NORIS BABB v. SECRETARY, DEPARTMENT OF VETERANS AFFAIRS
No. 16-16492
United States Court of Appeals, Eleventh Circuit
April 1, 2021
D.C. Docket No. 8:14-cv-01732-VMC-TBM
[PUBLISH]
Appeal from the United States District Court for the Middle District of Florida
(April 1, 2021)
ON PETITION FOR REHEARING
Before NEWSOM, ED CARNES, and SILER,* Circuit Judges.
We return, once again, to the case of Dr. Noris Babb. Babb is a clinical pharmacist who works at a VA medical center in Florida. Years ago now, she sued the Secretary of the Department of Veterans Affairs based on claims arising out of her employment at the hospital. In particular, Babb asserted claims for (1) gender discrimination, (2) age discrimination, (3) retaliation for engaging in activities protected by Title VII, and (4) hostile work environment. The Secretary prevailed across the board at summary judgment. We reversed and remanded on Babb‘s gender-discrimination claim but affirmed on everything else, although we noted that we might have ruled in Babb‘s favor on her age-discrimination and retaliation claims if our decision in Trask v. Secretary, Department of Veterans Affairs, 822 F.3d 1179 (11th Cir. 2016), hadn‘t stood in the way.
The Supreme Court granted certiorari on Babb‘s age-discrimination claim and reversed. So, on remand back to us, we reversed and remanded on that claim and (again) on the gender-discrimination claim, but we affirmed (again) on the Title VII retaliation and hostile-work-environment claims.
* Honorable Eugene E. Siler, Jr., United States Circuit Judge for the Sixth Circuit, sitting by designation.
Babb petitioned for rehearing on the latter two issues. She argued (1) that the Supreme Court‘s decision in her case also undermined our Trask-based rejection of her Title VII retaliation claim and (2) that an intervening decision of ours, Monaghan v. Worldpay US, Inc., 955 F.3d 855 (11th Cir. 2020), gutted the precedent on which we had relied in rejecting her hostile-work-environment claim. We granted rehearing.
We hold that the Supreme Court‘s decision in Babb‘s case undermined Trask to the point of abrogation and that the standard that the Court articulated there now controls cases arising under Title VII‘s nearly identical text. We further hold that Monaghan clarified our law governing what we‘ll call “retaliatory-hostile-work-environment” claims, and that the standard for such claims is, as we said there, the less onerous “might have dissuaded a reasonable worker” test articulated in Burlington Northern & Santa Fe Railway Co. v. White, 548 U.S. 53 (2006), and Crawford v. Carroll, 529 F.3d 961 (11th Cir. 2008), rather than the more stringent “severe or pervasive” test found in Gowski v. Peake, 682 F.3d 1299 (11th Cir. 2012).
We VACATE the district court‘s grant of summary judgment on Babb‘s Title VII retaliation and hostile-work-environment claims and REMAND for the district court to consider those claims under the proper standards.
I
A
Born in 1960, Noris Babb is now a clinical pharmacist at a VA hospital in Florida, where she has worked since 2004.1 In 2010, the VA instituted a new initiative governing promotions for pharmacists who, like Babb, spend at least 25% of their time engaged in “disease state management“—i.e., seeing patients and writing prescriptions for them without a physician‘s sign-off. Babb sought a promotion.
Things didn‘t go smoothly with the promotions program. Specifically, Babb and some of her co-workers thought that the VA implemented its initiative in ways that discriminated on the basis of age and gender. Two of Babb‘s colleagues filed complaints with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) in 2011. Babb sent emails and eventually gave a deposition in support of her colleagues’ complaints, and she filed her own EEOC complaint in May 2013. That‘s what eventually led her to this Court and, then, to the Supreme Court. See Babb v. Sec‘y, Dep‘t of Veterans Affairs, 743 F. App‘x 280, 283-84 (11th Cir. 2018).
As relevant here, Babb‘s ADEA claim and her Title VII retaliation claim both largely hinge on the same facts, which the Supreme Court concisely summarized as follows:
First, in 2013, the VA took away Babb‘s “advanced scope” designation, which had made her eligible for promotion on the Federal Government‘s General Scale from a GS-12 to a GS-13. Second, during this same time period, she was denied
training opportunities and was passed over for positions in the hospital‘s anticoagulation clinic. Third, in 2014, she was placed in a new position, and while her grade was raised to GS-13, her holiday pay was reduced. All these actions, she maintains, involved age discrimination, and in support of her claims, she alleges, among other things, that supervisors made a variety of age-related comments.
Babb v. Wilkie, 140 S. Ct. 1168, 1171 (2020) (footnote omitted). Some of the “comments” to which the Supreme Court referred were both age- and gender-related. For example, a pharmacy administrator described “Magic Mike” as a “middle-aged woman movie” in a conversation with Babb. Babb, 743 F. App‘x at 291. And, while the origins of a vulgar email were under investigation, the same individual called Babb a “mow mow,” which Babb took as a “grandma comment.” Id.
B
In 2014, Babb sued the Secretary of the Department of Veterans Affairs. She alleged that she had been the victim of gender and age discrimination, suffered retaliation based on protected EEOC activity, and endured a hostile work environment. For those reasons, she said, the VA had violated Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964,
The district court granted the Secretary summary judgment in full. We reversed and remanded on Babb‘s gender-discrimination claim but affirmed on her ADEA, Title VII retaliation, and hostile-work-environment claims. See Babb, 743 F. App‘x at 283. Along the way, we noted that if not for circuit precedent, we might have ruled in Babb‘s favor on both the ADEA and Title VII retaliation claims. See id. at 287, 290; id. at 288, 290 (describing Trask v. Sec‘y, Dep‘t of Veterans Affairs, 822 F.3d 1179 (11th Cir. 2016), as questionable-but-controlling authority)). But, we explained, under the prior-panel-precedent rule we didn‘t have that option. Id. at 288, 290.
So Babb took her case to a court with more options. The Supreme Court granted certiorari on just one question: Whether the federal-sector provision of the ADEA required Babb to prove that age was a but-for cause of a challenged personnel action. Babb v. Wilkie, 139 S. Ct. 2775 (2019) (mem.).
The Court answered that question “no.” Babb, 140 S. Ct. at 1178. “The plain meaning of the statutory text,” the Court held, “shows that age need not be a but-for cause of an employment decision in order for there to be a violation of
Back to us Babb‘s case came. On remand, we (1) reversed and remanded on the Title VII gender-discrimination claim, as we had done the first go around, (2) reversed and remanded on Babb‘s age-discrimination claim, in accordance with the Supreme Court‘s decision, and (3) affirmed on the remaining issues that the Court hadn‘t directly addressed—including the Title VII retaliation claim and the hostile-work-environment claim. Babb v. Sec‘y, Dep‘t of Veterans Affairs, 802 F. App‘x 548 (11th Cir. 2020) (per curiam).
Babb petitioned for rehearing on her Title VII retaliation and hostile-work-environment claims. She argued that the Supreme
II
We first ask what the Supreme Court‘s decision in Babb‘s case means for her Title VII retaliation claim—which, in turn, requires us to ask whether the Court‘s decision undermined to the point of abrogation Trask‘s Title VII holding, on which we earlier relied. Because the relevant provisions of the ADEA and Title VII are materially identical, we hold that the Supreme Court‘s analysis of the former controls the latter as well. Second, we ask what standard governs Babb‘s hostile-work-environment claim. We conclude, in accordance with our decision in Monaghan, that Babb‘s claim should be evaluated under the “might have dissuaded a reasonable worker” standard, rather than the “severe or pervasive” standard that we applied on her first appeal.
A
We divide our analysis of Babb‘s Title VII retaliation claim into two parts. First, we will determine whether the Supreme Court‘s decision in Babb‘s case, which construed a similar provision of the ADEA, is sufficiently on-point to free us of our allegiance to Trask. Second, we will consider the government‘s argument that Babb can‘t win even under the Supreme Court‘s more lenient standard.
1
In determining what the Supreme Court‘s decision portends for Babb‘s Title VII retaliation claim, we begin—as always—with the statutory text. Because Babb is employed by the VA, we look to Title VII‘s federal-sector provision.2 It says, in relevant part, “All personnel actions affecting employees ... in executive agencies shall be made free from any discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, or national origin.”
In Babb, the Supreme Court held that the “free from any discrimination” language means that personnel actions must be made in “a way that is not tainted by differential treatment based on” a protected characteristic. 140 S. Ct. at 1174.
In so holding, the Court initially examined each of
Having dissected the statutory terms, the Court then explained the relationship among them, giving special emphasis to two “matters of syntax.” Id. First, it observed that the adjectival phrase “based on age” “modifies the noun ‘discrimination,‘” not “personnel actions.” Id. “As a result, age must be a but-for cause of discrimination—that is, of differential treatment—but not necessarily a but-for cause of a personnel action itself.” Id. The second syntactical matter involved the adverbial phrase “free from any discrimination.” Because that phrase modifies the verb “made,” it tells us “how a personnel action must be ‘made.‘” Id. Accordingly, “[i]f age discrimination plays any part in the way a decision is made,” then that decision necessarily “is not made in a way that is untainted by such discrimination.” Id. at 1174. Add it all up, and the takeaway is this: “[T]he statute does not require proof that an employment decision would have turned out differently if age had not been taken into account“—i.e., does not require that age discrimination be the but-for cause of an adverse personnel decision. Id.
Babb “all but prewrote our decision today.” Allen v. Cooper, 140 S. Ct. 994, 1007 (2020). Because the relevant statutory provisions of the ADEA and Title VII are essentially identical, the Babb Court‘s interpretation
As a matter of plain text, the government agrees: “Because the text of [the relevant provisions of Title VII and the ADEA are] materially identical, the government agrees that the Supreme Court‘s textual analysis of the causation standard in Babb should apply to federal-sector Title VII retaliation claims.” Resp. to Pet. at 2; see Supp. Br. of Appellee at 10-12 (similar). Even so, the government insists that our decision in Trask, whose interpretation of the ADEA the Supreme Court abrogated, continues to control Babb‘s Title VII retaliation claim. So the
real question isn‘t about the right reading of the text. Instead, it‘s about whether Trask still requires us to follow the wrong one.
It doesn‘t. Because Babb undermined Trask “to the point of abrogation,” see United States v. Archer, 531 F.3d 1347, 1352 (11th Cir. 2008), Trask no longer binds this panel. Recall that when Babb‘s case first came to us, we acknowledged that “[i]f we were writing on a clean slate, we might well [have] agree[d]” with her. Babb, 743 F. App‘x at 287. But, we concluded, Trask bound us to reject her ADEA and Title VII retaliation claims. See id. at 288 (“Under the prior-panel-precedent rule, Trask is binding on us.“) (ADEA); id. at 290 (“Again, though, our earlier decision in Trask stands in Babb‘s way.“) (Title VII retaliation). The government says that‘s still true of the latter claim.
Having already done wrong once when we knew right, must we really do so again? Yes, the government says, because the Supreme Court granted certiorari only on the ADEA question, so its holding was likewise limited. And because the Supreme Court didn‘t overrule Trask insofar as it interpreted Title VII, the argument goes, the prior-panel-precedent rule compels us to continue to follow it still. We disagree.
To start, the limits of the cert grant don‘t decide this issue. The Supreme
So, are we right back where we were when we last saw Babb‘s case? That‘s the government‘s position—now, as then, the prior-panel-precedent rule requires us to affirm. It‘s true, of course, that “even where it has been weakened, but not overruled, by a Supreme Court decision, prior panel precedent must be followed.” United States v. Fred Smith, 122 F.3d 1355, 1359 (11th Cir. 1997). That being said, if an earlier decision of ours flatly conflicts with an intervening decision of the Supreme Court, then our duty to vertical precedent trumps our duty to horizontal precedent. See In re Provenzano, 215 F.3d 1233, 1235 (11th Cir. 2000) (“We would, of course, not only be authorized but also required to depart from [our prior decision] if an intervening Supreme Court decision actually overruled or conflicted with it.“). So it is here.
United States v. Archer, 531 F.3d 1347 (11th Cir. 2008), is illustrative. That case spawned two decisions from this Court on the meaning of the term “crime of violence” in the Sentencing Guidelines and “violent felony” in the Armed Career Criminal Act. When the case first came before us, our existing precedent, United States v. Gilbert, 138 F.3d 1371 (11th Cir. 1998), required us to hold that Archer‘s offense—carrying a concealed weapon in violation of Florida law—counted as a “crime of violence” under the Guidelines. United States v. Archer, 243 F. App‘x 564, 566 (11th Cir. 2007). Then, though, came the Supreme Court‘s decision in Begay v. United States, which held that a DUI isn‘t a “violent felony” under ACCA. 553 U.S. 137, 139 (2008). In Begay, the Court reasoned that while the violent felonies enumerated in the statute—i.e., “burglary, arson, extortion, and crimes involving the use of explosives“—usually “involve[d] purposeful, violent, and aggressive conduct,” DUIs didn‘t, and so a DUI couldn‘t be a “violent felony.” Id. at 144-45. Not long thereafter, the Supreme Court granted cert in Archer‘s case, vacated our first decision, and remanded for reconsideration in light of Begay.
So, when Archer‘s case returned to us, we had to decide whether Begay had undone Gilbert. The second time around, the panel examined Begay‘s rationale and found that Gilbert had been “undermined to the point of abrogation” because crime-of-violence caselaw and violent-felony caselaw ran on parallel tracks. Archer, 531 F.3d at 1352. ACCA‘s definition of “violent felony” and the Sentencing Guidelines’ definition of “crime of violence,” the panel
Just so here. In the same way that “violent felony” and “crime of violence” are functionally identical concepts, the two textual provisions here—one in the ADEA‘s federal-sector provision and one in Title VII‘s—are, as we have already explained, “[a]lmost exactly like” each other. Babb, 743 F. App‘x at 290. The Supreme Court‘s decision in Babb explained that for the ADEA, the “plain meaning of the critical statutory language (‘made free from any discrimination based on age‘) demands that personnel actions be untainted by any consideration of age.” 140 S. Ct. at 1171. Replace “age” with Title VII‘s set of protected characteristics, and everything else follows—plug and chug. And that displaces Trask‘s holding that the federal-sector retaliation provision requires but-for causation.
In an effort to salvage Trask, the government comes close to suggesting that its unclear holding can‘t be “undermined to the point of abrogation” precisely because it‘s unclear. In particular, the government argues that because Trask doesn‘t explicitly locate Title VII‘s cause of action for retaliation in the federal-sector provision, we shouldn‘t assume that Babb‘s logic and language are on-point. To that end, the government notes that in the past, some “appellate courts had held that retaliation claims were cognizable against federal employers under Title VII through the incorporation of remedies for violations of the private-sector [anti-retaliation] provision, Section 2000e-3(a).” Supp. Br. of Appellee at 9; see also, e.g., Ayon v. Sampson, 547 F.2d 446, 449-50 (9th Cir. 1976); Hale v. Marsh, 808 F.2d 616, 619 (7th Cir. 1986). And, the argument goes, if the federal-sector‘s incorporation of certain remedial provisions concerning retaliation also incorporates § 2000e-3(a)‘s protection from retaliation, then with § 2000e-3(a)‘s protection comes its but-for causation standard. Cf. Univ. of Texas Sw. Med. Ctr. v. Nassar, 570 U.S. 338, 362 (2013) (“[A] plaintiff making a retaliation claim under § 2000e-3(a) must establish that his or her protected activity was a but-for cause of the alleged adverse action by the employer.“).5 The government
This Court long ago construed
federal-sector provision, by its own terms includes retaliation. See Canino v. U.S. E.E.O.C., 707 F.2d 468, 472 (11th Cir. 1983). In much the same way that the Gomez-Perez Court held that “retaliation for complaining about age discrimination is ‘discrimination based on age,‘” 553 U.S. at 488, we held that retaliation for complaining about prohibited forms of discrimination is itself “discrimination” within the meaning of
We recognize that (like many judicial opinions) Trask wasn‘t perfectly pellucid in its every jot and tittle. And we take the government‘s point that Trask‘s references to Title VII‘s private-sector anti-retaliation provision and Nassar seem, at first blush, an awkward fit with a claim of retaliation brought under
possible. Cf. United States v. Hogan, 986 F.2d 1364, 1369 (11th Cir. 1993) (“A panel of this Court is obligated, if at all possible, to distill from apparently conflicting prior panel decisions a basis of reconciliation and to apply that reconciled rule.“). Moreover, and in any event, there is some reason to think that Trask implicitly relied on our earlier decisions. It was, after all, too late to have adopted the incorporationist approach—the old Fifth Circuit having already charted a different course—and sovereign immunity would have prevented the straightforward application of the private-sector anti-retaliation provision to the United States. Cf. Gomez-Perez, 553 U.S. at 491. Accordingly, we think that Trask is best read as having relied—per Porter—on a retaliation-based gloss on the word “discrimination” in
* * *
To sum up: The question is whether Babb‘s analysis of the
2
As a fallback, the government says that whatever Babb might portend for another case, Babb still cannot win this one. On the government‘s theory, Babb‘s claim founders on McDonnell Douglas Corp. v. Green, 411 U.S. 792 (1973), and the VA‘s host of non-pretextual reasons for its adverse employment decisions. And, says the government, Babb must show that her protected activity “was a but-for cause of some differential treatment that played a part in the decision made.” Supp. Br. of Appellee at 13. Babb cannot do that, the government asserts, because, as we held last time, she “has failed to demonstrate that the Secretary‘s proffered nondiscriminatory reasons for making each employment decision were pretextual.” Babb, 743 F. App‘x at 291. That was enough to sink Babb‘s case the first go-round and, the government says, it still is.
But it is not. In the course of rejecting one of the government‘s arguments before it in Babb, the Supreme Court specifically explained that its ruling did “not mean that age must be a but-for cause of the ultimate outcome.” 140 S. Ct. at 1174 n.3. Rather, “[i]f, at the time when the decision is actually made, age plays a part, then the decision is not made ‘free from’ age discrimination.” Id. (emphasis added). Indeed, the Court expressly clarified that “age must be the but-for cause of differential treatment, not that age must be a but-for cause of the ultimate decision.” Id. at 1174; accord, e.g., id. at 1171 (“The plain meaning of the critical statutory language (‘made free from any discrimination based on age‘) demands that personnel actions be untainted by any consideration of age.“). We cannot square the government‘s backstop argument with the Babb Court‘s reasoning:
Thus, “free from any discrimination” describes how a personnel action must be “made,” namely, in a way that is not tainted by differential treatment based on age. If age discrimination plays any part in the way a decision is made, then the decision is not made in a way that is untainted by such discrimination.
So, even when there are non-pretextual reasons for an adverse employment decision—as the government says there are here—the presence of those reasons does not cancel out the presence, and the taint, of discriminatory considerations. Cf. id. at 1173 (“[A]ge must be a but-for cause of discrimination—that is, of differential treatment—but not necessarily a but-for cause of a personnel action itself.“). Without quite saying as much, then, it seems that the Supreme Court accepted Babb‘s argument “that the District Court should not have used the McDonnell Douglas framework.” Id. at 1172.
One of the hypotheticals that the Supreme Court explored helps to show what this means in practice:
Suppose that a decision-maker is trying to decide whether to promote employee A, who is 35 years old, or employee B, who is 55. Under the employer‘s policy, candidates for promotion are first given numerical scores based on non-discriminatory
factors. Candidates over the age of 40 are then docked five points, and the employee with the highest score is promoted. Based on the non-discriminatory factors, employee A (the 35-year-old) is given a score of 90, and employee B (the 55-year-old) gets a score of 85. But employee B is then docked 5 points because of age and thus ends up with a final score of 80. The decision-maker looks at the candidates’ final scores and, seeing that employee A has the higher score, promotes employee A.
Babb, 140 S. Ct. at 1174.
Now it is obvious that in this hypo, the differential treatment based on age made no difference to the outcome. Even if employee B had not lost five points for being over 40, she still would have had the lower score. So age was not a but-for cause of her losing out. But no matter—age discrimination played a role in the decision-making because employee B was treated differently based on age when the employer docked five points from her total because she was 55. Under
Because
* * *
The Supreme Court‘s textual analysis of the
B
Babb‘s second request—concerning her hostile-work-environment claim—also requires us to address the reach of Supreme Court precedent, as well as the intricacies of our own.
We begin at the beginning, with Babb‘s complaint—which, at least as it concerned the allegedly hostile work environment, was not a model of clarity. Everything about Babb‘s hostile-work-environment claim(s?) appeared in a single line of her complaint. Rather than distinguishing between a hostile-work-environment claim based on age and sex and another such claim based on retaliation, she just said
Back when the district court first faced this case, Babb‘s hybrid hostile-work-environment claim did not raise any red flags. At that time, the case on which the district court relied—and the main case Babb argued on appeal—was Gowski v. Peake, 682 F.3d 1299 (11th Cir. 2012).
Gowski did a couple of things that matter for present purposes. First, it broke new ground in this Circuit by recognizing a “retaliatory hostile work environment claim.” Id. at 1311-12. Notably, it recognized that cause of action without mentioning
The district court in this case determined that Babb‘s claim, however construed, fell short of the severe-or-pervasive threshold. The court explained that the Gowski standard applied to both a claim alleging a “hostile work environment based on age or gender” and a “retaliatory hostile work environment claim,” and it adjudicated and rejected both claims (or possible versions thereof) under that standard. Babb, 2016 WL 4441652 at *16. What Babb complained about, the court held, was no more than “the ordinary tribulations of the workplace” and that simply did not constitute actionable harassment. Id. at *17.
On appeal, Babb likewise argued everything in Gowski terms—she accepted the severe-or-pervasive standard and just disputed the district court‘s determination that she did not meet it. You make a Gowski argument, and you are liable to end up with a Gowski holding.
Babb did—and we affirmed the district court‘s rejection of Babb‘s claim under Gowski‘s severe-or-pervasive standard. Babb, 743 F. App‘x at 292. Following remand from the Supreme Court, we did the same thing for the same reason. Babb v. Sec‘y, Dep‘t of Veterans Affairs, 802 F. App‘x 548, 548 (11th Cir. 2020).
But here is the wrinkle. Just weeks before we issued our (now-vacated) order on remand, this Court decided Monaghan v. Worldpay US, Inc., 955 F.3d 855 (11th Cir. 2020)—which, as we will explain, effectively overruled Gowski insofar as it applied to retaliatory-hostile-work-environment claims. To understand exactly what Monaghan did to Gowski—and how—it helps to start with Monaghan‘s theoretical framework.
First, the Monaghan Court took pains to separate out the various sorts of claims involved in Title VII litigation. The Court assigned archetypal Title VII claims the following names and definitions:
- The disparate-treatment claim, i.e., “a claim that an employee has suffered
a tangible employment action based on race or other prohibited characteristics.” - The hostile-environment claim, i.e., a claim stemming from mistreatment based on a protected characteristic that “is ‘sufficiently severe or pervasive’ that it can be said to alter the terms, conditions, or privileges of employment.”
- The retaliation claim, i.e., a claim stemming from “retaliation for protected conduct” where the mistreatment “well might have dissuaded a reasonable worker from making or supporting a charge of discrimination.”
The first two, the Monaghan Court explained, arise—at least in a private-sector case—under
Having established that framework, the Monaghan Court explained how Gowski mixed things up. Because “retaliatory-hostile-environment claims” were really Type 3 claims—i.e., retaliation claims under
On rehearing here, Babb challenges our earlier reliance on Gowski. And she asks that the Gowski-based summary judgment be vacated so that the district court can reconsider her claim under the proper standard. We agree, and we will do just that—but before doing so, we must address the government‘s various counterarguments.
The government leads with forfeiture. In short, the government says that because Babb did not split her hostile-work-environment claims up and did not argue Burlington Northern or Crawford the first time around, she should be barred from doing so now. Granted, this Court has a “long-standing prudential rule of declining to entertain issues not raised in an appellant‘s initial brief on appeal but raised for the first time in a petition for rehearing.” United States v. Levy, 416 F.3d 1273, 1275 (11th Cir. 2005). But of course, at the time Babb filed her initial brief on appeal, Monaghan had not been decided, and Gowski would have led most to conclude that any argument along these lines would be fruitless, if not downright frivolous. That, combined with the other circumstances here—that the case has been to the Supreme Court and back, that Monaghan came out right before we issued our order on remand, that the parties have briefed the issue twice and since participated in oral
Next, the government seeks to narrow Monaghan. In particular, it argues that Monaghan‘s holding is limited to “private-sector Title VII retaliatory hostile work environment claims” and has no bearing on “cases . . . arising under the federal-sector Title VII provision” and, accordingly, that ”Gowski . . . remains binding under the prior-panel-precedent rule.” Supp. Br. of Appellee at 8, 20. The government is right to point out (as we have acknowledged) that Monaghan involved a private employer and Gowski a federal employer. But in repudiating the analysis of Gowski—again, a case, like this one, about VA employees suing the Secretary—the Monaghan Court “reaffirm[ed] that the standard applicable to all Title VII retaliation claims is the Burlington Northern ‘well might have dissuaded’ standard, precisely as our pre-Gowski opinion in Crawford said.” 955 F.3d at 862 (emphasis added). We presume that when the Monaghan Court said “all,” it meant “all.” To be sure, we have observed that for “law-of-the-circuit purposes . . . the review of any precedent ought to focus far more on the judicial decision than on the judicial opinion.” Jones v. White, 992 F.2d 1548, 1566 (11th Cir. 1993)
(brackets and quotation marks omitted). But in Monaghan, Gowski‘s continuing vitality was front and center. See 955 F.3d at 857. The Monaghan Court examined Gowski at length and in detail—and concluded that it was wrong ab initio. Id. at 862. We see no fair reading of Monaghan that leaves Gowski‘s severe-or-pervasive holding intact. What is more, Monaghan‘s law-of-the-circuit holding—i.e., that Crawford trumped Gowski because “when there are conflicting prior panel decisions, the oldest one controls“—separately precludes us from concluding to the contrary. Monaghan, 955 F.3d at 862; see United States v. Tellis, 748 F.3d 1305, 1309-10 (11th Cir. 2014) (rejecting an argument that Circuit precedent had been undermined to the point of abrogation because the Court had already concluded otherwise); cf. Stokes v. Sw. Airlines, 887 F.3d 199, 205 (5th Cir. 2018) (noting that “the determination whether a given precedent has been abrogated is itself a determination subject to the [prior-panel-precedent rule]“).10
The government separately argues that the severe-or-pervasive standard is effectively
Finally, the government suggests that remand is futile because what Babb has complained of cannot pass muster even under the Burlington Northern-Crawford-Monaghan standard. We recognize that the district court has already characterized what Babb endured as “the ordinary tribulations of the workplace,” and that the Supreme Court has long said that Title VII “does not set forth ‘a general civility code for the American workplace.‘” Burlington Northern, 548 U.S. at 68 (quoting Oncale v. Sundowner Offshore Servs., Inc., 523 U.S. 75, 80 (1998)). Even so, given Gowski‘s demise, we think it best for the district court to have the chance to evaluate Babb‘s claim under the proper standard.
* * *
The first time around, we followed Gowski. Monaghan said that was a misstep. So today we follow Crawford. The district court should do the same on remand.
III
In conclusion, we vacate the grant of summary judgment on Babb‘s Title VII retaliation claim and her retaliatory-hostile-work-environment claim. We remand for the district court to reconsider these claims under the proper standards. On remand, the district court should follow Babb on the first issue and Crawford on the second.
VACATED and REMANDED.
21
