the incident plus negligence on the part of the employer, Greenpeace:
Al-Dabbagh alleges that Greenpeace had turned a blind eye to Mitchell’s sexual abuse of female employees in its Chicago office before she fell victim to it and consequently suffered grave bodily and psychological injury. As already stated, Greenpeace’s single response to Mitchell’s earlier conduct-an oral reprimand for his drinking-fell far short of addressing the more serious problems posed by his conduct. There is no question that those allegations, credited as they must be on the present motion, amply support the first (objective) element of a hostile-environment claim-the evaluation of Mitchell’s conduct by a reasonable person.
Al-Dabbagh,
. Brooks claims that knowledge of Selvag-gio’s conduct can be imputed to the city because Pat P. knew of it (indeed was a victim) and was a supervisor by virtue of her position as a senior dispatcher. Brooks relies on Lamb v. Household Credit Servs.,
The city also relies on Lamb. It points to language indicating that supervisors, as that term is defined for Title VII purposes, are only those who have authority to "hire, fire, or discipline employees, or recommend such, action.” Id. at 1517. It is undisputed that senior dispatchers lacked the authority to hire and fire dispatchers. While there is a vague reference to senior dispatchers assisting with disciplinary measures, this is not sufficient. See id. at 1517 (finding work flow supervisor with "limited set of purely ministerial employee training and monitoring” functions not to be a supervisor for Title VII purposes).
Lamb also provides for imputation where an employee who has "general responsibility for passing employment-related complaints up the corporate hierarchy” receives a complaint of harassment. See id. at 1516 (citing Llewellyn v. Celanese Corp.,
*1090 [F]or purposes of Tille VII, "management-level employees” encompass ... non-management employees charged with substantial responsibility for relaying employee complaints to management, particularly where management is located away from the workplace. If a co-worker has knowledge of a harassee’s complaint, but that coworker lacks authority to counsel, investigate, suspend, or fire the accused harasser, or to change the conditions of the haras-see’s employment, the co-worker's inaction does not spark employer liability unless that co-worker has an official or strong de facto duty to act as a conduit to management for complaints about work conditions.
Because Pat P., as a Senior Dispatcher, lacked power to change the conditions of employment, did not serve as a conduit to off-site managers and never actually received a formal complaint about Selvaggio, her knowledge of his conduct cannot be imputed to the city.
. See Brown v. Hot, Sexy & Safer Prods., Inc.,
. But see EEOC Policy Guide, page 6 supra, at 405:6691 ("The Commission will presume that the unwelcome, intentional touching of a charging party's intimate body areas is sufficiently offensive to alter the conditions of her working environment and constitute a violation of Title VII.”) We are not convinced that such a presumption is consistent with the Supreme Court's totality of the circumstances test approach in Harris. Nevertheless, even were we to adopt this presumption, the brief duration of the incident coupled with the city's effective remedial action would suffice to rebut it.
. Brooks also argues that the city is liable for its failure to take remedial steps once it had knowledge, through Pat P., of Selvaggio’s pri- or offending conduct. She relies on Fuller v. City of Oakland,
.See, e.g., Nidds v. Schindler Elevator Corp.,
. See O'Day v. McDonnell Douglas Helicopter Co.,
. See McAlindin v. County of San Diego,
. Brooks also alleges that, after she complained about Selvaggio, certain police officers refused to provide her services that were routinely provided to other dispatchers. However, the police did not employ Brooks and cannot be held liable for retaliating against her. See City of Los Angeles Dept, of Water & Power v. Manhart,
