Andrea Gogel v. Kia Motors Manufacturing of Georgia, Inc.

904 F.3d 1226
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedSeptember 24, 2018
Docket16-16850
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 904 F.3d 1226 (Andrea Gogel v. Kia Motors Manufacturing of Georgia, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Andrea Gogel v. Kia Motors Manufacturing of Georgia, Inc., 904 F.3d 1226 (11th Cir. 2018).

Opinion

MARTIN, Circuit Judge:

Before she was fired in 2011, Andrea Gogel was the manager of the Team Relations Department of Kia Motors Manufacturing of Georgia, Inc., a subsidiary of the Korean Kia Motors Corporation. During her time at Kia, Ms. Gogel heard many complaints about how women and Americans were treated at the Korean-owned company. She experienced similar treatment herself and, in her view, had been denied a promotion because she is a woman and an American. Eventually, Ms. Gogel decided to file an EEOC charge about the discrimination she had suffered.

Soon, another Kia employee, an American woman named Diana Ledbetter, filed her own EEOC charge. After learning of *1229 Ms. Ledbetter's charge, Kia came to believe that Ms. Gogel had "encouraged or even solicited" Ms. Ledbetter to file her charge. Kia says it fired Ms. Gogel for that reason.

Ms. Gogel sued Kia for gender and national origin discrimination and retaliation under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 ("Title VII"), 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-2(a) & § 2000e-3(a), as well as race and alienage discrimination and retaliation under 42 U.S.C. § 1981 . The District Court granted summary judgment in favor of Kia, and Ms. Gogel appealed. After careful review, and with the benefit of oral argument, we reverse the District Court as to Ms. Gogel's retaliation claims under Title VII and § 1981 and otherwise affirm its ruling.

I. Background

In 2008, Kia hired Ms. Gogel as Team Relations Manager for its new plant in West Point, Georgia. 1 At that time, she reported to Randy Jackson, who was the Director of Human Resources and Administration. Like Ms. Gogel, the head of Kia's department of Human Resources, Robert Tyler, also reported to Mr. Jackson. There were Korean counterparts, called "coordinators," for each management level position. For most of Ms. Gogel's time at Kia, Justin Yoo and Kevin Kim were the Korean coordinators for Team Relations and Human Resources.

The "overall purpose" of the Team Relations department was to "support an environment of positive team relations." To that end, Ms. Gogel's department was charged with developing policies and standards concerning employee behavior. These policies included harassment policies and an EEOC policy. Team Relations also helped employees understand "the rules and guidelines of the workplace" by offering training and development to new employees as well as to Kia's suppliers. When Ms. Gogel started with Kia, one of the training programs she taught was about compliance with American employment law, particularly Title VII, for Korean expatriates employed at Kia.

Ms. Gogel's department also conducted investigations into policy violations, including attendance issues and allegations of harassment or discrimination. The exact process for these investigations depended on the seniority of the employees involved as well as the severity of the allegations. At the conclusion of an investigation, Ms. Gogel would provide Mr. Jackson with the relevant facts and sometimes a recommendation. The results of an investigation were reviewed by Kia's legal department and Mr. Jackson.

In the fall of 2008, Ms. Gogel received a complaint from Diana Ledbetter, a General Affairs Specialist, about an inappropriate relationship between Ledbetter's supervisor, Ms. Kisha Morris Tarver, and Kia's president, Byung Mo Ahn. Ms. Ledbetter asked to transfer to the Team Relations department because Ledbetter perceived that Ms. Morris was abusing her position without fear of reprisal in light of her relationship with President Ahn. When Ms. Gogel received Ms. Ledbetter's complaint, she approached Mr. Jackson for advice on how to appropriately handle the matter, given President Ahn's senior position and the potential risk the relationship posed to the company. Mr. Jackson told Ms. Gogel she could not investigate Ms. Ledbetter's complaint. Separately, Mr. Kim, one of the Korean coordinators for Ms. Gogel, asked her to investigate how *1230 Ms. Morris was treating other people and whether she falsified her time, but asked her to do so without investigating President Ahn. Mr. Kim indicated Ms. Gogel should keep her investigation "very secret" and not tell Mr. Jackson about it. Ms. Gogel started gathering the information he requested. But a few weeks later, Mr. Kim told her "to stop the investigation, [ ] not gather any more information, and destroy all information" she had collected thus far.

Ms. Ledbetter made other complaints about workplace conduct as well. For example, unlike her male colleagues, she was made to practice saying, "welcome Chairman," while holding flowers to practice greeting visiting male Korean executives. She was ordered to serve these executives wine and she was called a geisha. When higher level executives visited from Korea, Ms. Ledbetter was forced to fill in for the normal receptionist because that receptionist was not perceived to be pretty while Ms. Ledbetter was. From 2008 through 2010, Ms. Gogel and Ms. Ledbetter met several times to discuss these types of complaints.

In early 2009, Kia reorganized its departments to include "Head of Department" ("HOD") designations. Mr. Tyler was made HOD for his own department (Human Resources) as well as Ms. Gogel's department (Team Relations). Ms. Gogel was the only woman in a similar management role, and she was the only one of these managers not designated an HOD. Ms. Gogel complained to Mr. Jackson about not receiving the designation, particularly because all other department heads got it. Mr. Jackson offered varying explanations for not designating Ms. Gogel HOD. Sometimes he said the nondesignation was related to the "timing" of Team Relations being made its own department. But other times he claimed the designation of Mr. Tyler was "automatic."

At first, Ms. Gogel believed Mr. Jackson's explanation that "timing" was the reason she was not promoted. But Ms. Gogel later concluded she was not promoted because of gender discrimination and her investigation of Ms. Morris's relationship with President Ahn. As a result of various investigations, including the investigation into Ms. Ledbetter's complaint, Ms. Gogel had observed "some extreme cultural differences between the Korean culture and American culture" including with regard to "standard employment laws." Ms. Gogel also noticed Mr. Kim's attitude toward her negatively changed following her discontinued investigation into Ms. Morris. In October 2009, Ms. Gogel met with Mr. Jackson and Mr. Tyler and told them she felt she was treated differently about the award of an HOD designation because of her gender. She also expressed her view that there was "a gender issue within the company that impacts multiple people within the organization." In April 2010, Mr. Tyler was promoted to Senior Manager of Human Resources and Team Relations.

Throughout 2010, many American managers expressed concerns about treatment by Korean management.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Andrea Gogel v. KIA Motors Manufacturing of Georgia, Inc.
967 F.3d 1121 (Eleventh Circuit, 2020)
Fuller v. Koch Foods, Inc.
M.D. Alabama, 2019
Waller v. Waller
656 F. App'x 901 (Tenth Circuit, 2016)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
904 F.3d 1226, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/andrea-gogel-v-kia-motors-manufacturing-of-georgia-inc-ca11-2018.