Casey v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.

8 F. Supp. 2d 1330, 1998 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 6189, 1998 WL 307189
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Florida
DecidedMarch 14, 1998
Docket3:96-cv-00274
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 8 F. Supp. 2d 1330 (Casey v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Casey v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc., 8 F. Supp. 2d 1330, 1998 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 6189, 1998 WL 307189 (N.D. Fla. 1998).

Opinion

PARTIAL SUMMARY JUDGMENT

COLLIER, District Judge.

Pending before the Court is Defendant WAL-MART’s motion for summary judgment and documents in support thereof (docs.103-106, 120, 125). Plaintiffs timely filed a memorandum and evidentiary materials in opposition (docs.113-115, 126, 131). The Court has taken summary judgment under advisement (doc. 112) and is now prepared to rule on Defendant’s motion. For the reasons stated below, Defendant Wal-Mart’s motion for summary judgment is GRANTED in part and DENIED in part.

I. Statement Of The Case

A. Background

On March 15, 1990 Plaintiff Marie Casey (“Casey”) began working at Defendant Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. (“Wal-Mart”) (doc. 106, exh. A:6). At the Crestview Wal-Mart store (“Crestview”) Casey was employed as a cashier and trained for positions at the service desk, cash office, and layaway (id. at 8). Then in the summer of 1993, the Crestview store re-opened as a Wal-Mart Supercenter (id. at 9). At that time, Casey became the “Demo Coordinator” responsible for demonstration displays throughout the store (id. at 9-11). Her immediate supervisor was Jim Goodlett, the co-manager of the store (id. at 10; doc. 120, exh. B:ll).

*1333 Shortly before the re-opening of the Crest-view supercenter, Defendant Jerry Brooks (“Brooks”) transferred from another Wal-Mart store to work as the market manager of the meat department (doe. 106, exh. G:16-17). While Brooks was employed at Crest-view, Casey alleges that he made inappropriate sexual comments towards her and touched her on several occasions, including grabbing her thighs and hips as well as bumping her knees (id. at exh. A:ll, 24). Despite several allegedly harassing incidents occurring between the summer of 1993 and February 1994 (id. atexh. F:24), Casey refrained from reporting Brooks’ actions until January or February of 1994 after another employee had also reported Brooks for harassment (id. at exh. A:20-21, 34-36). At that time, she reported the incidents to Glenn Hosburgh, who was the store director (id. at 35).

In response to the complaints against Brooks, Tony Duell (the district manager) and Jody Cullifer (the district loss prevention supervisor) investigated and questioned individuals associated with the events (id. at exh. F:14-16). During the course of their investigation, Brooks admitted in an interview on February 17, 1994 that he had referred to Casey’s breasts as “headlights” (id. at exh. Frattachment 1; exh. G:41). He was then immediately terminated; the decision to fire being based primarily on the “headlight” comment (id. at exh. F:21 & attachments 1, 2).

After Brooks’ termination, Casey had no further contact with him at the Crestview store and continued on at the position of demo coordinator, (id. at exh. A:38). In October 1995, over eighteen months after his termination at Crestview, Brooks applied for a job at the Destín Wal-Mart superstore (id. at exh. G:17-18; doc. 120, exh. B:36). Jim Goodlett, who had himself transferred from Crestview, recommended Brooks for a meat cutter’s position at the Destín store (doc. 120, exh. B:37-38). Brooks was hired for the job, which was an hourly, non-managerial position (id. at 36). While at the Destín store (“Destín”), Brooks was promoted to a managerial position for about one week, but Tony Duell then demoted him back to his hourly position (id. at 38-39; doc. 113, Brooks Depo. at 26-27). Then in the fall of 1996, Duell terminated Brooks for falsifying his Destín job application, which stated that he had left Wal-Mart in 1994 for “personal” reasons (docs. 106, exh. G:18; 113, Brooks Depo. at 26-27; 120, exh. B:40). He has not been employed by Wal-Mart since his termination at Destín (doe. 106, exh. G:28-29).

Defendant Karl Katzenberger (“Katzen-berger”) was also employed at the Crestview store when it re-opened as a supercenter in 1993 (id. at exh. E:18). He was an area manager, in charge of the bakery and supervisory duties associated with the daily operations of the bakery area (id. at 18-19). Katzenberger held that position for approximately a year until he was switched over to the separate “hard lines” area where he also served as an area manager (id. at 21). 1 The switch to hard lines was considered a lateral move with no change in pay or promotional character (id.).

While Katzenberger was the bakery area manager, Casey alleges that he would frequently give her back rubs as well as grab her neck and touch her thighs and waist (id. at exh. A:38-40). She also stated that he had once rubbed up against her buttocks and made a sex-based comment to her on one other occasion (id. at 39-40, 60-61). Although she did not report any of these incidents immediately, Casey finally spoke to her husband about them, and the two of them reported it to Tony Duell, the store manager, in July of 1994 (id. at exhs. A:63-69; F:45). Within a few days of that meeting Casey *1334 again met with Duell, who offered to transfer her to a different area in the store, but she refused (id. at exh. A:86-87). In the course of investigating Casey’s complaint, Duell, along with Charles Keith, the district manager, spoke to various employees and concluded that Katzenberger had not made inappropriate sexual comments but did give back and shoulder rubs which were unwelcome by the female associates who received them (id. at exh. F:49, 53-54, 58). In late July Duell contacted Brian Hardin, the regional personnel manager, to inform him of the investigation and sought a recommended course of action to take with Katzenberger (id. at exh. D:28-29, 42). As a result of that conversation, Duell verbally “coached” Katzenberger and warned him that his actions were not welcome and should stop immediately (id. at exhs. D:29-30; F:65-66). Effective August 6, 1994, Katzenberger was then transferred to the hard lines area, which was completely separate from the bakery area where Casey still worked (id. at exhs. E:75-76, 81-82; F:attachment 4).

In July and September of 1994, the Wal-Mart general office issued two memoranda regarding the demo coordinator position at Wal-Mart stores (id. at exh. F:87-91). The memos basically directed that the demo coordinator position be eliminated and the responsibilities associated with that job be delegated to two existing area managers at each store (id.). When Casey’s demo coordinator position was eliminated at the Crestview store, she transferred to a new position as price verifier without any change in pay (id. at exhs. A:108; F:90). Casey still works at the Crestview store today (id. at exh. A:6). Katzenberger is also currently employed by Wal-Mart, but as an area manager at a different store (id. at 17-18).

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8 F. Supp. 2d 1330, 1998 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 6189, 1998 WL 307189, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/casey-v-wal-mart-stores-inc-flnd-1998.