Drouillard v. Sprint/United Mgmt. Co.

375 F. Supp. 3d 245
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. New York
DecidedMarch 22, 2019
Docket2:16-cv-02997 (ADS)(ARL)
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 375 F. Supp. 3d 245 (Drouillard v. Sprint/United Mgmt. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Drouillard v. Sprint/United Mgmt. Co., 375 F. Supp. 3d 245 (E.D.N.Y. 2019).

Opinion

A. ELKILANY'S CONDUCT.

Elkilany called the Plaintiff a "nigger" on three occasions, and repeatedly used the word in her presence. One evening in April 2015, the Plaintiff and Elkilany were performing nightly closing procedures at Bay Shore. When the Plaintiff asked Elkilany to put away accessories, he said to her either "listen my n word," or "[t]his 'N word' is always on my case about something." Thereafter, in late April or early May 2015, Elkilany again said "this 'N word' is always on my case." And, on May 9, 2015, the following incident occurred while the Plaintiff was sitting at a desk in the back of the breakroom at work:

[Elkilany] came up next to me, and when he came next to me, he was too close so I asked him to step back. And he refused to move back. I was literally cornered on the desk because I couldn't move unless he moved away from me. And when I asked him to move, he wouldn't move. And then finally I extended my arm to move out and when I did, he said, "Oh, you just hit my nuts, now you need to massage it." And I asked him, "Please don't speak to me in that language. And please don't talk to me that way." And I go to step away, and he's like, "Oh, you're not going to massage my nut?" And I said, "Stop, Ebraheem, stop." Then he turned around and said, "Oh, this nigger again."

Although the Plaintiff testified that Elkilany only directly called her that slur on three occasions, she also testified that Ekilanly "repeatedly would use the word" in her presence and that he went about saying it like it "was just a regular, everyday word." Many of the times that he said the word, Ekilanly looked at the Plaintiff, as if he was trying to taunt her by directing it at her. For instance, Elkilany played a song at work that repeated the slur every other word, during which Elkilany would sing along and emphasize the slur while looking at the Plaintiff.

Other coworkers of the Plaintiff testified that Elkilany "very often" referred to African-Americans, including customers, as "niggers." One coworker, Christian Pineda ("Pineda") described the word as "just part of his vocabulary" and that he used it daily. Another coworker, Tiffany Pharr ("Pharr"), heard Elkilany use the slur at least 10-to-12 times and testified that he was "constantly saying it." Shaukat Alam ("Alam"), also a coworker of the Plaintiff, heard Elkilany say the word on a regular basis.

According to these coworkers, Elkilany specifically called the Plaintiff the epithet. Pineda heard Elkilany direct the word at *253the Plaintiff on two occasions, including saying the Plaintiff's name and then calling her a "nigger." Pineda further testified that he told the Plaintiff that Elkilany called her the epithet. Pharr witnessed Elkilany say to the Plaintiff: "[y]ou're acting like a nigger." Pharr also explained that Elkilany used the word in a more aggressive context when he directed it at the Plaintiff. Asad Hamdani ("Hamdandi") testified that he heard Elkilany call the Plaintiff a "nigger" on one occasion and a "nigga" more than a handful of times. Hamdani also observed Elkilany ask the Plaintiff: "Do you have to be such a [n----r] or why do you have to be such a [n----r]."

In addition to witnessing Elkilany's racist remarks, the Plaintiff's coworkers also testified that Elkilany frequently used the term "bitch" in the store, and specifically directed the term at the Plaintiff. Pharr stated that Elkilany "went through the store and ... called [the Plaintiff] a bitch." Pharr further testified that Elkilany called "us all bitches" and referred to women in the store as "bitches." Alam also heard Elkilany use the word "bitch" on several occasions in the workplace.

B. THE INITIAL INVESTIGATION.

The parties disagree as to the nature, content, and frequency of the Plaintiff's complaints to management regarding Elkilany's conduct. According to the Plaintiff, she reported Elkilany's conduct to her supervisor and store manager, Serap Sezer ("Sezer") in April 2015, after the first time Elkilany directed a racial epithet at her. She also testified that she complained to Sezer many other times over the first half of 2015. The Defendant, on the other hand, seems to believe that the first time the Plaintiff reported Elkilany's conduct to Sezer was on May 9, 2015, when she told Sezer that only two alleged incidents occurred between her and Elkilany.

On May 9, 2015, Sezer scheduled a meeting with Elkilany and the Plaintiff to discuss the Plaintiff's complaints. The parties present two different versions of the meeting. In the Plaintiff's view, Sezer scheduled the meeting upon the Plaintiff's request, after the Plaintiff complained on several occasions with no action taken. The Plaintiff claims that, during the meeting, Elkilany admitted to calling her the "N word" but refused to apologize because in his view it wasn't malicious. Conversely, the Defendant's position is that Sezer called the meeting upon her own initiative, and after the Plaintiff reported only two incidents where Elkilany used the slur. In addition, the Defendant believes that Elkilany denied calling the Plaintiff that word and apologized to her in the meeting.

The parties also disagree about what occurred after the meeting. The Defendant claims that Sezer immediately forwarded the Plaintiff's complaint to Kenneth McQuiller ("McQuiller"), the district manager of 13 or 14 retail stores located throughout Long Island, and that the Plaintiff later that night also called McQuiller. On the other hand, the Plaintiff avers that she walked out of her meeting with Sezer and Elkilany, went to her car, had a panic attack, and then called McQuiller to report what was going on in the store. The parties agree that in this phone call the Plaintiff explained what happened and that McQuiller requested she send him an e-mail about the incidents.

That evening, the Plaintiff e-mailed McQuiller stating that she "had two issues with RC Ebraheem Elkilany about his behavior in the store towards [her]." She further reported that "[o]n two occasions [Elkilany] has called me outside of my name (Calling me the N word) ... First time was about 3-4weeks ago and second *254time was today [May 9, 2015]." Although the e-mail did not mention the purported incident in early May, the Plaintiff testified that she told McQuiller about three separate incidents when they talked on the phone.

The next morning, May 10, 2015, McQuiller e-mailed the Plaintiff, asking if "any one else heard [Elkilany] make these two comments?" The Plaintiff replied that "Bob [Marine ("Marine") ] and Sha [Alam] were there when [Elkilany] made the massage comment and [as for] the N word, no one was around but he admitted to it in front of Serap."

On May 12, 2015, McQuiller traveled to Bay Shore and interviewed the Plaintiff, Elkilany, Alam, and Marine about the complaints.

McQuiller documented his interview with the Plaintiff in an e-mail dated May 12, 2015. According to the e-mail, the Plaintiff reported only two incidents concerning Elkilany. With regard to the first incident, she explained to McQuiller that at some point prior to May 9, 2015, she asked Elkilany several times to go on break but he would not clock out. In response to her instruction, Elkilany said "[y]ou always on my case, leave me alone my N......." The Plaintiff further told McQuiller that when Elkilany made this comment she "took no action at that moment" but brought the incident to Sezer's attention on May 9, 2015.

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Bluebook (online)
375 F. Supp. 3d 245, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/drouillard-v-sprintunited-mgmt-co-nyed-2019.