OPINION
Plaintiff Christine Ladd, an African-American woman claiming sex- and race-based harassment and retaliatory discharge against her former employer Grand Trunk Western Railroad (“Grand Trunk”), appeals the district court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of Grand Trunk. Ladd argues that she presented a genuine issue as to all of her claims. For the reasons that follow, we AFFIRM the judgment of the district court.
I. BACKGROUND
Christine Ladd, an African-American woman, began her employment in the rail track department of Grand Trunk Western Railroad in April of 2000. Ladd started as a trackman, and was promoted twice, once to welder-helper and then to welder. She was the only African-American woman among her co-workers, the vast majority of whom were Caucasian males. Ladd’s claims arise from two somewhat distinct series of events. Her claim for sex-and race-based harassment arises out of interactions with co-wоrkers primarily in the fall of 2004. Her claim for retaliatory discharge arises out of one specific incident on March 21, 2005, where she claimed to be injured by a co-worker’s actions, reported that injury, and was subsequently fired for filing a false report. The termination took place on April 21, 2005. In February of 2005, Ladd had complained internally about that same co-worker’s sex- and race-based remark, and in April, Ladd also filed two claims with thе Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (“EEOC”). In the first, filed on April 12, Ladd complained of the same co-worker harassment. In the second, filed on April 27 following her discharge, she claimed that her earlier harassment complaints were the true reasons for her termination.
Jason Richert, the employee whose actions she alleges caused her injuries, is also the only individual she identified in her deposition as having made a specific rаce- or sex-based offensive remark. Although Ladd was a welder and a welder-helper who worked underneath a foreman and Richert was a foreman at the same job site, Richert was not Ladd’s foreman and therefore she was not one of his subordinates.
A. Hostile Work Environment
Ladd’s hostile work environment claim is based on derogatory race- and sex-based comments by her co-workers which occurred from the beginning of her time at Grand Trunk until the end of 2004, аnd on tampering with her equipment that occurred in the summer and fall of 2004. Ladd, in her deposition, averred that she was generally subjected to sexually degrading commentary from the time she started working for Grand Trunk. (“Always being told if you can’t do the job, you shouldn’t be out here, it’s a man’s job out
Ladd testified that she did not complain about any of the aforementioned comments, either because they were not said to her face, or because they did not rise to the level where she felt she needed to complain about it. On October 19, 2004, she complained that Richert referred to her as a “black bitch.” Ladd alleges that she was speaking with a co-worker over the radio when in the background she heard Richert tell the co-worker to “tell that black bitch to get to the truck and answer her radio.” Ladd called her supervisor, Bill Miller, to register her comрlaint about Richert’s comment. Miller denies that Ladd told him that Richert called her a “black bitch,” recalling that she simply said that Richert used offensive language; but Miller testified that he told her he would speak with the employees involved, that he spoke with Bill Jackson, the foreman on duty, and Jackson confirmed that he had told Richert not to use any offensive language. Ladd went on seasonal furlough in November of 2004, and returned to service in Mаrch 2005. She did not hear any race or sex-based comments after her complaint of October 19. In February of 2005, Ladd told Tracy Miller, an assistant superintendent, about the same comment. Miller informed Grand Trunk’s Human Resource Manager, Harlan Arians, who initiated an internal investigation into the complaint and proceeded to interview Ladd, Richert and others who might have knowledge of her complaint. This investigation had not concluded аt the time Ladd was taken out of service on March 21, 2005.
The equipment tampering alleged by Ladd occurred in the summer and again in the fall of 2004. Ladd alleged that on July 8, she found her shears were taken apart, and on July 12, her oxygen tanks were taken. On October 19 and 20, bolts were removed from her grinder which resulted in fluid bursting out onto Joy Good, a potentially dangerous situation. Ladd could not identify the perpetrators of the equipment tampering, but shе inferred from the fact that she was the only person whose equipment was tampered with that her coworkers did it because of her race or sex or both. Ladd complained about the tampering in July of 2004 to David Chaney and Bill Miller, two of her supervisors. Although both Chaney and Miller testified that they found no evidence of tampering, they counseled Ladd’s co-workers not to tamper with her or anyone else’s equipment. Ladd also cоmplained about the defective grinder in October of 2004. Miller testified that he repaired the defective grinder on both occasions. Ladd did not recall any further instances of equipment tampering following the October 2004 incident.
B. Retaliation
Ladd engaged in protected conduct when she complained internally regarding Richert’s “black bitch” remark in October 2004 and February 2005. Ladd returned from furlough on March 7, 2005.
Ladd reported a back injury to her superiors on March 21, 2005. She stated that as she attempted to lift a drill from the bed of a truck, Richert moved the truck, and as a result, Ladd hurt her lower
The same day as the injury, Maranzano began an investigation into Ladd’s injury. He contacted David Cromie, the Risk Manager, and they interviewed Ladd, Ric-hert and other potential witnesses. Ric-hert and four witnesses stated that they did not see Ladd in the bed of the truck. Several of the witnesses stated that she was standing on the side of the truck when Richert started it up. Ladd maintained that she was in the bed of the truck and that no one could have seen her there. She alleged that the eyewitnesses were lying to protect Richert. Still on the same day, Maranzano had a conference call with Robert Cerri, the superintendеnt, and others, who decided both Ladd and Richert would be charged with serious misconduct, either the falsification of an injury report by Ladd or causing personal injury to Ladd by Richert. Ladd was removed from service immediately but Richert was not, based on the statements of the eyewitnesses.
On April 8, 2005, Grand Trunk held a formal hearing before Larry Wizauer in which Richert was charged with unsafe conduct in starting the truck without ascertaining it was safe to do so and Ladd wаs charged with falsifying an injury report. Larry Wizauer was a hearing and investigating officer who had conducted internal investigations for Grand Trunk for approximately 25 years, during which he had conducted in excess of 100 such investigations. Both Richert and Ladd were represented at the hearing by the same Union representative. Ladd, Richert, the four witnesses, and Mark Wilson, the welder Ladd was working for at the time, were all called to testify and Wizauer, Ladd, Richert, and the Union representative were all allowed to question the witnesses. Again, Richert and the four witnesses testified that they did not see Ladd in the bed of the truck, although they contradicted each other on whether Ladd stood at the front of the truck or the rear of the truck, they contradicted each other on whether Richert paused while walking around the truck, and a few of them admitted that they would not have seen Ladd if she had bеen bending over in the truck bed. Nevertheless, three witnesses said that they saw Ladd on the ground on the passenger side of the truck while Richert moved the truck. Based on the eyewitness testimony and his evaluation of the witnesses’ credibility, Wizauer determined that Richert was not guilty and Ladd was guilty, a recommendation that was passed on to Cerri who had ultimate decision-making authority. On April 12, 2005, a few days after the hearing and prior to any rendered decisiоn on the March 21 incident, Ladd filed a sex discrimination charge with the EEOC based on the events that had taken place in the fall of 2004. Cerri made the decision to terminate Ladd on April 21 based on Wizauer’s report, and Ladd was terminated on that day. At that time, Cerri testified that he was aware of Ladd’s February 2005 complaints but not yet aware that Ladd had filed a charge against Grand Trunk with the EEOC.
II. ANALYSIS
A. Hostile Work Environment
Ladd brings her claim for hostile work environment under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act, 42 U.S.C. §§ 2000e
et seq.
To make out a claim, Ladd needs to show: (1) she was a member of a protected class; (2) she was subjected to unweleomed harassment; (3) the harassment was based on sex or race; (4) the harassment created a hostile work environment; and (5) employer liability.
Williams v. General Motors Corp.,
The district court relied on
Davis v. Monsanto Chemical Co.,
Williams
made clear that we must consider the “totality of the circumstances,” and not discrete events in isolation.
Taken together, however, those actions still do not rise to the level of an actionable hostile work environment. The Court in
Harris v. Forklift Sys.,
B. Retaliation
Ladd also brings her claim for retaliation under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act, 42 U.S.C. § § 2000e
et seq.
To maintain a claim for retaliation, Ladd must establish that: (1) she engaged in Title VII-protected activity; (2) Grand Trunk knew that she engaged in the protected activity; (3) Grand Trunk subsequently took an adverse employment action against Ladd; and (4) the adverse action was causally related to the protected activity.
Mickey v. Zeidler Tool and Die Co.,
We need not address whether Ladd made out her prima facie case, because she has failed to produce any evidence that Grand Trunk’s decision was mere pretext and has therefore failed to carry her ultimate burden of persuasion on the issue of retaliation such that a reasonable juror could find in her favor.
4
Grand Trunk’s non-discriminatory reason for terminating Ladd is that she filed a false injury report. Ladd must produce evidence that either the proffered reason: (1) has no basis in fact; (2) did not actually motivate the adverse employment action; or (3) was insufficient to warrant the аdverse action.
Manzer v. Diamond Shamrock Chems. Co.,
With respect to prong one, Ladd argues that she did not give a false injury report. The evidence suggests otherwise. The investigation, consisting of multiple interviews and a formal hearing where four witnesses in addition to Richert testified to not seeing Ladd in the bed of the truck
In attempting to show pretext pursuant to prongs two and three, Ladd argues that she had a clean discipline record apart from a minor issue with absenteeism and that Richert was found guilty of other rule violations but was not terminated. Her first argument fails because falsifying an injury report is a serious rule violation and Ladd could not show that Richert also had committed a serious rule violation. The Public Law Board found that Ladd’s discipline of dismissal wаs “on valid grounds.” Ladd’s comparisons to Richert are inapposite where Richert previously violated different rules relating to safety, for which he was reprimanded. In
Klepsky v. United Parcel Serv., Inc.,
Therefore, we AFFIRM the judgment of the district court in granting summary judgment to Grand Trunk on Ladd’s hostile work environment and retaliation claims.
Notes
. Ladd’s union appealed the dismissal to a Public Law Board consisting of a union member, a carrier member, and a neutral member and authorized to hear railway employees’ grievances under the Railway Labor Act, 35 U.S.C. § 151 etseq.
. In Ladd’s brief on appeal, citing to Joy Good’s affidavit in which Good states that she had heard Richert refer to Ladd as “a nigger and a lazy nigger,” Ladd asserted that shе learned second hand from Good of epithets Richert used to refer to her. But nothing in Good's affidavit indicates that Ladd was present when Richert referred to her in that way, nor does Ladd or Good state when, how, or if at all Ladd received that information from Good. On the other hand, Ladd’s deposition testimony indicates that the “black bitch” slur was the only derogatory remark that she was aware that Richert had made. Even taking the inferenсes in Ladd’s favor for the purposes of summary judgment, we cannot conclude that Ladd learned second hand from Good that Richert had referred to her using a racial epithet before her termination. However, even if Ladd had learned of this remark prior to her termination, her claim would still be insufficient to create a hostile work environment.
. We bring this up to understand the objective severity of the comments Ladd had to put up with оn a daily basis, not to discard the comments as not subjectively abusive as Grand Trunk argues.
Cf. Harris,
. The district court wrote that "[t]he Sixth Circuit has held temрoral proximity between an adverse employment action and an employee's protected [sic] standing alone is insufficient to establish a causal connection for retaliation claim.” In light of
Mickey,
which was decided after the district court issued its opinion, however, that assessment is suspect.
See
