Grimmett v. State of Alabama Department of Corrections
Filing
30
MEMORANDUM OPINION Signed by Judge Karon O Bowdre on 6/25/13. (SAC )
FILED
2013 Jun-25 PM 02:10
U.S. DISTRICT COURT
N.D. OF ALABAMA
IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR
THE NORTHERN DISTRICT OF ALABAMA
SOUTHERN DIVISION
LAROY GRIMMETT, SR.,
Plaintiff,
)
)
)
v.
) CASE NO.: CV-11-BE-3594-S
)
STATE OF ALABAMA DEPARTMENT )
OF CORRECTIONS,
)
Defendant
)
MEMORANDUM OPINION
This matter – asserting claims of sexually hostile work environment, religious
discrimination, and retaliation based on complaints of sexual harassment, all brought pursuant to
Title VII – is before the court on “Defendant’s Motion for Summary Judgment.” (Doc. 19). For
the reasons stated in this Memorandum Opinion, the court FINDS that the motion for summary
judgment is due to be GRANTED IN PART and DENIED IN PART: the court will deny the
motion as to the hostile work environment claim based on sexual harassment at the Donaldson
facility; grant it as to the hostile work environment claim based on religious harassment; and
grant in part and deny in part the motion as to the retaliation claims.
I. PROCEDURAL HISTORY
The Plaintiff, Laroy Grimmett, Senior, filed this action pro se, asserting claims of
employment discrimination against his employer, the State of Alabama Department of Corrections
(ADOC), attaching an EEOC Charge (doc. 1-1). His Complaint was also accompanied by a
motion to appoint counsel and a motion for leave to proceed in forma pauperis. The court
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allowed Grimmett to file the Complaint with only partial fee payment, and it denied his request
for appointment of an attorney, but required him to file an Amended Complaint complying with
the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. (Doc. 2). Grimmett timely filed an Amended Complaint,
asserting claims of harassment based on his sex and religion, and retaliation (doc. 4).
On January 11, 2013, the ADOC filed a motion for summary judgment (doc. 19), and
subsequently, a brief supporting that motion (doc. 21). Grimmett’s response to the motion (doc.
23) included a “fact” narrative of four incidents that allegedly occurred during his employment,
with no submission of affidavits or declarations and no specific reference to evidence of record
supporting that narrative or to case law. The court entered an Order (doc. 24) giving Grimmett, as
a pro se litigant, “notice of the summary judgment rules, of his right to file affidavits or other
materials in opposition to the motion, and of the consequences of default” pursuant to Rule 56(c)
of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. Somerville v. Hall, 2 F.3d 1563, 1564 (11th Cir. 1993)
(per curiam) (ruling on a motion that – unlike the instant case – was originally filed as a motion
to dismiss and that the court converted into a motion for summary judgment) (quoting Griffith v.
Wainwright, 772 F.2d 822, 825 (11th Cir. 1985)). In that Order, the court gave Grimmett another
opportunity to file a response to the motion for summary judgment and supporting brief by the
deadline of February 13, 2013. Grimmett subsequently filed a timely second response (doc. 25),
which again included no submission of affidavits or declarations under penalty of perjury and no
reference to evidence of record supporting his fact narrative and no reference to case law. The
ADOC filed a reply (doc. 26). After the deadline for a response, Grimmett filed a sur-reply (doc.
27), that included no submission of affidavits or declarations under penalty of perjury, no specific
reference to evidence of record supporting his fact narrative, and no reference to case law.
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Grimmett’s sur-reply did refer to other incidents of sexual harassment involving other victims and
law enforcement officials, incidents he had read about in the news or had heard about generally;
however, he referred to no case law addressing harassment cases brought under Title VII or §
1981.
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
Summary judgment is an integral part of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. Summary
judgment allows a trial court to decide cases when no genuine issues of material fact are present
and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 56. When a
district court reviews a motion for summary judgment it must determine two things: (1) whether
any genuine issues of material fact exist; and if not, (2) whether the moving party is entitled to
judgment as a matter of law. Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(c).
The moving party “always bears the initial responsibility of informing the district court of
the basis for its motion, and identifying those portions of ‘the pleadings, depositions, answers to
interrogatories, and admissions on file, together with the affidavits, if any,’ which it believes
demonstrate the absence of a genuine issue of material fact.” Celotex Corp. v. Catrett, 477 U.S.
317, 323 (1986) (quoting Fed. R. Civ. P. 56). The moving party can meet this burden by offering
evidence showing no dispute of material fact or by showing that the non-moving party’s evidence
fails to prove an essential element of its case on which it bears the ultimate burden of proof.
Celotex, 477 U.S. at 322-23. Rule 56, however, does not require “that the moving party support
its motion with affidavits or other similar materials negating the opponent’s claim.” Id.
Once the moving party meets its burden of showing the district court that no genuine
issues of material fact exist, the burden then shifts to the non-moving party “to demonstrate that
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there is indeed a material issue of fact that precludes summary judgment.” Clark v. Coats &
Clark, Inc., 929 F.2d 604, 608 (11th Cir. 1991). Disagreement between the parties is not
significant unless the disagreement presents a “genuine issue of material fact.” Anderson v.
Liberty Lobby, Inc., 477 U.S. 242, 251-52 (1986) Substantive law determines which facts are
material and which are irrelevant. Id. at 248. In responding to a motion for summary judgment,
the non-moving party “must do more than simply show that there is some metaphysical doubt as
to the material fact.” Matsushita Elec. Indus. Co. v. Zenith Radio Corp., 475 U.S. 574, 586
(1986). The non-moving party must “go beyond the pleadings and by [its] own affidavits, or by
the ‘depositions, answers to interrogatories, and admissions on file,’ designate ‘specific facts
showing that there is a genuine issue for trial.’” Celotex, 477 U.S. at 324 (quoting Fed. R. Civ. P.
56(e)); see also Advisory Committee Note to 1963 Amendment of Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(e), 28
U.S.C. app. (“The very mission of summary judgment procedure is to pierce the pleadings and to
assess the proof in order to see whether there is a genuine need for trial.”). “The non-moving
party need not present evidence in a form admissible at trial; however, he may not merely rest on
his pleadings.” Graham v. State Farm Mut. Ins. Co., 193 F.3d 1274, 1282 (11th Cir. 1999) (citing
Celotex, 477 U.S. at 324). If he does, or if the evidence is “merely colorable, or is not
significantly probative, summary judgment may be granted.” Anderson, 477 U.S. at 249-50
(citations omitted).
In reviewing the evidence submitted, the court must “view the evidence presented through
the prism of the substantive evidentiary burden,” to determine whether the nonmoving party
presented sufficient evidence on which a jury could reasonably find for the nonmoving party.
Anderson, 477 U.S. at 254; Cottle v. Storer Commc’n, Inc., 849 F.2d 570, 575 (11th Cir. 1988).
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The court must refrain from weighing the evidence and making credibility determinations,
because these decisions fall to the province of the jury. See Anderson, 477 U.S. at 255; Stewart v.
Booker T. Washington Ins. Co., 232 F.3d 844, 848 (11th Cir. 2000); Graham v. State Farm Mut.
Ins. Co., 193 F.3d 1274, 1282 (11th Cir. 1999). Furthermore, all evidence and inferences drawn
from the underlying facts must be viewed in the light most favorable to the non-moving party.
Graham, 193 F.3d at 1282. The non-moving party “need not be given the benefit of every
inference but only of every reasonable inference.” Id. The evidence of the non-moving party “is
to be believed and all justifiable inferences are to be drawn in [its] favor.” Anderson, 477 U.S. at
255. After both parties have addressed the motion for summary judgment, the court must grant
the motion if no genuine issues of material fact exist and if the moving party is entitled to
judgment as a matter of law. Fed. R. Civ. P. 56.
Even if a district court “‘believes that the evidence presented by one side is of doubtful
veracity, it is not proper to grant summary judgment on the basis of credibility choices.’”
Feliciano v. City of Miami Beach, 707 F.3d 1244, 1252 (11th Cir. 2013) (quoting Miller v.
Harget, 458 F.3d 1251, 1256 (11th Cir. 2006)). The court should not disregard self-serving
statements made in sworn testimony simply because they are self-serving at the summary
judgment stage, and if the self-serving statements create a genuine issue of material fact, the court
should deny summary judgment on that basis. Id. at 1253.
III. FACTS
The court notes that the ADOC’s motion for summary judgment listed undisputed facts
and its brief reiterated those facts. Although Grimmett filed a response (doc. 23) and a sur-reply
(doc. 27), he did not file any further evidence opposing summary judgment nor did his response
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and sur-reply specifically refer to evidence that the Defendant had filed with docket number sites
for the location of that evidence. However, the ADOC filed Grimmett’s deposition testimony as
part of its evidentiary submission, and to the extent that his deposition testimony – which the
court has read – disputes the facts that the ADOC’s brief presents, or the ADOC’s characterization
of those facts, the court views those facts in the light most favorable to Grimmett. See Hyman v.
Nationwide Mut. Fire Ins. Co., 304 F.3d 1179, 1185 (11th Cir. 2002).
The Plaintiff, Laroy Grimmett, Sr., is a fifty-three year old African-American male of
Pentacostal religion who obtained over twenty years of experience in the food preparation
industry, including taking food preparation courses at a local community college in the early
1970s. He began working for the ADOC on June 1, 2010 in the position of “Steward I,”
supervising and overseeing the preparation of food for inmates. Grimmett has held the same
position and received the same pay throughout his tenure with the department.
A. Facts Regarding Hostile Work Environment
St. Clair Correctional Facility
Grimmett’s first job with the ADOC was at the St. Clair Correctional Facility, a facility
with all-male inmates located in Springville, approximately a half hour northeast of Birmingham.
Grimmett testified that he drove approximately an hour everyday from his home when he worked
at that facility. He worked there for four-and-a-half months and claims that the following
incidents of discrimination occurred during those months.
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(1) Alleged Sexual Harassment
a. Inappropriate Conversation in August of 2010
In August of 2010, Grimmett heard the following lunch conversation in the stewards’
office that occurred between Tywanna Baker, another steward, and the chief steward who
supervised Grimmett, Wilma Mitchell:
Baker: I am used to dick. Dicks don’t bother me.
Mitchell: Girl, I know what you mean. . . because I have had big dicks, medium
dicks, small dicks, black dicks, and had some white dicks, too.
Grimmett acknowledges that these remarks were not directed at him, but considered the
conversation in his presence to be unprofessional and to constitute sexual harassment.
b. Inappropriate Comments to Grimmett
During Grimmett’s tenure at St. Clair, his supervisor, Ms. Mitchell, would often make a
remark to him to this effect: “Just because there’s snow on the roof, Mr. Grimmett, doesn’t mean
that there’s no fire in the furnace.” Grimmett took this comment to mean that just because a
person is older does not mean that he or she is no longer sexually active. The first time Mitchell
made this remark to Grimmett was in September of 2010 in Mitchell’s office in the presence of
an inmate. However, Grimmett testified that Mitchell began making this remark to him
constantly, practically on a daily basis.
c. Inappropriate Bumping and Related Comment
In late October of 2010, Grimmett and some inmates were setting up the cafeteria serving
line when Grimmett noticed Mitchell standing so closely behind him that she “lay her breasts up
on [him].” The way Grimmett described the touching, Mitchell did not brush up against him and
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then immediately move away, as a person does when she inadvertently bumps someone else.
Instead, Grimmett – not Mitchell -- jumped away, and rather than apologizing, Mitchell
responded, “Why you jumped, Mr. Grimmett? You never had big titties on you before?”
Grimmett testified that this touching made him feel “violated” because the touching was
inappropriate by anyone other than his wife of twenty years. This incident is the only one where
any “touching” occurred involving Grimmett. Grimmett did not report this incident to Assistant
Warden Joseph Headley or any other prison management official and did not mention it in his
EEOC Complaint.
d. Further Inappropriate Comment to Grimmett
After the bumping incident, Mitchell looked at Grimmett up and down, stating, “Mmm
mmm Mr. Grimmett, you something else,” with a tone indicating that the comment had a sexual
meaning. Grimmett did not report this incident to prison management, either.
(2) Alleged Religious Harassment
Grimmett had a habit of making comments such as “Thank God” or “God willing,” and
on numerous occasions Mitchell would respond with a comment like “God has nothing to do
with this or that.” Grimmett would then state, “I’m going to thank God regardless” or “No one,
and I mean no one, can tell me to stop thanking God.”
(3) Reporting of Incidents at St. Clair
On or about August 15, 2010, Grimmett told Assistant Warden Headley, that he felt he
was the victim of harassment in the kitchen area. Headley told Grimmett he would handle the
situation and performed a preliminary investigation.
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As part of the preliminary investigation, Headley discussed the complaint with the
kitchen staff, who did not support Grimmett’s claims of sexual or religious harassment. Headley
also asked Grimmett to put his complaints in writing, and Grimmett provided a 24-page written
complaint to Headley in September of 2010, which included the conversation between Baker and
Mitchell as well as the “fire in the furnace” comments and Mitchell’s remarks about God but did
not include the bumping incident or the “Mmm mmm” comment, because those incidents had not
yet occurred. Headley passed the written complaint along to Warden Davenport on or about
October 18, 2010, and Davenport then made a formal request for an investigation to ADOC’s
Intelligence and Investigations Division.
Grimmett did not subsequently report the bumping incident and the “Mmm mmm”
comment, and testified that he did not do so because he had already reported Mitchell’s other
harassment and saw no discipline or other result from that reporting.
On October 22, 2010, the ADOC transferred Grimmett to Donaldson Correctional
Facility, which was closer to Grimmett’s home in Birmingham, and gave him a position there at
the same job description, rank and pay grade as he held at the St. Clair facility. According to the
ADOC, the transfer occurred as a protection to Grimmett during the pendency of the
investigation of his complaints. Grimmett did not request or desire the transfer.
Investigator M.C. Smith performed a formal investigation of Grimmett’s complaints of
harassment at the St. Clair facility, including tape recorded interviews of seven witnesses, and
produced a written report. In a report dated November 9, 2010 and included in the record of this
case, he concluded that “[t]he investigation did not reveal any evidence or witnesses to
substantiate Steward Grimmett’s complaint that his boss, Steward Mitchell, has been constantly
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harassing him, including sexual, because she wants to date him.” (Doc. 19-6, at 3). The report
also indicated that Grimmett had been interviewed after his transfer to the Donaldson facility and
Grimmett stated in that interview that he was not happy at the new facility.
Donaldson Correctional Facility
In October 2010, Grimmett began working at the Donaldson Correctional Facility, a
maximum security prison in Bessemer, Alabama, approximately a half hour west of Birmingham.
Grimmett testified that the Donaldson facility was located approximately forty-five minutes
from his home, about fifteen minutes closer than the St. Clair facility. However, Donaldson is a
higher security prison than St. Clair, and Grimmett testified that he did not want to transfer to
Donaldson because he liked working with the people at St. Clair except for supervisor Mitchell.
Grimmett worked at the Donaldson facility for approximately one year.
When Grimmett arrived at the facility, his supervisor, Alleric Holt, a male, informed him
that he had heard about the problems between Grimmett and Mitchell and did not like that
situation. Holt did not further explain why he did not like it; however, Holt also advised
Grimmett that he had trained Mitchell and that she had been his best and favorite steward.
Subsequently, Holt began on-going harassment of Grimmett, which Grimmett characterized as
“torment,” calling him nick-names such as “playa,” “pimp,” “slick,” “sissy,” “bitch” or “boy,”
even though Holt called all of the other stewards by their real names. When Grimmett
complained to Holt, asking Holt to give him the same respect that Grimmett gave Holt by calling
him the name on his nametag, Holt responded that Grimmett was his boy. When Grimmett told
him, “I’m not your boy,” Holt disagreed, saying that as long as Grimmett worked under him,
Grimmett was his boy. Grimmett testified that he understood Holt meant by using the term “boy”
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the same meaning as the inmates used, particularly in light of the other names Holt used of
“sissy,” “bitch,” etc.: it was a reference to Grimmett’s being Holt’s gay lover, which was not
true and which Grimmett did not want to become true.
Because the name-calling was an on-going problem, Ms. Carnathan, another steward who
supervised Grimmett, heard Holt calling Grimmett those names. Grimmett complained to Holt
about his name-calling in Carnathan’s presence.
To further support Grimmett’s understanding, Grimmett heard from several sources –
inmates and another steward who supervised Grimmett, Ms.Carnathan – that Holt was spreading
rumors that Grimmett was gay. Grimmett did not personally hear Holt tell anyone else that
Grimmett was gay in Grimmett’s presence. According to Grimmett, this rumor affected the way
the inmates treated Grimmett, because after the rumor began circulating, the inmates stopped
treating him with respect.
Reporting Grievances at Donaldson
Eventually, Grimmett and Holt ended up in the Warden’s office, and the Warden asked
Holt whether he called Grimmett such names. Holt denied the name-calling, so the Warden
called Ms. Carnathan to ask her whether she had indeed witnessed the name-calling. Although
Grimmett could not hear Carnathan’s side of the phone conversation, the Warden advised him
that Carnathan had confirmed the name-calling, and the Warden told Grimmett to put his
complaint in writing. The Warden advised Grimmett and Holt that if the two of them could not
resolve the problem between them and an altercation resulted, the Warden would fire both of
them.
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In January of 2011, Grimmett first filed a written grievance about Holt’s actions to
Warden Hetzel and asked to be transferred. Grimmett filed another grievance in April of 2011 to
the same effect.
According to a May 13, 2011 letter from Hetzel to Grimmett regarding the
transfer request, Assistant Warden Gordy investigated Grimmett’s complaints about Holt and
found them to be unjustified. The evidence presented to the court does not include any
investigative report from the Donaldson facility regarding Grimmett’s complaints, although it
does include such a report from the St. Clair facility. Hetzel denied Grimmett’s request to
transfer on May 13, 2011. About that time, Warden Hetzel transferred out of Donaldson and
Warden Cheryl Price transferred in. Grimmett advised Warden Price of his problems with Holt,
and Price asked Grimmett to be patient because Holt would be retiring soon. However,
Grimmett explained to Price that even if Holt retired, the rumors Holt had supposedly spread
about him at Donaldson made Grimmett’s name “mud,” and made Grimmett’s staying there
infeasible.
Alex City Work Release Center
Although Hetzel denied Grimmett’s request for a transfer, Grimmett later applied for and
received a job as steward at the Alex City Work Release Center. He sent a letter dated August
31, 2011 requesting the transfer, which the Commissioner granted on September 7, 2011.
Grimmett began working in Alex City on October 1, 2011, and he continues to work there. Alex
City is located approximately an hour and a half from Birmingham, and Grimmett testified that
Alex City is further to drive than the Donaldson facility. He has not experienced any incidents of
sexual or religious harassment at the Alex City facility, and he is happy working there, although
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the drive is farther from his home in Birmingham. He does not wish to be transferred back to St.
Clair or Donaldson, although those other facilities are closer to his home in Birmingham.
B. Additional Facts Regarding Retaliation
Grimmett testified that any write-ups or reprimands he received were not related to his
claims of sexual harassment. As for his job performance ratings, he received a 20/36 at both St.
Clair and Donaldson and received a 24/36 at the Alex City facility. He also acknowledged in his
deposition that his work hours have remained consistent with the various transfers, as have his
position and pay, so he has lost no pay as a result of the alleged harassment (doc. 19-3, at 217).
Although Grimmett requested the transfers away from St. Clair and Donaldson, he did so
get out from under supervisors that were allegedly sexually harassing him. He enjoys his current
work in Alex City, but that job is significantly farther from home than his positions at St. Clair
and Donaldson.
C. EEOC Charge
In a document with an EEOC department receipt date of February 12, 20112, Grimmett
filed an EEOC charge for discrimination based on sex, religion, and retaliation. In the narrative
paragraph of that charge, Grimmett states in relevant part as follows:
I am a male of Pentecostal religion.. . .From the time I was hired, I started being
subjected to sexual harassment by my supervisor. I reported it to the Warden []
but only started receiving unwarranted disciplinary actions for failing to acquiesce
to the sexual harassment. The environment became even more hostile in that I
was told that I could not pray or say the Lord’s name in the presence of my
supervisor. The supervisor made all manner of offensive remarks to me about her
sexual exploits. In October 2010, I was transferred temporarily from the facility I
was originally placed to another facility while an investigation was being
conducted. My supervisor at this facility was a friend of my former supervisor
and made sure I knew it. The hostile work environment continued at this with
him calling me offensive names such as pimp, my boy and others. I reported this
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conduct as well. I was told that I would be transferred in a couple of weeks to my
original location because of the treatment I was receiving at this facility. To date,
February 1, 2011, I have not been transferred.
(Doc. 1-1, at 1).
IV. DISCUSSION
In his Complaint, Grimmett asserts claims under Title VII for sexually hostile work
environment, religious discrimination, and retaliation after he complained of a sexually
hostile work environment. The court will address each claim separately.
A. Sexually Hostile Work Environment
Grimmett claims that the ADOC created a sexually hostile work environment at both
the St. Clair and Donalson facilities. That framework first requires a plaintiff to prove a
prima facie case of discrimination. To establish a claim for a sexual harassment/sexually
hostile work environment Grimmett must establish the following elements:
(1) that he [] belongs to a protected group; (2) that the employee has been
subject to unwelcome sexual harassment, such as sexual advances,
requests for sexual favors, and other conduct of a sexual nature; (3) that
the harassment must have been based on the sex of the employee; (4) that
the harassment was sufficiently severe or pervasive to alter the terms and
conditions of employment and create a discriminatorily abusive working
environment; and (5) a basis for holding the employer liable.
Mendoza v. Borden, Inc., 195 F.3d 1238, 1245 (11th Cir. 1999). The ADOC asserts that
Grimmett has failed to meet his prima facie case because he has not presented evidence
establishing the fourth and fifth elements listed above. The court FINDS that Grimmett has
established his prima facie case for the reasons stated below.
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The evidence presented establishes the first three elements of a sexually hostile work
environment prima facie case, and the ADOC does not argue otherwise in its brief. Rather, it
focuses on the fourth element, which generally presents the key issue and crucial analysis in most
sexual harassment cases: whether the harassment was sufficiently severe and pervasive to alter
the terms and conditions of employment.
The evidence presented shows a number of incidents of alleged sexual harassment: (1) the
overheard conversation at St. Clair and its reference to penises; (2) Mitchell’s almost daily
remark to Grimmett at St. Clair about “fire in the furnace”; (3) Mitchell’s single touching
incident at St. Clair; (4) Mitchell’s “Mmm mmm” remark to Grimmett at St. Clair; (4) Holt’s
repeated remarks at Donaldson to Grimmett that he was his “boy” and “sissy bitch” with
attendant rumors circulating around Donaldson that Grimmett was gay.
The court notes the fourth incident, which was not a single incident but on-going abuse
during Grimmett’s tenure, occurred at the Donaldson facility. The section of the ADOC’s brief
that discusses sexual harassment completely ignores the alleged abuse occurring at the
Donaldson facility and focuses entirely on the incidents at the St. Clair facility. The court finds
that this focus is misplaced, because alleged incidents of sexual harassment also occurred at the
Donaldson facility and because the ADOC was Grimmett’s employer at both facilities.
The genesis of this misplaced focus is perhaps Grimmett’s deposition testimony. In that
testimony, Grimmett clearly stated that his supervisor at Donaldson harassed him. He also
clearly stated that the harassment involved his supervisor “tormenting” him with remarks, among
others, about Grimmett being his “boy” which, in the prison context where they worked, had the
meaning of “gay lover.” So, Grimmett was very specific that the harassment was sexual in
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nature. However, in the deposition, Grimmett, who is pro se and who is not a lawyer,
characterized that harassment as “general harassment” not “sexual harassment.” But, given the
obvious sexual nature of the harassment, the pro se Plaintiff’s misuse and misunderstanding of
legal terms does not mean that counsel for the ADOC and this court can ignore those incidents
and take advantage of Grimmett’s ignorance of legal terms and the legal system. The court must,
at this summary judgment stage, view the facts in the light most favorable to Mr. Grimmett, as
non-movant, and while Mr. Grimmett’s lack of legal expertise renders him less than articulate,
the facts stated in his deposition testimony speak for themselves. The court will not and cannot
ignore them.
The court must determine whether the evidence presented – including the evidence of
alleged verbal sexual harassment at the Donaldson facility – establishes the fourth element as a
matter of law. In making such a determination, the court must use “common sense,” keeping in
mind the “social context, to distinguish between general office vulgarity and the conduct which a
reasonable person in the plaintiff’s position would find severely hostile or abusive.” Reeves v.
C.H. Robinson Worldwide, Inc., 594 F.3d 798, 811 (11th Cir. 2010) (en banc) (quotations
omitted). Similarly, the court acknowledges the Eleventh Circuit’s direction that “Title VII is not
a general civility code.” Cotton v. Cracker Barrel Old Country Store, Inc., 434 F.3d 1227, 1234
(11th Cir. 2006). Title VII does not provide a vehicle for employees to complain about “ordinary
workplace tribulations,” id., or for employees to air in court their personal feuds, McCollum v.
Bolger, 794 F.2d 602, 610 (11th Cir. 1986). Rather, it is designed to provide a vehicle to
complain about harassment or discriminatory abuse that is so severe that it changes the
workplace conditions.
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Further, as the Supreme Court of the United States pointed out in Ash v. Tyson Foods,
Inc., 546 U.S. 454, 456 (2006), when a court addresses allegedly abusive comments and attempts
to evaluate the severity of them, “[t]he speaker’s meaning may depend on various factors
including context, inflection, tone of voice, local custom, and historical usage” and the totality of
that information is not always available to a court at the summary judgment stage, where
evidence is confined to depositions, etc. The “severe or pervasive” requirement includes both
objective and subjective components, and thus, the harassing “behavior must result in both an
environment that a reasonable person would find hostile or abusive and an environment that the
victim subjectively perceives to be abusive.” Miller v. Kenworth of Dothan, Inc., 277 F.3d 1269,
1276 (11th Cir. 2002).
The court acknowledges that the instant case is a close one. The case does involve
alleged abusive sexual harassment at two different ADOC facilities by two different supervisors,
and the harassment was pervasive at both facilities, with at least the offensive verbal harassment
occurring repeatedly on an almost daily basis at both locations. However, it involves only one
touching incident, which occurred at the St. Clair facility. And, Grimmett did not report the
touching incident to the St. Clair facility Warden, as he reported other matters, saying he felt that
reporting was futile because he had made a prior report. Further, the management at the St. Clair
facility did acknowledge and address Grimmett’s complaints, performing a detailed investigation
of those complaints, moving Grimmett away from the supervisor who allegedly harassed him,
and filing an investigative report.
Grimmett’s allegations of sexual harassment at Donalson are more troubling. His
supervisor there, Holt, acknowledged his awareness of the problems at the first facility, making a
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point to discuss those problems with Grimmett and to point out Holt’s close relationship with the
prior supervisor whom Grimmett had accused of misconduct.
The court notes as well that Grimmett’s workplace is not an ordinary business; it is a
prison facility, and the prison context is important, particularly in light of the alleged repeated
statements of Holt’s harassing Grimmett at the Donaldson facility. Holt’s alleged conduct would
be annoying in any context but when the specific words he threw at Grimmett are placed in the
all-male maximum security prison context – referencing Holt’s sexual dominance over Grimmett
– added to the fact that Holt had supervisory control over Grimmett, the comments could morph
from offensive words into sexual threats and torment. Further, Grimmett was surrounded by
inmates who were placed in a maximum security prison for a reason. Because his ability to carry
out his work duties safely depended to some extent upon those inmates’ respect for him, Holt’s
treatment of Grimmett and the rumors circulating around the prison about Grimmett, which are
arguably related to that treatment, also carry safety implications that could also change the
conditions of Grimmett’s employment.1
The court uses the word “could” because many factors feed into a determination
regarding element four’s “severity” – factors that could change based on Holt’s demeanor, tone,
physical size, surroundings, character, background, sexual preferences, history of sexual activity
with co-employees, and further, the atmosphere of the prison, and the inmates’ reaction to the
sexual preferences of the prison employees, etc. These factors are not all clear from reading the
1
As the ADOC states in its brief, Grimmett’s claim – that Holt started the rumors he is
gay – based on what inmates and Carnathan told him is hearsay but could be admissible at trial
via testimony from the correct witness. However, regardless of whether Holt is responsible for
the rumors, the fact that these rumors were circulating at the prison arguably affects the severity
of Holt’s verbal harassment of him, in light of the content of that harassment.
18
evidence submitted to the court at this summary judgment stage: Grimmett’s deposition, a
Warden’s affidavit, an investigative report, wage reports, personnel evaluations, etc. However,
Grimmett testified that the way Holt treated him and the rumors circulating about Grimmett,
whether they came from Holt himself or were generated from Holt’s treatment of him, caused the
inmates to lose respect for him. Once again, the court must view these factors in the light most
favorable to Grimmett, and doing so raises genuine issues of material fact that must be left to a
jury to resolve.
The court must measure the severity of the alleged abuse by two standards: by a
reasonable person standing in Grimmett’s shoes and by Gimmett’s subjective standard. The
court finds that Grimmett meets the subjective standard of severity. Grimmett complained to
management at both facilities about the sexual harassment. Indeed, when he was at the
Donaldson facility, Grimmett subjectively felt that the conduct was severe enough for him to
request and welcome transfer to another facility, even if that transfer caused him to drive more
than an hour farther each day to and from work.
As to the objective severity determination, the court finds that it is fact-driven and that
genuine issues of material fact exist. Therefore, viewing the facts in the light most favorable to
Grimmett, the court FINDS that those facts establish the fourth element; the alleged abuse from
the Donaldson correctional facility was sufficiently severe or pervasive to alter the terms and
conditions of employment and create a discriminatorily abusive working environment.
The fifth element provides a means of holding the employer liable. In the instant case, as
discussed earlier, the court has determined that only the harassment at the Donaldson facility was
severe enough to establish the fourth element of his prima facie case. However, in an abundance
19
of caution, the court will address the fifth element and the basis of holding the employer liable
for the adverse employment actions at both facilities.
“The basis of an employer’s liability for [a] hostile environment ... depends on whether
the harasser is the victim’s supervisor or merely a coworker.” Huston v. Procter & Gamble
Paper Products Corp., 568 F.3d 100, 104 (3d Cir. 2009) (addressing an employer’s liability for a
sexually hostile work environment); see Lewis v. U.S. Dep’t of Labor Admin. Review Bd., 368 F.
App’x 20, 31 (11th Cir. 2010) (quoting this passage from the Huston decision). “An employer
‘is subject to vicarious liability to a victimized employee for an actionable hostile work
environment created by a supervisor with immediate (or successively higher) authority over the
employee.’” Miller v. Kenworth of Dothan, 277 F.3d 1269, 1278 (11th Cir. 2002) (quoting
Faragher v. City of Boca Raton, 524 U.S. 775, 807 (1998)). Therefore, when a supervisor takes
tangible employment action against the victim, the employer will be held strictly liable for the
hostile work environment. Id. Where, however, “an employee has established a claim for
vicarious liability but where no tangible employment action was taken, a defending employer
may raise [an Ellerth/Faragher] affirmative defense to liability or damages: ‘(a) that the
employer exercised reasonable care to prevent and correct promptly any ... harassing behavior,
and (b) that the plaintiff employee unreasonably failed to take advantage of any preventive or
corrective opportunities provided by the employer or to avoid harm otherwise.’” Miller, 277 F.3d
at 1278 (quoting Faragher, 277 F.3d at 807).
As these cases provide, the court must determine in the instant case whether Grimmett’s
supervisor(s) took a tangible employment action against Grimmett, and if one or both did, the
employer is strictly liable for the hostile work environment. The evidence presented to the court
20
indicates that the “harassing” supervisors themselves took no tangible employment action against
Grimmett. Rather, Grimmett claims to have received intangible adverse employment actions: he
receive an unwanted transfer from the St. Clair facility to the Donaldson facility that he did not
request or afterward embrace, and he received harassment from his supervisor at the Donaldson
facility. Neither Mitchell nor Holt fired him, demoted him, or docked his pay. Further, in his
deposition testimony, Grimmett acknowledges that any disciplinary action he received at these
facilities was unrelated to the sexual harassment. Finally, no evidence exists that the
management at the St. Clair or Donaldson facilities took a tangible adverse employment action
against Grimmett. Therefore, the ADOC is not strictly liable for the hostile work environment.
However, the absence of strict liability does not equate to the absence of employer
liability at all; Grimmett may establish employer liability by showing the existence of a hostile
work environment created by his supervisor’s intangible adverse employment action(s) as long as
the ADOC does not raise a successful Faragher defense. In attempting to raise such a defense,
the ADOC asserts that it exercised reasonable care in response to the complaints of harassment.
As to the transfer from St. Clair to Donaldson, the court agrees that the transfer appears to be an
effort to exercise reasonable care to correct the situation. The transfer occurred after a fairly
thorough investigation, involving taped interviews, resulted in a finding of no support for the
harassment allegations. While separating Grimmett from his St. Clair supervisor appears to be a
reasonable solution to the conflict between the two, given the investigation’s finding, disciplining
or removing the supervisor would be inappropriate. Rather, placing Grimmett in the same
position with the same pay under a male supervisor at another facility would appear to be
imminently reasonable and fair to both employees, with the negative factors being the increased
21
security level of the Donaldson prison and the close relationship between the two supervisors.
Grimmett has produced no evidence that he communicated with management before the transfer
to Donaldson that the security level of the new facility was undesirable or unacceptable, or that,
despite his complaints about Mitchell, he would prefer working under her rather than transfer to
the maximum security facility. The court finds that the ADOC has established a Faragher
defense as to the transfer of Grimmett from St. Clair to Donaldson.
Whether the ADOC exercised reasonable care after Grimmett’s complaints of sexual
harassment at the Donaldson facility is not as clear. The evidence presented unfortunately does
not include the investigative report from that facility, and the court finds that absence troubling.
The facts as presented provide a conclusory finding as a result of the investigation – that the
harassment complaint was unfounded – but little or no information about what the investigation
included and upon what the conclusion was based. According to Grimmett’s testimony, Warden
Hetzel advised him that his witness, Ms. Carnathan, supported his claims of harassment when the
Warden talked to her on the phone. Because Grimmett heard only Hetzel’s side of the
conversation and not Carnathan’s, Hetzel’s recounting of what Carnathan said is hearsay. In any
case, the Donaldson authorities – both Warden Hetzel and Warden Price, his successor – failed
to grant Grimmett’s requests for a transfer communicated in January of 2011 and repeated in
April of that year. The ADOC rather blithely notes that he received a transfer, as he requested,
but the evidence reflects that the Donaldson officials can take no credit for the transfer to Alex
City and cannot claim that the transfer was a result of any exercise of reasonable care to prevent
or correct the harassing behavior. Rather, when his request to transfer was ignored, then denied,
Grimmett eventually took matters into his own hands and engineered the transfer – effective ten
22
months after he requested it – by going outside the Donaldson authorities and applying himself
for the position at the Alex City facility.
In sum, the ADOC has presented general, non-specific evidence that the Donaldson
authorities initiated an investigation into Grimmett’s complaints, but it has provided no evidence
upon which the court can determine that the investigation and its conclusion represent an
exercise of reasonable care to prevent or correct harassing behavior. And, as noted above,
because the Donaldson authorities denied Grimmett’s request for a transfer, the ADOC cannot
point to the transfer he himself engineered as evidence of its exercise of reasonable care.
Therefore, the court finds that, as to the complaints at the Donaldson facility, the ADOC has not
established a Ellerth/Faragher defense, because it has not presented evidence that it exercised
reasonable care to prevent and correct harassing behavior, and it has not presented evidence that
Grimmett failed to take advantage of any preventive or corrective opportunities.
Therefore, the court FINDS that, viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to
Grimmett, the pro se Plaintiff, he has established his prima facie case of hostile work
environment based on sexual harassment by his supervisor at the Donaldson facility. The motion
for summary judgment is due to be DENIED as to this claim.
B. Hostile Work Environment based on Religious Discrimination
Grimmett also claims that the ADOC created a hostile work environment based on
religious harrassment. To establish such a claim, Grimmett must establish the following
elements: (1) that he belongs to a protected class; (2) that he has been subject to unwelcome
harassment; (3) that the harassment was based on his religion; (4) that the harassment was
sufficiently severe and pervasive to alter the terms of his employment and create an abusive
23
working environment; and (5) that a basis exists for holding the employer liable. See
MackMuhammad v. Cagle’s, Inc. 279 F. App’x 801, 804-05 (11th Cir. 2010) (applying the same
analytical framework to religion-based hostile work environment claims as the court applied to
claims of sexual or racial harassment); see also Johnson v. AutoZone, Inc., 768 F. Supp. 2d 1124,
1151-52 (N.D. Ala. 2011) (listing those elements).
In arguing that Grimmett has not his prima facie case on this claim, the ADOC once
again focuses on the fourth element – the severe or pervasive element – and asserts that
Grimmett has failed to present evidence to establish that element as a matter of law. As to the
claim for hostile work environment based on religious harassment, the court agrees.
In the instant case, the only evidence of religious harassment and discrimination
Grimmett has presented is that when he made reference to God with remarks such as “God
willing” or “thank God,” Mitchell made responses such as “God has nothing to do with this or
that.” Unlike the alleged sexual harassment, the alleged religious harassment occurred only
during the four months when Grimmett worked at the St. Clair facility and did not continue when
he moved to other facilities.
As a Pentacostal Christian, Mr. Grimmett found Mitchell’s remarks offensive, and they
were perhaps rude, insensitive, and uncivil. However, as discussed above, Title VII is not a
“general civility code” and does not attempt to regulate mere offensive utterances in the
workplace when those utterances are not so severe and pervasive that they alter the terms and
conditions of employment. Grimmett has provided no evidence that this particular religious
harassment, if it qualifies as harassment, altered the terms or conditions of his employment or
was otherwise anything but an ordinary workplace tribulation. Accordingly, the court FINDS
24
that the motion for summary judgment is due to be GRANTED as to the claim for hostile work
environment based on religious harassment.
C. Retaliation
Grimmett also claims that the ADOC retaliated against him for complaining of sexual
harassment. His EEOC charge checks “retaliation” and references the following actions after he
complained of sexual harassment: his transfer to another facility, and, noting his new
supervisor’s awareness of his complaints against his old supervisor, the new supervisor’s
subsequent sexual harassment of him, calling him “my boy,” “pimp,” etc.
To evaluate a plaintiff’s claim of retaliation brought pursuant to Title VII and § 1981
where no direct evidence of discriminatory retaliation exists, a court must follow the framework
set out in the decisions of McDonnell Douglas Corp v. Green, 411 U.S. 792, 802-03 (1973) and
Texas Department of Community Affairs v. Burdine, 450 U.S. 248, 252-53 (1981). That
framework first requires a plaintiff to prove a prima facie case of discrimination; he must
establish that “he engaged in statutorily protected activity, he suffered a materially adverse
action, and there was some causal relation between the two events.” Butler v. Ala. Dep’t. of
Transp., 536 F.3d 1209, 1213 (11th Cir. 2008) (citing Burlington N. & Santa Fe Ry. Co. v.
White, 548 U.S. 53, 68 (2006)). “The antiretaliation provision protects an individual not from all
retaliation, but from retaliation that produces an injury or harm. . . .[A] plaintiff must show that a
reasonable employee would have found the challenged action materially adverse, ‘which in this
context means it well might have dissuaded a reasonable worker from making or supporting a
charge of discrimination.’” Id. (quoting Rochon v. Gonzales, 438 F.3d 1211, 1219 (D.C. Cir.
2006)).
25
In its brief in the instant case, the ADOC acknowledges that Grimmett complained about
sexual harassment at both St. Clair and Donalson but claims that he cannot establish the last two
elements of his prima facie case because no adverse employment action occurred as a result of
Grimmett’s complaints. It asserts that transfer to the Donaldson facility was not adverse because
it was closer to Grimmett’s Birmingham home, and further, that the transfer occurred for a
legitimate, non-discriminatory reason: protecting Grimmett while his complaints were being
investigated. As to Holt’s harassment, it asserts that the harassment at Donaldson does not
qualify as an adverse employment action because Grimmett was not demoted, fired, and lost no
pay. The court will address these arguments.
Transfer to Donaldson
As to the transfer from St. Clair to Donaldson, the ADOC dismisses it as an adverse
employment action because the Donaldson facility was closer to his Birmingham home, because
Grimmett received the same position with the same pay at Donaldson, and because
management’s intention was to protect Grimmett during the investigation of his sexual
harassment complaint. Despite ADOC’s “closer to home” argument, the evidence reflects that
the two facilities were, for all practical purposes, approximately the same distance away from
Grimmett’s home. While the ADOC’s statement of its intention to protect Grimmett may be
true and could be raised as a legitimate non-discriminatory reason for the transfer, its intention –
however honorable – does not mean that the tranfer was not adverse to Grimmett. The fact
remains that Grimmett did not request the transfer, and he testified that he did not want it.
Further, the facilities were not identical: the Donaldson facility was a maximum security
prison, a higher level of security than at St. Clair with attendant safety and discipline worries
26
based on the different make-up of the prison population. Indeed, shortly after he arrived at the
Donaldson facility, Grimmett did make a formal request to transfer away from Donaldson and
into a work release facility that was on the opposite end of the security scale, supporting his
claim that he was unhappy with the transfer to Donaldson and that the security level of the
facility where he worked was important to him.
In addition, the ADOC insists that the transfer was not an adverse employment action
because Grimmett did not lose his job or his position and his pay rate remained constant.
However, to be materially adverse, an action need not be a dismissal, demotion, or docking of
pay. For example, the Supreme Court has stated that reassignment of duties so that an employee
spends more time performing arduous duties and less time performing easier ones could be an
adverse employment action. The key is not whether the employee suffers a monetary deficit or a
job or position loss but whether the action would have “dissuaded a reasonable worker from
making or supporting a charge of discrimination.” Burlington, 548 U.S. at 68.
In the instant case, a jury could find that a reasonable worker would prefer working in a
lower security prison than a maximum security prison and that the action of transferring
Grimmett to a maximum security prison as a result of a sexual harassment complaint when the
worker did not request it would have dissuaded a reasonable worker from making such a
complaint. Accordingly, the court finds that, viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to
Grimmett, the transfer falls within the definition of an adverse employment action. Further, the
court finds that a causal connection exists between the complaint and the transfer, and, indeed,
the ADOC does not deny that connection but only states that the intention behind the connection
27
was to protect, not to discriminate. Thus, the court FINDS that Grimmett has established his
prima facie case of retaliation as to the action of transferring Grimmett to the Donaldson facility.
Having established that case, the burden shifts to the ADOC, which must articulate a legitimate,
non-discriminatory reason for the alleged retaliatory act. See Goldsmith v. City of Atmore, 996
F.2d 1155, 1162-63 (11th Cir. 1993) (applying the McDonald Douglas framework to a Title VII
retaliation case). As stated previously, it has done so, citing the protection of Grimmett during
the pendency of the investigation into his complaints, which the court finds to be legitimate.
Because ADOC has articulated a non-discriminatory reason, the burden rests upon
Grimmett to show that the reason was a pretext for discrimination. See McDonnell Douglas, 411
U.S. at 802. As to the issue of pretext, the court “‘must evaluate whether the plaintiff has
demonstrated such weaknesses, implausibilities, inconsistencies, incoherencies, or contradictions
in the employer’s proffered legitimate reasons for its action that a reasonable factfinder could
find them unworthy of credence.’” Ash v. Tyson Foods, Inc., 664 F.3d 883, 892 (11th Cir. 2011)
(quoting Combs v. Plantation Patterns, 106 F.3d 1519, 1538 (11th Cir. 1997)).
Grimmett has not met his burden of establishing that this legitimate, non-discriminatory
reason was pretext for discrimination by presenting any evidence to the contrary. The transfer
was to the same position, for the same pay, and under a male supervisor, which would appear to
represent a reasonable response to protect Grimmett in light of his complaint. Grimmett has
presented no evidence, and, indeed, no evidence exists in the record, that Grimmett advised the
ADOC management prior to the transfer to Donaldson that he did not want the transfer, that he
did not want to work in a maximum security prison, or that he would prefer to continue working
at St. Clair rather than transfer to a maximum security prison. Further, he has not otherwise
28
provided evidence of inconsistencies, contradictions, weaknesses, or implausibilities in the
ADOC’s position or actions as to this particular transfer, which would show that it was pretext
for discrimination. Absent any evidence of pretext, the court further FINDS that summary
judgment is due to be GRANTED in favor of the ADOC as to the retaliation claim based on the
transfer from St. Clair to Donaldson.
Holt’s Harassment
A second adverse action is what the ADOC calls Grimmett’s “mistreatment” at the hands
of his supervisor Holt – constantly taunting him with terms such as “my boy” “sissy” and “bitch”
in a maximum security prison context. Although Holt was Grimmett’s supervisor at the
Donaldson facility, not at St. Clair where Grimmett complained of Mitchell’s sexual harassment,
Grimmett’s testimony establishes that prior to the commencement of this mistreatment, Holt
knew about Grimmett’s complaints regarding Mitchell; Holt had a close enough relationship with
Mitchell that Holt characterized her as his best and favorite steward, and he communicated to
Grimmett his displeasure about the complaints. While not a tangible employment action, Holt’s
sexual taunting of Grimmett in the maximum security prison is an action that a jury also could
have found would dissuade a reasonable worker from complaining of sexual harassment.
Accordingly, the court FINDS that Grimmett has established his prima facie case of
retaliation as to Holt’s mistreatment of him at the Donaldson facility. Because the ADOC
presents no legitimate, non-discriminatory reason for Holt’s mistreatment, Grimmett has no
burden of presenting evidence of pretext as to that action. Therefore, the motion for summary
judgment is due to be DENIED as to that claim of retaliation.
29
V. CONCLUSION
In sum, for the reasons stated above, the court FINDS as follows:
•
As to the claim for a sexually hostile work environment, the motion for summary
judgment is due to be DENIED; Grimmett has established his prima facie case of hostile
work environment based on sexual harassment by his supervisor at the Donaldson
facility.
•
As to the claim for hostile work environment based on religious harassment, the motion
for summary judgment is due to be GRANTED.
•
As to the claim for retaliation, the motion for summary judgment is due to be GRANTED
IN PART and DENIED IN PART; the court WILL GRANT the motion regarding
retaliation based on the action of transferring Grimmett to the Donaldson facility, and
WILL DENY the motion regarding retaliation based on Holt’s alleged mistreatment of
Grimmett.
The court will enter a simultaneous, consistent Order.
Dated this 25th day of June, 2013.
____________________________________
KARON OWEN BOWDRE
UNITED STATES DISTRICT JUDGE
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