OPALA, Justice.
The United States District Court for the Western District of Oklahoma [certifying court] certified the following questions pursuant to the Uniform Certification of Questions of Law Act, 20 O.S.1991 §§ 1601
et seq.:
1. Does a cause of action for sexual harassment in the form of hostile work environment exist in Oklahoma when an employer has fewer than 15 employees?
2. Does a cause of action exist for sexual battery in the workplace?
3. If the answer to question two is “Yes,” must Plaintiff show that Defendant knew the touchings were unwanted as an essential element of the claim?
4. Does the public policy reflected in the Oklahoma Anti-Discrimination Act provide an exception to Oklahoma’s terminable-at-will employment doctrine that permits a cause of action for retaliatory termination based on the refusal to condone sexual touching when the employer has fewer that 15 employees?
5.If the answer to question 5 [sic 4] is ‘Tes,” does the doctrine of after-acquired evidence of employee misconduct bar all relief in an action for retaliatory termination?
As we understand the
first
question, it asks whether a
common-law
action for wrongful discharge in culmination
of
work-related (or on-the-job) sexual harassment would lie against an
employer
with fewer than fifteen employees. By the
second
question, our attention is invited to whether Oklahoma recognizes a
private
cause of action for “sexual battery”.
The first
and
fourth
certified questions are answered in the negative.
In
response to the
second
question, we declare that Renee Brown’s [Brown or plaintiff] claim would be actionable as a common-law tort of assault and battery. We hence need not pause to consider whether the provisions of 21 O.S.1991 § 1123(B)
afford the basis for a tort claim. Our answers to the
second
and
fourth
questions make a response to the
third
and fifth
queries unnecessary.
I
THE ANATOMY OF THE FEDERAL-COURT LITIGATION
Brown was employed as a paralegal by Jon R. Ford Attorney, Inc. [Firm], presumably a professional corporation, from March 5, 1992 until July 16, 1992. During this period the Firm employed a maximum of
five
persons, including both Brown and Jon R. Ford [Ford] — the latter its sole shareholder. The plaintiff complains that dining her employ
ment Ford, without her consent, “sexually touched” her on several occasions. She eventually confronted him and requested that he discontinue the advances — which he did. Brown asserts that her rejection of his sexual advances motivated certain employment decisions that changed her earlier work require
ments
— ie., created a hostile work environment — which ultimately led to her dismissal by the Firm.
Brown brought suit against the Firm and Ford [defendants] for, among other things, sexual harassment, wrongful termination and “sexual battery”. After denying the defendants’ quest for summary judgment, the federal court certified the questions now before us.
II
THE NATURE OF THIS COURT’S FUNCTION WHEN ANSWERING QUESTIONS FROM A FEDERAL COURT
While the actionability of state-law claims identified in the submitted questions may be tested when answering the questions posed, it is not this court’s province to intrude (by responses to be given) upon the federal court’s decision-making process. Because
the case
is
not
before us
for decision,
we refrain, as we must, from (a) applying the declared state-law responses to the facts elicited or to be elicited in the federal-court litigation and (b) passing upon the effect of federal procedure on the issues, facts and
proof
in the case (whether made by evidence at trial or by acceptable probative substitutes called “evidentiary materials” for use in the summary process of adjudication).
The task of analyzing the impact of today’s answers must be and hence is deferred to the certifying court.
Ill
A STATE-LAW CLAIM FOR WRONGFUL DISCHARGE IN CULMINATION OF WORK-RELATED SEXUAL HARASSMENT, WHETHER IT BE RESTED ON STATUTE
OR COMMON LAW, CANNOT BE PRESSED AGAINST AN
EMPLOYER
WITH FEWER THAN FIFTEEN EMPLOYEES
Brown’s argument would have us conclude that the legislature’s refusal to extend the sexual harassment remedy to persons engaged in a workplace of less than fifteen employees is constitutionally infirm when measured by the equal protection standards.
Under the U.S. Const, amend. XIV, § 1,
if legislative classifications are neither violative of a constitutional or fundamental right
nor based upon a
suspect classifica
tion
— i.e., race,
gender,
illegitimacy
or alienage,
they must be deemed presumptively valid so long as they are found to be rationally related to legitimate state interests.
A legislature is vested with wide discretion in passing laws which have the inevitable effect of treating some people differently from others.
These principles, which accord with federal and Oklahoma fundamental law and with this State’s extant jurisprudence, recognize the power of the legislature to classify people for disparate
substantive-law
treatment.
In enacting 25 O.S.1991 §§ 1101
et seq.,
Oklahoma’s
Anti-Discrimination Act,
the legislature doubtless sought to avoid imposing upon
small shops
the potentially disastrous expense of defending against a state-law claim for workplace discrimination, whether based upon offending sexual conduct or on other grounds. We do
not
find this
legislatively declared objective
offensive to the Fourteenth Amendment’s equal protection clause, to our own fundamental law, or to extant State jurisprudence. Neither private employment
nor freedom from sexual harassment within the workplace environment
Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI
OPALA, Justice.
The United States District Court for the Western District of Oklahoma [certifying court] certified the following questions pursuant to the Uniform Certification of Questions of Law Act, 20 O.S.1991 §§ 1601
et seq.:
1. Does a cause of action for sexual harassment in the form of hostile work environment exist in Oklahoma when an employer has fewer than 15 employees?
2. Does a cause of action exist for sexual battery in the workplace?
3. If the answer to question two is “Yes,” must Plaintiff show that Defendant knew the touchings were unwanted as an essential element of the claim?
4. Does the public policy reflected in the Oklahoma Anti-Discrimination Act provide an exception to Oklahoma’s terminable-at-will employment doctrine that permits a cause of action for retaliatory termination based on the refusal to condone sexual touching when the employer has fewer that 15 employees?
5.If the answer to question 5 [sic 4] is ‘Tes,” does the doctrine of after-acquired evidence of employee misconduct bar all relief in an action for retaliatory termination?
As we understand the
first
question, it asks whether a
common-law
action for wrongful discharge in culmination
of
work-related (or on-the-job) sexual harassment would lie against an
employer
with fewer than fifteen employees. By the
second
question, our attention is invited to whether Oklahoma recognizes a
private
cause of action for “sexual battery”.
The first
and
fourth
certified questions are answered in the negative.
In
response to the
second
question, we declare that Renee Brown’s [Brown or plaintiff] claim would be actionable as a common-law tort of assault and battery. We hence need not pause to consider whether the provisions of 21 O.S.1991 § 1123(B)
afford the basis for a tort claim. Our answers to the
second
and
fourth
questions make a response to the
third
and fifth
queries unnecessary.
I
THE ANATOMY OF THE FEDERAL-COURT LITIGATION
Brown was employed as a paralegal by Jon R. Ford Attorney, Inc. [Firm], presumably a professional corporation, from March 5, 1992 until July 16, 1992. During this period the Firm employed a maximum of
five
persons, including both Brown and Jon R. Ford [Ford] — the latter its sole shareholder. The plaintiff complains that dining her employ
ment Ford, without her consent, “sexually touched” her on several occasions. She eventually confronted him and requested that he discontinue the advances — which he did. Brown asserts that her rejection of his sexual advances motivated certain employment decisions that changed her earlier work require
ments
— ie., created a hostile work environment — which ultimately led to her dismissal by the Firm.
Brown brought suit against the Firm and Ford [defendants] for, among other things, sexual harassment, wrongful termination and “sexual battery”. After denying the defendants’ quest for summary judgment, the federal court certified the questions now before us.
II
THE NATURE OF THIS COURT’S FUNCTION WHEN ANSWERING QUESTIONS FROM A FEDERAL COURT
While the actionability of state-law claims identified in the submitted questions may be tested when answering the questions posed, it is not this court’s province to intrude (by responses to be given) upon the federal court’s decision-making process. Because
the case
is
not
before us
for decision,
we refrain, as we must, from (a) applying the declared state-law responses to the facts elicited or to be elicited in the federal-court litigation and (b) passing upon the effect of federal procedure on the issues, facts and
proof
in the case (whether made by evidence at trial or by acceptable probative substitutes called “evidentiary materials” for use in the summary process of adjudication).
The task of analyzing the impact of today’s answers must be and hence is deferred to the certifying court.
Ill
A STATE-LAW CLAIM FOR WRONGFUL DISCHARGE IN CULMINATION OF WORK-RELATED SEXUAL HARASSMENT, WHETHER IT BE RESTED ON STATUTE
OR COMMON LAW, CANNOT BE PRESSED AGAINST AN
EMPLOYER
WITH FEWER THAN FIFTEEN EMPLOYEES
Brown’s argument would have us conclude that the legislature’s refusal to extend the sexual harassment remedy to persons engaged in a workplace of less than fifteen employees is constitutionally infirm when measured by the equal protection standards.
Under the U.S. Const, amend. XIV, § 1,
if legislative classifications are neither violative of a constitutional or fundamental right
nor based upon a
suspect classifica
tion
— i.e., race,
gender,
illegitimacy
or alienage,
they must be deemed presumptively valid so long as they are found to be rationally related to legitimate state interests.
A legislature is vested with wide discretion in passing laws which have the inevitable effect of treating some people differently from others.
These principles, which accord with federal and Oklahoma fundamental law and with this State’s extant jurisprudence, recognize the power of the legislature to classify people for disparate
substantive-law
treatment.
In enacting 25 O.S.1991 §§ 1101
et seq.,
Oklahoma’s
Anti-Discrimination Act,
the legislature doubtless sought to avoid imposing upon
small shops
the potentially disastrous expense of defending against a state-law claim for workplace discrimination, whether based upon offending sexual conduct or on other grounds. We do
not
find this
legislatively declared objective
offensive to the Fourteenth Amendment’s equal protection clause, to our own fundamental law, or to extant State jurisprudence. Neither private employment
nor freedom from sexual harassment within the workplace environment
is a fundamental right which
must be surrounded
by the shield of state law. The legislative purpose in enacting 25 O.S.1991 § 1302
bears a rational relationship to a permissible state objective and the challenged statute is
gender neutral.
In short, only
where the employer has fifteen or more employees
does the enactment under consideration cover offending sexual conduct in the workplace,
regardless
of the actor’s or the victim’s gender.
A
THE STATUTORY CLAIM
Work-related sexual discrimination is remediable
against an
employer
in an administrative proceeding brought
under the provisions of
25 O.S.1991 §§ 1101
et seq.
[Oklahoma’s Anti-Discrimination Act].
The cited act defines an
employer
as a legal entity having
fifteen or more
employees.
The plaintiff may not successfully pierce this Act’s validity by attacking
the statutorily set numerical minimum as offensive to Okl. Const, art. 5, § 46.
The invoked constitutional provision interdicts only impermissible procedural
disparateness.
It does not strike at the legislative power to classify persons or things for dissimilar
substantive-law
treatment.
Since Brown’s sexual harassment claim does
not
fall within the statute’s criteria for
actionability
— her
workplace having less than fifteen
employees— she is not shielded by any legislatively articulated public policy protection. We need
not
speculate
today
on whether a discharge in culmination of work-related sexual harassment created by a hostile work environment
might be remediable, at common law, under the rubric of a public policy breach within the meaning of this court’s pronouncement in
Burk v. K-Mart
Corporation.
B
THE COMMON-LAW CLAIM
As we understand
the fourth
question, it calls upon us to answer the following:
Is a discharge in culmination of (or connection with) work-related or on-the-job sexual harassment in breach of public policy and hence
actionable
under the Burk
exception?
The plaintiff presses us for a sweeping pronouncement which would hold that because the workplace discrimination provisions of Oklahoma’s Anti-Discrimination Act declare an across-the-board public policy exception to the at-will employment doctrine,
her termination should be deemed actionable against the Firm as a common-law tort.
The body of our common law, which serves to
supplement
the corpus of statutory enactments, is powerless to
abrogate
the latter, either in whole or
in part.
Validly expressed legislative will must
always control
over contrary notions of the unwritten law.
When in
pari materia, statutory law
and the precepts of
either preexisting or after-declared
common law are to be construed together as one consistent and harmonious whole. Once an interaction of the two sources has been measured by these principles, it is clear that even if Oklahoma’s common law did recognize a discharge in culmination of work-related (or on-the-job) sexual harassment
as a
Burk
tort — a question which need not be answered today— Brown’s common-law claim would not be actionable as a discharge in breach of public policy because her employer, who engaged
fewer than fifteen employees,
is outside the Act’s purview.
As stated earlier in this opinion, we will not pause to consider today whether the
Burk
exception may generally be invoked to press a claim for wrongful discharge in culmination of work-related (or on-the-job) sexual harassment by “hostile work environment”
against an employer who is subject to statutory anti-discrimination remedies.
IV
SINCE OKLAHOMA’S COMMON LAW AFFORDS BROWN A REMEDY UNDER THE GENERAL RUBRIC OF ASSAULT AND BATTERY,
IT IS NOT NECESSARY TO REACH THE ISSUE WHETHER A PRIVATE TORT MAY BE RESTED UPON VIOLATION OF A CRIMINAL STATUTE
The tort of assault and battery need not be predicated on, or implied in, a criminal statute
[e.g.,
sexual battery — 21 O.S.1991 § 1123(B)
]. It enjoys an independent existence as a common-law cause of
action
ex
delicto
(regardless of the victim’s gender and of the motivation for the offensive conduct). It affords the plaintiff a tort claim against Ford, as the alleged actor, but not necessarily
qua
employer. Brown’s common-law tort claim may be pressed regardless of her status as an employee of the Firm and her gender is entirely immaterial. The delict's sexual aspects, which do not constitute the gravamen of harm remediable by the civil action of assault or battery, are merely
evidentiary and explanatory
of the actor’s offending conduct.
For Brown to state an assault or battery cause of action
against her employer
— the Firm — the tort must be shown to have occurred in the course of Ford’s employment and the evidence must meet the standards, recently reiterated in
Rodebush v. Oklahoma Nursing Homes, Ltd.,
which control the employer’s tort-related responde-at superior liability. If the employee’s offending conduct may be viewed as
willful,
an employer
cannot be
held
vicariously liable
unless its employee’s act is found to have been “incidental to and in furtherance of’ its business.
y
SUMMARY
Our answers require that the
liability posture
of each of the two defendants in the
case
— the
Firm
and
Ford
— be considered separately. A
common-law
claim against an employee/actor, who sexually intrudes upon a co-employee’s freedom from offensive bodily contact and then discharges her (as employer’s agent), is to be distinguished from the
statutory
administrative remedy for on-the-job discrimination available
solely
against the actor’s employer.
A
statutory
workplace discrimination claim for sexual harassment is cognizable
only
against those who engage fifteen or more employees.
Because the common-law tort of assault and battery affords a
complete
remedy (with a full recovery range) for
wrongful
intrusions by sexual advances, we need not address, today whether a criminal statute [21 O.S.1991 § 1123(B)],
pressed by Brown as a basis for her private tort action, could be invoked for civil vindication of “sexual battery”. It is sufficient to say that ample redress is available to Brown through the ancient common-law tort of assault and battery. The
vicarious
tort liability of the actor’s employer is controlled by the teachings recently restated in
Rodebush.
CERTIFIED QUESTIONS ANSWERED.
HODGES, LAVENDER, HARGRAVE and SUMMERS, JJ., concur.
ALMA WILSON, C.J., KAUGER, V.C.J., and SIMMS and WATT, JJ., dissent.