Lead Opinion
Valeria Smith and Ronald Gamble are both guards at the Cook County Jail, a facility administered by the Cook County Sheriffs Department under the supervision of Sheriff Michael Sheahan. Gamble was none too pleasant to his female colleagues in general, but one day he took matters further and violently assaulted Smith while she was working her shift. Smith complained internally, but to little avail. She also filed a criminal assault claim against Gamble (which resulted in a conviction), and finally, in light of the unsatisfactory reaction of the Sheriffs Department to her complaints, she brought the present action under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 42 U.S.C. § 2000e et seq., claiming that she had been subjected to sex discrimination in the form of a hostile work environment. The district court granted summary judgment to the Sheriff on the ground that Smith’s experiences of harassment were too isolated to be actionable under Title VII and that, in any event, the Sheriffs Department’s response to the assault was sufficient to shield it from liability. Although we agree that the district court correctly granted summary judgment for Sheriff Sheahan in his individual capacity, we find that the evidence Smith presented requires a trial
I
Because this matter was resolved at summary judgment and no credibility determinations have yet been made, we relate the facts and draw our inferences in the light most favorable to Smith. Popovits v. Circuit City Stores, Inc.,
On August 30, 1992, during their regular shifts at the Cook County Jail, Gamble entered Smith’s work station to collect inmate commissary slips. A dispute ensued, during which Gamble called Smith a “bitch,” threatened to “fuck [her] up,” pinned her against a wall, and twisted her wrist severely enough to damage her ligaments, draw blood, and eventually require surgical correction. Smith immediately reported the incident to her supervisor, Lieutenant Jessie Anderson, who recommended that Smith seek medical treatment. Lieutenant Anderson also questioned witnesses, reported the attack up the chain of command, and took action to keep Smith and Gamble separated thereafter.
The Sheriffs Department’s response was an institutional shrug of the shoulders. It neither investigated further nor did it discipline Gamble. Instead, in response to Smith’s request that further action be taken, one Investigator Sullivan made light of the incident and jokingly suggested that Smith should “kiss and make up” with Gamble. The Department responded in much the same way to other complaints of Gamble’s hostile behavior toward women in the workplace. In order to show that Gamble’s actions were because of her sex, rather than randomly violent, Smith presented affidavits from six other female Cook County Jail guards tending to show that Gamble has an inglorious history of offensive interactions with his female coworkers, and that the Department knew this. .For example, Yvonne Averhart’s affidavit related two separate incidents with Gamble. * In 1991, he made sexualized comments about her body as she passed through the scanning device he was operating at the entrance to the jail. When she objected, he became hostile and called her a “bitch.” Other officers intervened to keep the situation from escalating further. In 1995, Gamble demanded that Averhart give him extra food for some of the inmates from the central kitchen, where she was working. She refused because he lacked the proper authorization. Gamble again became hostile, repeatedly calling her a “bitch” and threatening to “kick [her] ass.” Another officer intervened, pulling Gamble away from Averhart and trying to calm him down. Averhart reported the latter incident to her supervisor, but no action was taken on her complaint.-
- Officer Kim Pemberton described an incident with Gamble in 1990 or 1991 that occurred as he was passing through the entrance at which she was posted to check identification badges. He refused to show her his ID, and she in turn refused to let him enter. When she relented, Gamble made a derogatory comment, to which she responded in kind. Gamble then tried to storm the area where Pemberton was working, issuing vulgar threats of physical harm similar in tone and content to those that we have already recounted. A supervising officer held Gamble back to keep him from making good on his threats and told Pemberton to write up the incident. When she gave her report to another superior, he ripped it up with the explanation that “it takes two to fight.”
Female Cook County .Jail Officers L.A. Hempen, Renee Hardimon, Myra Greene, and Constance Wilson had similar encounters with Gamble. Together with Officers Averhart and Pemberton, these women officers related a total of seven incidents in which Gamble became verbally abusive and physically threatening, though none of the other incidents escalated into the type
Disappointed with the response of the Sheriffs Department, Smith turned to the courts. She filed a criminal complaint against Gamble in Cook County Criminal Court. On February 25, 1993, that court found him guilty of criminal battery and placed him under court supervision. Although Gamble’s superiors at the Sheriffs Department were aware of this criminal conviction, not only did they disregard it— they promoted him instead. Smith, on the other hand, has been reassigned to guard inmates with psychiatric problems, a transfer she considers tantamount to a demotion.
Smith filed charges with the EEOC, and she also initiated a two-count civil action in the Circuit Court of Cook County, filing her third amended complaint on November 8, 1995 after she received her right-to-sue letter. The defendants removed the case to federal court on December 8, 1995. Count I of the complaint alleged a hostile work environment, in violation of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 42 U.S.C. § 2000e et seq., against Sheriff Sheahan in his official and individual capacities and against the Cook County Sheriffs Department. (Smith has since conceded that she cannot state a claim against Sheriff Sheah-an individually, and that the Sheriffs Department has no legal existence separate from that of Sheriff Sheahan in his official capacity.) Count II alleged a state law tort claim against Gamble for assault and battery. In light of Gamble’s admitted criminal conviction for these acts, the district court entered judgment on the pleadings in Smith’s favor on Count II and later dismissed that part of the case based on a settlement. Smith instead appeals from the court’s entry of summary judgment in favor of Sheriff Sheahan in his official capacity on the Title VII claim.
II
We review a grant of summary judgment de novo because it presents pure questions of law. Stop-N-Go of Madison, Inc. v. Uno-Ven Co.,
When sexual harassment in the workplace alters the terms and conditions of someone’s employment, it falls’ within the scope of the prohibition against sex discrimination in Title VII. See Burlington Industries, Inc. v. Ellerth,
Accepting Smith’s account as true, Gamble’s actions constitute prohibited sexual harassment. Smith presented sufficient evidence to raise the inference that Gamble targets co-workers for his assaultive outbursts based on their sex. One method of demonstrating that harassment is based on sex is to provide evidence of discrepancies in how the alleged harasser treats members of each sex in a mixed-sex workplace. Oncale,
A jury would also be entitled to conclude that the assault Smith suffered was severe enough to alter the terms of her employment even though it was a single incident. The district court held to the contrary; it opined that sex-based harassment can never be actionable unless it is repeated. This was error: the Supreme Court has repeatedly said, using the disjunctive “or,” that a claim of discrimination based on the infliction of a hostile working 'environment exists if the conduct is “severe or pervasive.” See Ellerth,
The Sheriff argues that only sexual assaults qualify as isolated occurrences severe enough to alter the conditions of a victim’s employment without proof of additional incidents. This position, however, loses sight of the Court’s admonition in Oncale that the only requirement is that the adverse action must be because of the victim’s sex (or other protected characteristic). In a sex discrimination case, the action need not be inspired by sexual desire, assuming for the sake of argument that rape or sexual assault is anything but an act of violence. Breaking the arm of a fellow employee because she is a woman, or, as here, damaging her wrist to the point that surgery was required, because she was a woman, easily qualifies as a severe enough isolated occurrence to alter the conditions of her employment. Compare Lockard v. Pizza Hut, Inc.,
Moreover, on the facts of this case as they now stand, the assault was part of a broader pattern of behavior hostile to women. Smith has provided evidence that Gamble has repeatedly assailed his female co-workers with verbal abuse and threats of physical harm. Sheriff Sheahan argues that we should disregard these other incidents because they did not happen to Smith, but again we disagree. Although they may be less important in defining her work environment than the assault she experienced firsthand, incidents “directed at others and not the plaintiff ... do have some relevance in demonstrating the existence of a hostile work environment.” Gleason,
Another point deserves mention. Relying on Rabidue v. Osceola Refining Co.,
Even if this aspect of Rabidue survived Harris, we think it did not outlive Oncale. It is true that the severity of alleged
Ill
The final question is whether Smith has provided evidence that the Sheriffs Department was negligent in preventing or remedying the harassment. As for prevention, the Sheriff argues that his department had no knowledge of the incidents Smith’s female co-workers claim to have reported before Smith was assaulted and therefore had no duty to prevent the assault. Given the officers’ sworn affidavits that they made reports to their superiors that were simply ignored, this is a disputed issue of material fact that cannot be resolved at summary judgment. See also Wilson,
The remainder of the Sheriffs argument rests on the assertion that Lieutenant Anderson’s separation of Smith and Gamble adequately discharged the Department’s duty to remedy the harassment because it prevented further incidents between the two. But not every preventive measure will be a proper remedy, as is readily apparent when we consider that the Department could also have prevented recurrences by firing Smith — an obviously impermissible reaction to her complaint. The question is instead whether the Sheriffs Department’s response to the harassment was a reasonable one, designed to remedy the illegal harassment, or a negligent one that did not adequately respond to the situation in its midst. Just as an employer may escape liability even if harassment recurs despite its best efforts, so it can also be liable if the harassment fortuitously stops, but a jury deems its response to have fallen below the level of due care. See Baskerville,
In light of the Sheriffs Department’s failure to discipline Gamble for so serious an infraction as a criminal assault, its decision instead to promote him, Gamble’s recurrent hostilities toward other female guards even after his assault on Smith, his taunts to one of his victims that his supervisors wouldn’t penalize him for his actions, Investigator Sullivan’s suggestion to Smith to “kiss and make up,” and Smith’s reassignment to less desirable duty, we think a jury could reasonably conclude that the Sheriffs Department’s tepid response of separating Smith and Gamble did not effectively remedy the harassment problem.
Because a jury could find that Smith was subject, to sex-based harassment in violation of Title VII and that the Sheriffs Department was negligent in failing to prevent or remedy the harassment, we ReveRse the district court’s grant of summary judgment for the Sheriffs Department and Remand the case for further proceedings consistent'with this opinion. The claims against the Sheriff in his individual capacity were correctly dismissed,
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting. I respectfully dissent.
It is my firm conviction that this is a case of battery. To expand it into a Title VII case because the victim of this bully is a woman reads more into Title VII than I think is appropriate. Taking the complaint as true, it still accuses an absolute boob of punching out a weaker person— the mark of a coward but that isn’t covered by Title VIL I would affirm. She has a cause of action all right, but a state court tort for trespass vi et armis, not Title VII.
