Davis v. Team Electric

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedMarch 28, 2008
Docket05-35877
StatusPublished

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

Bluebook
Davis v. Team Electric, (9th Cir. 2008).

Opinion

FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT

CHRISTIE DAVIS,  No. 05-35877 Plaintiff-Appellant, D.C. No. v.  CV-01-01752-OMP/ TEAM ELECTRIC CO., JMS Defendant-Appellee.  OPINION

Appeal from the United States District Court for the District of Oregon Owen M. Panner, Senior Judge, Presiding

Argued and Submitted July 12, 2007—Portland, Oregon

Filed March 28, 2008

Before: Alfred T. Goodwin, Stephen Reinhardt, and Milan D. Smith, Jr., Circuit Judges.

Opinion by Judge Reinhardt

3169 DAVIS v. TEAM ELECTRIC CO. 3173

COUNSEL

Paul B. Eaglin, Eaglin Law Office, Fairbanks, Alaska, for the appellant.

Peter R. Chamberlain and Pamela J. Stendahl, Bodyfelt Mount Stroup & Chamberlain LLP, Portland, Oregon, for the appellee.

OPINION

REINHARDT, Circuit Judge:

In this sexual discrimination action under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 42 U.S.C. § 2000e et seq., electri- cian Christie Davis contends that her former employer, Team Electric Company, treated her worse than the male employees at a work site that had no other women until she contacted the state civil rights agency; retaliated against her for filing a dis- crimination complaint with the agency; and failed to prevent her supervisors from creating and maintaining a hostile work environment. The district court granted Team Electric’s motion for summary judgment on all claims. We reverse.

I. Background

In early May 2000, Team Electric hired Christie Davis as a journeyman electrician. On October 19, 2000, Team Electric assigned her to a project at the Clackamas County High School. At the time, she was apparently the only female elec- trician on the site. 3174 DAVIS v. TEAM ELECTRIC CO. Lyle Loughary was Davis’s project foreman for the first few weeks of the assignment. On November 7, Davis told Loughary that she was experiencing neck pain from doing ceiling work for two weeks. Loughary allegedly replied that he would allow her to work in the electrical room with Bill Burkitt, and stated that he would transfer her because Burkitt “needs a girlfriend.” Davis also alleges that Loughary repeat- edly referred to his wife as “astrobitch.”

On November 15, Davis wrote in her journal that “[Loug- hary]. . . laid me out on tasks leaving info out and short on materials and sometimes tools,” and that the foreman told her “repeatedly NOT to go in the trailer,” where meetings and breaks were held. In her deposition, Davis said:

I wasn’t included at first on meetings they would have. Who knows what they were about because I wasn’t included. I complained about it and they started including me. But they still had their little personal meetings which I didn’t really care, other than I felt left out. . . . They would . . . get donuts for the guys . . . . [I heard someone say] “Well, [Loughary] said the donuts are for the guys,” in rep- rimand to Bill Walsh offering me one . . . .

Kevin Behrens, the site’s project superintendent, asserted in an affidavit that if the work discussed in a field meeting did not involve a certain employee, “that employee [was] not expected or asked to attend the meeting.” Similarly, project foreman Bill Walsh stated that “[i]f Davis was not present at a meeting, it was because the meeting had nothing to do with her area of work,” and that “[a]t no time was Davis excluded from a meeting simply to exclude her.”

Davis did not initially receive a radio, making it difficult to communicate with co-workers because, she alleges, she was “always put in another area from everybody.” Team Electric responds that there were a limited number of radios, assigned DAVIS v. TEAM ELECTRIC CO. 3175 as needed, and that she received a radio after complaining. Davis also alleges that she would sometimes fail to receive any radio response from supervisors, and that co-workers talked to her over the radio in a demeaning manner. Walsh and Behrens claim that they were not aware of demeaning talk.

Davis repeatedly expressed frustration over being assigned a disproportionate number of jobs that entailed working with Monokote, a hazardous material sprayed over metal and wood. She complained to Walsh about the physical effects of her exposure to Monokote, and he responded that she would lose her job for being paranoid. When she commented to her supervisor, Dave Davis, that it was unfair that she was assigned all the Monokote jobs, he allegedly replied, “[w]e don’t mind if females are working as long as they don’t com- plain.”1

Team Electric asserts that Davis never had to do the jobs that were even more dangerous than the Monokote assign- ments, that all employees had to work in hazardous areas, and that most of the time that she worked in such areas she did so with a male co-worker. It also alleges that on one occasion, when Davis asked not to work with Monokote in a new assignment, she was assigned to a different wing of the build- ing.

In mid-January 2001, Davis told Walsh that she wanted to pursue a long-term project, such as installing the fire alarm. Walsh replied that another employee might be the “natural choice” for the alarm because he was already pulling cable. Two days later, Loughary asked Davis if she would like a “change of pace” after doing ceiling work, and offered to move her into the kitchen area. 1 These were the words Davis reported in her deposition. In her journal, Davis wrote that Dave Davis said, “the guys don’t mind having a girl working with them if they don’t complain.” 3176 DAVIS v. TEAM ELECTRIC CO. At the end of January, Loughary allegedly reprimanded Davis several times for trying to enter the trailer, telling her not to bother Behrens with work issues because it could “make [him] mad.” The next day, Walsh allegedly pulled her aside and told her that he “felt uncomfortable” around her. Davis allegedly replied that she felt uncomfortable around people that made her feel “not welcome (like I shouldn’t be there),” but that she was “getting over it.” Walsh then told her about potential jobs on other sites, and she replied that she was interested but would have to know where they were— Davis was limited in how far she could travel because she had to take her child to daycare in the mornings.2 In the same con- versation, Walsh allegedly said “this is a man’s working world out here, you know.”

In mid-March, Davis worked in areas that did not yet have Monokote installed. On March 15, Dave Davis told her that she had “missed a meeting with all of the guys.” On March 22, she went into the trailer and noticed that “Burkitt was get- ting job info from [Behrens],” even though Loughary had told her not to go into the trailer and talk to Behrens.

On March 23, Davis told Walsh that she felt isolated and that it seemed she was assigned to a disproportionate number of hazardous jobs, particularly assignments working with Monokote. On April 18, she told Walsh that she was fatigued from “being on the lifts all the time” and that “it was hard working alone all the time.”

On April 19, Behrens told Davis that if she didn’t like the work she should “get out of the trade.” The next day, she left a message on Behrens’s voicemail telling him that she could not make it to work because she “needed to seek counseling regarding the . . . incident.” She wrote in her journal that she 2 At one point, the male electricians voted to start their shift at 6am. Davis was given permission to arrive at 7am so that she could take care of her children. DAVIS v. TEAM ELECTRIC CO. 3177 “can’t talk to him because every time I try . . . he blows up at me.”

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Davis v. Team Electric, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davis-v-team-electric-ca9-2008.