OPINION
Plaintiff Lena T. Konah, a United States citizen and native of Liberia, worked as a licensed practical nurse for Defendant Unity Health Care, Inc. She was assigned to the medical unit at the Central Detention Facility operated by Defendant District of Columbia. She complains that jail inmates made vulgar and lewd comments and gestures at the nurses constantly. Ms. Konah further complains that, on August 5, 2009, she was trapped behind bars with a group of sexually threatening inmates but Defendant Sergeant Robert Jef
Ms. Konah claims that Unity’s acts and omissions constituted discrimination based on gender and national origin and that Unity constructively discharged her by terminating her in retaliation for her complaints about the August 5, 2009, incident. She also complains that the District of Columbia violated her rights under the Fourth and Fifth Amendments to the United States Constitution by “seizing” her and by denying her due process and equal protection. Further, Ms. Konah alleges that Sgt. Jefferson intentionally inflicted emotional distress on her and aided in the assault and battery that occurred when one of the inmates grabbed her on the buttocks. In response to Ms. Konah’s Third Amended Complaint, Unity and Sgt. Jefferson have filed motions for summary judgment. The District of Columbia moves for judgment on the pleadings.
I. FACTS
A. Unity Health Care and the D.C. Central Detention Facility
Ms. Konah worked for Unity as a Licensed Practical Nurse from November 2006 through September 2009.
Each of the “open population” housing units at CDF is monitored by a sergeant, who sits in a glass-walled control module called a “bubble” and who supervises floor officers and inmates. Id. ¶ 10. Inmates who qualify for open population are released from the cells but must remain in the cell block. From the bubble, the sergeant controls one gate (“bubble gate”) that connects the cell block to a narrow hallway called the “sally port,”
One of Unity’s duties is to administer medications to inmates, which nurses have typically done in the housing units. Unity SUF ¶¶ 7, 41. Correctional officers are required to accompany nurses at all times when they administer medication to inmates. Id. ¶¶ 7-9; Unity MSJ, Ex. 2 [Dkt. 67-6], Deposition of Lena Konah (Konah Dep.), at 95 (Q. “And are you supposed to be escorted by an officer? A. Yes.”). If an officer is not immediately available, a nurse can “just come back and wait for one.” Konah Dep. at 100. Waiting for an officer was Ms. Konah’s typical practice. Id.
Insulting interactions between inmates and nurses were not uncommon at CDF. Unity SUF ¶¶ 22-26. Sometime in April 2009, a nurse — not Ms. Konah — reported that an inmate had thrown urine and feces at her. Id. ¶ 33. On April 21, 2009, several nurses, including Ms. Konah, sent a letter to Unity complaining about security practices at the jail. Id. ¶ 34; Compl. ¶¶ 26, 31; see also Unity MSJ, Ex. 18 [Dkt. 67-6], Letter dated April 21, 2009 (4/21/09 Letter) at 1. The letter described several recent incidents involving feces and “unknown liquids”, as well as the general difficulties of working around the inmates while distributing medication.
The day after the nurses’ complaint letter, Mali Zabiheian, Unity’s Health Services Administrator and the senior management representative for Unity at the D.C. Jail, implemented a “sick call room policy.” Unity SUF ¶ 35; see Unity MSJ, Ex. 20 [Dkt. 67-6], Decl. of Yali Zabiheian (Zabiheian Decl.) ¶¶ 1, 7-8 & Ex. A (4/22/09 Zabiheian Memo) at 1. The policy stated:
Effective May 1, medication administration and dispensing by the nursing and pharmacy staff will take place in the sick call rooms on the housing units. The medical staff will no longer walk on the housing units to administer medicine in open population.
4/22/09 Zabiheian Memo at 1. On April 30, 2009, during a training meeting,- all nursing staff at the Jail, including Ms. Konah, were instructed to use the sick call rooms when dispensing medicine. Unity SUF ¶ 40. According to Unity business records, during a discussion of “Medication Dispensing in Units,” all nurses were in
B. The August 5, 2009 Incident
Ms. Konah was assigned to dispense medication to inmates on August 5, 2009, in a CDF housing unit known as Southwest. or SW 1. Unity SUF ¶44. Sgt. Jefferson was on duty at the Southwest bubble that day. On this occasion, Ms. Konah varied from her usual practice of waiting for an officer and entered the sally port unescorted. Konah Dep. at 100, 103. She began to dispense medications to inmates in the sally port, close to the front gate. Unity SUF ¶¶ 45-46. While she was there, the bubble gate opened and closed a few times, presumably to admit and discharge inmates obtaining medications. See Zabiheian Deck, Exs. D & E (SW1 Videos from Aug. 5, 2009). However, a group of inmates from the housing unit, dressed only in their undergarments, approached Ms. Konah in the sally port, making especially lewd and sexually threatening comments. She went to the bubble and asked Sgt. Jefferson to open the front gate to the corridor outside the unit so she could get away from the inmates, but he refused to respond or to open the gate, leaving her trapped in the sally port. As Ms. Konah returned to the front gate, the semi-clothed inmates surrounded her, calling her names and using sexually explicit language; one inmate grabbed her on the buttocks. Ms. Konah asked him something to the effect of “why did you touch me?” and screamed for help from Sgt. Jefferson. See Unity MSJ, Ex. 24 [Dkt. 67-6], DCDC-1 Report Completed by Lena Konah (Konah DCDC-1 Report); id., Ex. 25 [Dkt. 67-6], DCDC-1 Report Completed by Dr. Benedict Kargbo (Kargbo DCDC-1 Report). Dr. Benedict Kargbo, a treatment specialist at the Jail, entered the sally port from the housing unit, saw what was happening, and told the inmate to back away from Ms. Konah, which he did immediately. Unity SUF ¶ 52. Dr. Kargbo joined Ms. Konah’s demands that the front gate be opened. Kargbo DCDC-1 Report at 1-2. Sgt. Jefferson eventually opened the front gate. With a corrections officer at the entrance, Ms. Konah and Dr. Kargbo left the sally port at the front gate and entered the main hallway of the Jail.
C. Aftermath of August 5, 2009 Incident
In the meantime, Ms. Konah took a planned vacation and, on August 26, 2009, told Unity that she was too terrified of the Jail to return to work there. Unity SUF ¶¶ 62-63. She asked for a transfer to the chronic care unit of CDF to avoid the open-population cell blocks, but the “nurse manager” could not put her there and told her to “go back to [her] assigned area” or, if she did not want to do so, to “go home” because she “should not come back.” Konah Dep. at 118. Unity agreed to look for a position outside of CDF. Unity SUF ¶ 66. In September 2009, Unity asked Ms. Konah to consider other open positions identified on Unity’s Career Opportunity website, and she agreed. Id. ¶¶ 68-69. However, Ms. Konah was hospitalized in September or October 2009. She admits that Unity contacted her attorney about a job opening but says she could not respond because she was in the hospital. Konah Dep. at 142-44.
Unity learned that Ms. Konah was hospitalized on October 9, 2009.
Ms. Konah filed a complaint with the D.C. Office of Human Rights on December 3, 2009. See Unity MSJ, Ex. 42 [Dkt. 67-6], ÓCHR Complaint. On January 20, 2010, Unity again offered her a position at the Hunt Place Health Center, which she accepted. Unity SUF ¶¶ 81-82. On January 21, 2010, Unity sent Ms. Konah a letter asking her to complete the FMLA documents before her scheduled return to work on January 27, 2010. Unity MSJ, Ex. 38 [Dkt. 67-6], Jan. 21, 2010, Letter from S. Michele Ottley to Lena Konah (noting that Ms. Konah’s absence had been “provisionally designated as Intermittent F[amily] M[edical] L[eave]”). On January 27, 2010, Ms. Konah did not show up for work. Unity SUF ¶ 84. Unity informed her that it considered her failure to complete FMLA documents and failure to show up to work a voluntary resignation. Id. ¶ 85. Ms. Konah admits that Unity offered her a job at another Unity Healthcare facility and that she accepted the job in January 2010 but “there was some little discrepancy” she could not recall that prevented her from reporting for work. Konah Dep. at 144-45.
In' her deposition, Ms. Konah answered many important questions, especially about events after August 5, 2009, with the statement that she could not recall or could not explain.
D. Procedural History
Ms. Konah filed a complaint in this Court on June 2, 2010, and the case was
The Court granted in part and denied in part the motion to dismiss. See Konah v. District of Columbia,
Sgt. Jefferson and the District answered the Second Amended Complaint, and the parties engaged in discovery. The case was reassigned to the Honorable Rosemary M. Collyer on April 20, 2012, and, following a May 9, 2012, status conference, Ms. Konah filed her Third Amended Complaint, Dkt. '64. Unity filed its answer, Dkt. 65, as did Sgt. Jefferson and the District, Dkt. 66. Shortly thereafter, discovery closed. Unity moved for summary judgment, Dkt. 67, which Ms. Konah opposes, see Dkts. 70-73. The District moved for judgment on the pleadings, Dkt. 68, which Ms. Konah also opposes, Dkt. 79. Sgt. Jefferson filed a separate motion for summary judgment, Dkt. 76; Ms. Konah filed her opposition to that motion on September 13, 2012, Dkt. 84.
The complaint currently before the Court is the Third Amended Complaint, Dkt. 64, which, as discussed below, varies in certain respects from Ms. Konah’s prior complaints. Ms. Konah now brings the following seven claims: Count I, discrimination based on sex against the District and Unity, ¶¶ 39-47; Count II, discrimination based on national origin against Unity, ¶¶ 48-51; Count III, reprisal, against Uni
II. LEGAL STANDARD
A. Motions for Summary Judgment
Under Rule 56 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, summary judgment shall be granted “if the movant shows that there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(a); accord Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc.,
In ruling on a motion for summary judgment, the court must draw all justifiable inferences in the nonmoving party’s favor and accept the nonmoving party’s evidence as true. Anderson,
B. Motion for Judgment on the Pleadings
Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(c) provides that “[ajfter the pleadings are closed — but early enough not to delay trial — a party may move for judgment on the pleadings.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(c). A motion for judgment on the pleadings will be granted if the movant shows, at the close of the pleadings, that no issue of material fact remains to be resolved, and that he or she is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. See Terry v. Reno,
The standard of review for a motion pursuant to Rule 12(c) is essentially the same as that for motions to dismiss pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6). Robinson-Reeder v. Am. Council on Educ.,
Although “detailed factual allegations” are not necessary to withstand a motion for judgment on the pleadings, see Bell Atl. Corp. v. Twombly,
III. ANALYSIS
The Court addresses Sgt. Jefferson’s Motion for Summary Judgment before turning to Unity’s Motion for Summary Judgment and, finally,- the District’s Motion- for Judgment on the Pleadings.
A. Sergeant Jefferson’s Motion for Summary Judgment
Robert Jefferson is a sergeant at the D.C. Department of Corrections. Ms. Konah complains that he “aided in the assault and battery” of Ms. Konah by the SW1 inmates with conduct that was “intentional, reckless, and in deliberate disregard of a high degree of probability that emotional distress would result to [Ms. Konah].” Compl. ¶¶ 63-68. Sgt. Jefferson moves for summary judgment.
1. Relevant Facts
Ms. Konah entered the sally port at 1:51:43 p.m. and left at 2:06:30 p.m., as shown by video of the front gate to the sally port. See SW 1 Videos from Aug. 5, 2009. The video footage shows that the front gate opened and closed on five occasions while Ms. Konah was in the sally port, including at 2:06:30, when she exited. Id.; see also Konah Dep. at 205 (“Q. And in that video the gate from the main hall into the sally port opened numerous times, didn’t it? A. It did.”).
Her recollections of August 5, 2009, are otherwise inconsistent. She first testified that she went to the bubble and had her back to the front gate so that she could not see it open or close. Konah Dep. at 196 (“Q. [T]he door at the main gate, was that opening and closing? A. I can’t recall because I was backing — my back is turned to the main gate and I’m facing the bubble. So there is no way I can actually figure as to whether the gate is opening or closing.”). She then testified that she did, in fact, look at the gates, but did not see the gates opening and closing. Id. at 200 (“I kept looking back and forth to see whether the gate is open for me to go out and I did not see it open.”). Despite these statements, she later admitted that she “saw the gate opening closing several times.” Id. at 203. The video shows that Sgt. Jefferson opened the front gate multiple times; whether Ms. Konah saw the gate open is unclear.
Sgt. Jefferson argues that the Court can and should disregard those parts of Ms. Konah’s testimony that are disputed by the evidence on the video recordings. Mem. P. & A. Supp. Jefferson Mot. Summ. J. (Jefferson MSJ Mem.) [Dkt. 76] at 8-11 (citing Scott v. Harris,
Ms. Konah responds that, at best, Sgt. Jefferson admitted that he told her that he could not let her out until another officer was with him. PI. Mem. P. & A. Opp. Jefferson MSJ (PI. Jefferson Opp.) [Dkt. 84-1], at 6-7; see also Jefferson Dep. at 52-54 (“She was asking to get out the gate, I couldn’t open the gate — •... I told her I had to bring an officer — we had inmates in
2. Constitutional Claims Against Sergeant Jefferson
In briefing the instant motion for summary judgment, both Sgt. Jefferson and Ms. Konah contest whether he violated her constitutional rights. The Third Amended Complaint does not make any such claim against Sgt. Jefferson. Compare Complaint [Dkt. 1] ¶¶ 31-33 (alleging Sgt. Jefferson acted with reckless disregard of Fourth Amendment rights), and Am. Compl. [Dkt. 8] ¶¶ 33-35 (same), and Second Am. Compl. [Dkt. 25] ¶¶ 41-M5 (same for Fourth and Fifth Amendment rights), with Third Am. Compl. [Dkt. 64] ¶¶ 54-62 (alleging only that Sgt. Jefferson and others acted under color of state law (¶ 55) and that the District violated constitutional rights). While the parties’ arguments repeat earlier briefing, the Third Amended Complaint, modified by counsel for the fourth time, has dropped them. What is now pled against Sgt. Jefferson are only the common law torts of assauli/battery and intentional infliction of emotional distress. Third Am. Compl. ¶¶ 62-68.
The Court will address the common law claims presented in the Third Amended Complaint before it. For clarity’s sake, however, in case the issue is raised on appeal, the Court notes that if there were remaining constitutional claims against Sgt. Jefferson, it would find that he is entitled to qualified immunity. Qualified immunity is “a defense that shields officials from suit if their conduct ‘d[id] not violate clearly established statutory or constitutional rights of which a reasonable person would have known.’ ” Ortiz v. Jordan, — U.S. —,
Ms. Konah entered the sally port at 1:51:43 p.m. and left at 2:06:30 p.m. The video shows that Sgt. Jefferson opened the front gate multiple times while Ms. Konah was in the sally port. She does not challenge the video. Her constitutional claims — whether interpreted as false imprisonment, unreasonable seizure, lack of due process, or equal protection — all reduce to the argument that Sgt. Jefferson should have sounded an emergency call or “code” to bring other guards running and extricate her sooner. E.g., PI. Jefferson Opp. at 11 (“[Sgt. Jefferson] neither sounded an alarm [n]or placed a call on his radio to other officers standing outside the gate, he stood and just look at Plaintiff
3. Common Law Claims Against Sgt. Jefferson
Ms. Konah brings claims under District of Columbia law against Sgt. Jefferson: Count V, assault and battery — two distinct causes of action, see Jackson v. District of Columbia,
District of Columbia law on these three common law torts is clear, and it is clear in a way fatal to Ms. Konah’s claims: all three torts require proof of intent on the part of Sgt. Jefferson. “An assault is an intentional and unlawful attempt or threat, either by words or acts, to do physical harm to the plaintiff.” Smith v. District of Columbia,
Q: So other than ... not opening the gate upon your request before the inmate touched you, what did the District of Columbia or — and/or Robert Jefferson do that caused you the injury that you are claiming?
A: He did not open the gate to let me out as I asked him before the inmate came and touched me.
Q: What else — what else did the District of Columbia or Robert Jefferson do other than not opening the gate?
*23 A: He just did not open the gate. That’s all he did. He stood there, look at me.
Konah Dep. at 227-28.
The trouble is that there is nothing in the record — even in Ms. Konah’s sometimes self-serving deposition testimony— suggesting that Sgt. Jefferson delayed opening the gate with the intention that Ms. Konah suffer an assault, a battery, or emotional distress. See Restatement (Second) of Torts § 18, cmt. e (“It is not enough to make the act intentional that the actor realize that it involves any degree of probability of a harmful or offensive contact or an apprehension of such contact, less than a substantial certainty that it will so result.”). That deficit might not be fatal to Ms. Konah’s claims if the case were in a different posture; “subjective intent can rarely be proven directly” and often “must be inferred.” See Waldon v. Covington,
The Court will, therefore, grant summary judgment in favor of Sgt. Jefferson on Ms. Konah’s claims of assault, battery, and intentional infliction of emotional distress.
B. Unity’s Motion for Summary Judgment
Pending against Unity are Ms. Konah’s claims of discrimination based on sex, Count I; discrimination based on national origin, Count II; reprisal (retaliation), Count III; and constructive discharge, Count VII. There are no genuine disputes of material fact, and summary judgment will be granted in favor of Unity.
In the Third Amended Complaint, Ms. Konah seeks to hold Unity liable for discrimination based on sex and national origin under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 42 U.S.C. § 2000e et seq., and the D.C. Human Rights Act (“DCHRA”), D.C.Code § 2-1401.01 et seq.
The Court turns to Ms. Konah’s sex discrimination claim against Unity, which is based on the theory that Unity “created an abusive work environment” and “failed to remedy sexually offensive conduct by inmates/staff, gender specific abusive language and sexual assault [that] was ongoing and [ ] continuous.” Compl. ¶¶ 42-43.
“To determine whether a hostile work environment exists, the court looks to the totality of the circumstances, including the frequency of the discriminatory conduct, its severity, its offensiveness, and whether it interferes with an employee’s work performance.” Baloch v. Kempthorne,
Employers can be liable for a hostile work environment created through the actions of third parties, such as inmates. Beckford v. Dep’t of Corr.,
As a threshold matter, the Court notes that its analysis of the sex discrimination claim focuses primarily, though not exclusively, on the August 5, 2009 incident involving Ms. Konah. She has alleged that
Ms. Konah testified only that she “was not the only nurse that [sexually harassing insults had] been said to,” and when pressed for details or names, she said: “I won’t be able to pinpoint because I can’t recall. So I can just tell you that there were other incidents where inmates have told nurses these things.” Konah Dep. at 233-35. She has not identified any other incidents in which inmate misconduct was directed at her other than vaguely attempting to adopt the events in the April 21, 2009 letter as having happened to her. Id. at 68-69. She claims she reported prior incidents she experienced to Unity but has not provided any evidentiary support for those assertions, id.; the absence of any such evidence is notable in a case in which Unity’s business records are extensive. Courts in this Circuit “frown[] on plaintiffs who attempt to bootstrap their alleged discrete acts of [discrimination or] retaliation into a broader hostile work environment claim.” Baloch v. Norton,
Unity argues that it worked with the D.C. Department of Corrections (DOC) to ensure that there were “reasonable policies in place to prevent inmates from assaulting nurses.” Unity MSJ at 11. Noting that DOC, not Unity, is “responsible for all safety and security procedures at CDF,” Unity emphasizes that it implemented a policy requiring nurses ,to administer inmate medications in the sick call rooms, effective May 1, 2009, and that Ms. Konah, who had been trained on this policy, violated it on August 5, 2009. Id. Unity also argues that Ms. Konah’s allegations do not support a hostile work environment claim because the August 5, 2009 incident was isolated and not “extremely serious” as case law requires. Id. at 15-16 (citing, inter alia, Burlington Indus., Inc. v. Ellerth,
Ms. Konah’s primary argument derives from what she perceives as Unity’s “ ‘negligence and ratification’ of the harassment through its failure to take appropriate and reasonable responsive action” to “Plaintiffs and other nurses[’] complaints of an abusive environment.” Pl. Unity Opp. at 12 (citing Freitag v. Ayers,
The Court concludes that Unity took reasonable and appropriate corrective steps to ensure that the environment for Unity nurses at CDF would be as safe and non-hostile as a job situation in a jail requiring direct contact with inmates could be. As a contractor with DC DOC, Unity was ultimately bound by DOC’s security policies. Unity SUF ¶ 6. Unity also worked with DOC to develop its own policies applicable to Unity employees to ensure their safety, such as requiring Unity nurses to be escorted at all times by an officer. The record demonstrates that Unity was responsive to security concerns raised by its nurses, reacting to the April 2009 complaint letter by instituting the sick call room policy: “Effective May 1, medication administration and dispensing by the nursing and pharmacy staff will take place in the sick call rooms on the housing units.” 4/22/09 Zabiheian Memo at 1. The follow-up by Unity and DOC to the August 5, 2009 incident was also comprehensive, including the immediate medical evaluation of Ms. Konah by the infirmary, a meeting with the warden, the offer of criminal prosecution, and the use of the internal CDF disciplinary system to which inmates are subject.
The mere existence of security measures might be disregarded if Ms. Konah were unaware of them, but there is no genuine dispute of material fact that she knew of the escort policy and the sick call room policy. Unity--SUF ¶ 11 (Ms. Konah used a sick call room in March 2009), Konah Dep. at 95, 100 (Ms. Konah was aware of the escort policy and typically followed it), Nursing Staff Meeting Record at Bates UNITY 132-33 (Ms. Konah signed attendance sheet for training on sick call room policy). Ms. Konah was, apparently, in violation of Unity policies when the August 5, 2009 incident took place. Indeed, Ms. Konah says she normally waited for a guard to escort her and offers no explanation for why, on August 5, she departed from this practice. Her brief speculates that Unity “could have gone outside of DOC and brought the matter to the attention of higher level officials” or “properly monitored [and] developed a clear policy on dispensing medication and provided safety equipment for the nurses,” PI. Unity Opp. at 23-24, but Ms. Konah herself concedes that “Unity was not on the unit with me. It was the officer that was on the unit with me. So I’m-the officer was the one that should have done something to prevent the incident happening to me,” Konah Dep. at 113. Unity took reasonable measures to prevent harassment and is not-liable. See Beckford,
2. Retaliation
The Court turns next to Ms. Konah’s vague retaliation claim, which includes only the conclusory statement that “she was subsequently subjected to an adverse action because she opposed discriminatory treatment.” Compl. ¶ 52. Her opposition brief states the legal standard for a retaliation claim and then recites, without further legal argument, Ms. Konah’s version of the events that took place after August 5, 2009, from Ms. Konah’s vacation to her eventual termination by Unity. PL Unity Opp. at 24-25.
Title' VII’s antiretaliation provision prohibits an employer from “discriminating] against” an employee because she has “opposed” a practice proscribed by Title VII or because “[s]he has made a
When the employer offers a “legitimate, non-discriminatory reason” for the allegedly materially adverse action, “the sole remaining question” becomes “retaliation vel non — whether, based on all the evidence, a reasonable jury could conclude that [the] proffered reason ... was pretext for retaliation.” Pardo-Kronemann v. Donovan,
The Court need not be detained by the imprecise nature of Ms. Konah’s allegations because the record is devoid of any evidence to sustain a retaliation claim, either on the theory that Unity retaliated against Ms. Konah for reporting the August 5, 2009 incident by offering her a transfer to a community health center or by terminating her in January 2010. There is no genuine dispute of material fact that Unity had legitimate, nondiscriminatory reasons in offering a transfer from a job setting in which Ms. Konah believed she could no longer work — CDF—to one that would be more amenable. Unity has never questioned Ms. Konah’s inability to work among inmates after August 2009. To the contrary, the record reveals that it made multiple efforts to preserve her job and accommodate her during and after her hospitalization, providing prompt and informative communications to Ms. Konah’s caregiver. See generally Correspondence Among Unity and Laurel Hospital Regarding FMLA Documents; Correspondence Regarding Open Position.
Furthermore, contrary to Ms. Konah’s argument that “she was terminated, without even knowing that she had a viable job offer,” Pl. Unity Opp. at 25, Ms. Konah acknowledged that she “accepted the position”- and “agree[d] to go back to work,” Konah Dep. at 145. Thus, when Unity terminated Ms. Konah for failing to return to work, it acted with a legitimate reason that the documentary evidence overwhelmingly shows was not a pretext for retaliation. See Unity MSJ, Ex. 45 [Dkt. 67-6], Letter From Sidney Jackson dated Jan. 27, 2010, at 1 (“You failed to report to Michele Ottley ... as directed in the correspondence sent to you on January 21,
3. Constructive Discharge
Ms. Konah’s final claim against Unity is Count-VII, constructive discharge. She asserts that Unity was “aware of the abusive environment,” which “caused harm to [Ms. Konah] to the extent that the environment was no longer tolerable and as a result [Ms. Konah] was constructively discharged and/or terminated.” Compl. ¶ 70. This claim also fails.
A constructive discharge claim “ ‘depends on whether the employer deliberately made working conditions intolerable and drove the employee out.’ ” Mungin v. Katten Muchin & Zavis,
4. Conclusion
As discussed above, there are no genuine disputes of material fact regarding any of Ms. Konah’s claims against Unity, which is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. The Court thus grants Unity’s motion for summary judgment in its entirety.
C. The District of Columbia’s Motion for Judgment on the Pleadings
The Complaint advances three counts against the District: Count I, discrimination based on sex; Count III, retaliation for Ms. Konah’s opposition to sex discrimination; and Count IV, violations of her Fourth and Fifth Amendment rights due to inadequate training of correctional officers, leading to a custom or practice of sexual misconduct to which the District was deliberately indifferent. The District moves for judgment on the pleadings on all three counts; the Court grants the motion except as to Ms. Konah’s equal protection claim.
1. Sex Discrimination and Retaliation Claims
Addressing the Second Amended Complaint, the Court earlier dismissed allegations that the District violated Title VII and the DCHRA because Unity was Ms. Konah’s employer, not the District. See
2. Alleged Constitutional Violations
Ms. Konah’s constitutional claims against the District stem in the first instance from the same allegation underlying her claims against Sgt. Jefferson: that when she asked him to open the cell doors, he did not do so immediately. Ms. Konah alleges violations of her Fourth Amendment right to be free from unreasonable seizure and her Fifth Amendment right to due process before incarceration. Ms. Konah clarifies in her opposition to the District’s motion that “by not calling CODE Blue or using [some] other means of communication or alarms, limitations were imposed so that other[ ] [officers] who could have come to Plaintiff’s] rescue” were not summoned. Pl. Opp. Mot. J. Pleadings [Dkt. 69] (PL D.C. Opp.) at 20. Additionally, Ms. Konah alleges that she was a victim of sexual harassment in violation of the Equal Protection Clause and that this claim is actionable under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. She cites Kern v. City of Rochester,
Constitutional claims against municipalities like the ones advanced by Ms. Konah require a two-step analysis. See Baker v. District of Columbia,
Ms. Konah’s two lines of argument—on the one hand, Fourth Amendment and Fifth Amendment claims, and, on the other, an Equal Protection claim— must be addressed separately. As to the first, Ms. Konah’s alleged constitutional right was either to have the front gate opened more immediately or to have Sgt. Jefferson call a “Code” to summon help more immediately. As alleged in the Complaint, and even as expanded in her brief, Ms. Konah fails to articulate a constitutional violation for which the District might be liable. The actor against whom these allegations run is Sgt. Jefferson. As set forth above, Ms. Konah has not pursued those claims as against Sgt. Jefferson in the Third Amended Complaint; even if she had, the Court would find that he is protected by qualified immunity. Ms. Konah makes no express claim—and none is revealed by the multiple complaints or briefs or the evidentiary record—that any other person or entity had control over the gates to Southwest One on August 5, 2009. But a municipality cannot be held liable under § 1983 under a theory of respondeat superior, solely because it employed a tortfeasor. Monell, 436 U.S, at 691-92,
Ms. Konah makes no claim that Sgt. Jefferson failed to open the gates to the sally port more immediately because of any action or inaction by the District, much less that any “custom or policy” of the District caused the violation. See id. Moreover, as discussed above, Ms. Konah’s testimony reveals that she entered the sally port voluntarily, without waiting for an officer to escort her, and Sgt. Jefferson was unable to open the gate until an officer secured the inmates so that the interior gate could be shut. The incidental delay Ms. Konah suffered was not an unreasonable seizure in violation of the Fourth Amendment or a violation of due process in contravention of the Fifth Amendment. See Butera v. District of Columbia,
Analysis of Ms. Konah’s claim of sexual harassment proceeds differently. The Court first evaluates whether Ms. Konah has alleged a constitutional violation. “[T]he Due Process Clause of the Fifth Amendment forbids the Federal Government to deny equal protection of the laws.” Davis v. Passman,
Passman involved an inquiry into “what ‘important governmental objectives,’ if any, are served by the gender-based employment of congressional staff.” Id. at 236 n. 9,
[W]e presume that justiciable constitutional rights are to be enforced through the courts. And, unless such rights are to become merely precatory, the class of those litigants who allege that their own constitutional rights have been violated, and who at the same time have no effective means other than the judiciary to enforce these rights, must be able to invoke the existing jurisdiction of the courts for the protection of their justiciable constitutional rights.
Id. at 242,
The Court thus turns to the second step of the Monell analysis to determine whether Ms. Konah has “stated a claim that a policy or custom of the District of Columbia caused the constitutional violation alleged.” Baker,
According to the Complaint, the alleged hostile work environment and discriminatory acts were provoked by inmates and allowed without effective limitation by District employees or agents despite it being obvious that something needed to be done. Compl. ¶¶ 18, 26, 30, 31; see id. ¶ 26 (“Plaintiffs supervisors and other management staff at the Central Detention Facility were aware that abusive actions by inmates toward Plaintiff are a pattern and practice.... ”). Ms. Konah’s complaint is that the District did
At this point, the District of Columbia seeks judgment on the pleadings. The Court cannot oblige. Whether Ms. Konah can prove a violation of her constitutional right to equal protection is not the current question. The District’s motion attacks only the sufficiency of the allegations in the Third Amended Complaint, which the Court finds are sufficiently clear and detailed to make out a cause of action. See Iqbal,
The Court will thus grant the District’s motion for judgment on the pleadings in all respects except in regards to Ms. Konah’s claim of municipal liability for an equal protection violation.
IV. CONCLUSION
For the reasons set forth above, Unity’s motion for summary judgment and Sgt. Jefferson’s motion for summary judgment will be granted. The District’s motion for judgment on the pleadings will be granted except in regards to Ms. Konah’s claim of municipal liability for an equal protection violation. A memorializing Order accompanies this Opinion.
Notes
. The facts are taken from the Third Amended Complaint [Dkt. 64] unless otherwise indicat- ' ed. The Court refers to the Third Amended Complaint as "Complaint” except as otherwise made clear from context.
. A sally port is a secured controlled entryway, with doors at either end, used to control access to and from a prison or fortification.
. The incidents referenced in the letter all involved nurses other than Ms. Konah. 4/21/09 Letter at 1.
. In reports completed on August 5, 2009, Ms. Konah described this incident twice:
On Wednesday, August 5, 2009, at approximately 2:00 pm, after the completion of distributing medication in housing unit SW-1, I was standing at the front gate to exit the unit. I observed several Inmates in the sally port that was surrounding me and proceeded to the control bubble to ask the officer to open the front gate. When I walked back to the front gate, I was grabbed on the buttocks inappropriately by Inmate James Jamal [sic] #318-144 who was positively identified by case manager Dr. Benedict Kargbo who was also standing in the sallyport at the time. Inmate James was positively identified by his armband and wingcard.
Approximatly [sic] 2 pm I was at the sally port on SW-1 passing medication to an inmate. I saw about 9 inmates coming out from unit to the sally port. At this time, I got scared and asked officer at the bubble to open the gate for me to get out. But he refused to - let me out. The inmates surrounded me and one of them grabbed my buttocks. I turned around and asked him why did you touch me? At this time I started screaming. I went back to the officer in the bubble to asked [sic] to open the gate again. He open the gate this time. I left the unit. Case manager Dr. Benedict L. Kargbo was also at the gate trying to get out. He saw what happen [sic].
Konah DCDC-1 Report at Bates UNITY22526.
. Ms. Konah’s physician, Dr. Lanning E. Moldauer, states that Ms. Konah’s sense of powerléssness, helplessness, and fear when surrounded by the Jail inmates was amplified by the terror she witnessed in Liberia. See Unity MSJ, Ex. A [Dkt. 67-6], Report of Dr. Lanning E. Moldauer (Moldauer Report), at 3, 5. At an unspecified time, she was diagnosed at Laurel Regional Hospital with Post Traumatic Stress Syndrome.
. Confusing an offer with a full agreement and contradicting her own testimony, Ms. Konah’s Statement of Disputed Facts asserts that she "did not receive a January 21, 2010 job offer relating to this letter [from Unity] since the position was not finalized since all the terms were not accepted in January 2010.” See PL Statement Disputed Facts [Dkt. 75] (PL SDF) ¶ 31.
. The deficits in Ms. Konah's recollection ranged from the improbable, e.g., Konah Dep. at 22 (her first job), to the important, e.g. id. at 102 (the events of August 5, 2009), to the bizarre, e.g. id. at 242-43 (whether she returned from a trip to Liberia in March. 2012, three months prior to the deposition). She also said she could not "explain” a disconcerting number of answers or concepts, even on matters not essential to the case. E.g., id. at 37 ("Q: And what did working with inmates mean to you? A. Like working with a patient. Q. Could — could you just explain that for me? A. I really can’t explain it. I — I wouldn’t be able to explain to you.”); id. at 90 ("Q: And what were your duties while working as an LPN at Unity? A; I can’t really explain them to you in detail now.”).
. Monell v. N.Y.C. Dep’t of Social Servs.,
. Ms. Konah sought to file a supplemental affidavit to her opposition to Unity's motion for summary judgment; following a telephone conference with the parties, the Court denied the motion. See Minute Order dated Sept. 5, 2012.
. Ms. Konah protests that the no video shows the incident in question, when the inmates surrounded her and one grabbed her. See, e.g., Konah Dep. at 202-203. One camera, identified as Camera # 1, was directed at the SW 1 front gate from outside of the gate. Zabiheian Decl. ¶ 18. A second, identified as Camera # 24, was located at the far end of the SW1 cell block from the sally port, showing the entire cell block as well as, from some distance, the bubble and bubble gates. Id. Thus, the interior of the sally port was not in view or captured by the video, which is distinctly not at movie quality. Since there is no doubt or dispute that a group of semi-clothed inmates surrounded Ms. Konah and an identified (and disciplined) inmate grabbed her on her buttocks, the absence of a video recording of the incident is not material to resolution of the pending motions.
. In light of Ms. Konah’s concession that she has no reason to challenge the video footage, the Court disregards counsel’s vague and confusing assertion that the videos are not accurate. See Pl. Disputed Facts ¶ 35 ("There is no visual of Plaintiff in the Sallyport passing medications is not on the video [sic].”).
. The testimony of Dr. Kargbo on this crucial point favors the District and Sgt. Jefferson. See Unity MSJ Ex. 15 [Dkt. 67-6], Dep. of Dr. Benedict Kargbo (Kargbo Dep.), at 18-22 (testifying that, after Ms. Konah asked to be let out, Dr. Kargbo knocked on the bubble asking to be let out, but “the front door was not open at all with the inmates that much in the sally port”; Sgt. Jefferson eventually opened the front gate).
. Judge Urbina, to whom this case was originally assigned, denied Sgt. Jefferson's prediscovery motion to dismiss based on qualified immunity.
. The parties have not argued that the Court should apply a privilege analysis to the tort claims, but Sgt. Jefferson is likely entitled to a privilege defense insofar as he waited to open the gate for security reasons. See Restatement (Second) of Torts § 10(2)(b) ("A privilege may be based on the fact that its exercise is necessary for the protection of some interest of the actor or of the public which is of such importance as to justify the harm caused or threatened by its exercise....’’).
. As discussed above, Judge Urbina’s denial of the motion to dismiss on these counts does not require a ruling in Ms. Konah’s favor on summary judgment.
. Title VII and the DCHRA are interpreted coextensively. E.g., Elhusseini v. Compass Grp. USA, Inc.,
. The D.C. Circuit has not formally adopted . this standard for third-party hostile work environment claims, although it did so implicitly in an unpublished opinion involving a professor’s claim that her employer failed to take sufficient action to protect her from sexual harassment by a homeless man. See Martin v. Howard Univ.,
. Although the District's motion is for judgment on the pleadings and Ms. Konah's Complaint is facially deficient as discussed in the text, the Court notes that Ms. Konah was subject to lengthy questioning on this point during her deposition. The relevant portion of the transcript lasts eighteen pages, during which Ms. Konah repeatedly testifies that "[i]t was only Unity that I was employed for at the jail.” Konah Dep. at 160-61; see also id. at 162 (“Q. Were you employed by the District of Columbia on August 5, 2009? A. I was employed by Unity.”). But see id. at 163 (“I can't answer the question because I was in the District of Columbia facility, but I was employed by Unity. That's what I'm saying. So I'm not sure what the question is.”).
. See OCHR Complaint, filed with the District of Columbia Office of Human Rights and cross-filed with the EEOC (identifying Unity as "Respondent # 1” and “D.C. Department of Corrections (D.C. Jail)” as "Respondent # 2”). Ms. Konah asserted: "I believe I have been discriminated against, subjected to sexual harassment, a hostile work environment and subjected to retaliation by Respondent on the bases of gender (female) and national origin (Liberia) because: I was hired by Respondent as Licensed Practical Nurse on or about November 6, 2006 and I performed my duties satisfactorily____ During my tenure with Respondent # 1, I have been subjected to derogatory comments and other sexually harassing acts by inmates of the Respondent # 2. My employer (Respondent #1) has done nothing to eliminate this harassment...." Id.
. Because the District is treated as a federal entity and not a state for the purpose of analyzing constitutional due process claims, such suits against the District "must be brought under the Fifth and not the Four
. It bears emphasizing that denying the District's motion for judgment on the pleadings is not inconsistent with granting the summary judgment motions filed by Unity and Sgt. Jefferson. The District's motion tests only the sufficiency of the pleadings, while the other motions require the Court to survey the record before it. Moreover, as discussed above, DOC, not Unity, was responsible for security procedures at CDF.
