*1 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA LYDIA CLEMMONS, :
:
Plaintiff, : Civil Action No.: 10-0911 (RC) :
v. : Re Document Nos.: 53, 56 :
ACADEMY FOR EDUCATIONAL :
DEVELOPMENT, et al. , :
:
Defendants. :
MEMORANDUM OPINION
G RANTING AED’ S M OTION FOR S UMMARY J UDGMENT ; AND
D ENYING THE FHI 360 D EFENDANTS ’ M OTION FOR S UMMARY J UDGMENT AS M OOT I. INTRODUCTION
Plaintiff, Dr. Lydia Clemmons, worked for defendant, the Academy for Educational Development (“AED”), in carrying out an HIV prevention project before she resigned in March 2009. She since has filed the instant lawsuit against AED alleging constructive discharge, retaliation, and hostile work environment on the basis of race in violation of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 (“Title VII”), 42 U.S.C. §2000e et seq. , and the District of Columbia Human Rights Act (“DCHRA”), D.C. Code §1-2501 et seq. , as well as a claim for defamation under District of Columbia common law. Now before the Court is AED’s motion for summary judgment as to each of these claims. [1] Upon consideration of the parties’ motions, the memoranda *2 in support thereof and opposition thereto, and the evidentiary record submitted by both parties to supplement their filings, the Court will grant AED’s motion for summary judgment.
II. FACTUAL BACKGROUND A. AED’s Structure and Operations During the relevant events, AED was a Delaware non-profit company based in Washington, D.C. that operated domestic and international human and social development programs. See Stmt of Undisputed Facts, ¶ 1, Dec. 13, 2013, ECF No. 56 (“SOF”). In particular, AED oversaw two projects in Ghana that addressed HIV prevention for at-risk populations: the Strengthening HIV and AIDS Response Partnership Project (“SHARP”), and the Ghana Sustainable Change Project (“GSCP”). See SOF ¶ 2. The United States Agency for International Development (“USAID”) was the principal funder and client for both SHARP and GSCP. See 2d Am. Compl. (“SAC”) ¶¶ 8, 15, ECF No. 28. The Global Health Population and Nutrition Center (“GHPN”) managed and directed GSCP, and AED, through its Center on AIDS & Community Health (“COACH”), directed and managed SHARP. See id. ¶¶ 15-16. Both COACH and GHPN operated out of AED’s headquarters in the District of Columbia. See id.
Beth Anne Moskov, USAID’s Director for Health, Population and Nutrition, managed the U.S. Government’s health-related funded activities in Ghana, including SHARP and GSCP, starting in August 2005. SOF ¶ 9; Moskov Dep. 7:20-8:4, Aug. 19, 2013, ECF No. 68-19. Chief Technical Officers (“CTOs”) reported on SHARP’s and GSCP’s daily activities and progress to Ms. Moskov; specifically, Peter Wondergem was the CTO for SHARP, and Susan Wright was the CTO for GSCP. Moskov Dep. 18:14-19:3. Further, each Ghana project was led by a chief of party (“COP”), and in May 2006, Dr. Clemmons, an African-American woman, was hired to serve as the COP for SHARP. SOF ¶ 4. On May 1, 2007, Jacqui Larsen started *3 as the Deputy COP for GSCP, until she received a promotion to COP in October 2007. See id. ¶ 6. Ms. Larsen’s direct supervisor was Nancy Nachbar, the Senior Project Director for GHPN, see id . ¶ 7, and Dawn McCown became GSCP’s Deputy COP in January 2009. See id . ¶ 8.
B. Dr. Clemmons’s Hiring and Salary Demands
Before agreeing to work for AED, Dr. Clemmons requested a salary of over $122,00, which was 15% more than her prior salary of $106,000, as well as a $40,430 increase over SHARP’s previous COP’s annual salary. id . ¶¶ 12, 14. Under a cooperative agreement between USAID and AED, USAID was responsible for approving and paying Dr. Clemmons’s salary, and USAID offered a maximum salary of $114,480 per year to Dr. Clemmons. id. ¶ 14. AED, however, agreed to pay the difference from of its pool of unrestricted funds in order to complete Dr. Clemmons’s hiring. Def.’s Mot. Summ. J. at Ex. O-131-32; Beadle De Palomo Dep. 42:2-11, Nov. 6, 2013, ECF No. 68-12.
After joining AED, Dr. Clemmons received three annual merit-based salary increases in accordance with AED’s “Annual Salary Review Guidelines,” which were issued yearly by AED’s president and CEO. The AED guidelines established a range of merit-based salary percentage increases that corresponded with an employee’s base salary and annual performance rating. See Def.’s Mot. Summ. J. at Ex. O-88; O-139. In each of the three years, Dr. Clemmons received a performance rating of “4” on a scale of “1 to 4,” which signified an “Excellent” rating. See id. at Exs. O-90, O-140, O-213.
In two of the three years, however, Dr. Clemmons received the minimum allowable percentage salary increase under AED’s guidelines. See id. First, in 2006 she was entitled under the guidelines to a salary increase between 5.1% and 6.5%, and she received a 5.1% increase. See id. at Ex. O-139-40. Likewise, in 2008 Dr. Clemmons was entitled to a salary increase *4 between 4.5% and 6.0%, and she received the minimum salary increase of 4.5%. See id. at Ex. O-88. During the interim year of 2007, however, she was entitled to a salary increase between 4.1% and 5.5%, and she received a 5.0% increase. See id. at Ex. O-213. Two other high- performing COPs also received the minimum allowable salary increases in 2008. First, Stanley Terrell, a Caucasian COP for a project in the Dominican Republic, was eligible to receive a merit-based increase between 2.5% and 4.0%, and he received an increase of 2.5%. See id. at Ex. O-88; O-211 . Second, Licida Bautista, a Latina COP for a project in Honduras, received a rating of “Excellent” and was eligible for a salary increase between 5.5% and 7.0%, and she received the minimum salary increase of 5.5%. See id. at Ex. O-88; O-212.
C. The Relationship between SHARP and GSCP
Before and after Dr. Clemmons’s arrival, SHARP and GSCP had a strained and challenging relationship. McClintock Dep. 152:20-153:9, April 30, 2013, ECF No. 68-17; Nachbar Dep. 170:17-172:3, May 24, 2013, ECF No. 68-20; Beadle De Palomo Dep. 214:4- 216:15. This was at least in part because the projects competed against each other for USAID’s attention and resources, and the projects suffered from inadequate communication and strategic misalignment, which USAID recognized. Def.’s Mot. Summ. J., Ex. O-180; Beadle De Palomo Dep. 214:4-216:15.
Following Ms. Larsen’s promotion to COP in October 2007, the relationship between SHARP and GSCP, and particularly between Dr. Clemmons and Ms. Larsen, quickly worsened. As a result, USAID directed AED to adopt a Joint Implementation Plan (“JIP”) to facilitate collaboration between the projects and to implement more efficient communication strategies for HIV prevention in Ghana. Clemmons Dep. 170:11-171:10, Aug. 2, 2013, ECF No. 13; Moskov Dep. 66:17-67:15. The JIP, however, increased GSCP’s involvement in the HIV work *5 that SHARP had been performing independently, which further strained the relationship between the projects. See Moskov Dep. 67:16-68:17. In particular, Dr. Clemmons has identified three examples to showcase the strained relationship between the projects during this time period.
First, in September 2007 Dr. Clemmons participated in a JIP meeting led by her immediate supervisor, Michael Kaplan. During a break in the meeting, Dr. Clemmons expressed concerns to Mr. Kaplan and Ms. Larsen about how the meeting was being conducted, as well as what she perceived to be technical gaps in GSCP’s work product. See Clemmons Dep. 183:3- 189:5. When Dr. Clemmons tried to follow up about implementing technical changes, Ms. Larsen refused to modify the activities identified during the JIP design meeting. See id.
Second, after that meeting, Dr. Clemmons and Ms. Larsen held additional meetings about implementing the JIP; these meetings, however, were often contentious, which only increased the hostility between the projects. Dr. Clemmons testified that during these meetings, Ms. Larsen was hostile, impatient, and verbally abusive. id. at 108:17-111:1. In addition, Ms. Larsen repeatedly interrupted Dr. Clemmons, spoke over her, and dismissed or ignored all of Dr. Clemmons’s comments and suggestions. id . at 119:17-120:13.
Third, during a February 2008 meeting, Dr. Nachbar warned Dr. Clemmons to avoid discussing GSCP with anyone from USAID unless someone from GSCP was present. Dr. Clemmons testified that GSCP staff were not given the same instruction regarding SHARP. id. at 238:2-239:4.
AED, on the other hand, provides evidence that Dr. Clemmons’s attitude and persistent criticism of Ms. Larsen and GSCP contributed to the deteriorating relationship between the projects. For example, AED notes that Dr. Clemmons repeatedly criticized GSCP’s technical expertise, such as by saying that GSCP had “performance problems,” Def.’s Mot. Summ. J., Ex. *6 O-119; O-120, and by accusing GSCP of doing “slap-dash work” that required correcting, see SOF ¶ 32. GSCP members also complained about Dr. Clemmons verbally attacking them when providing technical feedback. See Clemmons Dep. 106:18-108:3. Due to the worsening relationship between the projects, Frank Beadle De Palomo, the Director of COACH, met with Dr. Clemmons and Ms. Larsen during his April 2008 site visit, but his efforts did not alleviate the tensions. SOF ¶ 46.
On July 7, 2008, Cheryl Mayo took over as the Senior Project Director at COACH, making her Dr. Clemmons’s direct supervisor. SOF ¶ 51. In this position, Ms. Mayo supervised four international HIV programs within COACH, see Mayo Dep. 54:6-20, June 18, 2013, ECF No. 68-16, and she reported to Mr. Beadle De Palomo, who oversaw personnel, management, donor relations, and organizational policy for all HIV program, see id. at 55:7- 61:19; Beadle De Palomo Dep. 10:21-11:6. At one point, Mr. Beadle De Palomo informed Ms. Mayo about the issues between GSCP and SHARP, and in doing so, he stated that Dr. Clemmons was “very intelligent, [had] a lot of experience, [had] a commanding presence, and look[ed] like Vanessa Williams.” Beadle De Palomo Dep. 189:7-18, 208:13-209:2. According to Ms. Mayo, Mr. Beadle De Palomo also said that Dr. Clemmons “intimidates the dowdy, white women of the Ghana Sustainable Change Project.” Mayo Dep. 89:13-17.
D. The July 13, 2008, Email and Subsequent Investigation On July 13, 2008, Ms. Nachbar emailed Peggy Parlato and Mark Rasmuson, her supervisors at GHPN, about Dr. Clemmons’s conduct during a meeting with USAID. Def.’s Mot. Summ. J., Ex. O-5. Because Ms. Nachbar did not attend the meeting, the information provided in her email was derived from a telephone conversation with Ms. Larsen. See id. ; Nachbar Dep. 153:07-155:9. In the email, Ms. Nachbar wrote that Dr. Clemmons was “out of *7 control and attempts to manage her have failed.” Def.’s Mot. Summ. J., Ex. O-5. Ms. Nachbar concluded the email with the following recommendation:
There need[s] to be consequences for Lydia’s behavior. In the past, AED was reluctant to act because of fear of how the client would react. Susan’s reaction to the meeting is clear evidence that she, at least, has little regard for Lydia. I believe Lydia should be removed. But, if that’s not going to happen, there need[s] to be consequences.
Id. Separately, Ms. Nachbar emailed Mr. Beadle De Palomo with the same information. See Beadle De Palomo Dep. 225:9-11.
After receiving the email, Mr. Beadle De Palomo contacted Dr. Clemmons to inform her about what Ms. Nachbar had written, and he also initiated an investigation into whether Ms. Nachbar was accurately portraying the joint meeting. See Def.’s Mot. Summ. J., Ex. O-76. During the investigation, Mr. Beadle De Palomo spoke with meeting attendees from SHARP, GSCP, and USAID, reviewed relevant documents, see id. at Ex. 57, and spoke with Ms. Larsen, see Beadle De Palomo Dep. 227:7-19. At the end of his investigation, Mr. Beadle De Palomo concluded that there was no merit to the allegations in Ms. Nachbar’s email. Accordingly, on July 16, 2008, he sent an email to Ms. Nachbar criticizing her judgment and stating that she should have listened to both sides before sending the email. See Def.’s Mot. Summ. J., Ex. O-58. AED then disciplined Ms. Nachbar by limiting her visibility with senior management and denying her desirable roles within the organization. Beadle De Palomo Dep. 153:13-157:18.
Mr. Beadle De Palomo communicated the results of the investigation to Dr. Clemmons, and he told her that Ms. Nachbar’s opinion would not adversely affect her employment at AED. Beadle De Palomo Dep. 231:5-232:17. He also informed Dr. Clemmons that he possessed a favorable opinion of her and her work for SHARP. See id. Dr. Clemmons thanked Mr. Beadle De Palomo for the investigation and his support, but she still felt compelled to raise the issue with AED’s Human Resources Department. Def.’s Mot. Summ. J., Ex. O-78.
Mr. Beadle De Palomo responded by warning Dr. Clemmons that she would be making the complaint “alone and without [his] support.” Id. He also explained that the complaint “will only create worse feeling[s] between you and GSCP, and will most definitely make the situation worse. It will swallow your time and make you less productive … which will have a direct impact on your performance and my view and review of your work.” Id. Nonetheless, Mr. Beadle De Palomo reassured Dr. Clemmons that “Jacqui, Nancy, GHPN, have nothing to do with your professional reputation. If you do a good job, the project accomplishes its deliverables, then everything will be fine.” Id. Ms. Mayo emailed Dr. Clemmons with the same advice, though she also encouraged Dr. Clemmons to “take a step back” from the situation. Id.
E. The Formal Grievance and Investigation
Dr. Clemmons filed a formal grievance on October 7, 2008, with AED’s Chief Management Officer, Ricardo Villeta, claiming that she experienced workplace mobbing, bullying, and malicious gossip. See Def.’s Mot. Summ. J., Ex. O-1. Upon receipt of the grievance, Marti McClintock, the AED’s Senior Employee Relations Officer, informed Dr. Clemmons that an investigation would be commenced. See Clemmons Dep. 345:13-18. Ms. McClintock interviewed Dr. Clemmons by phone on October 14, 2008, after which Dr. Clemmons sent her a set of emails and documents that she believed addressed the key points of the grievance. Def.’s Mot. Summ. J., Ex. O-8. Separately, Ms. McClintock interviewed Ms. Mayo, Mr. Beadle De Palomo, and Ms. Nachbar. McClintock Dep. 20:20-21:10. Ms. McClintock did not interview Ms. Larsen, though she did confirm with Ms. Nachbar that Ms. Larsen had been counselled about remaining professional when working with Dr. Clemmons. Def.’s Mot. Summ. J., Ex. O-28.
On December 23, 2008, Dr. Clemmons informed Ms. McClintock that she was seeking legal advice due to concerns about having her professional reputation and employment opportunities harmed because of her conflict at AED, as well as the potential fall-out with USAID in Ghana. See Def.’s Mot. Summ. J., Ex. O-26. On January 7, 2009, Ms. McClintock sent Dr. Clemmons a “final close-out” report setting forth the findings from the investigation, including that:
I did not find a collaborative or collective effort to have you terminated, and/or a campaign against you. However, I did find inappropriate behavior and actions to have taken place in the past. The people who were involved with such actions have been formally addressed, very clearly and directly. As a result, it is our expectation that you will not experience similar actions to take place in the future. However, if that is not the case, you are asked to inform HR[.] Id. at Ex. O-134. On February 15, 2009, Dr. Clemmons emailed Ms. McClintock about several lingering issues she had regarding alleged racially-motivated workplace mobbing. See id. at Ex. O-29. In response, Ms. McClintock asked Dr. Clemmons to provide more details about these incidents, see id. , but Dr. Clemmons never replied to Ms. McClintock, see McClintock Dep. 218:12-14.
Instead, on February 25, 2009, Dr. Clemmons sent Mr. Villeta a series of emails detailing her concerns about AED’s investigation into her grievance and asking for a hearing before AED’s Grievance Board. Def.’s Mot. Summ. J., at Ex. O-168. Mr. Villeta responded with an email explaining why he thought the investigation was sufficient. See id. at Ex. O-136. Mr. Villeta also stated, however, that Dr. Clemmons could convene the Grievance Board if she desired, see id ., but Dr. Clemmons deleted the email before fully reading it, so she was unaware of this option. Clemmons Dep. 432:21-433:3. Dr. Clemmons resigned on March 9, 2009. SOF ¶¶ 168, 170-71.
F. The Request for Paid Leave
On December 2, 2008, Dr. Clemmons emailed Ms. Mayo to request an advance of fourteen days of paid Rest & Recuperation (“R&R”) leave beginning in January 2009. id . ¶ 138. At the time, Dr. Clemmons had a negative vacation balance that would return to a zero balance at the end of the next pay period. Def.’s Mot. Summ. J., Ex. O-86. Despite this, Mr. Dan White, the Senior Financial Director of COACH, advanced her five days of vacation leave and one day of personal leave, which is the amount Dr. Clemmons would have accrued in the first quarter of the next year. See id.
G. Alleged Reputational Harm
Dr. Clemmons asserts that after resigning, she learned additional information about AED’s alleged attempts to damage her reputation. Specifically, she alleges that staff at the COACH Center in Washington, D.C. labeled her a “black prima donna,” SAC ¶ 101, and that Mary Lyn Field, then an AED Vice President, told a senior manager with Family Health International that there were “management problems” within SHARP and implied that Dr. Clemmons was “a problem for AED,” Clemmons Dep. 32:6-13 . Further, in February 2009 Ms. Field allegedly approached a group of development specialists on their way to an HIV/AIDS conference, including a senior manager with John Snow International (“JSI”) who had worked with Dr. Clemmons in Uganda, and asked in an insinuating tone whether Dr. Clemmons was “difficult” at her last job. See id. 46:4-48:21. Dr. Clemmons also asserts that Mr. Niblett, a senior officer at AED with whom she had never worked, said to an employee of another non- governmental organization that Dr. Clemmons was “not a team player.” Id. 65:13-67:15. Dr. Clemmons speculated that Mr. Niblett formed this opinion after reading Ms. Nachbar’s July 2008 email recommending that AED fire Dr. Clemmons. See id. at 70:16-72:4.
Dr. Clemmons, moreover, argues that she lost job opportunities due to her damaged reputation. In particular, she asserts that while in Ghana in May 2009, JSI offered to include her in a grant proposal as the chief of party/project director for a new USAID-funded project, but the offer was withdrawn shortly thereafter. id. 87:1-90:10. Dr. Clemmons further alleges that JSI’s Ken Olivola said she was removed from consideration for this project due to reports that she was “difficult to work with” and “hard on Ghanaian staff.” Pl.’s Interrog. Resp. No. 9 at 19, Ex. O-111, ECF No. 56-19. Finally, Dr. Clemmons asserts that she was qualified for several other positions within USAID for which she applied, but she was denied these positions because of negative comments about her work with SHARP. Clemmons Decl. ¶ 10, Jan. 31, 2014, ECF No. 67.
III. LEGAL STANDARD
Summary judgment is appropriate “if the movant shows that there is no genuine dispute
as to any material fact and [thus] the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” Fed. R.
Civ. P. 56(a);
accord Talavera v. Shah
,
Once the moving party has met its burden, to defeat the motion the nonmoving party
must designate “specific facts showing that there is a genuine issue for trial.”
Id
. at 324 (citation
omitted). Although the Court must view this evidence in the light most favorable to the
nonmoving party and draw all reasonable inferences in that party’s favor,
see Grosdidier v.
Broad. Bd. of Governors, Chairman
,
Finally, the Court notes that “[c]redibility determinations, the weighing of the evidence,
and the drawing of legitimate inferences from the facts are jury functions, not those of a judge at
summary judgment.”
Barnett v. PA Consulting Grp., Inc.
,
IV. ANALYSIS
Dr. Clemmons brings causes of action against AED under Title VII and the DCHRA for constructive discharge, retaliation, and hostile work environment on the basis of racial discrimination, as well as a cause of action for defamation under District of Columbia common law and a claim asking the Court to order adverse inferences based on spoliation of evidence. *13 AED has moved for summary judgment on all of Dr. Clemmons’s claims. For the reasons explained below, the Court grants AED’s motion for summary judgment as to each issue.
A. Title VII and DCHRA Claims
Dr. Clemmons asserts multiple claims under both the DCHRA and Title VII. The DCHRA, just like Title VII, prohibits certain discriminatory practices “[b]y an employer,” including making it unlawful for an employer to “fail or refuse to hire, or to discharge, any individual; or otherwise discriminate against any individual, with respect to his compensation, terms, conditions, or privileges of employment” based upon several protected categories, including “race, color, religion, national origin, sex [or] age.” [2] D.C. Code § 2-1402.11(a)(1).
Given the similarities between the statutes, it is not surprising that the D.C. Court of
Appeals “has made clear that federal case law addressing questions arising in Title VII cases is
applicable to the resolution of analogous issues raised regarding DCHRA claims.”
Ali v. District
of Columbia
,
Further, “in considering claims of discrimination under the DCHRA, [courts] employ the
same three-part, burden-shifting test articulated by the Supreme Court for Title VII cases in
*14
McDonnell Douglas Corp. v. Green
,
1. Hostile Work Environment under Title VII and the DCHRA Dr. Clemmons alleges that until her resignation, she experienced a hostile work environment based on racial discrimination through “workplace mobbing” that occurred in the following ways: Director of GHPN, Margaret Parlato, falsely spreading rumors about her, then telling AED’s Mr. Niblett that Dr. Clemmons had denounced GSCP to USAID; GSCP consistently reporting to AED’s headquarters that Dr. Clemmons was “disingenuous and manipulative”; Ms. Moskov falsely informing another USAID office that Dr. Clemmons had a tendency to “cry racism”; Ms. Nachbar sending an email falsely detailing Dr. Clemmons’s unprofessional conduct at a joint GSCP/SHARP meeting and calling for Dr. Clemmons’s termination; Ms. Larsen, Ms. McCown, and Ms. Moskov ridiculing and glaring at Dr. Clemmons during meetings; Dr. Clemmons being forced to report directly to Ms. Nachbar during the harassment investigation; and AED taking insufficient steps to address the hostile work environment by refusing to send Dr. Clemmons’s allegations to a non-management majority on the Grievance Board. Pl.’s Opp’n to Def. AED’s Mot. for Summ. J., 15-18, Jan. 31, 2014, ECF No. 67.
To establish a prima facie hostile work environment claim under Title VII and the
DCHRA, Dr. Clemmons must demonstrate that (1) she is a member of a protected class; (2) she
*15
was subject to unwelcome harassment; (3) the harassment occurred because of her race; and (4)
the harassment affected a term, condition, or privilege of employment.
See Singletary v. District
of Columbia
,
a. Racial Discrimination
Under Title VII and the DCHRA, a “plaintiff must always prove that the conduct at issue
was not merely tinged with offensive … connotations, but actually constituted discrimination …
because of the employee’s protected status.”
Peters v. District of Columbia
,
Here, the acts upon which Dr. Clemmons rests her hostile work environment claim do not involve explicit references to race. Instead, she points to the following circumstantial evidence to *16 demonstrate racial discrimination: Ms. Larsen, a white woman, receiving a higher starting salary than Dr. Clemmons, even though Dr. Clemmons had more experience; Ms. Larsen likening Dr. Clemmons to a “dog … that won’t let go of a bone,” Pl. Interrog. Resp., No 3-2 at 11, Ex. O- 111; Ms. Larsen and Ms. McCown treating “white colleagues or African Ghanaian colleagues” of a junior status with respect and friendliness, but being hostile and derisive towards Dr. Clemmons, Clemmons Dep. 124:15-22; and supervisors believing that GHPN’s treatment of Dr. Clemmons was motivated by her race. Thus, Dr. Clemmons argues that her experience, combined with the experiences of other African-American colleagues, and the observations of Mr. Beadle De Palomo, show that race was a motivating, or at least exacerbating, factor in the workplace hostility she endured.
Dr. Clemmons first argues that she received a lower starting salary than Ms. Larsen despite Dr. Clemmons having more field experience. Dr. Clemmons then posits that this difference in pay was due to racial animus. Her argument fails, however, for a very simple reason: The individuals who Dr. Clemmons alleges are responsible for the “workplace mobbing” are not the people who determined Ms. Larsen’s and Dr. Clemmons’s salary. Instead, it is undisputed that the salaries were determined by Mr. Beadle De Palomo, Mr. Niblett, Chief Operating Officer Jack Downey, and President Steve Moseley. Beadle De Palomo Dep. 31:10-32:9. Dr. Clemmons, on the other hand, attests that the workplace mobbing was carried out by some combination of Ms. Parlato, Ms. Moskov, Ms. Larsen, Ms. Nachbar, and Ms. McGowan. For this reason, the disparate starting salaries provide no insight into whether the accused individuals acted with racial motivations.
In addition, the Court notes that USAID did not authorize Dr. Clemmons’s requested salary of $122,00, but rather approved a starting salary of $114,500. SOF ¶ 14. In order to *17 hire Dr. Clemmons, AED agreed to pay the $7,500 difference. Def.’s Mot. Summ. J., Ex. O- 131, O-132; Beadle De Palomo Dep. 42:9-11. Accordingly, she received the exact salary she demanded at the expense of AED using its own funds, and AED’s willingness to meet her original salary demand directly contradicts her claim that her salary was the result of racial discrimination.
Dr. Clemmons also asserts that Ms. Larsen said she was “just like a dog[,] … like a terrier that won’t let go of a bone.” See Pl. Interrog. Resp., No 3-2 at 11, Def.’s Mot. Summ. J., Ex. O-111. Though this statement lacks an explicit reference to race, it does constitute one incident within the broader conflict between Dr. Clemmons and Ms. Larsen. As such, the Court begins its analysis by reviewing the tumultuous relationship between the women before moving on to determine whether Dr. Clemmons has established racial discrimination.
Beginning in September 2007, AED adopted the JIP to increase SHARP’s and GSCP’s efficiency in developing and implementing communication strategies for HIV prevention in Ghana. Clemmons Dep. 170:11-171:10; Moskov Dep. 66:17-67:15. The JIP required Dr. Clemmons and Ms. Larsen, as the COPs for SHARP and GSCP, respectively, to meet regularly and collaborate on tasks. Dr. Clemmons testifies that in a series of telephone calls, meetings, and emails leading up to one event, Ms. Larsen was “dismissive and resistant” to her ideas, eventually telling Dr. Clemmons that GSCP would not provide SHARP with support for the event. Pl. Interrog. Resp., No 3-1 at 10-11, Def.’s Mot. Summ. J., Ex. O-111. As another example, when Dr. Clemmons provided technical feedback on materials generated by GSCP that required SHARP’s approval, Ms. Larsen interrupted Dr. Clemmons while she was speaking and told Dr. Clemmons that she always had to be right about everything. See id. at No. 3-5. Ms. Larsen allegedly went on to say, in a snide tone, that “this is exactly the reaction that I would *18 expect from you, Lydia, and I am not at all surprised.” Id. Dr. Clemmons further alleges that Ms. Larsen behaved similarly in each JIP meeting, and as such, she would “consistently talk over … interrupt, or speak to [Dr. Clemmons] in a condescending way, and generally give the impression that she considered [Dr. Clemmons’s] inputs to be irritating or of no value.” Id. at No. 3-7.
Dr. Clemmons contends that supervisors who witnessed these and other similar interactions between the women believed that GSCP’s conduct was motivated by racial discrimination. Pl.’s Opp’n, 21-22. To this point, Dr. Clemmons identifies a set of statements made by Mr. Beadle De Palomo and Ms. Mayo. Id. First, in a conversation between the two about the tension between Dr. Clemmons and Ms. Larsen, Ms. Mayo claims that Mr. Beadle De Palomo said that Dr. Clemmons “has a lot of experience and has a commanding presence. She looks like Vanessa Williams and intimidates the dowdy, white women of the Ghana Sustainable Change Project.” Mayo Dep. 89:13-17. Ms. Mayo suggests that Mr. Beadle De Palomo was implying that race or cultural issues contributed to the issues between the projects. Id. at 87:6-9.
Mr. Beadle De Palomo, however, denies that this statement was intended to suggest racial tension, see Beadle De Palomo Dep. 189:1-191:7, but rather that he only intended to describe Dr. Clemmons’s energy and ability to captivate a room. See id. at 189:9-12. In fact, Ms. Mayo separately notes that the comment was more descriptive in nature, as indicated by the use of “Vanessa Williams” “as a point of reference.” Mayo Dep. 89:13-20. Thus, though Ms. Mayo at one point states in her deposition that she inferred racial animus from Mr. Beadle De Palomo’s juxtaposition of Dr. Clemmons as “Vanessa Williams” and the GSCP staff as “dowdy white women,” see Mayo Dep. 93:15-20, Ms. Mayo later testifies that the descriptors may have been *19 related to Dr. Clemmons’s and the GSCP staff’s personal appearance and attractiveness, rather than race, see Mayo Dep. 97:9-98:22. [3]
Dr. Clemmons also argues that Ms. Mayo’s own perception of the tension between Dr. Clemmons and the GSCP staff suggests that racial discrimination occurred. Indeed, Ms. Mayo testifies that “GSCP had a stereotype of Dr. Clemmons as a menacing, attacking black woman.” Mayo Dep. 252:15-254:3. Ms. Mayo formed this belief through her discussions with Mr. Beadle De Palomo, her personal experience as an African-American woman, and her observations of Dr. Clemmons interacting with the GSCP team. See generally , Mayo Dep. 257-265. Ms. Mayo therefore at times suggests that GSCP’s reaction to Dr. Clemmons was informed by prejudice and preconceptions about African-Americans. Mayo Dep. 256:17-259:21. Ms. Mayo also admits, however, that GSCP staff never explicitly described Dr. Clemmons as a “menacing black woman.” Id. at 255:14-255:1. She also acknowledges that some of the incidents between Dr. Clemmons and GSCP resulted from personality conflicts, not race. Mayo Dep. 182:2-12. Thus, Ms. Mayo attempts to present a narrative in which Ms. Larsen and Ms. McCown possessed stereotypes about African-American women that affected their opinion of Dr. Clemmons’s workplace performance, despite her own statements that suggest otherwise.
AED, on the other hand, alleges a non-discriminatory justification for the conflict between Dr. Clemmons and GSCP: “intense internal competition” between the projects for the “attention and resources from AED and their mutual external client … USAID.” Def.’s Mot. Summ. J., 1. According to Mr. Beadle De Palomo, the relationship between the groups “was never good,” Beadle De Palomo Dep. 214:9-10, and he explains that the projects were “set up at the same time from the same organization, sort of similar scope…. The programs were *20 competing against each other, which in our field [] happens across organizations. It is very rare for one organization to be implementing dual multiple projects in the same space.” Id. at 216:3- 11.
Ms. Moskov echoes this assessment, explaining that the projects suffered from “inadequate communication and strategic misalignment” even before Dr. Clemmons and Ms. Larsen joined. Moskov Dep. 66. Indeed, several other managers note that tension between the projects predated Dr. Clemmons and Ms. Larsen arriving, see, e.g. , Mayo Dep. 70:13-19; McClintock Dep. 152:20-153:9; Nachbar Dep. 170:4-172:3; Beadle De Palomo Dep. 9:1-10:13, 213:22-215:20, and the strain only increased after implementation of the JIP, which required GSCP to provide “technical oversight” on projects that SHARP previously was implementing independently. Moskov Dep. 68. Thus, as Ms. Moskov explains, “when GSCP was moving slow[ly] in their projects, SHARP was working more independently in the communication around HIV/AIDS. When GSCP[’s] work started to improve … we asked them to take back or play the role they had originally been set up to play around HIV communication and that is when the tension grew.” Id . Similarly, Ms. Nachbar describes the JIP as “ambitious,” and she questions whether AED possessed the “resources to be able to do everything that was being asked and the volume of what was being asked in the time period we were talking about.” Nachbar Dep. 40:11- 18. Thus, AED’s evidence demonstrates that the JIP was plagued by funding and structural issues from its inception, and it may have been these issues, not race, that caused the tension between the projects.
The story, then, is complicated. It is not entirely clear whether Dr. Clemmons
experienced any race-based discrimination within the workplace, and in fact, the evidence
strongly suggests that she did not. At the same time, AED has provided additional evidence
*21
suggesting that tension between the projects existed before Dr. Clemmons joined and only
increased as a result of the JIP, not because of racial discrimination.
Cf. Nichols v. Truscott
, 424
F. Supp. 2d 124, 140 (D.D.C. 2006) (rejecting Title VII claim when “[r]ather than arising from
any discriminatory [or retaliatory] animus …, this harassment appears quite clearly to have
arisen from personal conflicts between plaintiff and her … supervisors”);
see also Moses v. City
of New York
, No. Civ. 06-5974,
b. Severe or Pervasive Harassment
The Supreme Court has held that Title VII, and thus the DCHRA as well, is violated only
by harassment that is so “severe or pervasive” as to “alter the conditions of [the plaintiff’s]
employment and create an abusive working environment.”
Faragher v. City of Boca Raton
, 524
U.S. 775, 786 (1998). “In order to be actionable under [Title VII], a[n] … objectionable
environment must be both objectively and subjectively offensive, one that a reasonable person
would find hostile or abusive, and one that the victim in fact did perceive to be so.”
Id.
at 787
(citing
Harris v. Forklift Sys., Inc.
,
First, though Dr. Clemmons suggests that her reputation was damaged, the evidence shows that the relevant supervisors always maintained a positive impression of her work and career prospects. See, e.g. , Beadle De Palomo Dep. 144:13-145:18; 231:5-232:17. This reality was never more evident than through the events following the July 13, 2008, email from Ms. Nachbar to several supervisors recommending that Dr. Clemmons “be removed,” or at least face consequences for her “out of control” actions. Mr. Beadle De Palomo responded that “[i]f this [email] is the smoking gun or evidence of Lydia’s behavior being ‘beyond the pale of acceptable professional behavior,’ I am not all convinced.” Id. at 129:19-130:2. Further, by the time Dr. Clemmons was aware of the email, Mr. Beadle De Palomo already had informed her that he was the only person who “could affect how she was treated in the organization,” and that such treatment would be based on her performance ratings and professional success alone. id. 232:5-11. Indeed, Mr. Beadle De Palomo testifies that his defense of Dr. Clemmons was so vigorous that it destroyed his previously friendly relationship with Ms. Nachbar. id. 152:21- 153:4. Given that Dr. Clemmons received clear reassurances that her job security and workplace reputation were intact, the evidence simply does not demonstrate that this email altered Dr. Clemmons’s workplace condition in any way, let alone to a severe or pervasive degree.
The Court reaches the same conclusion as to Dr. Clemmons’s complaints about GSCP
staff sending rude emails, rolling their eyes at her in meetings, and allegedly spreading false
rumors about her. Annoying as these behaviors may be, they are “purely subjective harms” that
did not affect the “terms, conditions, or privileges of employment,” and as such, they were not
“adverse employment actions.”
Forkkio v. Powell
,
As the D.C. Circuit has reiterated, “not everything that makes an employee unhappy is an
actionable adverse action” because, otherwise, courts would become mediators for “even trivial
employment actions that an irritable, chip-on-the-shoulder employee did not like.”
Bridgeforth v.
Jewell
,
2. Retaliation under Title VII and the DCHRA
Dr. Clemmons also asserts that she was retaliated against for engaging in a protected
activity, namely reporting racial harassment to AED’s Human Resources Department. Pl.’s
Am. Compl. ¶ 139-40. Title VII’s anti-retaliation provision prohibits an employer from
discriminating against an employee because the employee “‘opposed any practice’ made
unlawful by Title VII or ‘made a charge, testified, assisted, or participated in’ a Title VII
proceeding or investigation.”
Manuel v. Potter
,
Dr. Clemmons may meet her burden through direct evidence, or if she cannot produce
direct evidence of retaliation, through the three-part burden-shifting framework laid out in
McDonnell-Douglas Corp v. Green
,
The D.C. Circuit has explained, moreover, that when an employer has proffered a
legitimate, non-retaliatory explanation for the adverse action, “the burden-shifting framework
disappears,”
Jones v. Bernanke
,
AED argues that Dr. Clemmons has not identified a materially adverse action that
occurred as the product of AED’s alleged retaliation. Def.’s Opp’n. at 25. The “material
adversity” requirement emphasizes that district courts should distinguish between “trivial” harms
and “significant” harms that arise in the workplace.
Burlington
,
Here, Dr. Clemmons first alleges that she was threatened with a poor review in retaliation
for her complaint to Human Resources. This allegation is based on Mr. Beadle De Palomo’s
statement that he did “not support [Dr. Clemmons] taking [her complaint] to HR.” Def.’s Mot.
Summ. J., Ex. O-78. The Court notes, however, that this remark was not actually a clear threat
that if Dr. Clemmons filed a grievance, Mr. Beadle De Palomo would give her a bad review.
Indeed, the remainder of the email makes clear that Mr. Beadle De Palomo really had in mind
the possibility that pursuing a grievance would consume Dr. Clemmons’s time, which, in turn,
would make her less productive, thereby negatively impacting her performance and possibly
resulting in a lower review.
See id.
;
see also Gaujacq v. EDF, Inc.
,
Yet even construing this language — which the Court finds to be ambiguous — as a
possible threat of adverse action, it is clear that the potential threat never materialized. Dr.
Clemmons did, in fact, file a grievance on October 7, 2008, but it did not impact her performance
evaluation later that month. Dr. Clemmons’s October 20, 2008 performance evaluation, like her
previous two, rates her performance as “Excellent,” the highest possible designation. Def.’s Mot.
Summ. J., at Exs. 90, 140, 213. Dr. Clemmons has thus failed to show that Mr. Beadle De
Palomo’s statement indicating his lack of support for her complaint, which lacked any
corresponding consequences, was materially adverse.
Baloch v. Kempthorne
, 550 F.3d
1191, 1199 (D.C. Cir. 2008) (holding that proposed suspensions were not materially adverse
actions where the suspensions were never served);
Russell v. Principi
,
Second, Dr. Clemmons argues that receiving the lowest available salary increase in 2008
after filing her grievance constituted a materially adverse action. It is well settled that under Title
VII — and thus the DCHRA, too — an action is materially adverse when it constitutes a
“significant change in employment status, such as hiring, firing, failing to promote, reassignment
with significantly different responsibilities, or a decision causing significant change in benefits.”
Bridgeforth,
Here, Dr. Clemmons does not complain that she received
no
pay increase (let alone a pay
decrease
); rather, she takes issue with having received a pay increase of 4.5%, the minimum
percentage increase within the AED salary guidelines range for the highest-rated employees. Def.’s Mot. Summ. J., at Ex. O-88. Of course, a lower than expected raise or bonus could
theoretically constitute a materially adverse action if the decreased compensation is awarded for
discriminatory or retaliatory reasons.
Russell
,
Even assuming that the sub-optimal pay raise is materially adverse, however, AED has asserted legitimate, non-discriminatory reasons for the amount of the pay increase, and Dr. Clemmons has not produced sufficient evidence to discredit those legitimate reasons and show that the raise was retaliatory. Mr. Beadle De Palomo, who determined Dr. Clemmons’s pay raise, testified that although AED guidelines allowed him to award Dr. Clemmons a salary increase of between 4.5% and 6.0% in 2008, his practice was to be frugal when setting raises for high-earning managers due to budgetary restrictions. Def.’s Mot. Summ. J., at Ex. O-88; Beadle De Palomo Dep. 237:11-238:2, 244:7-254:9. Specifically, he adopted this approach because AED pays salary increases out of a common pool of funds, and as such, a larger salary increase for one high-earning manager, like Dr. Clemmons, results in fewer funds available for *29 lower-earning employees. See Beadle De Palomo Dep. 237:11-238:2, 244:7-254:9. Accordingly, other high-performing COPs also received minimum-level pay raises in 2008, including Stanley Terrell, a Caucasian COP for a project in the Dominican Republic, and Licida Bautista, a Latina COP for a project in Honduras. Def.’s Mot. Summ. J., at Ex. O-88; O-211; O-212.
In response, Dr. Clemmons has not offered any evidence to demonstrate that AED’s
legitimate explanation is mere pretext or to support her theory of retaliatory animus. A plaintiff
can show pretext “either directly by [showing] that a discriminatory reason more likely
motivated the employer or indirectly by showing that the employer's proffered explanation is
unworthy of credence.”
Jones v. Bernanke
,
Third, Dr. Clemmons alleges that Mr. Beadle De Palomo retaliated by denying her request for fourteen days of R&R, but, critically, she fails to square this argument with the undisputed fact that she was not entitled to any days of R&R at the time of the request. See Clemmons Dep. 398:6-399:19. Despite not being entitled to a single day of R&R, Dan White, the Senior Financial Director of COACH, still recommended, and Mr. Beadle De Palomo approved, that Dr. Clemmons receive an advance of six days of paid leave, which was equal to the leave she would have accrued during the first quarter of the next year. See Def.’s Mot. Summ. J., Ex. O-86.
Dr. Clemmons also asserts that Ms. Mayo originally approved her request for fourteen
days of R&R, but Mr. Beadle De Palomo reversed that decision without explanation. Clemmons Dep. 417:11-14. In addition, Dr. Clemmons suggests that it was unusual for a senior
VP like Mr. Beadle De Palomo to intervene in discretionary leave requests.
See id.
at 417:15-22. Dr. Clemmons, however, offers no evidence to support this claim besides her own self-serving,
conclusory statements uncorroborated by any evidence.
[6]
Saunders v. DiMario
, No. Civ. 97-
1002,
Even if the denial of vacation days that an employee has not accrued could constitute
materially adverse action,
see Morales v. Gotbaum
, 10-cv-0221,
*32 Fourth, Dr. Clemmons argues that AED forcing her to report to Ms. Nachbar regarding USAID’s $500,000 grant for implementing an HIV-prevention program constituted a materially adverse employment action because it was “an invitation to more trouble.” [8] Pl.’s Opp’n at 29. In particular, she alleges the HIV-prevention program required stricter reporting obligations for spending grant money than SHARP had to deal with for other grants that were “30 times” larger than the USAID grant, and as such, the reporting requirement was merely intended to create “busy work.” See id.
It is well settled, however, that “minor inconvenience[s] and alteration[s] of job
responsibilities … do not rise to the level of an adverse action.”
Taylor v. Solis
,
3. Constructive Discharge under Title VII and the DCHRA
Finally, Dr. Clemmons brings a constructive discharge claim on the basis that AED left
her in an untenable employment situation by failing to take actions to prevent the gossip and
mobbing directed at her, and by threatening retaliation for complaining to Human Resources. Pl.’s Am. Compl. ¶ 130. For a constructive discharge claim, Dr. Clemmons must show that (1)
intentional discrimination existed; (2) her employer deliberately made working conditions
intolerable; and (3) aggravating factors justified her conclusion that she had no option but to end
the employment.
Lewis v. District of Columbia
, 653 F. Supp. 2d. 64, 81 (D.D.C. 2009)
(citing
Carter v. George Wash. Univ
.,
Further, to demonstrate constructive discharge based on a hostile work environment, Dr.
Clemmons “must first establish a hostile work place by showing behavior ‘sufficiently severe or
pervasive to alter the conditions of [her] employment.’”
Boone v. MountainMade Found.
, No.
*34
CV 08-1065,
The Court already has concluded that the alleged workplace harassment did not rise to the
severe or pervasive level, which has been described as a lower standard than that which is
required for constructive discharge.
Suders
,
Alternatively, even upon further review of Dr. Clemmons’s arguments, the Court reaches the same conclusion. To start, Dr. Clemmons was never demoted, given a lower salary, or *35 otherwise stripped of responsibility within the workplace. Rather, she received excellent reviews from supervisors, see Clemmons Dep. 427: 1-6; Mayo Dep. 311:4-312:19, Beadle De Palomo Dep. 233:12-235:9, and she received a raise upon getting those reviews, see Clemmons Dep. 423:18-426:22; Beadle De Palomo Dep. 232:18-22. In addition, though Dr. Clemmons argues that she was constructively discharged by being “locked into a position from which she could apparently obtain no relief” after AED’s Human Resources department allegedly failed to investigate her claims or grant her access to the Grievance Board, see Pl.’s Opp’n at 9, 31, Mr. Villeta’s email about the investigation specifically stated that Dr. Clemmons could seek redress with the Grievance Board if she so desired, see Def.’s Mot. to Dismiss, Ex. O-136, at AED 00765-768. Though Dr. Clemmons says that she was unaware of this option because she prematurely deleted the email, her error does not change the reality of her failure to act on the available avenues for redress.
In fact, Dr. Clemmons remained at AED for several more months before leaving her
position. Clemmons Decl. ¶ 9. She even applied for a position with another organization that
would have required her to continue working with GHPN. Beadle De Palomo Dep. 252:12-
22; Clemmons Dep. 446:1-5. And when Dr. Clemmons finally did leave, she said the reason for
doing so was to “return to Vermont and spend some of the summer with [her] family” and to
enjoy “some quality time for a real rest and relaxation with loved ones” — not because of an
abusive or hostile work environment.
[9]
Email from Clemmons to Mayo, Def.’s Mot. Summ.
J., Ex. O-91. Taken together, the evidence simply does not suggest that Dr. Clemmons endured
an environment “so intolerable that [s]he was left with no reasonable alternative other than
*36
terminat[e] [her] employment.”
Harris v. Wackenhut Servs., Inc.
,
B. Defamation Claim under District of Columbia Common Law
Dr. Clemmons alleges that AED made false and defamatory statements that ruined her
reputation in the International Health community and precluded her from receiving future job
opportunities. Under District of Columbia law, Dr. Clemmons must establish the following
elements to maintain a defamation claim: (1) the defendant made a false and defamatory
statement concerning her; (2) the defendant published the statement without privilege to a third
party; (3) the defendant’s fault in publishing the statement amounted to at least negligence; and
(4) either the statement was actionable as a matter of law irrespective of special harm, or the
statement’s publication caused special harm.
See Croixland Props. L.P. v. Corcoran
, 174 F.3d
213, 215 (D.C. Cir. 1999) (citing
Crowley v. N. Am. Telecomms. Ass’n
,
Here, Dr. Clemmons alleges the following defamatory statements: (1) Jack Downey, CEO of AED, telling Mary Lynn Field-Nguer, Vice President and Director of the HIV/AIDS program, that Dr. Clemmons was “problematic,” SOF ¶ 202, and Ms. Field-Nguer repeating this statement to Ms. Mayo and Ms. Bardfield, while adding that there were “management problems” at SHARP, SOF ¶¶ 203, 205; (2) Ms. Field-Nguer asking a senior manager at JSI whether Dr. Clemmons was “difficult” to work with at her last position, SOF ¶ 204; (3) VP Greg Niblett telling Ms. Bardfield that Dr. Clemmons was “not a team player,” SOF ¶ 206; (4) Ms. Moskov, a USAID employee, sending an unsolicited reference to USAID’s Tanzania office stating that Dr. *37 Clemmons tended to “cry racism when things are not going her way,” [10] SOF ¶ 211; and (5) a USAID-funded project in Ghana reporting that it heard Dr. Clemmons was “difficult to work with” and “hard on Ghanaian staff,” SOF ¶ 216.
AED argues that Dr. Clemmons relies on inadmissible hearsay to prove the occurrence of
each of these allegedly defamatory statements. As with summary judgment generally, to survive
a motion for summary judgment on a defamation claim, Dr. Clemmons must provide evidence in
a form admissible at trial that shows that the defendant published the statements to a third party.
Poullard v. Smithkline Beecham Corp.
, No. Civ. 02-1590,
Here, Dr. Clemmons concedes that she was not present during any of the alleged defamatory remarks. Clemmons Dep. 23:15-24:16; 46:9-49:7; 68:4-9; 90:4-92:12. Thus, after admitting that she was not there when Ms. Field-Nguer allegedly told Ms. Bardfield that “management problems” existed within SHARP, Dr. Clemmons testifies that Ms. Bardfield relayed this information to her at a later time. id. 23:15-24:16 . Similarly, Dr. Clemmons *38 admits that she was not present when Ms. Field-Nguer asked JSI’s Katrina Khrum whether Dr. Clemmons was “difficult” in her last position. [11] See id. 46:9-49:7. The same holds true for Mr. Niblett’s alleged comment about Dr. Clemmons not being a “team player.” See id. 68:4-9. Finally, Dr. Clemmons admits that she cannot even identify who informed her about someone saying she was “difficult to work with” and “hard on Ghanaian staff,” but rather she simply attributes these statements to “informal reports.” See id. 90:4-92:12.
In response to AED’s objection, Dr. Clemmons fails to address the hearsay question and instead mistakes AED’s argument as one about the “common interest privilege.” Pl.’s Opp’n., at 35. The Court, however, feels compelled to note that there is direct evidence in the record stating that Ms. Field-Nguer implied that Dr. Clemmons’s leadership had led to “management problems” at AED. Bardfield Decl., Pl.’s Opp’n, Ex. C ¶ 3. But the Court finds no such direct evidence as to the other alleged defamatory comments, and without any legal or factual arguments from Dr. Clemmons to the contrary, the Court must conclude that the remaining statements, which are supported only through inadmissible hearsay, cannot survive summary judgment as the basis for the defamation claim.
Regarding Ms. Field-Nguer’s comment, it merely expresses her subjective opinion, and
under District of Columbia law, opinion statements that lend themselves to varying
interpretations are insufficient for a defamation claim because they cannot be proved “false.”
[12]
Houlahan v. Freeman Wall Aiello
, No. 1:04-CV-1161,
Ms. Field-Nguer’s alleged statement that Dr. Clemmons’s leadership resulted in
“management problems” clearly represents her own, unverifiable opinion. Further, Ms. Field-
Nguer did not reference specific underlying incidents that could be “proven or disproven” in
connection with this opinion statement.
[13]
See Armstrong v. Thompson
,
C. Spoliation of Evidence Claim
Finally, Dr. Clemmons alleges that AED failed to preserve emails related to her
grievance that potentially were relevant to this litigation. Pl.’s Opp’n., at 37. “Spoliation” is
*40
“defined as ‘the destruction or material alteration of evidence or the failure to preserve property
for another’s use as evidence in pending or reasonably foreseeable litigation.’”
Clarke v. Wash.
Metropolitan Area Transit Auth
.,
Generally, spoliated evidence is considered relevant for “not only the ordinary meaning
of the term, but also that the destroyed evidence would have been favorable to the movant.”
Zhi
Chen v. Dist. of Columbia
,
Here, Dr. Clemmons seeks four issue-related adverse inferences against AED to fill in what she alleges are the following evidentiary gaps: (1) the lack of emails between Ms. Nachbar, Ms. Larsen, Ms. McCown, and Ms. Moskov, which Dr. Clemmons believes will demonstrate the conspiratorial relationship between the individuals when criticizing her; (2) the lack of certain emails between Mr. Beadle De Palomo and Ms. McClintock, which Dr. Clemmons believes will *41 show that AED willfully ignored race issues when handling the grievance; (3) the lack of all 457 alleged emails between SHARP and GSCP, which Dr. Clemmons believes were intentionally destroyed in order to hide meritless criticisms of her sent to Mr. Beadle De Palomo; and (4) the lack of any written communication from Mr. Beadle De Palomo to Messrs. Niblett and Downey about Ms. Nachbar’s July 2008 email, which Dr. Clemmons believes will prove that Messrs. Niblett and Downey relied on the email when making negative comments about her. Pl.’s Opp’n., 41-42. The Court finds, however, that even if granted, the adverse inferences that Dr. Clemmons seeks are insufficient to create the genuine disputes of material fact necessary to avoid summary judgment.
First, as to a possible adverse inference about the conspiratorial nature of the comments directed against Dr. Clemmons by Ms. Moskov, Ms. Nachbar, Ms. Larsen, and Ms. McCown, such an inference only would speak to the subjective mindset of these individuals, while the Court already dismissed the hostile work environment claim because the alleged objective acts were not sufficiently “severe” or “pervasive.” See infra Part IV.A. Indeed, the alleged tormentors’ subjective states of mind generally are irrelevant to maintaining the Title VII and DCHRA causes of action that Dr. Clemmons brings, [14] and as such, the requested adverse inference would not create a genuine dispute of material fact that prevents summary judgment.
Second, Dr. Clemmons seeks an inference that either Mr. Beadle De Palomo intentionally did not send the “public lynching email” to Mr. McClintock, or that Mr. McClintock negligently failed to read it. Pl.’s Opp’n at 41-42. She suggests that if granted, either inference would support *42 her argument that AED willfully ignored race issues during the grievance investigation. See id . But in dismissing the constructive discharge claim, this Court did not rely on AED’s purported willfulness or negligence in conducting the investigation, see infra Part IV. C, so any evidence or inference bolstering Dr. Clemmons’s claim on this issue would be immaterial and thus would not allow her to avoid summary judgment.
Third, Dr. Clemmons requests an inference that AED intentionally destroyed emails that would have shown other examples in which GSCP employees complained about her to Mr. Beadle De Palomo. Pl.’s Opp’n. at 42. The Court, however, already concluded that Ms. Nachbar’s email, in combination with other complaints about Dr. Clemmons, did not alter the terms and conditions of Dr. Clemmons’s employment and did not result in an adverse employment action. [15] Thus, even if additional criticisms were sent to Mr. Beadle De Palomo, such a fact is irrelevant to avoiding summary judgment because the emails, in and of themselves, are not probative of whether an adverse action ultimately occurred.
Finally, Dr. Clemmons seeks an inference that Messrs. Niblett and Downey read Ms. Nachbar’s July 2008 email and then made negative comments to others based on the content of the email. id. But additional evidence about how their opinions of Dr. Clemmons were formed would not create a dispute of material fact to save the defamation claim. This is because the Court granted summary judgment for AED on the basis that Dr. Clemmons brought the defamation claim in exclusive reliance on inadmissible hearsay, see infra Part IV.D, and the adverse inference she seeks would not change the Court’s conclusion.
*43 For these reasons, the Court concludes that even if spoliation occurred — and the Court takes no position on whether it did — any lost evidence was harmless because the adverse inferences that Dr. Clemmons seeks would not create a genuine dispute of material fact as to any of her causes of action. See Burley v. Nat’l Passenger Rail Corp. , No. CV 11-1222, 2014 WL 1278641, at *7 (D.D.C. Mar. 31, 2014) (explaining that plaintiff’s “request for a spoliation inference in connection with a videotape of the accident would not create a genuine issue of material fact” and granting defendant’s motion for summary judgment). As such, the Court denies Dr. Clemmons’s request, and the Court need not consider the remaining factors necessary for proving spoliation.
V. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, AED’s motion for summary judgment is GRANTED , and the FHI 360 Defendants’ motion for summary judgment is DENIED WITHOUT PREJUDICE AS MOOT . An order consistent with this Memorandum Opinion is separately and contemporaneously issued.
Dated: September 30, 2014 RUDOLPH CONTRERAS
United States District Judge
Notes
[1] Dr. Clemmons also joined as a co-defendant Family Health International, d/b/a FHI 360, FHI Development 360 LLC, and FHI Solutions LLC (collectively, the “FHI 360 Defendants”), as AED’s successor in interest. The FHI 360 Defendants separately moved for summary judgment on the basis that successor liability does not exist as to every state and federal claim. Defs.’ Supp. Mot. Summ. J., ECF No. 53. Because the Court grants summary judgment for AED as to all claims, the Court will deny as moot the FHI 360 Defendants’ motion.
[2] The DCHRA is broader than Title VII insofar as it prohibits discrimination based on the “race, color, religion, national origin, sex, age, marital status, personal appearance, sexual orientation, gender identity or expression, family responsibilities, genetic information, disability, matriculation, or political affiliation of any individual,” whereas Title VII prohibits discrimination only with respect to an individual’s “race, color, religion, sex, or national origin.” Compare D.C. Code § 2-1402.11(a)(1), with 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-2(a)(1).
[3] Of course, personal appearance is protected under the DCHRA but not Title VII. D.C. Code § 1-2501.
[4] AED also argues that Dr. Clemmons is unable to show that it negligently failed to take action to prevent the workplace mobbing, and thus is unable to establish vicarious liability for the hostile work environment claim. Def.’s Mot. Summ. J. 2. The Court does not need to reach this issue, however, because it finds that the hostile acts are not sufficiently severe or pervasive to create a hostile work environment in the first place.
[5] AED argues that Dr. Clemmons was not opposing a discriminatory practice prior to the alleged retaliatory action because her “mobbing grievance” did not even hint at racial harassment. But because the Court rules on other grounds, it does not reach this issue.
[6] Indeed, Dr. Clemmons fails to identify another similarly situated employee for whom this “case-by-case” leave policy was applied more leniently. To the contrary, Mr. Beadle De Palomo testifies that he never approved advanced leave to an employee with a negative leave balance, and Mr. Clemmons does not provide conflicting evidence to create a dispute of material fact on the issue. Beadle De Palomo Dep. 249:19-22.
[7] Dr. Clemmons also cites to an email exchange that appears to clearly show Mr. White recommending that AED advance her six days of paid leave, instead of eleven days. Def.’s Mot. to Dismiss, Ex. O-87. This email demonstrates that she specifically was advanced six days, and not any other quantity of days, because that was the amount of leave she would accrue by the end of the first quarter of 2009. See id . This further suggests a non-retaliatory purpose behind the decision. And Dr. Clemmons points to no evidence that Mr. White possessed any retaliatory animus against her.
[8] This reporting required little, if any, direct contact with Ms. Nachbar. Instead, Dr. Clemmons was asked to provide a progress report to Senior Program Manager Sarah Torrance, who summarized the report and sent it to Ms. Nachbar for review. Mayo Dep. 199:21-200:5; Email between Clemmons and Torrance, Def.’s Mot to Dismiss, Ex. O-82.
[9] As further evidence undercutting her claim, this email and Dr. Clemmons’s exit coincided with her project ending, and several other employees also were seeking new jobs around this time. See Mayo Dep. 342:5-10.
[10] The Court notes that this alleged defamatory remark was made by Ms. Moskov, an employee of USAID. Neither USAID nor Ms. Moskov is a party to this case, and Dr. Clemmons does not offer a theory of liability through which AED or FHI would be liable for the tortious conduct of Ms. Moskov.
[11] In fact, Dr. Clemmons admits that she only heard this alleged statement from a third party who had spoken with Ms. Khrum, rather than from Ms. Khrum herself. Clemmons Dep. 46:9-49:7.
[12] Though it is unnecessary to evaluate the other alleged defamatory statements individually because Dr. Clemmons fails to support them with admissible evidence at summary judgment, the Court’s independent analysis finds that such statements also likely would constitute opinions that are not actionable for defamation under District of Columbia law.
[13] Separately, Dr. Clemmons suggests that this opinion was effectively a factual
statement because it was uttered by an individual who acted as her supervisor and listeners
therefore might attribute a sense of truthfulness to it. Pl.’s Opp’n at 34. Though a speaker’s
identity may affect a listener’s credibility determination, the speaker’s knowledge about the
opinion’s subject, without more, does not convert an opinion into an actionable statement.
See,
e.g.
,
Armstrong
,
[14] Rather, it is the
victim’s
subjective state of mind that counts.
Faragher v. City
of Boca Raton
,
[15] In fact, Mr. Beadle De Palomo actually spoke up in defense of Dr. Clemmons after hearing such criticism, and he reassured Dr. Clemmons that he supported her and that the criticism did not affect his opinion of her. Beadle De Palomo Dep. 232:5-11.
