Christina Olson v. Lowe's Home Centers, Inc.

130 F. App'x 380
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedMay 4, 2005
Docket04-12790; D.C. Docket 03-00147-CV-5-MCR
StatusUnpublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 130 F. App'x 380 (Christina Olson v. Lowe's Home Centers, 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
Christina Olson v. Lowe's Home Centers, Inc., 130 F. App'x 380 (11th Cir. 2005).

Opinions

HULL, Circuit Judge.

Christina Olson appeals from the district court’s grant of summary judgment for her employer, Lowe’s Home Centers, Inc. (“Lowe’s”), on her sexual-harassment and retaliation claims under Title VII and Florida state law. After review and oral argument, we reverse as to Olson’s sexual-harassment claim, but affirm as to Olson’s retaliation claim.

I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND

A. The Alleged Harassment

In March 1999, plaintiff Olson began working for Lowe’s as a desk clerk. In August 2001, Olson was promoted to head cashier. On March 2, 2002, Ron Senkle became the manager of Olson’s department. Senkle supervised all cashiers, including Olson.1

In April 2002, Senkle began making sexual comments to Olson. The comments started out slow, about once a week. They grew in frequency until they occurred once or twice every shift Olson worked with Senkle for approximately 2lh months.

Specifically, Senkle’s comments were: (1) stating Olson’s ass looked good in her blue jeans; (2) stating Olson had a headache because she must not have gotten any last night; (3) stating he knew how to get rid of Olson’s headache because he had the magic touch; (4) stating his magic wand could fix anything; (5) asking if Olson wanted him to call her husband and tell her husband to give her some sex; (6) asking if Olson wanted him to call her husband and give him some tips to ease her tension by giving her sex; and (7) telling Olson that she would not be such a bitch if her husband would give her sex. According to Olson, as time went on, the sexual comments “started getting more vulgar, more worse, more unacceptable.” Olson periodically told Senkle to stop making such comments and to leave her alone, but the comments continued.

Senkle’s physical contact with Olson involved one kissing and two rubbing incidents. The rubbing incidents occurred when Senkle was working behind Olson at the cash register. In the process of reaching for the register, Senkle would rub the front of his body against the back of Olson’s body.2 According to Olson, she could feel “the whole front of his body up against the back of mine.”

The kissing incident occurred on July 6, 2002, after Olson found a misplaced, important document that Senkle and Leo McNaron, an assistant manager, needed to tally the day’s receipts. Olson took the [383]*383document to the room in which Senkle and McNaron were present. McNaron asked for, and received permission from, Olson to give her an appreciative hug.

Olson then gave the document to McNaron. Afterwards, Senkle grabbed Olson’s right arm, pulled her towards him, grabbed her head, pulled it down towards him, and kissed Olson. Senkle then let go of Olson. Treating physicians determined that Olson suffered physical and psychological injuries from the kissing incident.3 Due to her injuries, Olson was put on light duty.

B. Olson’s Complaints

In her deposition, Olson devotes 20 pages to describing Senkle’s sexual comments and physical contact. Immediately after describing the sexual harassment, Olson testified that she informed Judy Hall, a department manager, about what Senkle was saying to her, as follows:

Question: Did you ever tell any member of management that you did not want [Senkle] to work with you because of the statements he was making to you?
Olson: Yes.
Question: Who did you tell?
Olson: Judy Hall
Question: And what position did Judy Hall have?
Olson: She was, at the time, if I recall, she was a department manager of millworks.
Question: Did you ask Judy Hall to tell anybody else?
Olson: ... Judy Hall informed me that she was going to tell Sandra Bell.
Question: And who was Sandra Bell?
Olson: Sandra Bell was a — she was in charge of three different departments. And I think she was an MOD.
Question: Why didn’t you tell Sandra Bell anything?
Olson: Because I trusted Judy, and she was friends with Sandy Bell, and she assured me that she would tell Sandy.
Question: Did you ever tell Judy not to report anything or tell anybody else about what you had told her?
Olson: No.4
Question: And how many times did you go to Judy Hall to complain about what Ron Senkle was saying to you or about you?
Olson: I can recall two incidents that I talked to Judy Hall about Ron Senkle.
Olson: There was an incident when I went to break, and she was in the back on break. And I was upset. And she asked me, you know, “Chris, what’s wrong?” And I said, ‘Well, I have to work with Ron. And there’s things that he’s saying that are, you know pretty out there.” Or I would tell ... her about how he had approached me or some things that he would say. She would say to me, ‘Well, I have to go to lunch with Sandy today. Let me talk to her, and I’ll get back to you.” Then there was an incident after I had said to her, that I seen [sic] her again, and she [384]*384asked me, “well, what did [Senkle] say to you today?” And then I would tell her something that he would say [sic]----
Question: Well, how many times did you go to Judy Hall with the intent to have Ms. Hall report your complaints about Ron Senkle?
Olson: I can recall twice.
Question: And the first time was when you were upset?
Olson: Yes:
Question: And the second time was when?
Olson: The second time is when I was on break and she was on break, and I ran into her back there, and she approached me saying, “So, what is [Senkle] doing today?” And I would tell her what either [Senkle] said to me or what comments that he made, or so on and so forth.
Question: And at that time did you ask her or tell her to report that to management?
Olson: No, she told me she was going to report it.
Question: Did you ask her to report it?
Olson: I did say to her that something needed to be done about [Senkle].

Hall herself acknowledged that what Olson was reporting was sexual harassment. In her deposition, Hall testified that, after her first meeting with Olson, she informed Olson “that if [Olson] told [Senkle] to stop and he continued to do it, that would be considered sexual harassment at that point.” Thus, in the light most favorable to Olson, the evidence shows that Olson reported Senkle’s comments to Hall, and Hall considered them sexual harassment.5

As explained later, Lowe’s policies provided that an employee could complain to any “member of management.” According to both Olson and Hall, Hall was an appropriate member of Lowe’s management to report incidents of sexual harassment.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
130 F. App'x 380, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/christina-olson-v-lowes-home-centers-inc-ca11-2005.