Thе district court granted summary judgment for the defendant in this Title VII suit for sexual harassment. The plaintiffs appeal presents an important question: what is the lowest level in a corporate or other institu *673 tional hierarсhy at which notice to an employee of sexual harassment is deemed notice to the employer?
The plaintiff was a production worker in a chemical manufacturing plant. According to allegations that we must accept as true because of the procedural posture of the case, beginning in the middle of 1989 her foreman began harassing her sexually. The details of the alleged harassment, whiсh included offensive touchings as well as leers and lewd comments and solicitations, are not important. Between the onset of the harassment and December of 1992 the plaintiff complained at least fivе times to the foreman’s immediate supervisor, who was the head of a department of 60 workers in which the plaintiff worked. The department head spoke to the foreman but did not report the plaintiffs complaints to the plant’s personnel director, as the company’s rules required him to do, and the harassment continued. In December the plaintiff complained to another supervisory employee, a subordinate of the department head, and this employee relayed the complaint to the personnel director, who took some action but, according to Young, not enough to stop the harassment. So she filed charges with the EEOC and then took six months of unpaid sick leave, which she attributes to the harassment. She is still employed by the defendant.
Had the plaintiffs harasser not been her supervisor (the foreman of her work team), the only question would be whether the company was negligent in failing to act promptly on her complaints.
McKenzie v. Illinois Department of Transportation,
The answer depends on whether notice to the plaintiffs department head was notiсe to the company, for if it was, then it will require a trial to determine whether the company dawdled so long in responding as to indicate negligence. If it was not notice to the company — -if the compаny did not receive notice until December, when the personnel director learned of the complaints — the company is not liable for the foreman’s harassment of the plaintiff because, as the district judge found, the uncontested facts show that the personnel director acted promptly and responsibly in response to the complaints. The fact that (as the plaintiff contends) the personnel direсtor may not have succeeded in stopping the harassment does not show that Bayer (or he) was negligent. E.g.,
McKenzie v. Illinois Department of Transportation, supra,
The district judge held that notice to the department head was not notice to the company because “he was not in upper-level management” and “had no responsibility for investigating or handling charges of sexual harassment.” The judge cited
Van Zant v. KLM Royal Dutch Airlines,
The question what employee or other agent must be notified of something for the corporation itself (or other principal) to be responsible for the consequеnces arises in many different areas of the law. It arises, for example, in regard to service of process, e.g.,
Swaim v. Moltan Co.,
Inquiry will normally begin with ground (l)(a), identifying the person who has the duty under the employer’s rules to channel complaints of sexual harassment to the employees of the company who are empowered to act upon such a complaint. Many companies appoint a “point person,” usually in the personnel or (as it is nowadays often called) human resourcеs department, to be the recipient of charges of harassment. If identified to and accessible to potential complainants, this person becomes the natural channel for the making and forwаrding of complaints, and complainants can be expected to utilize it in the normal case. Whether and in what circumstances a company can make this the exclusive channel for complaints about harassment we need not decide in this case; but what is certain is that if the company fails to establish a clearly marked, accessible, and adequate channel for complaints, judicial inquiry will have to turn to who in the company the complainant reasonably believed was authorized to receive and forward (or respond to) a complaint of harassment. A department head would ordinarily be such a someone with regard to complaints of misconduct lodged by a worker in his department. If he receives such a complaint he would be obligated by elementary principles of management and good sense either tо resolve the prob *675 lem himself or to refer it to someone else within the company, who can.
Focus on whether the information comes to the attention of someone who ought by specification of his duties or, failing that, general norms of management to do something about it, either directly or by referring the matter to some other corporate employee, is a better, because a more concrete, a more practical, approach than asking at what level in a corporate hierarchy an employee “is” the corporation. Except in some closely held corporations, no single employee is the corporation (and anyway a corporation with only one employee would be exempt from Title VII, see 42 U.S.C. § 2000e(b)), so the approach we аre criticizing is in quest of something that does not exist, making it “metaphysical” in a pejorative sense. What is possible to identify is who has the authority to terminate the harassment of which the plaintiff is complaining and did the plaintiff complain to someone who could reasonably be expected to refer the complaint up the ladder to the employee authorized to act on it. These two questions should guide thе inquiry in cases in which the question is whether the plaintiff placed her complaint in a proper channel.
Under Bayer’s internal policies governing harassment, the plaintiff had four authorized channels for lodging a complaint, one of which was to complain to her department head — and that is what she did. The defendant argues absurdly, in the teeth of its own policies as well as of good sense, that in a corporаtion the size of Bayer the head of a department of “only” 60 workers is too far down the corporate ladder to count. Most companies do not have as many as 60 workers. A company does nоt buy effective immunity from the duties that Title VII places on employers merely by growing to a point at which it has many layers of supervisory employees or by slotting in additional layers, so that whereas in a company with 60 employees, notice to the president would clearly suffice as notice to the company, in a company of 20,000 employees notice to a supervisor of 300 employees might not be еnough because there were several supervisory layers between himself and the president or board of directors. Very small companies are exempted from Title VII. 42 U.S.C. § 2000e(b). This is the first time we’ve heard it argued that very large ones are, too. Cf.
Consolidated Edison Co. of New York, Inc. v. Arroll,
Since notice to the plaintiffs department head was in the circumstances notice to the company, there is a genuine issue of material fact regarding the company’s negligence, and so the judgment of the district court must be reversed and the case remanded to that court for trial.
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
