Lead Opinion
I. Facts
Beth Ann Faragher worked as an ocean lifeguard for the City of Boca Raton, Florida (City), in the Parks and Recreation Department’s Marine Safety Section. The City employed Faragher intermittently from September 1985 until June 1990. During these five years, Bill Terry and David Silverman acted as supervisors of the ocean lifeguards, Terry as Chief of the Marine Safety Section and Silverman as a Marine Safety lieutenant and then captain. Terry had the authority to supervise all aspects of the lifeguards’ work assignments; to give oral reprimands and place reports of disciplinary actions in personnel files; and to interview and select new lifeguards, subject to approval by higher management. Silverman supervised the lifeguards’ daily duties, including designating work assignments and supervising physical fitness routines.
The Marine Safety Section was organized according to a clear chain of command. Lifeguards reported to Marine Safety lieutenants, and above them to captains; the captains reported directly to the Chief of the Marine Safety Section, who was directly supervised by the Recreation Superintendent; the Recreation Superintendent reported to the Director of Parks and Recreation, who reported to the City Manager. Lifeguards had little contact with City officials. Marine Safety Headquarters was at the beach — in a remote location, far away from City Hall.
Marine Safety Chief Terry subjected Far-agher and another lifeguard, Nancy Ewan-chew, to uninvited and offensive touching, and lieutenant Silverman made offensive comments and gestures to both Faragher and Ewanehew. In particular, Faragher testified that over the course of her five years of employment Terry touched her shoulders or waist on a number of occasions, patted her thigh once in April 1990, and slapped her on the rear end. Ewanehew testified about two specific incidents where Terry touched her in a sexually offensive manner. However, neither Faragher nor Ewanehew complained to Parks and Recreation Department management about Terry’s and Silverman’s conduct while they were employed with the City or when they resigned. They both did speak about Terry’s and Silverman’s conduct with one of their supervisors, Marine Safety lieutenant and Training Captain Robert Gordon. In fact, most of the female lifeguards complained to Gordon about Silverman’s language and conduct. The lifeguards did not speak with Gordon on a subordinate to superior basis; they spoke with him as a friend whom they held in high repute. Gordon did not report the complaints to his supervisor, Terry, or to any other City official.
Ewanehew resigned from her position with the City in April of 1989, saying that she was leaving because she had found a better job. Faragher resigned in June of 1990 to attend law school. In April of 1990, Ewanehew wrote a letter to the City’s Director of Personnel complaining that she and other female lifeguards had been sexually harassed by Terry and Silverman while she was employed by the City. The City did not know about Terry’s and Silverman’s conduct until receiving Ewanehew’s letter. The City then investigated Ewanchew’s complaint and determined that Terry and Silverman had engaged in some inappropriate conduct. The City reprimanded and disciplined them both.
II. Procedural Background
In 1992, Faragher sued the City, Terry, and Silverman. Faragher sued the City for sexual harassment under Title VII of the CM Rights Act of 1964,42 U.S.C. § 2000e et seq. (Count I). Faragher sued Terry and Silverman for sexual harassment under 42
The district court entered judgment for Faragher on her Title VII claim against the City, awarding her $1 in nominal damages.
Faragher appealed and the City cross appealed. A panel of this court reversed the district court’s judgment for Faragher on her Title VII sexual harassment claim against the City, but affirmed the district court’s judgment in all other respects. Faragher v. City of Boca Raton,
III.Issues on Appeal
We address two issues in this opinion:
IV.Standards of Review
We review the district court’s finding of fact under the clearly erroneous standard of review. Pullman-Standard v. Swint,
V.Contentions of the Parties
Faragher contends that Terry’s and Silver-man’s positions as top lifeguard commanders make them prototypical agents of the City. Faragher argues that this status, combined with Terry’s and Silverman’s conduct, makes the City liable for hostile environment sexual harassment. In addition, Faragher argues that the harassment was so pervasive that the City should be charged with constructive knowledge of Terry’s and Silverman’s conduct.
The City argues that it cannot be held liable under agency principles for Terry’s and Silverman’s conduct because there is no evidence which supports a finding either that Terry and Silverman were acting within the scope of their authority in harassing Faragher, or that they were aided in accomplishing the harassment by the existence of their agency relationships with the City. The City further contends that the evidence is insufficient to support the trial court’s finding that the City had constructive notice of Terry’s and Silverman’s conduct.
VI.Discussion
A. The City is not indirectly liable for Terry’s and Silverman’s conduct.
This case requires us to accommodate the Supreme Court’s mandate in Meritor
Because the Eleventh and all other circuits employ agency principles in the realm of hostile environment sexual harassment, this opinion utilizes the language of traditional agency case law. Under this approach, direct liability and indirect liability are distinct concepts and form the only possible bases for an employer’s liability. An employer is directly liable for hostile environment sexual harassment if it knew, or upon reasonably diligent inquiry should have known, of the harassment and failed to take immediate and appropriate corrective action. See Steele v. Offshore Shipbuilding, Inc.,
In contrast, an employer is indirectly, or vicariously, liable for the wrongful conduct of its agent, whether or not the employer knew or should have known about the agent’s wrongful act. Generally, an employer may be indirectly liable for hostile environment sexual harassment by a superi- or: (1) if the harassment occurs within the scope of the superior’s employment; (2) if the employer assigns performance of a non-delegable duty to a supervisor and an employee is injured because of the supervisor’s failure to carry out that duty; or (3) if there is an agency relationship which aids the supervisor’s ability or opportunity to harass his subordinate. See Restatement (Second) of Agency § 219(1), (2)(e), (2)(d).
Subsequent to Meritor, the circuits differ on the appropriate test to apply in a hostile work environment case involving sexual harassment of an employee by the employer’s supervisor. See, e.g., Kauffman v. Allied Signal,
This Circuit has concluded that in a pure hostile environment case, a supervisor’s harassing conduct is typically outside the scope of his employment. See Steele,
Strict liability is illogical in a pure hostile environment setting. In a hostile environment case, no quid pro quo exists. The supervisor does not act as the company; the supervisor acts outside “the scope of actual or apparent authority to hire, fire, discipline, or promote.”
Steele,
Instead, this circuit has articulated two agency principles under which an employer may be held indirectly,
First, neither Terry nor Silverman was acting within the scope of his employment when he perpetrated the harassment. Under well-established common law agency rules, an agent is not acting within the scope of his employment when he is “going on a frolic of his own.” Joel v. Morrison, 6 C. & P. 501, 172 Eng.Rep. 1338 (1834)(first recorded use of this phrase); see also Spencer v. Assurance Co. of America,
In contrast, if it becomes apparent that the act was the agent’s way of accomplishing some authorized purpose, then the master cannot avoid liability, even if he has given specific, detailed and emphatic instructions to the contrary. See Restatement (Second) of Agency § 230; Prosser, supra, at 461.
The contours of this same analysis have guided courts adjudicating agency is
The harassment here consisted of offensive comments, gestures and touching. However, the nature of Terry’s and Silverman’s acts and comments towards Faragher does not support a finding that they were acting within the scope of their employment in subjecting Faragher to offensive language, gestures, and touching. Indeed, there is no evidence that Terry and Silverman harassed Faragher in order to perform any service for the City, or that they were either explicitly or implicitly authorized by the City to engage in such harassment. This case provides the archetypical example of employees stepping outside of the scope of their employment and seeking to further personal ends. Consequently, under this theory of vicarious liability, the City cannot be liable for Terry’s and Silverman’s harassing conduct.
Second, neither Terry nor Silverman was aided in accomplishing the harassment by the existence of his agency relationship with the City. See Sparks,
No person threatened to fire or demote Faragher for refusing to accommodate Terry’s and Silverman’s harassing overtures. Moreover, the harassment cannot reasonably be viewed as conduct associated with Terry’s and Silverman’s status as agents of the City. See supra note 8. And, there is no evidence that either Terry or Silverman made any employment decisions based upon Faragher’s response to their sexual overtures. See Karibian v. Columbia University,
Because Terry and Silverman were not acting within the line and scope of their employment in perpetrating the harassment against Faragher, and because Terry and Silverman were not aided in accomplishing the harassment by the existence of any agency relationship with the City, the district court erred in holding the City of Boca Raton vicariously liable for Terry’s and Silverman’s harassment of Faragher.
B. The City is not directly liable for Terry’s and Silverman’s harassing conduct.
The district court found that the City had no actual knowledge of the sexual
The City contends that the district court’s finding that the City had constructive notice of the harassment is clearly erroneous and, therefore, that the City may not be held directly liable for the harassment. Faragher responds that the district court’s finding that the sexual harassment was severe and pervasive enough to infer the City’s knowledge is not clearly erroneous.
An employer is directly liable for hostile work environment sexual harassment if the employer knew or should have known of the harassment and failed to take prompt remedial action. Steele,
A plaintiff also can prove an employer’s knowledge by showing that the harassment was pervasive enough to charge the employer with constructive knowledge. Huddleston,
We agree with the district court that the analyses are the same to the extent that a court must evaluate the totality of the circumstances both in determining whether the work environment was abusive and in determining whether the conduct was pervasive enough to put the employer on notice. But we do not agree with the district court’s apparent belief that simply because conduct is pervasive enough to create an abusive work environment the employer should be charged with knowledge of the conduct. The question of notice to the employer is distinct from the question of the environment’s abusiveness. Thus, the district court erred to the extent that it conflated the two inquiries.
There may be cases in which it is difficult to draw the line where conduct becomes so pervasive that the employer should have known about it. But this is not such a case. The district court expressly found that the City had no knowledge of Terry’s and Silver-man’s conduct. The district court did not find, nor has Faragher pointed to, any factual basis for concluding that the harassment was so pervasive that the City should have known of their conduct. The evidence suggests that just the opposite is true. The lifeguards were stationed at a remote location and had little contact with City officials. The harassment itself occurred intermittently over a long period of time. Faragher worked for the City mostly on a part-time and summer basis, and the district court’s holding was premised upon a few, discrete instances of harassment. Another lifeguard, Kelly Ev
Finally, the district court found that the confined space at the lifeguard headquarters building, along with the disproportionate ratio of female to male lifeguards, were in and of themselves conducive to a sort of camaraderie that might be considered “somewhat boisterous.” Despite this, however, Ewan-ehew stated that the atmosphere in the locker room was generally respectful among members of a particular shift.
For the above reasons, the district court clearly erred in finding that the City’s knowledge may be inferred from the fact that the conduct was pervasive enough to create an abusive work environment.
VII. Conclusion
We reverse the district court’s judgment for Faragher on her Title VII sexual harassment claim against the City. In all other respects we affirm the district court’s judgment.
AFFIRMED in part; REVERSED in part.
Notes
. The facts are essentially drawn from the district court's Finding of Fact.
. The district court awarded Faragher $10,000 in compensatory damages on her § 1983 claim against Terry and Silverman, jointly and severally, and $500 in punitive damages on her battery claim against Terry. Additionally, the district court entered judgment for Ewanchew on her battery claim against Terry and awarded her $35,000 in compensatory damages and $2,000 in punitive damages.
. The parties present additional issues that do not merit further discussion. We affirm as to those issues. See 11th Cir. R. 36-1.
. These cases refer to this type of liability as “indirect” liability. However, as courts long have done outside the realm of Title VII sexual harassment analyses, we are now marrying the common law agency terms to their proper, traditional common law principles. This alteration can promote ease of reference to the underlying common law agency principles.
. The cases that developed these theories of liability referred to them as avenues for "direct” employer liability. For the reasons stated in footnote 4, we use the label “indirect” liability.
. This scenario admittedly will be rare after Steele.
. The commentary to §§ 235 and 236 makes it clear that scope-of-employment determinations must turn on whether the employee’s act was intended to benefit the employer. This "intent” can be discerned from circumstantial evidence which indicates that the employee's act, whether "part” of, or "incidental" to, the employment was in some way authorized by the employer. See Comment a, § 235, Comment a,- § 236. Thus, "[i]f ... the servant does the very act directed, or does the kind of act which he is authorized to perform within working hours and at an authorized place, there is an inference that he is acting within the scope of employment.” Comment a, § 235. See also Bennett,
. Gary cites, as an example of this type of conduct, Restatement (Second) of Agency § 219, comment e: "Thus a telegraph company may be held liable for a tort committed by a telegraph operator who sends a false telegraph message, as may the undisclosed principal of a store whose manager cheats a customer.” Gary,
[[liability is based upon the fact that the agent’s position facilitates the consummation of the [tort], in that from the point of view of the third person the transaction seems regular on its face and the agent appears to be acting in the ordinary course of the business confided to him. See Restatement § 219, comment e (citing § 261 in discussion of § 219(2)(d)).
. In its discussion of the City's indirect liability for Terry's and Silverman’s conduct the court held that Gordon's knowledge of Terry's and Silverman’s conduct provides a basis for holding the City liable. This was error. Gordon did not receive that information as the City’s agent; he received it as a friend held in high repute by his colleagues.
. It does not follow in this case that because there was an abusive environment the City necessarily had constructive knowledge of Terry’s and Silverman's harassment. However, there may be other cases in which the same level of pervasiveness can support a finding both of hostile environment and constructive notice.
. There is some evidence that the City did not effectively disseminate among Marine Safety employees its sexual harassment policy. The district court did not find that the City would have known about the harassment if it had effectively disseminated this policy; and indeed, the record indicates that failure to disseminate this policy was not the reason why the City did not know about the harassment.
Concurrence in Part
dissenting in part and concurring in part, in which HATCHETT, Chief Judge, and KRAVITCH, Senior Circuit Judge, joins:
The question posed in this case explores the circumstances under which an employer can be liable for a supervisor-created hostile environment of sexual harassment. I believe the majority errs in concluding that the City is not liable under the circumstances presented here and misapplies the law in doing so. First, I believe that the majority fails to give appropriate consideration to the responsibility of an employer for the acts of its agents under traditional agency principles, and essentially limits liability to only employers who “knew or should have known” of the hostile environment. Second, even though the majority says that an employer’s liability can be based on only constructive knowledge, its analysis effectively requires actual knowledge “of high city officials” — a test at odds with traditional principles of “imputed” corporate knowledge.
In Meritor Savings Bank v. Vinson,
The majority acknowledges employer liability for supervisor-created hostile environment sexual harassment if the employer knew or should have known of the harassment and failed to take prompt remedial action. Vance v. Southern Bell Tel. & Tel. Co.,
After a non-jury trial, the district court in this case found that Terry’s and Silverman’s conduct was “sufficiently severe or pervasive” to constitute hostile environment sexual harassment. The court then ruled that “[t]his finding of pervasiveness supports an inference of knowledge, or constructive knowledge, on the part of the City regarding Terry’s and Silverman’s sexual harass-ment____” The determination of constructive notice is based on factual findings which this court will not overturn unless they are clearly erroneous. See Reich v. Dep’t of Conservation and Natural Resources,
The majority also purports to find legal error: “[Sjimply because' conduct is pervasive enough to create an abusive work environment an employer should [not] be charged with knowledge of the conduct. The question of notice to the employer is distinct from the question of the environment’s abusiveness. Thus the district court erred to the extent that it conflated the two inquiries.” Majority Op. at 1538. However, there is no support in either logic or the law for such a proposition. The majority can cite to no case which holds that the same level of pervasiveness cannot support the same finding of a hostile environment and constructive notice. In fact, Vance states, “Just as the determination of whether conduct is sufficiently ‘severe and pervasive’ to constitute actionable harassment requires evaluation of the totality of the circumstances, the fact finder [in determining constructive knowledge] must examine the evidence in the same manner. Again, the egregiousness, as well as the number of the incidents, is plainly relevant.” Id. at 1513. Moreover, the majority seems to collapse the two distinct inquiries of actual knowledge and constructive
For an employer to be charged with knowledge, it is clearly not necessary for the head of the company, its president, or the chairman of the board to have known of the harassment. Indeed, generally the ultimate head or governing board does not have actual knowledge of the action. The very point of ascribing knowledge on a constructive basis is to recognize that liability can be imputed even when the employer has not been “told,” i.e., even when there is no actual knowledge. The relevant inquiry for constructive knowledge is what the employer should have known in the exercise of reasonable care. Hirschfeld v. New Mexico Corrections Dep’t.,
Terry was the Chief and supervisor of the lifeguard station at which Faragher worked. He clearly had the notice necessary to impute knowledge, and therefore liability, to the City. Under the circumstances presented here, the district court, ■ after hearing and evaluating the evidence, correctly applied the law to the facts of this case and did not commit clear error in finding that the pervasiveness of the harassment supported an inference of constructive notice on the part of the City.
“Indirect Liability ”
I also think the majority errs in effectively confining liability to instances where an employer has actual or constructive knowledge. The very purpose of agency is to establish an employer’s liability specifically for acts of which it has no knowledge. As Justice Joseph Story explains, a principal
is held liable to third persons in a civil suit for the frauds, deceits, concealments, misrepresentations, torts, negligences, and other malfeasances, or misfeasances, and omissions of duty, of his agent, in the course of his employment, although the principal did not authorize, or justify, or participate in, or, indeed, know of such misconduct, or even if he forbade the acts, or disapproved of them.-
Joseph Story, Commentaries on the Law of Agency § 452, at 536-37 (5th ed. 1857). This rule of holding a principal liable for the acts of its agent is based on “the consideration that it is the principal who makes it possible for the agent to inflict the injury.” 3 Am. Jur.2d Agency § 270 (1986). The record here establishes that Terry and Silverman were agents of the City acting within the scope of their employment
The majority erroneously assumes that because employers rarely, if ever, expressly authorize supervisors to act in a way that would create a sexually hostile environment, harassment by a supervisor would never fall “within the scope of his employment.” The
Indeed, I believe that hostile environment sexual harassment is analogous to the Restatement’s well-known paradigm, which explains that “a chauffeur, driving on an errand for his master, who knowingly drives on the left-hand side of the street or exceeds the speed limit, is still acting within the scope of employment.” Restatement § 231 cmt. a. The act of speeding has not been authorized by the employer, but the journey has clearly been undertaken within the scope of the chauffeur’s employment. Likewise, a pervasively hostile work environment of sexual harassment is never (one would hope) authorized, but the supervisor is clearly charged with maintaining a productive, safe work environment. The supervisor directs and controls the conduct of the employees, and the manner of doing so may inure to the employer’s benefit or detriment, including subjects ing the employer to Title VII liability. In hostile environment sexual harassment cases the supervisor, though not authorized to create a sexually hostile environment, uses his authority “to call [the victim] into his presence, to retain her in his presence over her objections, to use his responsibility to act as the voice of the employer to place her in a compromising position, and to take liberties with her personal privacy beyond the reach of a co-equal acquaintance, or a stranger.” See David Benjamin Oppenheimer, Exacerbating the Exasperating: Title VII Liability of Employers for Sexual Harassment Committed By Their Supervisors, 81 Cornell L.Rev. 66, 88 (1995); see also, Huddleston,
Moreover, “[a]n act may be within the scope of employment although consciously criminal or tortious.” Restatement § 231; see also, Lyon v. Carey,
Notwithstanding these well-established principles, the majority writes that an act is not within the scope of employment where “the agent has no intention to perform any service for his employer, but instead seeks only to further some personal end.” Majority Op. at 1536. In support of this proposition, the majority cites Bennett v. United States,
The majority’s use of Spencer v. Assurance Co. of America,
“under special circumstances, an employee’s intentional battery of another may be said to have occurred within the employee’s scope of employment.” See, e.g., Forster v. Red Top Sedan Service, Inc.,257 So.2d 95 (Fla. 3d DCA 1972) (directed verdict in favor of employer reversed where employee bus driver forced plaintiffs car off the road and then assaulted and battered the ear’s occupants after plaintiff allegedly delayed the employee from performing his job-related duties); Columbia by the Sea, Inc. v. Petty,157 So.2d 190 (Fla. 2d DCA 1963) (jury question created as to the scope of employment question when maitre d’ struck a customer after customer failed to pay his bill and called maitre d’ a “bastard”).
Spencer,
The majority also cites to Restatement §§ 235 and 236, arguing that in order to hold the employer liable, the employee must have intended to “serve the interests” of the employer. However, this is too narrow a reading of these sections, as under those provisions, an employer can also be held liable if there was an intent “to perform it as a part of or incident to a service on account of which he- is employed.” Applying all of the foregoing principles to the facts of this case, I believe the City of Boca Raton is liable under § 219(1) for the hostile environment created by Terry and Silverman.
The record reveals that both Terry and Silverman were granted virtually unchecked authority over the work environment. In Terry’s capacity as Marine Safety Chief, “[he] had the authority to supervise all aspects of the lifeguards’ work assignments, to conduct counseling and oral reprimands and place reports of such disciplinary actions in the lifeguards’ personnel files.” Terry also interviewed and selected new lifeguards, subject to approval by higher management. Moreover, Terry held the highest management position in the Marine Safety Section and on the City’s beaches. Thus, he was ultimately responsible for the general beach environment, including the public’s safety, and as such, it was incumbent upon him to ensure optimal performance from the lifeguards. Silverman, as Marine Safety lieutenant, and then captain, supervised the “lifeguards’ daily duties, including designation of the lifeguards’ work assignments and staffing of shifts, and supervision of their physical fitness routines.”
With respect to the City’s involvement with the lifeguards, the court found that “the lifeguards’ contacts with higher city officials ... were almost non-existent,” and the City admits that, “Marine Safety headquarters was located at the City beach and was thus physically remote from City Hall.” The lifeguards operated under an extensive chain of command, with at least six levels of management between the lifeguards and the City Manager. Most importantly, although the City had a written sexual harassment policy, that policy was never disseminated among Marine Safety Section employees, and in fact, supervisors were never told or made aware of the City’s sexual harassment policy. Indeed, the district court explicitly found that any procedures that the City had in place to deal with sexual harassment were ineffectual because of the City’s failure to disseminate those procedures.
In sum, Faragher was completely isolated from the City’s higher management, and Terry and Silverman directly controlled and supervised all aspects of her day-to-day activities. Furthermore, it is clear that the City had divested itself of all responsibility for the social climate of the lifeguards’ work environment, that Terry and Silverman essentially were given unfettered responsibility for and control over that environment, and that the lifeguards had no effective avenue of redress •with the City. Thus, under Vance, Terry and Silverman were acting with the requisite amount of authority as agents to bind the City as principal. This conclusion is supported by the fact that the acts of harassment were undertaken during the time and at the place of work and were “incidental to” the broad range of tasks the supervisors were authorized to do, see Restatement § 229 (defining scope of employment), as well as by the fact that Terry and Silverman were aided in accomplishing these acts by the existence of the agency relationship.
For the foregoing reasons, I would hold the City liable for Terry’s and Silverman’s creation of a hostile work environment of sexual harassment.
concurring in part and dissenting in part:
With the exception of appellant Beth Ann Faragher’s Title VII claim, I concur in the court’s disposition of this case. As for that claim, I cannot join the court’s opinion because I agree with the district court that Faragher’s proof demonstrated that the City of Boca Raton violated Title VII by requiring
I.
A.
Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, as amended, provides that
[i]t shall be an unlawful employment practice for an employer—
(1) to fail or refuse to hire or discharge any individual, or otherwise to discriminate against any individual with respect to his compensation, terms, conditions, or privileges of employment, because of such individual’s race, color, religion, sex, or national origin.
42 U.S.C. § 2000e-2(a).
Title VII prohibits as a discriminatory condition of employment the employer’s creation of an abusive working environment characterized by severe and pervasive sexual harassment. Meritor Savings Bank v. Vinson,
For obvious reasons, most employers strive to maintain order in the workplace. Order enhances efficiency. For employers in the private sector, order enhances the potential for profit. For public employers, order enhances the image of officials who must stand for re-election and bureaucrats who report to them and seek job security. Disorder, the converse of order, prevents the workplace from operating at optimal efficiency. Sexual harassment that is severe and pervasive constitutes disorder. Hence, employers have an extra-legal incentive to prevent it. Title VII, because of the liability and associated costs it may impose, provides employers with an added, legal incentive to prevent this form of disorder.
There is always someone in charge of any workplace. Depending on the character of the business or the number of employees in the workplace, the designation of the person in charge may be explicit. Alternatively, the designation may be tacit. Unless the employer designates someone other than the person in charge of the workplace as the one responsible for maintaining order, I would hold that the person in charge of the workplace has the responsibility of preventing
B.
In the case at hand, the court does not dispute that Terry was in charge of the workplace. As Chief of the Marine Safety Section, “Terry had the authority to supervise all aspects of the lifeguards’ work assignments; to give oral reprimands and place reports of disciplinary actions in personnel files; and to interview and select new lifeguards, subject to approval by higher management.”- Ante at 1533. The district court found that the City “had a written sexual harassment policy, [but failed] to disseminate said policy among Marine Safety Section employees,” including Faragher. Faragher v. City of Boca Raton,
n.
As noted above, the City had a policy against sexual harassment in the workplace. The City, however, did not communicate the policy to the employees of the Marine Safety Section or identify the person to whom complaints of sexual harassment were to be made. Thus, the City effectively concealed from those employees the avenue for redress of grievances. This concealment troubles me for three reasons. First, I fear that the court’s opinion dilutes the employer’s duty under Title VII to maintain a workplace free of severe and pervasive sexual harassment. Second, the court’s opinion places an undue burden on employees who wish to complain of harassment in the workplace. Third, the court’s opinion has the potential to breed disrespect for the law.
A.
The court exonerates the City from liability because Faragher did not complain to someone in the Parks and Recreation Department management. The court does so even though Faragher had not been told to whom she should complain. An employer reading the court’s opinion may conclude that it, like the City of Boca Raton, can escape Title VII liability by having a policy against sexual harassment but concealing from its employees the identity of the person to whom claims are to be made. Because such concealment would have the potential for reducing claims of sexual harassment, and thus the
B.
To the extent that the court’s opinion induces employers to conceal the identity of the person to whom complaints of sexual harassment are made, the opinion places an undue burden on employees who suffer such harassment. Under my approach, if the employee is not informed of the identity of the person to whom complaints are to be made, the employee would simply turn to the person in charge of the workplace. Under the court’s approach, the employee must guess to which of the employer’s agents or employees a complaint should be lodged. Depending on the circumstances, this could be risky business. Among other things, the employee might err in selecting the person to whom to complain, in which ease her complaint could go for naught.
C.
The scenarios depicted in subparts A and B above, which I submit are entirely plausible, will in time breed disrespect for the law. Although I am sure that the court does not intend such a result, I contend that the result is likely. For employers, escaping Title VII liability for sexual harassment in the workplace will be seen as a game — a game to .be played with cards dealt from a deck eomposed of law of agency principles. The object of the game is to escape Title VII liability without affording employees the protection that Title VII purports to provide. For employees, Title VII will be seen as an empty promise — a mere sop, if you will— enacted by Congress to placate a constituency-
concurring in part and dissenting in part:
With respect to Faragher’s Title VII sexual harassment claim against the City, I agree with Judge Barkett that the district court should be affirmed. I agree with much of what is said in Judge Barkett’s opinion. I agree with Judge Barkett that the City was appropriately found liable pursuant to the theory of “direct liability.” In addition to the facts pointed out by Judge Barkett relating to the severity and pervasiveness of the conduct constituting a hostile environment, I would rely upon the testimony regarding the intermediate supervisor, Gordon. When plaintiffs complained to him, he indicated that the City did not care. I think this evidence of the City’s lack of concern also supports the district court’s finding of constructive notice.
I also agree with Judge Barkett that the City could be liable under a theory of “indirect liability,” i.e., pursuant to the agency principles upon which our previous hostile environment cases have relied. I need not decide the threshold level of authority which a supervisor must possess in order to impose liability on the employer under these principles. For example, I need not decide that every supervisor with some authority relating to personnel can impose liability on the employer. It is sufficient for the disposition of this ease, in my judgment, that Terry was endowed by the City with sufficient authority to impose liability on the City. The City placed Terry in charge of this particular workplace and in charge of the plaintiffs and similarly situated employees. The following
. Additionally, the majority errs in engaging in de novo review of the district court’s factual findings relating to constructive knowledge instead of reviewing for clear error.
. Common law principles of agency are embodied in § 219 of the Restatement (Second) of Agency (1958)[heremafter “Restatement"]. Section 219 establishes five different theories for assigning liability to employers for the actions of their employees:
(1) A master is subject to liability for the torts of his servants committed while acting in the scope of their employment.
*1540 (2) A master is not subject to liability for the torts of his servants acting outside the scope of their employment, unless:
(a) the master intended the conduct or the consequences, or
(b) the master was negligent or reckless, or
(c) the conduct violated a non-delegable duty of the master, or
(d) the servant purported to act or to speak on behalf of the principal and there was reliance upon apparent authority, or he was aided in accomplishing the tort by the existence of the agency relation.
. I am using "direct” liability in the same manner as the majority. Under the Restatement, this theory arises under § 219(2)(b), which provides: " (2) A master is not subject to liability for the torts of his servants acting outside the scope of their employment, unless: (b) the master was negligent or reckless.” Employer negligence in this context is defined as "failing to remedy or prevent a hostile or offensive work environment of which management-level employees knew, or in the exercise of reasonable care should have known.” Hirschfeld v. New Mexico Corrections Dep’t.,
. I am using "indirect" liability in the same manner as the majority, that is, according to the principles of agency found in §§ 219-37 of the Restatement.
. § 219(1) provides, "A master is subject to liability for the torts of his servants committed while acting in the scope of their employment.”
.§ 219(2)(d) provides, “A master is not subject to liability for the torts of his servants acting outside the scope of their employment, unless ... the servant purported to act or to speak on behalf of the principal and there was reliance upon apparent authority, or he was aided in accomplishing the tort by the existence of the agency relation.”
. See e.g. Andrade v. Mayfair Manag., Inc.,
. I am confused by the court's use of the conjunction “and.” To me, because the City is a corporation and must act through its agents, actual knowledge must be imputed knowledge. That is, information that an agent obtains in discharging his or her duties is imputed by operation of law to the corporation, thus giving the corporation actual knowledge of what the agent learned. Hence, when referring to a corporation, imputed knowledge is actual knowledge.
I am also confused by the court's conclusion that the Ci1y would be liable if it "knew or should have known” of the sexual harassment in question. This implies that the Ci1y could be held liable for simple negligence. A Title VII claimant, however, must establish that the employer intended the harassment. I believe that the court, in using this "knew or should have known” language, means that if a trier of fact could conclude from the evidence that the agent responsible for ensuring order in the workplace (including the prevention of severe and pervasive sexual harassment) knew that an employee was being subjected to a hostile environment, that knowledge would constitute the employer's knowledge.
. This approach is consistent with the Supreme Court's directive in Meritor that, in determining which of the employer’s agents or employees is responsible for preventing severe and pervasive harassment from permeating the workplace, "courts [must] look to agency principles for guidance,” although "such common law principles may not be transferable in all their particulars to Tide VII.”
. The court implies that someone in the Parks and Recreation Department management was responsible for implementing the City's policy against sexual harassment by observing that “neither Faragher nor [fellow lifeguard Nancy] Ewanchew complained to Parks and Recreation Department management about” the harassing conduct in question. Ante at 1533. By suggesting that Faragher had to find someone in the management of that department with whom to lodge her complaint, the court ignores the reality of Faragher’s workplace. The Parks and Recreation Department management was located elsewhere and had little, if any, contact with the Marine Safety Section's employees, while Terry was close at hand and was “in charge” of virtually every aspect of Faragher’s work environment.
. Lodging a complaint imposes on the employee certain costs, including embarrassment and disruption of working relationships. Where the employee does not know to whom to complain, it may be that she will complain to the wrong person and that her complaint will not be addressed properly. Where the employee faces the costs associated with lodging a complaint and sees little likelihood that her complaint will yield any benefit, the employee would probably not complain.
. Judge Barkett at 1543 (M/S at 10).
. I need not decide whether the foregoing facts support agency liability under the scope-of-employment prong or under the aided-in-accomplishing-the-tort-by-the-agency-relationship prong or both. As suggested by Judge Barkett's analysis, I suspect the analysis is similar under either prong. .
