This is a ease of hostile work environment harassment, in which the plaintiff-employee
BACKGROUND
Plaintiff Jenice Torres, a Puerto Rican woman, was employed at the New York University (“NYU”) Dental Center (the “Dental Center”) from 1990 to 1994 as an Administrative Secretary to Eugene Coe, the Dental Center’s Facilities Manager. Of the approximately thirty employees under Coe’s command at the Dental Center at that time, Torres was the only woman. Torres alleges (and many of her co-workers corroborate) that during the course of Torres’ employment, Coe constantly harassed her on the basis or her sex and race. Specifically, Torres claims that Coe: 1) “habitually referred to [Torres] as a ‘dumb cunt’ or ‘dumb spic’ in the office”; 2) made insulting remarks about the size of Torres’ breasts and buttocks; 3) made sexual innuendos towards Torres; 4) crudely indicated to other employees his desire to have sex with Torres; 5) frequently told Torres that she should stay home, go on welfare, and collect food stamps like the rest of the “spies”; 6) remarked to other people that when Torres called in sick she was “probably out sucking cocks to earn extra money”; 7) ridiculed Torres’ pregnancy, calling her “beer belly” and suggesting that she was not smart enough to use birth control; and 8) allowed friends of his who visited him at the office to tell people that Torres “gave a blowjob to every man who came into the office,” and to throw money on the table and mockingly order Torres to strip. Coe was apparently in the habit of consuming large amounts of alcohol nearly every day at lunch, which often exacerbated his abusive behavior.
Intimidated by Coe, Torres was afraid to complain to Coe’s supervisors. Although she mentioned the matter to eoworkers, Torres said nothing to NYU’s upper management during the first three years of her employment, and she declined to file a formal harassment charge with NYU or with her union. Finally, in September 1993, Leonard Pisano, the Assistant Director of Maintenance of Academic Facilities at NYU, heard of Coe’s abusive conduct from one of Torres’ coworkers. Pisano called Torres in to meet with him. At that meeting, he suggested to Torres that she file a written complaint. When Torres failed to do so, Pisano reiterated that request in December 1993 or January 1994. Around that same time, Pisano was promoted to Associate Director of Academic Facilities, a position that made him Coe’s direct supervisor.
On February 23,1994, Torres put her complaints in writing, in the form of a handwritten letter that she sent to Pisano. In the letter, Torres wrote: “First of all I would like to apologize for not writing sooner as we had originally discussed. It has taken me quite a while to gather courage and strength to begin this letter.” She continued: “I have never felt so intimidated by anyone until I started working for Mr. Eugene Coe.” She explained that she had not complained to Coe’s supervisors because she knew that they were his friends. She “thought there wasn’t anyone to turn to until [she] met [Pisano].” In the letter, Torres did not recount many specific allegations of harassment. Instead, she listed the ways in which Coe mistreated numerous employees, and offered a general criticism of Coe as a man and a boss. At the close of the letter, Torres explained that “[t]here is so much more, but it will take some time” to explain. She added, “Len, I hope and ask you to please keep this confidential until we both speak about this matter.”
Pisano met with Torres to discuss the situation in March 1994. At that time, Torres again, in her own words, “told him to keep this confidential.” Relying on that request, Pisano did nothing until late June 1994, when he called Torres in to meet with Stephen Heller, NYU’s Assistant Vice President for Administrative Services. After hearing Torres’ story, Heller referred her to a counselor to help her cope with the harassment. Later that month, while Coe was on vacation, Heller and Pisano met with Torres to inform her that she would be receiving a transfer to Pisano’s office effective before Coe’s return. Torres never worked with Coe again.
Shortly thereafter, Torres filed a discrimination charge with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (“EEOC”). In late August 1994, both Pisano and Heller separately asked Torres to drop her EEOC charge. She declined to do so.
In August 1994, Heller confronted Coe about his behavior and commenced an investigation, which culminated in Coe’s termination on September 1, 1994. The following month, Torres was transferred, on her own request, to a position as a departmental secretary at the NYU Medical Center. She received a $6,500 raise in her annual salary.
In early March 1995, Torres received a right-to-sue letter from the EEOC. Three months later, she brought this suit against Coe, Pisano, Heller, and NYU, pursuant to Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, as amended, 42 U.S.C. §§ 2000e et seq., Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972, 20 U.S.C. §§ 1681 et seq., the New York State Human Rights Law, N.Y.Exec.Law §§ 290 et seq., and the New York City Human Rights Law, N.Y.C. Admin. Code §§ 8-101 et seq.
On January 17, 1996, relying on this court’s holding in Tomka v. Seiler Corp.,
Judge Stanton’s January 17 ruling left NYU as the only remaining defendant. On July 15, 1996, Judge Stanton granted NYU’s motion for summary judgment on all counts, concluding that NYU could not be held liable for Coe’s harassment, that there was no evidence that NYU retaliated against Torres for filing charges with the EEOC, and that Torres’ common law negligence claim was barred by New York’s workers compensation statute. See Torres v. New York Univ., No. 95 Civ. 4106,
This appeal followed.
/
Summary judgment is proper when “there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and ... the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(c). We review a grant of summary judgment de novo, drawing all factual inferences and resolving all ambiguities in favor of the nonmoving party. See Lazard Freres & Co. v. Protective Life Ins. Co.,
II
Title VII prohibits discrimination on the basis of race and sex with respect to the “compensation, terms, conditions, or privileges of employment.” 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-2(a)(1).
Ill
As an initial matter, NYU claims that Torres’ allegations of harassment do not, as a matter of law, suffice to establish the existence of a hostile work environment. We emphatically reject this contention.
A hostile work environment exists “[wjhen the workplace is permeated with dis-
NYU argues that Torres has done no more than allege a handful of incidents of inappropriate behavior that, as a matter of law, were not so pervasive as to meet this objective test. See Kotcher v. Rosa and Sullivan Appliance Ctr., Inc.,
In her deposition testimony, Torres alleged that Coe constantly harassed her — so often that she “lost count” — but that she could recall the exact dates and circumstances of only a few incidents of harassment. As such, she may find it difficult to convince a jury that pervasive harassment in fact took place, and that a reasonable employee in her shoes would have found her working environment hostile. But this court cannot say as a matter of law that Coe’s alleged conduct did not suffice to create a hostile work environment. If a jury were to credit Torres’ general allegations of constant abuse, which were confirmed by her eoworkers, it could reasonably find pervasive harassment, even in the absence of specific details about each incident. See Dey v. Colt Constr. & Dev. Co.,
If the allegations made by Torres are true, she will surely be able to establish that she reasonably found her working environment hostile and abusive. In fact, in light of Coe’s repeated statements, which are quoted above, and which are sufficiently offensive that we decline to repeat them here, we find it patently offensive that NYU is willing to concede in its brief only “that several of these incidents as related by plaintiff, if true, were inappropriate, tasteless attempts at humor and conversation, that could be considered not the best behavior by some people ” (emphasis added).
The fact that the law requires harassment to be severe or pervasive before it can be actionable does not mean that employers are free from liability in all but the most egregious of cases. See Harris,
A reasonable woman
The fact that many of Coe’s statements were not made in Torres’ presence is, in this case, of no matter; an employee who knows that her boss is saying things of this sort behind her back may, reasonably find her working environment hostile. Cf. Kotcher,
TV
Despite the existence of a jury question as to whether Coe’s conduct created a hostile work environment, we affirm the district court’s conclusion that, as a matter of law, NYU may not be held liable for that conduct.
Whereas liability for quid pro quo harassment is always imputed to the employer, a plaintiff seeking to recover from an employer for hostile work environment must demonstrate some specific basis to hold the employer liable for the conduct of its employees. See Karibian v. Columbia Univ.,
Relying on the imperfect analogy to agency law, and specifically on the Restatement of Agency, courts have had difficulty establishing coherent rules in this area. While cautioning that “[a] rule of employer liability deriving from traditional agency principles cannot be reduced to a universal, pat formula,” we have summarized the law in this circuit thusly:
[A]n employer is hable for the discrimina-torily abusive work environment created by a supervisor if the supervisor uses his actual or apparent authority to further the harassment, or if he was otherwise aided in accomplishing the harassment by the existence of the agency relationship. In contrast, where a low-level supervisor does not rely on his supervisory authority to carry out the harassment, the situation will generally be indistinguishable from eases in which the harassment is perpetrated by the plaintiff’s co-workers; consequently, ... the employer will not be liable unless “the employer either provided no reasonable avenue for complaint or knew of the harassment but did nothing about it.” Kotcher,957 F.2d at 63 .
To recap, an employer will be held liable for the harassment perpetrated by one of its supervisors if:
a) the supervisor was at a sufficiently high level in the company, or
b) the supervisor used his8 actual or apparent authority to further the harassment, or was otherwise aided in accomplishing the harassment by the existence of the agency relationship, or
c) the employer provided no reasonable avenue for complaint, or
d)the employer knew (or should have known)9 of the harassment but unreasonably failed to stop it.10
A. Sufficiently High Level in the Hierarchy
While it is not clear where the line that we mentioned in Kotcher — above which á supervisor is at a sufficiently high level in the management hierarchy of the company for his actions to be imputed automatically to the employer — is to be drawn,
B. Use of Authority or the Agency Relationship
Although Coe was Torres’s supervisor, there is no evidence that he used his authority to further the harassment or that he was aided in accomplishing the harassment by the existence of the agency relationship. It is true that, “[i]n a sense, a supervisor is always aided in accomplishing the tort by the existence of the agency because his responsibilities provide proximity to, and regular contact with, the victim.” Gary v. Long,
Thus, in order to establish liability on the theory that the supervisor exploited the agency relationship in committing the harassment, a plaintiff “must allege facts which establish a nexus between the supervisory authority” and the harassment. Tomka,
As the district court correctly explained, Torres cannot impute liability to NYU on the ground that it did not provide a reasonable opportunity to complain:
Torres does not seem to dispute that NYU provided a reasonable avenue for complaint. She knew about NYU’s written sexual harassment policy, but did not file a complaint with any of the people designated to receive them. She also knew that the collective bargaining agreement which governed her employment contained an anti-discrimination provision and a grievance mechanism, but she did not file a grievance.
Torres,
D. Knowledge and Inaction
The law is clear that “an employer may not stand by and allow an employee to be subjected to a course of racial [and/or sexual] harassment by co-workers” or supervisors. Snell,
Torres first discussed the harassment with Pisano in September 1993. She sent him two letters on the subject in February 1994. Yet nothing was done about the harassment until late July 1994, when Torres was transferred to another department. In the meantime, Coe continued to harass Torres. It is primarily on this basis that Torres seeks to hold NYU liable.
1) NYU’s knowledge
As the district court noted, implicit in Torres’ argument that NYU knew of the harassment and did nothing about it is the assertion that Pisano’s knowledge of the harassment should be imputed to NYU. Relying on our statement that “[f]or the knowledge of a supervisor to be imputed to the company, that supervisor must be at a sufficiently high level in the hierarchy of the company” that he or she “qualiffies] as a proxy for the company,” Van Zant v. KLM Royal Dutch Airlines,
An official’s actual or constructive knowledge of harassment will be imputed to the employer when principles of agency law so dictate. That will be the ease when a) the official is at a sufficiently high level in the company’s management hierarchy to qualify as a proxy for the company, see Van Zant,
We agree with the district court that the record makes it difficult to determine whether Pisano was at a sufficiently high level in NYU’s management hierarchy to qualify as a proxy for the employer. But leaving that question aside, we conclude that Pisano’s knowledge can be imputed to NYU under the rule that, where the person who gained notice of the harassment was the supervisor of the harasser (e.g., had the authority to hire, fire, discipline, or transfer him), knowledge will be imputed to the employer on the ground that the employer vested in the supervisor the authority and the duty to terminate the harassment. See, e.g., Hall v. Cus Constr. Co.,
Moreover, even before he became Coe’s supervisor, Pisano’s knowledge could potentially have been imputed to NYU on the ground that Pisano had a duty to inform the company of the harassment:
Taken as a whole, the cases demonstrate that for purposes of Title VII, “management-level employees” [that is, employees whose knowledge can be imputed to the employer] encompass two groups of persons: first, supervisors possessing substantial authority and discretion to make decisions concerning the terms of the harasser’s or harassee’s[16 ] employment; and second, non-management employees charged with substantial responsibility for relaying employee complaints to management, particularly where management is located away from the workplace. If a coworker has knowledge of a harassee’s complaint, but that co-worker lacks authority to counsel, investigate, suspend, or fire the accused harasser, or to change the conditions of the harassee’s employment, the coworker’s inaction does not spark employer liability unless that co-worker has an official or strong de facto duty to act as a conduit to management for complaints about work conditions.
Lamb,
In the instant case, while Pisano did not have supervisory authority over either Coe or Torres before his promotion in early 1994,
We therefore conclude that, as a matter of law, NYU is responsible for Pisano’s knowledge as of the date at which Pisano became Coe’s supervisor, and that the record would support a finding that NYU is responsible for Pisano’s knowledge even before that date. In other words, NYU knew of the harassment, but did not immediately act to stop it. This does not, however, end our inquiry.
2) NYU’s Response
NYU can be held liable only if Pisa-no did not fulfill his duty to take reasonable steps to remedy the harassment. See Snell,
When Torres first discussed the harassment with Pisano, she asked him not to speak about the matter with anyone. Pisano explained in his deposition:
Q: Did you investigate at that time?
A: No, I didn’t.
Q: Why didn’t you?
A: Jenny [Torres] asked me not to do anything. She called me up and told me some things on the phone, and I said[,] [“]well, what do you want to do about it[?”] and she said[,] [“]nothing, I just wanted someone to talk about it,[”] and I said[,] [“]you can call me any time you want to, if you need help let me know.[”]
Pisano repeatedly suggested to Torres that she should pursue her complaint in writing. But when Torres finally sent a letter to Pisano, she closed with a heartfelt request— “Len, I hope and ask you to keep this confidential until we both speak about this matter” — and thanked Pisano for his “confidentiality” and his time. Torres never followed up that letter by authorizing Pisano to take action, at least not prior to her conversation with Heller, at which point the harassment was promptly terminated. To the contrary, Torres admits that, in a follow-up conversation with Pisano in March 1994, she again specifically “told him to keep this confidential.”
Despite her request for confidentiality, Torres later testified in a deposition that she fully expected Pisano to act to rectify the situation, and that all that she meant in requesting confidentiality was that she did not want Pisano to speak freely about the matter “with people who have no business knowing what is going on.” But in evaluating the reasonableness of Pisano’s conduct, Torres’ understanding is not determinative. What is relevant is what Torres said to Pisa-no, and Pisano’s reasonable understanding of what she meant. It is undisputed that Torres, on more than one occasion, asked Pisano to keep the matter “confidential.” Pisano explained his understanding of that request
A: Because of Jenny. She asked me not to. She asked me again, riot to speak to anyone when she had written me those letters in February of [1994]. She specifically wrote in the letters, I’m afraid, please don’t say anything to anyone. I felt that I was the only person she had turned to at this point regarding this problem, and to betray her trust in the matter would do harm rather than good.
We therefore have before us a situation in which an intimidated and embarrassed employee was finally able to gather the strength to complain about the harassment that she had been enduring, but specifically asked the supervisor to whom she complained to keep the matter confidential and to refrain from taking action until a later date. Does a supervisor breach his duty to remedy the harassment by honoring the employee’s request? That is not a question that we can answer categorically. Its resolution will vary from ease to ease.
There is certainly a point at which harassment becomes so severe that a reasonable employer simply cannot stand by, even if requested to do so by a terrified employee. But that is not this case. There are, for example, no allegations here of any serious physical or psychological harm that would have occurred if the employer did not act forthwith. And the law will not presume in every case that harassed members of Title VII’s protected classes do not know what is best for themselves and cannot make reasonable decisions to delay — at least for a time— pursuing harassment claims, perhaps for privacy or emotional reasons, until they are ready to do so.
Likewise, there may be eases in which a supervisor or co-worker is harassing a number of employees, and one harassed employee asks the company not to take action. In those cases, the employer’s duty to the other employees would take precedence, and the company would most likely not be justified in honoring a single employee’s request not to act. But that too is not this case.
What then of this case? By asking Pisano to keep the matter confidential, Torres placed him in a difficult situation. She wrote in her letter: “I thought there wasn’t anyone to turn to until I met you. I finally found someone to confide in.” Had Pisano ignored her request and pursued a harassment complaint — in the face of Torres’ own conscious decision not to do so — he would have breached her trust. There will be cases in which an employer is forced to do that. But this is not one of them. Torres’ letters to Pisano recounted only a few relatively minor incidents of harassment; they did not come close to conveying the full extent of the abuse subsequently alleged in this lawsuit. Moreover, Torres was the only victim of Coe’s racial and sexual harassment. She was the only female employee in Coe’s office at the Dental Center, and there is no indication in the record that any other employees were being harassed by Coe in violation of Title VIL On these facts, it must be said as a matter of law that Pisano behaved reasonably in honoring Torres’ request for confidentiality and in failing to act immediately to end the harassment. Accordingly, while NYU is liable for Pisano’s actions, Pisano did not breach his duty to protect Torres from further harassment.
V
On separate occasions in August 1994, Pi-sano and Heller each asked Torres to drop her EEOC charge. Torres argues that these requests, which she characterizes as demands, constituted retaliation for her having complained about Coe’s harassment. We reject this argument.
It is unlawful for an employer to retaliate against an employee for filing a charge pursuant to Title VII. See 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-3(a). To establish a prima facie case of unlawful retaliation, a plaintiff must show: “i) participation in a protected activity known to the defendant; ii) an employment action disadvantaging the plaintiff; and iii) a causal connection between the protected activity and the adverse employment action.” Tomka,
While it is undisputed that Torres’ filing of an EEOC charge constituted participation in a protected activity, Torres cannot
We have held that “Reasonable defensive measures do not violate the anti-retaliation provision of Title VII, even though such steps are adverse to the charging employee and result in differential treatment,” so long as they “do not affect the complainant’s work, working conditions, or compensation.” United States v. New York City Transit Auth.,
It is conceivable that a demand to withdraw an EEOC charge could constitute retaliation, if it truly had so great an effect on the plaintiff as to alter the conditions of her employment in a material way. For instance, repeated and forceful demands accompanied even by veiled suggestions that failure to comply would lead to termination, discipline, unpleasant assignments or the like, might in some circumstances affect an employee’s working conditions. But here Torres admits that Heller and Pisano did not repeat their requests, that she in fact refused their requests, and that she suffered no negative consequences as a result of having turned them down. As such, Torres did not experience an adverse employment action. Indeed, taken as a whole, Pisano’s and Heller’s reaction to Torres’ complaint materially improved the conditions of her employment. Torres was transferred at her request and given a substantial raise. And the man who harassed her was fired.
VI
Torres also alleges that NYU should be held liable under the common law of negligence, based on its failure to supervise Coe and to prevent the establishment of a hostile working environment. As the district court properly found, that claim is barred by New York’s Workers’ Compensation Law, which provides: “The right to compensation or benefits under this chapter, shall be the exclusive remedy to an employee ... when such employee is injured or killed by the negligence or wrong of another in the same employ.” N.Y.WoRkComp.Law § 29(6); see also Burlew v. American Mut. Ins. Co.,
Workers’ compensation exclusivity does not, however, preclude an employee’s suit if the employer committed an intentional tort or another person committed such an intentional wrong at the employer’s direction. See Acevedo v. Consolidated Edison Co.,
In disputing this conclusion, Torres cites no cases. She argues instead that workers’ compensation exclusivity should not bar Title VII harassment suits. Of course it shouldn’t, nor could it under the Supremacy Clause. U.S. Const, art. VI, el. 2. But it can and does bar state common law negligence claims.
CONCLUSION
Torres has made out a prima facie case of serious racial and sexual harassment. But she has not shown that NYU, through its agent Pisano, acted unreasonably in honoring
The district court’s grant .of summary judgment is therefore affirmed.
Notes
. We have repeatedly noted that claims brought under New York State’s Human Rights Law are analytically identical to claims brought under Title VII. See, e.g., Van Zant v. KLM Royal Dutch Airlines,
. While Torres’ notice of appeal initially indicated that she was appealing from both the January
. Title DC provides that "[n]o person in the United States shall, on the basis of sex, ... be denied the benefits of, or be subjected to discrimination under any education program or activity receiving federal financial assistance.” 20 U.S.C. § 1681(a). We have held that Title VII principles apply in interpreting Title IX. See Murray v. New York Univ. College of Dentistry,
While this court has previously indicated in dicta that "Tide DC has been construed to prohibit gender discrimination against both students enrolled in federally supported educational programs and employees involved in such programs” and that any "aggrieved individual has an implied right of action for injunctive relief or monetary damages,” Murray,
. Of course, even a single episode of harassment, if severe enough, can establish a hostile work environment. See Tomka,
. Despite having to endure continuous abuse and racial discrimination upon breaking Major League Baseball's color barrier fifty years ago, Jackie Robinson was able to compile a .297 batting average, lead the league in stolen bases, and earn the Rookie of the Year award. See Charles C. Alexander, Our Game: An American Baseball History 202-03 (1991).
. See Newton v. Department of the Air Force, 85 F.3d 595, 599 (Fed.Cir.1996) (citing and parenthetically quoting Ellison v. Brady,
In light of Harris, several courts have found that a district court does not err in instructing the juiy as to a "reasonable person” standard, rather than a "reasonable woman” standard. See Watkins v. Bowden,
.It is not only "a woman of Victorian delicacy— a woman mysteriously aloof from contemporary American popular culture in all its sex-saturated vulgarity," Baskerville v. Culligan Int'l Co.,
. We use the male pronoun since the context of this case, and most harassment cases, is that of a male supervisor and a female victim. We do not doubt that in other contexts, the genders can be different.
. An employer can be held liable if it had constructive notice of the harassment, that is, if officials sufficiently high in the management hierarchy should have gained knowledge of it through the exercise of reasonable care. See, e.g., Murray,
. In a thorough discussion of employer liability under the Restatement of Agency, the Tenth Circuit has recently noted that an employer could also conceivably be held liable for a supervisor’s harassment under section 219(1) of the Restatement, which provides that "[a] master is subject to liability for the torts of his servants committed while acting in the scope of their employment.” Restatement (Second) Agency § 219(1) (1958) [hereinafter Restatement]. As the Tenth Circuit noted, however, liability will rarely attach under this provision because "sexual harassment simply is not within the job description of any supervisor or any other worker in any reputable business,” Harrison v. Eddy Potash, Inc.,
. It appears that a supervisor may cross that line in two different ways. First, the official may be so high-ranking that the law will consider his acts to be the employer’s acts. See Hunter v. Allis-Chalmers Corp.,
. In fact, Kotcher indicates that the fact that the harasser was the highest ranking official at a remote location cuts against automatically imputing his actions to the employer, since other members of the corporate hierarchy would be less likely to discover the harassment. See Kotcher,
. But see Staszewski, supra, at 1094 (arguing that ”[i]f the harasser is acting in a supervisory capacity when he creates a hostile work environment, he will necessarily be aided by the agency relation, and liability should properly be imputed to the employer”); Note, Sexual Harassment Claims of Abusive Work Environment Under Title VII, 97 Harv.L.Rev. 1449, 1461 (1984) (using agency principles to argue that “[c]ourts should hold employers liable for all acts of sexual harassment committed by supervisory personnel”). Whatever the merits of the position advocated by these commentators, the Supreme Court has rejected the suggestion that “employers are always automatically liable for sexual harassment by their supervisors.” Meritor, 477 U.S. at 72,
. The Tenth Circuit has articulated a means by which an employer could be held liable under the first clause of section 219(2)(d) of the Restatement, which provides for liability if "the servant purported to act or to speak on behalf of the principal and there was reliance upon apparent authority.” Restatement, supra, § 219(2)(d). According to the Tenth Circuit:
[T]o recover, a plaintiff must show that the employer manifested in the supervisor the authority to act on its behalf, that such manifes-*636 tatíon resulted in harm to the plaintiff, and that the plaintiff acted or relied on the apparent authority in some way. The first element is established whenever an employer vests its supervisor with the authority to control significant aspects of the work environment. The second element is satisfied by demonstrating [that] the supervisor subjected plaintiff to sexual harassment. The third element (that plaintiff acted or relied on the apparent authority of her supervisor) is the most difficult to prove and will often hinge upon whether the employer has a formal policy against sexual harassment. When an employer lacks a formal written grievance policy, a victim of sexual harassment will reasonably perceive her only available options to be silently acquiescing in the harassment or leaving her job. In contrast, if an employer has taken steps to remove any possible inference that a supervisor has authority to sexually harass his subordinates, the victim is likely aware the harassment is not authorized and reliance on apparent authority will be difficult to establish.
Harrison,
. Cf. Hunter,
. The applicability in this circuit of the rule that the knowledge of a supervisor possessing authority over the terms of the harassee's employment will be imputed to the employer is uncertain. We may have suggested in dicta in Van Zant that an employer is not necessarily liable when the plaintiff informs her immediate (low-level) supervisor of the harassment, and the supervisor fails to act. See Van Zant,
