ON APPELLEES’ SUGGESTION FOR REHEARING EN BANC
Appellees’ suggestion for rehearing en banc has been transmitted to the full Court. A majority of the judges of the Court in regular active service have not voted in favor thereof. Upon consideration of the foregoing, it is
ORDERED, by the Court en banc, that the suggestion is denied.
A dissenting opinion filed by Circuit Judge BORK is attached and is joined by Circuit Judges SCALIA and STARR.
BORK, Circuit Judge, with whom Circuit Judges SCALIA and STARR join, dissenting frоm the denial of rehearing en banc:
This case should be reheard en banc. It involves important issues of antidiscrimination law, at least two of which are wrongly decided. The panel’s resolutions of the various issues before it, taken in combination, produce an unacceptable result. According to the panel opinion, when an employee charges sexual harassment in the workplace, the supervisor charged may not prove that the sexual behavior, far from constituting harassment, was voluntarily engaged in by the other person, nor may the supervisor show that the charging person’s conduct was in fact a solicitation of sexual advances. These rulings seem plainly wrong. By depriving the charged person of any defenses, they mean that sexual dalliance, however voluntarily engaged in, becomes harassment whenever an employee sees fit, after the fact, so to characterize it.
The panel opinion explicitly states that a plaintiff’s voluntariness in participating in a sexual relationship with her suрervisor “can have no bearing on the pertinent inquiry” in a sexual harassment suit brought under Title VII.
Vinson v. Taylor,
if [Vinson] and Taylor did engage in an intimate or sexual relationship during the time of [Vinson’s] employment with Capital, that rеlationship was a voluntary one by [Vinson] having nothing to do with her continued employment at Capital or her advancement or promotions at that institution.
Id. at 145 (footnote omitted). This finding may have been irrelevant to environmental, as opposed to quid pro quо, harassment because it speaks of continued employment and advancement. But the panel did not rest on that distinction and rejected voluntariness as a defense in any kind of case. The panel’s reasoning on this point is entirely circular. The opiniоn states that to allow proof of voluntariness on the part of a woman employee would expose her to what the panel sees fit to characterize as a “hideous quadrilemma” — the victim must acquiesce in the harassment, oppose it, resign, or yield and lose all hope of legal redress. Id. at 146. Passing the point that yielding and acquiescing would seem to be the same thing, the argument succeeds only because the defendant is denied the right to prove that the “victim” is not that but a willing participant. The rules оf evidence are rigged so that dalliance is automatically harassment because no one is allowed to deny it.
The harmfulness of the panel decision is augmented by additional rulings on what evidence is to be admissible in Title VII sexual harassment cases. On the оne hand, the panel holds that plaintiffs must be allowed to introduce evidence of their
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supervisor’s behavior toward other employees in an effort to establish a pattern or practice of sexual harassment.
But it is not the supervisor alone who is deprived of essential defenses. The panel decision makes the employer vicariously liable for the acts of the supervisor even though those acts were wholly unknown to the employer and were directly contrary to his instructions. 2 Of course, the employer is also prohibited from demonstrating that the alleged harassment was instead voluntary participation or that advances made were solicited. The result is thаt the employer is virtually converted into an insurer that all relationships between supervisors and employees are entirely asexual. Though the employer has no way of preventing sexual relationships, he is defenseless and must pay if they occur and are then claimed to be harassment. 3
The Supreme Court has never addressed the question of an employer’s vicarious liability under Title VII. I would, however, not suggest that we sit en banc to decide that issue were it not clear that the evidentiary rulings already discussed should be reconsidered en banc. That being so, we ought to take up the difficult and important question of an employer’s vicarious liability under Title VII for conduct he knows nothing of and has done all he reasonably can to prevent. In doing this, we cannot necessarily imрort wholesale notions of vicarious liability which are evolving in lower court Title VII cases involving racial discrimination. We have previously recognized that various Title VII doctrines may require some modification before they can be applied in sexual harassment cases.
4
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Bundy v. Jackson,
Therefore, whatever the proper rule in cases involving racial discrimination, it would be appropriate for the en banc court to re-examine the vicarious liability issue in the unique context presented by sexual harassment claims.
5
The panel’s rule is at odds with traditional practice which was not to hold employers liable at all for their employee’s intentional torts involving sexual escapades.
6
In addition, the panel’s rule is at odds with, or is at least a substantial extension of, the prior case law in this circuit. The two prior decisions of this court upon which the panel relied were both cases where the employer was fully aware of the acts of sexual harassment perpetrated by its supervisory employees.
Bundy v. Jackson,
For all the foregoing reasons, I would rehear this case en banc.
Notes
. The panel cited no evidentiary rules or authorities in defense of its statement that this evidence should be suppressed. The sole reason given for excluding the evidence was that "under
Bundy
[v.
Jackson,
. In this case, employer Capital City had аn official policy of nondiscrimination. Vinson v. Taylor,
. In this case, the employer could not have done more to avoid liability without aсtually monitoring or policing his employees’ voluntary sexual relationships. Aside from the very outrageousness of such policing, it would be a very high cost way, undoubtedly the highest cost way, of solving the problem.
But cf. Horn v. Duke Homes,
. We recognized in
Bundy v. Jackson,
the McDonnell formula prеsumes the standard situation where the alleged discrimination is due to the bare fact of the claimant’s membership in a disadvantaged group. It therefore ... fails to fit with precision the very unusual, perhaps unique, situation of sexual harassment, where the alleged basis оf discrimina *1332 tion is not the employee’s gender per se, but her refusal to submit to sexual advances which she suffered in large part because of her gender.
. The panel opinion relies оn several decisions in other circuits which, of course, are not binding on this court. Most of those decisions discuss vicarious liability under Title VII in the somewhat different situation where racial discrimination is at issue.
. The panel concedes that its decision сould not stand under “[tjraditional principles of respondent superior as they obtain in the field of torts."
Notwithstanding the traditional rule, the panel claims that strict vicarious liability is mandated here because that is the position taken by the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission’s Guidelines on Discrimination Because of Sex. The panel asserts that these guidelines are "entitled to great deference” since they are "administrative interpretаtion[s] of the Act by the enforcing agency.”
Albemarle Paper Co. v. Moody,
. Perhaps some of the doctrinal difficulty in this area is due to the awkwardness of classifying sexual advances as "discrimination.” Harassment is reprehensible, but Title VII was passed to outlaw discriminatory behavior and not simply behavior of which we strongly disapprove. The artificiality of the approach we have taken appears from the decisions in this circuit. It is "discrimination” if a man makes unwanted sexual overtures to a woman, a woman to a man, a man to another man, or a woman to another woman. But this court has twice stated that Title VII does
not
prohibit sexual harassment by a "bisexual superior [because] the insistence upon sexual favors would ... apply to male and female employees alike.”
Barnes v. Costle,
