Bailey v. USF Holland, Inc

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedMay 16, 2008
Docket07-5304
StatusPublished

This text of Bailey v. USF Holland, Inc (Bailey v. USF Holland, Inc) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bailey v. USF Holland, Inc, (6th Cir. 2008).

Opinion

RECOMMENDED FOR FULL-TEXT PUBLICATION Pursuant to Sixth Circuit Rule 206 File Name: 08a0184p.06

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT _________________

X Plaintiffs-Appellees, - BOBBY BAILEY and ROBERT SMITH, - - - No. 07-5304 v. , > USF HOLLAND, INC., - Defendant-Appellant. N Appeal from the United States District Court for the Middle District of Tennessee at Nashville. No. 05-00435—Aleta Arthur Trauger, District Judge. Argued: May 2, 2008 Decided and Filed: May 16, 2008 Before: COLE and GRIFFIN, Circuit Judges; FORESTER, Senior District Judge.* _________________ COUNSEL ARGUED: Toni Querry Farkas, FRANTZ WARD, Cleveland, Ohio, for Appellant. Stephen C. Crofford, PARKER & CROFFORD, Nashville, Tennessee, for Appellees. ON BRIEF: Toni Querry Farkas, Thomas Merritt Bumpass, Jr., Carl H. Gluek, FRANTZ WARD, Cleveland, Ohio, for Appellant. Stephen C. Crofford, Mary A. Parker, PARKER & CROFFORD, Nashville, Tennessee, for Appellees. Julie L. Gantz, EQUAL EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY COMMISSION, Washington, D.C., for Amicus Curiae. _________________ OPINION _________________ GRIFFIN, Circuit Judge. Plaintiffs Bobby Bailey and Robert Smith, both African-American, were dock workers and truck drivers for defendant USF Holland, Inc. After making numerous complaints over the course of several years regarding their coworkers’ habit of referring to them as “boy,” “hey boy,” or “damn it boy,” and subjecting them to other forms of racial harassment, plaintiffs sued defendant for violation of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the Tennessee Human Rights Act. Following a non-jury trial, the district court ruled for plaintiffs and awarded damages. We affirm.

* The Honorable Karl S. Forester, Senior United States District Judge for the Eastern District of Kentucky, sitting by designation.

1 No. 07-5304 Bailey et al. v. USF Holland, Inc. Page 2

I. Plaintiff Bailey began working for USF Holland in 1990. He started as a dock worker and eventually became a driver responsible for delivering freight throughout Nashville and the surrounding counties. Plaintiff Smith began work for defendant as a dock worker in 1997. Much of the harassment surrounds the persistent taunting of Bailey and Smith with the word “boy.” The Honorable Aleta A. Trauger explained the facts surrounding this harassment: In 2000, USF Holland opened a new, larger terminal, requiring the hiring of new workers, and it was in that new environment that Mr. Bailey’s coworkers started to call him “boy.” Mr. Bailey would tell those employees not to call him “boy,” but the employees would respond that they did not mean anything by the term and would continue to use it. Mr. Bailey was aware that the term was also being used to address Mr. Smith and another black employee, Jimmy Bolden. At some point in 2001, Mr. Bailey and Mr. Smith complained about being addressed as “boy” at the terminal to Tim Kircher, the operation manager, and Rich Powers, another supervisor. Mr. Bolden also complained to Mr. Kircher about the use of the term “nigger” in 2001. However, no action was taken as a result of those conversations. In 2002, Bailey complained to Tommy Barnes, the union job steward, that his coworkers continued to call him “boy.” Barnes told a manager, who then held a series of meetings about “roughhousing at the terminal,” but did not specifically mention the use of the word “boy.” As the district court explained, the situation became worse: In one incident, a white employee, Bubba Ridings, addressed Mr. Bailey as “baby boy.” When Mr. Bailey told Mr. Ridings that he preferred not to be called “boy,” Mr. Ridings next said that the only thing he could think of in response to Mr. Bailey’s request was “damn it boy.” In 2002, Mr. Bailey discovered a noose hanging in the dock area. He did not report the noose to any supervisors because he thought it was located such that the supervisors could see it. Several years later, Mr. Bailey discussed the noose with terminal manager Julie Jones and with investigator Brian Cave. Bailey continued to complain about being called “boy.” The district court found that these complaints inspired his coworkers to call him “boy” with greater frequency. Daniel Calvo, Bailey’s immediate supervisor, repeatedly addressed him as “boy” and “damn it boy,” and responded to Bailey’s complaints by telling him not to take things so personally. Bailey, understandably, came to believe that his coworkers were intentionally trying to bait him with the word. He believed that they would start conversations with him solely in order to “‘Bobby boy’ or ‘damn it boy’ him.” In several instances, immediately following Mr. Bailey’s negative reaction to being called “boy,” his coworkers responded with “damn it boy.” When Julie Jones became the terminal manager in 2004, Bailey, Smith, and another employee complained to her about the racially charged environment. She informed Steve Blubaugh, the Vice President of Human Resources. Blubaugh then conducted “sensitivity training” at the terminal and specifically addressed the use of the term “boy,” noting that it was a racial epithet used during slavery. During the sensitivity training, “several white employees voiced resistance to the idea that it was wrong to refer to African-American men as ‘hey boy’ or ‘damn it boy.’” One white employee, Fred Connor, told Jones that the word “boy” was a “southern thing” and that he would continue to use it regardless of company policy, informing her that because of his insistence on using the word, “you are probably going to have to fire me one day.” The behavior continued, and No. 07-5304 Bailey et al. v. USF Holland, Inc. Page 3

Bailey’s coworkers took what the district court described as “more dangerous, hostile actions” toward him: For instance, Mr. Bailey’s tow-motor was vandalized, resulting in substantial damage. The word “boy” appeared spray-painted on the trailer walls and trailer doors, and in the locker rooms; it appeared etched into restroom walls located in the terminal; and it was written in the dust that collected on the dock surfaces. The words “fuck boy” were written on a fuel pump. Although the defendant took action to remove the graffiti, it returned and persisted past the time that the plaintiffs filed this suit. In 2005, Gary Brown, a white employee, told Mr. Bailey that there were two kinds of boys – cowboys and colored boys. This caused Mr. Bailey and Mr. Brown to get into a heated argument and, shortly thereafter, a flyer appeared in the break room depicting a white person and a black person wrestling for a basketball. On the white player was written “Gary Brown” and on the black player, “The Boy.” During that time a different flyer appeared in the break room, again with a white person and black person playing basketball. In a cartoon bubble emanating from the white player’s mouth were the words, “Give it to me, boy.” In the calendar posted in the break room, Mr. Bailey discovered the word “boy” written in the square for [the Martin Luther King Jr. holiday]. The district court found that this conduct affected Bailey at work and at home; Bailey suffered emotional pain, exhaustion, loss of interest in his hobbies, and the stress adversely affected his relationships with his wife and his children. Plaintiff Smith was subjected to similar racial harassment involving the use of the word “boy.” For example, in 2001 as Smith was backing out of a trailer in his forklift, James Goodman, a fellow employee, blocked him and shouted, “[h]ey boy, what you doing, boy? Do you hear me, boy? Where you going, boy?” Afterwards, Smith told Goodman not to call him “boy.” Smith complained to Kircher, the operation manager, but Kircher took no action. Judge Trauger found that, as with Bailey, Smith also had to endure more heinous conduct: In another incident, in 2001, Ron Bruce, a white coworker, approached Mr.

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Bailey v. USF Holland, Inc, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bailey-v-usf-holland-inc-ca6-2008.