MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
This matter is before the Court on Defendant’s motion for summary judgment [Record No. 73]. Plaintiff has responded [Record No. 79] to which Defendant has replied [Record No. 89], Fully briefed, the Court makes the following findings of fact and conclusions of law.
FINDINGS OF FACT
Defendant is the fоrmer employer of Plaintiffs deceased brother, Mark Epelb-aum. Mark began working for defendant in June of 1993 as a lab technician. Plaintiff alleges that while Mark was employed by the defendant, he endured frequent ethnic jokes and derogatory comments about his Polish ancestry. 1 On October 10, 1996, Mark died from a self-inflicted gunshot wound to the head. It is Plaintiffs contention that the defendant is liable for creating and condoning a hostile work en *431 vironment which was a substantial contributing factor in Mark’s suicide.
CONCLUSIONS OF LAW
Plaintiff presents three claims against the defendant. Said claims include a wrongful death action, the creation of a hostile work environment in violation of K.R.S. 344.040, and intentional infliction of emotional distress. 2
I. Applicable Standard
In deciding whether to grant summary-judgment, the Court must view the facts presented in a light most favorable to the nonmoving party, which in this case is the plaintiff.
See Kocsis v. Multi-Care Management, Inc.,
II. Plaintiffs claims
A. Wrongful death
Plaintiff first claim for wrongful death is brought under K.R.S. 411.130. Said statute permits a personal representative of the deceased to recover damages whenever the death “results from an injury inflicted by the negligence or wrongful act of another.”
Id.
In order to recover, however, the act of the defendant must have “caused” the death of Plaintiffs brother.
See Watters v. TSR, Inc.,
If a fact is so unforeseeable in character or is highly extraordinary in nature, it is considered an intervening cause and will relieve an original tortfeasor of liability to the ultimate victim.
See Wat-ters,
Several exceptions have been carved into the general rule that suicide is an intervening cause eliminating liability on the part of a wrongdoer. The first exception is “where a person known to be suicidal is placed in the direct care” of another owing a duty to protect the person from harm. Id. This custodial relationship does not exist in the case at bar. The second exception is found in workers compensation law and permits recovery when an injury sustained in the course of employment causes some type of “mental disorder sufficient to impair the worker’s normal and rational judgment, where the worker would not have committed suicide without the mental disorder.” Id. at 384. No such injury occurred here.
Finally, the third exception, which is the one argued by the plaintiff, is known as the irresistible impulse exception and occurs when a “decedent was delirious or insane and either incapable of realizing the nature of his act or unable to resist an impulse to commit it.” Id. If the decedent was nоt known to be suicidal or having such mental affliction rendering him incapable of refraining from inflicting such harm upon himself, then the defendant cannot be liable. See id.
In the case at bar, neither the defendant, nor any employee of the defendant was aware that the decedent was suicidal. Decedent was a quiet and reserved man who chose not to share, his feelings and emotions with his co-workers. In fact, he rarely, if ever, discussed his personal life at work. The record indicates that the decedent was never treated *432 for nor diagnosed with any mental condition or mental illness at any time during his life. Even Plaintiff, the decedent’s older brother in frequent contact with the decedent, has stated that he, at no time, believed the decedent to be suicidal or a danger to himself.
Hence, this Court concludes that no material genuine issue of fact exists at to whether decedent’s suicide was brought about by the alleged conditions he was facing while in the defendant’s employ. Plaintiffs wrongful death claim must be dismissed for lack of causation.
B. Hostile work environment
Pursuant to K.R.S. 344.040 et seq., the Kentucky Civil Rights Act, Plaintiff asserts that the defendant subjected the decedent to intentional, illegal national origin discrimination and a hostile work environment. Plaintiff alleges that the atmosphere in the laboratory where the decent worked was permeated with discriminatory animus. Such animus is illustrated by the following remark in reference to the decedent by Darren Stephen, the decedent’s co-worker who was to train decedеnt for a particular job: “if the dumb Pollack wanted to learn anything he was going to have to learn it himself because he wasn’t teaching him.” Additionally, Mike Gordon, another co-worker had allegedly stated to the decedent, “I don’t care how many degrees you have; to me you’re just a dumb Pollack.” Other instances of “harassment” that occurred at the lab include the following:
(1)Co-worker Linda Davis testified that during decedent’s first year, she recalled Gordon telling an ethnic joke which according to the defendant, was not directed at the decedent. She and the decedent walked away and did not actually hear the joke. Stephen testified that he recalled Gordon telling ethnic jokes. Bill Wilson also testified that he had heаrd Gordon telling ethnic jokes not directed at the decedent.
(2) Jackie Giles, an operator and coworker of decedent, stated jokingly to decedent, on more than one occasion, “you dumb pollack, come and gеt this sample,” to which the decedent regularly responded, “you gay American.” According to Linda Davis, the two were joking.
(3) Pam Davis, an operator and coworker of decedent, once stated to the decedent when he was carrying bottled water, “you’re so dumb you even have to buy your water.... You don’t know you can get water out of the fountain?”
(4) Pam Davis testified that in early 1995, she imitated decedent’s accent, to which he responded “do not make fun.”
Defendant argues that еven if the above allegations are true, they are insufficient as a matter of law to constitute actionable ethnicity based harassment.
To prevail on a claim alleging a hostile work environment, Plaintiff must show that (1) decedent was a mеmber of a protected class; (2) decedent was subjected to unwelcomed harassment; (3) the harassment was based on decedent’s ethnicity; (4) the harassment unreasonably interfered with his work performance and created a hostilе work environment; and (5)the defendant knew or should have known of the charged harassment and failed to implement prompt and appropriate corrective action.
See Blankenship v. Parke Care Centers, Inc.,
A hostile work environment is found to exist when it is permeated with “discriminatory intimidation, ridicule, and insult.”
Harris v. Forklift Systems, Inc.,
There is no dispute in the fact that the decedent’s Polish ethnicity placed him in a protected class. Based on the comments of some of his co-workers, it appears that the decedent was also subject to harassment because of his Polish ancestry.
With regard to the fourth element in Harris, the Court finds that on at least one significant occаsion, the harassment may have interfered with decedent’s work performance. Darren Stephen, the person in charge of training decedent for a chemist position for which decedent was qualified, refused to train decedent and called him a “dumb Pollack” to his face.
The fourth element also requires the Court to use several factors in determining whether a hostile work environment exists. In terms of frequency and severity, Plaintiffs case appears weak when comparеd with Sixth Circuit case law. In
Black v. Zaring Homes, Inc.,
Abeita v. TransAmerica Mailings, Inc.,
Because Plaintiff is unable to meet all of the elements to form a prima facie case of hostile work environment, his claim must fail.
C. Intention infliction of emotional distress
To support a claim for the intentional infliction of emotional distress upon decedent by the defendant, Plaintiff must prove the following:
(1) the wrongdoer’s conduct must be intentional or reckless; (2) the conduct must be outrageous and intolerable in that it offends against the generally accepted standards of decency and morality; (3) there must be a causal connectiоn between the wrongdoer’s conduct and the emotional distress; and (4) the emotional distress must be severe.
Humana of Kentucky, Inc. v. Seitz,
To avoid summary judgment, Plaintiff must establish a prima facie case containing each of the above elements.
See Pierce v. Commonwealth Life Ins. Co.,
III. Conclusion
Plaintiff has presented no genuine issues of material fact to avoid summary judgment in the above-styled action. By dismissing these claims, the Court is by no means condoning the actions оf the defendant’s employees. The conclusions drawn by this Court reflect the lack of causation as to decedent’s suicide and the high threshold required of Plaintiff as set forth by the Sixth Circuit. The Court finds that the occasional ethnic slurs used by Defendant’s emрloyees to be inappropriate and distasteful. However, statutes such as Title VII and the Kentucky Civil Rights Act were “not designed to purge the workplace of vulgarity.”
Black,
Accordingly,
IT IS ORDERED that Defendant’s motion for summary judgment be, and the same hereby is, GRANTED.
Notes
. In 1969, the Epelbaum family left Poland to come to America when Mark was thirteen years old.
. The latter two of these claims are brought on behalf of the decedent.
. Defendant argues that Plaintiff's claim is preempted by K.R.S. Chapter 344, and therefore cannot be considered by this Court. Because this Court determined that Plaintiff’s claim under said chapter could not survive summary judgment, the issue of preemption does not arise. Therefore, it is appropriate that the Court reach the merits of Plaintiff's emotional distress claim.
