Christopher VICKERS, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. FAIRFIELD MEDICAL CENTER, Steve Anderson, Kory J. Dixon, John Mueller, and “Jane Doe” Dixon, Defendants-Appellees.
No. 04-3776
United States Court of Appeals, Sixth Circuit
July 19, 2006
453 F.3d 757
Harness argues that by referencing only “just punishment” and “adequate deterrence” specifically, the district court did not sufficiently consider the other
III.
For these reasons, we affirm.
ARGUED: June 8, 2005.
Decided and Filed: July 19, 2006.
Before: SILER and GIBBONS, Circuit Judges; LAWSON, District Judge.*
OPINION
JULIA SMITH GIBBONS, Circuit Judge.
Christopher Vickers brought a claim against Fairfield Medical Center (FMC), three co-workers, and a co-worker‘s spouse alleging sex discrimination, sexual harassment and retaliation in violation of
For the following reasons, we affirm the decision of the district court.
I.
Vickers was employed as a private police officer by Fairfield Medical Center in Lancaster, Ohio. Kory Dixon and John Mueller were also police officers at FMC and often worked with Vickers. Steve Anderson was Police Chief of FMC‘s police department and was Vickers’ supervisor.
Vickers’ seventy-one page complaint is extremely detailed. It gives a virtually day-by-day account of Vickers’ allegations of harassment. According to the complaint, Vickers befriended a male homosexual doctor at FMC and assisted him in an investigation regarding sexual misconduct that had allegedly occurred against the doctor. Once his co-workers found out about the friendship, Vickers contends that Dixon and Mueller “began making sexually based slurs and discriminating remarks and comments about Vickers, alleging that Vickers was ‘gay’ or homosexual, and questioning his masculinity.” Vickers asserts that following a vacation in April 2002 to Florida with a male friend, Dixon‘s and Mueller‘s harassing comments and behavior increased. Vickers asserts that Anderson witnessed the harassing behavior but took no action to stop it and frequently joined in the harassment. Vickers asserts that he has never discussed his sexuality with any of his co-workers.
Vickers contends that he was subject to daily instances of harassment at the hands of his co-workers from May 2002 through March 2003. The allegations of harassment include impressing the word “FAG” on the second page of Vickers’ report forms, frequent derogatory comments regarding Vickers’ sexual preferences and activities, frequently calling Vickers a “fag,” “gay,” and other derogatory names, playing tape-recorded conversations in the office during which Vickers was ridiculed for being homosexual, subjecting Vickers to vulgar gestures, placing irritants and chemicals in Vickers’ food and other personal property, using the nickname “Kiss” for Vickers, and making lewd remarks suggesting that Vickers provide them with sexual favors.
Vickers also asserts that on several occasions, he was physically harassed by his co-workers. According to his complaint, on October 20, 2002, Vickers and Mueller were conducting handcuff training. Dixon handcuffed Vickers and then simulated sex with Vickers while Anderson photographed this incident. Vickers downloaded the digital picture and placed it in his mailbox,
Vickers considered reporting the harassment he was experiencing to FMC‘s Vice-President or President but asserts that Anderson confronted Vickers before he reported the harassment, telling him that reporting the harassment would be futile, as it would not change the work environment. Vickers spoke with Anderson, Dixon, and Mueller several other times about the harassment, but no action appears to have been taken. In April 2003, Vickers retained a lawyer to aid him in dealing with the harassment he was experiencing on the job. Vickers’ attorney met with FMC representatives, at which time the representatives stated that they would begin investigating Vickers’ complaints immediately. In connection with the investigation, Vickers asserts that Anderson, Dixon and Mueller, among others, were interviewed.
FMC‘s counsel informed Vickers’ attorney at the conclusion of the interview that FMC did not believe that Vickers had a “legally actionable claim” against them. Shortly thereafter, Vickers met with the human resources department at FMC, where he learned that Anderson, Dixon and Mueller had been suspended for staggered periods as a result of FMC‘s investigation into Vickers’ complaints. Vickers was told that human resources would attempt to rearrange Vickers’ schedule in order to minimize his contact with Anderson, Mueller, and Dixon. Vickers was also informed during this meeting that the investigation had revealed actionable misconduct by Vickers, but that human resources had elected not to pursue any action against him in light of the harassment Vickers had experienced. Vickers claims that human resources refused to provide specific information regarding Vickers’ alleged misconduct despite his request.
Vickers asserts that, contrary to the statements of human resources regarding a schedule shift, he continued to work closely with Anderson, Dixon and Mueller. Vickers contends that Dixon and Mueller were openly hostile toward him during this time period. Despite human resources’ instructions to all involved parties to keep Vickers’ complaint confidential, word of the situation spread. Vickers met with human resources again and was assured that appropriate action would be taken. A few days later, Anderson informed Vickers that his request to transfer shifts had been denied. Soon thereafter, Anderson informed Vickers that he was required to meet with the human resources department. Vickers was told by a co-worker that the meeting was for the purpose of initiating a personnel action against him “in order to discredit him” if he filed a lawsuit against FMC. Vickers attempted to discern from human resources whether the meeting was for disciplinary purposes. He was told that it was in fact a disciplinary meeting and that he was informed that he was not allowed to have an attorney present at the meeting. Vickers spoke with his attorney and thereafter decided to resign from his position at FMC.
All defendants-appellees filed a joint motion for judgment on the pleadings pursuant to
II.
We review the district court‘s dismissal of a complaint pursuant to
Vickers argues on appeal that the district court erred in finding that he cannot prevail on his
The district court found that Vickers’ allegations, if proven, could not support a finding that the harassment and discrimination he endured occurred because he
In order to establish a prima facie case of sex discrimination under
We conclude that the theory of sex stereotyping under Price Waterhouse is not broad enough to encompass such a theory. The Supreme Court in Price Waterhouse focused principally on characteristics that were readily demonstrable in the workplace, such as the plaintiff‘s manner of walking and talking at work, as well as her work attire and her hairstyle. See id. at 235. Later cases applying Price Waterhouse have interpreted it as applying where gender non-conformance is demonstrable through the plaintiff‘s appearance or behavior. See, e.g., Dawson v. Bumble & Bumble, 398 F.3d 211, 218 (2d Cir.2005) (stating that an individual may have a viable
In considering Vickers’ sex stereotyping argument, the Second Circuit‘s recent opinion in Dawson v. Bumble & Bumble, 398 F.3d at 211, is instructive. In Dawson, a female former employee of a hair salon and self-described lesbian attempted to bring a sex discrimination claim against her employer after she was terminated based on alleged gender stereotyping. Id. at 218. The plaintiff in that case complained that the discrimination she suffered was based on her non-conforming appearance. Id. at 221. The Second Circuit noted the faulty logic in viewing what is, in reality, a claim of discrimination based on sexual orientation as a claim of sex stereotyping:
When utilized by an avowedly homosexual plaintiff, ... gender stereotyping claims can easily present problems for an adjudicator. This is for the simple reason that stereotypical notions about how men and women should behave will often necessarily blur into ideas about heterosexuality and homosexuality.
This court‘s opinion in Smith v. City of Salem, 378 F.3d at 566, does not alter this conclusion. The plaintiff in Smith, a lieutenant in the Salem Fire Department, was a transsexual undergoing a physical transformation from male to female. Id. at 568. The treatment resulted in a display of “‘a more feminine appearance on a full-time basis.‘” Id. The plaintiff was suspended based, at least in part, on co-workers’ expressed concerns that “his appearance and mannerisms were not ‘masculine enough.‘” Id. In Smith, the court made explicit that a plaintiff cannot be denied coverage under
Ultimately, recognition of Vickers’ claim would have the effect of de facto amending
Nor does the prevailing case law on same-sex sexual harassment provide an avenue for Vickers’ claim. As noted above, the Supreme Court has stated that
Nothing in Vickers’ complaint indicates that his harassers acted out of sexual desire. Similarly, the complaint does not support an inference that there was general hostility toward men in the workplace. Finally, Vickers included no information regarding how women were treated in comparison to men at FMC. In fact, defendants-appellees maintain that Vickers worked in an all-male workforce, an assertion that Vickers has apparently not disputed.
The Sixth Circuit has previously rejected hostile work environment claims brought by plaintiffs in very similar factual scenarios in one published and two unpublished cases. See EEOC v. Harbert-Yeargin, Inc., 266 F.3d 498, 519-23 (6th Cir.2001) (hostile work environment claim rejected where plaintiff experienced frequent inappropriate touching because though harassment was sexual in nature, it could not be said to be “because of ... sex” as required by
III.
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the decision of the district court granting defendants-appellees’ motion for judgment on the pleadings pursuant to
DAVID M. LAWSON, District Judge, dissenting.
As the majority correctly states, in Price Waterhouse v. Hopkins, the Supreme Court held that “making employment decisions based on sex stereotyping, i.e., the degree to which an individual conforms to traditional notions of what is appropriate for one‘s gender, is actionable under
I.
It is beyond debate that
The majority correctly points out that a sexual harassment claim based on a hostile workplace environment requires the claimant to plead that he was a member of a protected class, he was subjected to unwelcome sexual harassment, the harassment was based on sex, the conduct created a hostile environment, and the employer is accountable for the condition. Ante at 762 (citing Clark v. United Parcel Serv., Inc., 400 F.3d 341, 347 (6th Cir.2005)). The thrust of the opinion is that Vickers failed to plead that the harassment was based on sex because it had its roots in the harassers’ perception that
However, I believe that such a reading of the complaint in this case is too narrow and imposes an obligation on the plaintiff that is more exacting at this stage of the proceedings than is required by the
I have no quarrel with the proposition that a careful distinction must be drawn between cases of gender stereotyping, which are actionable, and cases denominated as such that in reality seek protection for sexual-orientation discrimination, which are not. Nor do I believe that gender stereotyping is actionable per se under
[T]here is a difference that subsequent cases have ignored between, on the one hand, using evidence of the plaintiff‘s failure to wear nail polish (or, if the plaintiff is a man, his using nail polish) to show that her sex played a role in the adverse employment action of which she complains, and, on the other hand, creating a subtype of sexual discrimination called “sex stereotyping,” as if there were a federally protected right for male workers to wear nail polish and dresses and speak in falsetto and mince about in high heels, or for female ditchdiggers to strip to the waist in hot weather.
Hamm v. Weyauwega Milk Products, Inc., 332 F.3d 1058, 1067 (7th Cir.2003) (Posner, J. concurring). However, these distinctions can be complicated, and where, as here, the plaintiff has pleaded facts from which a fact finder could infer that sex (and not simply homosexuality) played a role in the employment decision and contributed to the hostility of the work environment, drawing the line should not occur at the pleading stage of the lawsuit. “Claims lacking factual merit are properly dealt with through summary judgment under
II.
Looking at the allegations in this case, I cannot conclude that no set of facts could be proved that would entitle the plaintiff to relief. The allegations permit the conclusion that the defendants were hostile to the plaintiff because he was not masculine enough, justifying an inference that a female-or a man with female characteristics-would not be tolerated in the job of private police officer at the Fairfield Medical Center (FMC).
Vickers asserts that there are some twenty-five incidents of harassment that could be construed as evidence of the defendants’ perception that Vickers was not masculine enough for them. To be sure, the conduct that Vickers cites for the most part requires following Vickers‘s argument from point to point, and it is not a crystal-clear statement of sex stereotyping due to the conflation with homosexual references. However, as the district court noted, Vickers does allege that he was not perceived as sufficiently masculine. In March of 2002, the complaint alleges, Vickers began investigating allegations of sexual misconduct against a male doctor at FMC by a “gay” complainant. Compl. at ¶15, J.A. at 23. Vickers ultimately befriended the individual and assisted him in investigating the matter. Ibid. Fellow police officers Dixon and Mueller, upon learning of the investigation and that the complainant was a homosexual, suspected Vickers of being a homosexual “and question [ed] his masculinity.” Compl. at ¶16, J.A. at 23 (emphasis added). Vickers alleges that he was a private person and did not share details of his personal life at work.
In paragraph 250 of the complaint, Vickers states:
Vickers does not make any claim of protected status on the basis of homosexuality per se-whether real or perceived-with regard to his
Title VII claim. Vicker[s]‘s claim is instead grounded in the body of sex-discrimination jurisprudence set forth by the landmark U.S. Supreme Court decision Price Waterhouse v. Hopkins, 490 U.S. 228, 109 S.Ct. 1775, 104 L.Ed.2d 268 (1989), and its progeny. AlthoughTitle VII does not prohibit discrimination against homosexuals per se-whether real or perceived-the Price Waterhouse line of cases stands for the proposition, inter alia, that it is improper to discriminate in employment on the basis of real
or perceived nonconformity with gender norms.
J.A. at 77. Vickers cites at least one factual example of this perception: on January 22, 2003, Dixon informed Mueller that Vickers “might jump your ass. He did me for no reason when I walked in.” Compl. at ¶72, J.A. at 37. According to Vickers, the following ensued:
Dixon then proceeded to explain to Mueller that Vickers was in a bad mood. Mueller said, “Maybe he is having a heavy (menstrual) flow day, huh?” Mueller then said to Vickers, “Why don‘t you pluck that tampon out and put a new pad in and lose some of that pressure?”
Mueller walked out of the office momentarily, returning with a sanitary napkin which he tried to rub in Vickers’ face. Vickers said, “What are you putting a tampon on me for?” Mueller snapped, “You fucker, it‘s a fucking pad,” and continued to try and put the sanitary napkin in Vickers’ face. Mueller then began making sexual panting noises, followed by sexual grunts and moans. Mueller finally settled for taping the sanitary napkin to Vickers’ uniform coat. Compl. at ¶¶71-72, J.A. at 37.
When Vickers returned to work on January 25, 2003, Mueller asked Vickers if his mood had improved. Compl. at ¶73, J.A. at 37. Thus, Vickers alleges that he was subjected to harassment because he was perceived as being insufficiently masculine. Vickers clarifies in his complaint that the events alleged therein are indicative of the defendants’ perception that Vickers does not measure up to their stereotypes of masculinity and that he does not wish his complaint to be construed as suggesting otherwise. The district court recognized that Vickers was alleging a claim of sex stereotyping, and Vickers cites at least one example where his conduct incited harassment because the defendants believed him to be acting like a woman.
There are other examples. For instance, on one occasion when Vickers, Dixon, Mueller, and Anderson were working, Mueller extended a tape measure to touch Vickers‘s crotch several times until Vickers got angry and told Mueller to stop. Anderson remarked that Vickers “must be tired, he‘s not in the mood to play.” Compl. at ¶¶65-67, J.A. at 35-36. A few moments later, Dixon grabbed Vickers‘s breast and remarked “Kiss [the defendants’ nickname for the plaintiff] has titties.” Compl. at ¶67, J.A. at 36. At another point, Vickers‘s truck was rear-ended causing Dixon to express that he did not want his “favorite bitch” to get hurt and Anderson, Dixon, and Mueller to joke that Vickers had been “rammed in the ass.” Compl. at ¶¶111-12, J.A. at 45. In yet another instance, Anderson phoned the station, but when Vickers answered Anderson demanded to speak to “a real officer.” Compl. at ¶115, J.A. at 46. The complaint also contains an allegation that a note was left for the plaintiff in the workplace, purportedly from a woman, asking if he was “interested” but stating that “I know your plumbing is hooked up wrong.” Compl. at ¶124, J.A. at 48.
These allegations, in my view, provide a basis for the inference that the plaintiff was perceived as effeminate and therefore unworthy to be considered “a real officer.” The permissible conclusion that emerges is that the plaintiff was not tolerated-and the defendants made the workplace environment hostile-because the job required only “manly men,” not woman-like ones or women themselves. The complaint need only contain “direct or inferential allegations respecting all the material elements to sustain a recovery under some viable legal theory.” Johnson v. City of Detroit, 446 F.3d 614, 618 (6th Cir.2006) (emphasis
As in Smith, I believe that the plaintiff in this case has “alleged that his failure to conform to sex stereotypes concerning how a man should look and behave was the driving force behind Defendants’ actions.” Id. at 572. Following Smith, this court has held that “[s]ex stereotyping based on a person‘s gender non-conforming behavior is impermissible discrimination, irrespective of the cause of that behavior.” Barnes v. City of Cincinnati, 401 F.3d 729, 737 (6th Cir.2005) (citations omitted). Allegations that a plaintiff‘s “failure to conform to sex stereotypes concerning how a man should look and behave was the driving force behind defendant‘s actions” has been deemed sufficient to “state[] a claim for relief pursuant to
III.
The plaintiff has set forth sufficient facts in his complaint to support a
UNITED STATES of America, Plaintiff-Appellee, v. Gregory YOPP, Defendant-Appellant.
No. 05-1807
United States Court of Appeals, Sixth Circuit
July 19, 2006
Argued: June 6, 2006.
Decided and Filed: July 19, 2006.
