Lead Opinion
Oleta Van Steenburgh appeals from the district court’s grant of judgment as a matter of law in favor of the Rival Company (Rival) on her sexual harassment claim under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 42 U.S.C. §§ 2000e-2000e-17. We reverse and remand.
I.
Van Steenburgh began working at Rival’s manufacturing plant in 1988. Her immediate supervisor was Larry Esser. Van Steenburgh had a good working relationship with Esser until late 1989 or early 1990, when he told Van Steenburgh that he was interested in seeing her socially. From that point until Van Steenburgh left Rival in June of 1995, Esser repeatedly confronted Van Steenburgh in private and
In early 1994, Esser entered Van Steen-burgh’s office and again asked why she would not have an affair with him. He grabbed her and put his arms around her, but she pushed him away. He became angry with her and said, “You owe me and you’re going to pay.” In March 1995, Esser approached Van Steenburgh in an aisle of the plant, put one arm around her, and put one hand on her breast. He said he would stop harassing her if he could “just touch [her] down there.” During the time between these direct physical contacts, Esser stared at Van Steenburgh, entered her office uninvited, and repeatedly asked her to have an affair with him.
Van Steenburgh formally complained about Esser’s conduct to Carol Bottcher, the plant manager, in May of 1992 and in early 1994. Bottcher verbally warned Es-ser once, but failed to make any written record of the complaints. When the harassment continued after Bottcher’s warning, Van Steenburgh complained repeatedly about Esser and Bottcher to another supervisor, Tommy Toliver. Toliver insisted there was nothing he could do about Esser’s conduct or Bottcher’s failure to act, and he indicated that Bottcher would not take more severe action against Esser.
On June 8, 1995, in front of Bottcher, Toliver, and numerous co-workers, Esser informed Van Steenburgh that Bottcher had decided to place another employee above her on the production line. Van Steenburgh testified that Esser “got in my face” and said, “You can still run this line but Louise is going to be over it, do you understand, do you understand what I’m saying.” Immediately after the incident, Van Steenburgh informed Toliver that she believed Esser had spoken to her in a hostile manner to humiliate her and to retaliate against her in front of her supervisors and co-workers. Toliver said that he believed her but that nothing could be done because Bottcher would not believe the story. Later that day, Van Steen-burgh quit her employment at Rival.
Van Steenburgh filed a complaint against Rival with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission on February 27, 1996. Following receipt of a right-to-sue letter, she filed this action. A jury returned a verdict in her favor on her claims of hostile environment sexual harassment and constructive discharge. It awarded her $47,500 in back pay and $115,000 in compensatory damages. Rival moved for judgment as a matter of law or, in the alternative, for a new trial. The district court granted both of Rival’s motions. It held that there was insufficient evidence at trial for the jury to find either that sexual harassment occurred within the limitations period or that Van Steenburgh was constructively discharged. In summary fashion, the court also granted Rival’s alternative motion for a new trial.
II.
We review de novo the district court’s grant of Rival’s motion for judgment as a matter of law. See Hathaway v. Runyon,
The 300-day limitations period for Van Steenburgh’s claims began on May 3, 1995. Rival argues that it is entitled to judgment as a matter of law because Van Steenburgh presented no evidence of discriminatory conduct that occurred after this date. Rival does not dispute that Esser harassed Van Steenburgh between early 1990 and March of 1995. It argues that the harassment ended when the last explicitly sexual act of harassment occurred.
Unlike quid pro quo harassment or other “discrete” forms of sex discrimination, hostile environment harassment is an “ongoing nightmare for the employee victim, in legal parlance, a ‘continuing violation.’ ” Gipson v. KAS Snacktime Co.,
Esser’s pattern of harassment involved waiting several months between incidents of direct physical contact. During the periods when no touching occurred, Esser stared at Van Steenburgh and kept her in constant fear of retaliation. Van Steen-burgh testified that she became so frightened that her job performance declined and she became clinically depressed. Thus, the hostile environment did not abruptly end after the March 1995 incident, but rather continued until Van Steenburgh left the company following the June 8, 1995, incident. See Draper v. Coeur Rochester, Inc.,
Rival is mistaken in asserting that there must be incidents within the limitations period that are explicitly sexual. See Nichols v. American Nat’l Ins. Co.,
The jury could have inferred a nexus between Esser’s hostile manner of addressing Van Steenburgh in front of her supervisors and co-workers on June 8 and her repeated rejections of his prior sexual overtures. Van Steenburgh introduced evidence that Esser did not treat men the way he treated her. Rival’s own witness, Sylvia Trent, testified that Esser had a “thing” for Van Steenburgh and could be obsessive about other women at the plant. Although Esser’s conduct on June 8 was not as egregious as his earlier conduct, the
Rival similarly claims that the June 8 incident was insufficient to demonstrate constructive discharge as a matter of law. This argument also fails to view the June 8 incident in the context of Esser’s continuing pattern of harassment.
To demonstrate constructive discharge, a plaintiff must show that the harassment was severe enough that a reasonable person in the same position would have found the working conditions intolerable. Coffman v. Tracker Marine, L.P.,
Van Steenburgh provided Rival an adequate opportunity to remedy the situation before she quit. She formally complained to Bottcher in May of 1992. Bottcher verbally warned Esser, but failed to make a written record of the complaint or of her efforts to remedy the problem. When the harassment continued after Bottcher’s warning, Van Steenburgh made another formal complaint to Bottcher in early 1994. Esser’s harassing conduct failed to cease. Van Steenburgh then complained repeatedly about Esser, and about Bottcher’s failure to remedy the problem, to Toliver, another supervisor. This was adequate to demonstrate that Van Steenburgh had a lack of recourse against the harassment within Rival’s organization. See Howard v. Burns Bros., Inc.,
III.
The district court granted Rival’s alternative motion for a new trial. We review this decision for an abuse of discretion. Mears v. Nationwide Mut. Ins. Co.,
A district court must adequately articulate its reasons for overturning a jury verdict. See White,
The parties suggest that leading questions at trial caused the district court to grant the motion. Trial errors must be pervasive, however, to warrant granting a new trial. See O’Dell v. Hercules, Inc.,
We reverse the district court’s grant of judgment as a matter of law. We remand for an articulation of the reasons for granting a new trial that will enable us to conduct the meaningful review of that ruling that is required by White v. Pence.
Concurrence Opinion
concurring and dissenting in part.
I concur in Parts I and II of the court’s opinion, and with the holding that there is sufficient evidence to support the jury’s finding of constructive discharge. I dissent from Part III of the court’s opinion and in the remand of this case to the district court for further review of whether the jury’s verdict was against the weight of the evidence. I would reverse entirely and order reinstatement of the judgment based upon the jury verdict.
The district court order granting the alternative new trial, quoted in full in the court’s opinion, did not so much as mention the weight of the evidence. The discussion in Part III of the court’s opinion today simply assumes that this was the ground upon which the district court was relying.
We have long held that when the district court grants a motion for new trial on the ground that the verdict is against the weight of the evidence, it must clearly articulate its reasons for doing so. The district court must carefully balance the evidence presented by each side; only then can it reach an informed determination of whether the verdict would work a miscarriage of justice if left undisturbed. See White v. Pence,
The district court’s order granting a new trial does not come close to meeting these standards. The district court failed to state that the verdict was against the weight of the evidence or that the verdict would work a miscarriage of justice if allowed to stand. These are the ultimate findings to be made by the district court in granting such a motion. In addition, the
Most of the testimony in this case came from Van Steenburgh, although there were other employees of Rival who testified about what they had seen and what Van Steenburgh had told them about Esser’s conduct. Esser was deceased at the time of trial and did not testify. The controversy involved the interaction of two individuals. In this simple case, any conflicts raised by the evidence should have been resolved by the jury. See Stafford,
The district court granted the new trial without following the procedures that we have mandated for over twenty-five years, failing to state the basis for granting the motion and articulating no analysis or reasons for its ruling. The order and record before us simply provide no basis to remand the case, for to do so would essentially ignore our numerous precedents relating to the standards for granting a new trial on the basis that the verdict is against the weight of the evidence.
I agree that we should reverse the ruling granting judgment as a matter of law, but believe that we should also reverse the grant of a new trial and order that the jury’s verdict be reinstated.
