Buckner v. General Signal Technology Corp.

163 F. Supp. 2d 617, 2000 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 21302, 2000 WL 33422611
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. North Carolina
DecidedJune 13, 2000
Docket1:99CV116-C
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 163 F. Supp. 2d 617 (Buckner v. General Signal Technology Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Buckner v. General Signal Technology Corp., 163 F. Supp. 2d 617, 2000 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 21302, 2000 WL 33422611 (W.D.N.C. 2000).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OF DECISION

COGBURN, United States Magistrate Judge.

THIS MATTER is before the court pursuant to 28, United States Code, Sec *620 tion 636(c). Defendants have moved for summary judgment and supported their motion with a memorandum of law. In response, plaintiff has filed a timely memorandum in opposition, to which defendants filed a reply. On May 2, 2000, oral arguments were heard.

I. Background

Plaintiff asserts four causes of action — a Title VII action for sexual harassment against both defendants; a common-law claim for slander asserted against the individual defendant; a common-law claim for intentional infliction of emotional distress against both defendants; and a claim for discharge in retaliation for complaints of sexual harassment against the corporate defendant.

The corporate defendant manufactures refrigerators and freezers for laboratory use. While not their intended purpose, those units can also be used in the home. Plaintiff began working at the corporate defendant’s Asheville plant in 1987 in the wiring department. In 1990, she successfully bid for a position in the stockroom, where the individual defendant was her supervisor.

Plaintiff makes no claim in this action that the individual defendant used foul language, told inappropriate jokes, or made any sexual advance, either verbally or physically. Instead, plaintiff contends that the individual defendant made a series of statements over a number of years that were disparaging of women in the workplace or that he subjected women to vocational aptitude or skills tests to which he did not subject men. Specifically, she contends, as follows:

(1)In 1990, the individual defendant subjected plaintiff, but not the male applicants, to testing regarding the operation of a forklift.
(2) In 1990, the individual defendant, when responding to plaintiffs question regarding why it was taking so long to place her into the job, said, “A woman had no business [being] in the stockroom.”
(3) In 1994 or 1995, plaintiff was given the most difficult area of the stockroom — moving heavy compressors— which she accomplished with the use of a forklift and hand truck. (The individual defendant contends that plaintiffs assignment was the easiest, it allowed plaintiff time to run company errands outside the plant, and it was a sought-after position.)
(4) In 1994, the individual defendant issued a warning to plaintiff when she refused to cut a length of pipe when instructed to do so by a team leader. (Apparently, the individual defendant claimed it was his order that was disobeyed, when, in fact, it was an order of the team leader, who did not have authority. The warning was later reduced by the corporate defendant’s Human Resources Department.)
(5) In 1996, the favorable “errand duty” was taken away from plaintiff, which action she contends is more evidence of sex discrimination, because the errand duty was not taken away from male employees who preceded her until they had accidents. (The individual defendant contends that several employees told him that plaintiff was running personal errands on company time during the 1995 holiday season. When plaintiff took leave and another employee was assigned the errand task, the individual defendant observed that the task was accomplished quicker.)
(6) Sporadically, the individual defendant made statements that women were not qualified to work in the *621 stockroom and that he hoped women would not apply for those positions, and he made such statements every time a stockroom position was posted — August 1990, December 1994, February 1995, December 1996, and March 1997.
(7) The individual defendant made teasing comments about plaintiff being thin, with specific reference to her posterior. (Plaintiff admits, however, that she engaged in self-deprecating humor about her thinness.)

In her deposition, plaintiff states that the individual defendant could have been joking when he made the offending comments about women in the workplace and that she was joking when she made sporadic comments about “worthless men.” C. Buckner Depo., at 76, 214.

In 1997, plaintiff was allegedly terminated from her employment over the “freezer incident.” Rather than recite in detail all the facts relating to that $175 transaction, the court will summarize what purportedly occurred. As mentioned above, the corporate' defendant manufactures freezers and refrigerators for laboratory use. Occasionally, those units are not sold to laboratories due to cosmetic “dings and dents.” As a perk of working for the corporate defendant, employees are, from time to time, allowed to bid on those units, a process run by the Human Resources Department of the plant. Units that are not bid on may then be sold to any employee on a first-come, first-serve basis. Once the employee made payment, Human Resources would issue an “authorization” for removal of the unit from the plant. Without the “authorization,” the unit was not to leave the premises.

In July 1997, such a sale was conducted. Later that month, a few units, located in the shipping area of the plant, appeared to be left over from that sale. Some of plaintiffs friends wanted to purchase a unit if any were left over after the auction. Plaintiff inquired with Human Resources concerning one unit marked at $175 and was told it was available for sale. She called her friends, who came over that day with a check for $175 and a truck for transporting the unit. Plaintiff states that she carried the check from the shipping area to Human Resources, told the individual defendant what was going on, and displayed to him the check. When she presented the check to Human Resources, they refused to accept it because the vice president of manufacturing said that the unit had not been through the bidding process and other employees had expressed an interest in it.

Having been denied the right to purchase the unit, plaintiff returned to the shipping area with her friends’ check in hand. In the meantime, however, the individual defendant had assisted her friends in loading the unit into their truck, and her friends had driven away, all without the required “authorization” for removal. The individual defendant learned either that day or the next of the improper removal, and heated discussions were had between plaintiff and the individual defendant during the remainder of the week, including an accusation in a private conversation between the two of them that plaintiff had stolen the unit. Plaintiffs attempts at getting her “friends” to return the unit were unsuccessful. On Wednesday of that week, plaintiff was advised by the vice president of manufacturing that if she failed to have the unit returned, it would result in a reprimand. By Friday, when the unit had not been returned, the vice president of manufacturing fired plaintiff over the incident, citing (1) taking unfair advantage of an employee benefit and (2) insubordination in failing to bring the unit back when instructed to do so. Plaintiff *622

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163 F. Supp. 2d 617, 2000 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 21302, 2000 WL 33422611, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/buckner-v-general-signal-technology-corp-ncwd-2000.