Dube v. Hadco Corp.

CourtDistrict Court, D. New Hampshire
DecidedFebruary 4, 1999
DocketCV-97-554-SD
StatusPublished

This text of Dube v. Hadco Corp. (Dube v. Hadco Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dube v. Hadco Corp., (D.N.H. 1999).

Opinion

Dube v . Hadco Corp. CV-97-554-SD 02/04/99 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE

DISTRICT OF NEW HAMPSHIRE

Kellie Dube

v. Civil No. 97-554-SD

Hadco Corporation

O R D E R

In this civil action plaintiff Kellie Dube alleges that her

employer, Hadco Corporation, sexually harassed her and terminated

her employment in violation of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act

of 1964, 42 U.S.C. §§ 2000e et seq. (1994). Dube's complaint

also contains counts based on defamation and wrongful discharge.

Currently before the court is defendant's motion for partial

summary judgment, to which plaintiff objects.

Background

Dube was a waitress at the Passaconaway Country Club where

she met Chris Mastrogiacomo, the general manager of Hadco's Derry

facility. Mastrogiacomo and a group of Hadco employees played

golf at Passaconaway on a weekly basis. While he was in the

clubhouse after playing golf one evening, Mastrogiacomo informed

Dube that he was looking for a new secretary and asked her if she would be interested. Dube told Mastrogiacomo that her

secretarial skills were a bit rusty, but after looking at her

resume, Mastrogiacomo told her she was qualified for the job and

that the company would provide training. Dube accepted the job.

On her first day, Mastrogiacomo introduced Dube to two Hadco

managers who worked at its New York facility. In front of the managers, Mastrogiacomo said to Dube, "'We should take you on a

business trip to New York.'" Dube Deposition at 7 7 . In her

deposition, Dube stated that although she did not expect her job

to require travel, she did not find the suggestion objectionable

to her in any way. See id. at 8 2 .

Shortly after beginning work, Dube became aware of a rumor

that she and Mastrogiacomo were having an affair. Dube first

heard the rumor from Don Torisi, a Hadco manager she knew from

the golf course. Mr. Torisi told Dube she was "'gonna hear a lot of stuff that's going on that you're involved with Mr.

Mastrogiacomo . . . .'" Id. at 9 1 . Mr. Torisi's advice was,

"'Don't listen to any of it because you know that it's not

true.'" Id. Shortly thereafter, another management employee,

Rod, came into Dube's office and told Dube he thought she should

be aware there was a rumor that she was involved with

Mastrogiacomo. When Dube later brought up the rumor in a

conversation with "another guy that was in the warehouse," that

employee responded that he was aware of the rumor. Id. at 9 6 .

2 Dube also spoke to Mastrogiacomo about the rumor. He responded,

"'You are going to just have to listen to all of that . . . but

none of it's, we know that none of it's true.'" Id. at 9 9 .

In August 1995 a Hadco manager named Bob Jordan asked Dube

to make hotel reservations for some customers who were traveling

from Japan to visit Hadco. Dube made reservations for the men at the Highlander Inn in Manchester. Because she was not

experienced at making travel arrangements and was not familiar

with the Highlander, Dube asked Bob Jordan if she could visit the

Highlander. Jordan told her that it was acceptable for her to do

so. According to Dube, she then informed him that "'there could

be a chance that I might bump into [the Japanese visitors] just

to see how their flight arrangements were, how their flight went,

and how the arrangements were when they got there. Was

everything satisfactory.'" Id. 115. Jordan responded that "that was not a problem." Id.

When she left work that day, Dube went to the Passaconaway

Country Club and picked up her roommate, Fiona Peatrie, who was a

bartender there. She then drove to the Highlander. Dube stopped

at the front desk, where a hotel employee verified that the

Japanese men had arrived. Dube then called the men on the house

phone to welcome them and make sure they were satisfied with the

accommodations. The man who answered the phone told Dube he

would like to come down and meet her. Both of the men met Dube

3 in the lobby of the hotel. At some point (it is unclear from the

record when), Dube's roommate joined her in the lobby. After

meeting them, one of the Japanese men asked Dube to recommend a

restaurant for dinner. When Dube made a suggestion, the man

asked Dube and Peatrie to accompany the men to dinner. Dube

initially declined, but her roommate encouraged her to say yes, suggesting it might insult the visitors if they declined the

offer.

Dube and Peatrie accompanied the men to Café Pavone in

Manchester, where they ate dinner. During dinner the group

shared a bottle of wine and exchanged pleasantries. At one

point, Dube excused herself from the table to make a telephone

call. When she returned, she saw that one of the men had spilled

some wine on his shirt. Dube drove the men back to the hotel

after dinner. Dube told the men she would drive them to Hadco the next day for their meeting. The following day Dube, who was

unable to provide the men with transportation because her car had

broken down, explained the situation to Carlos Gutierez, the

Hadco manager the men were going to meet that day.

Shortly thereafter, Don Torisi and a group of Hadco managers

played golf at Passaconaway. Torisi said to Dube's roommate, who

was tending bar, "'You and Kellie should, could run an escort

service.'" Id. at 209. Later that week, Debbie Simpson, a Hadco

employee responsible for training Dube, approached her to discuss

4 the dinner. Simpson informed her that there was talk about Dube's running an escort service and told her she "wanted to know what [Dube's] theory and thoughts were on [her] going out for dinner.'" Id. at 140. Subsequently Diane Riel-Piatt, the human resources manager, called Dube into her office to investigate the rumors that were circulating. Riel-Piatt told Dube she had heard the escort service rumor and wanted to get her side of the story.

In the aftermath of the dinner, the incident was discussed by various Hadco managers and human resources employees. There was concern over the wine that was spilled on one of the men. Some management employees began describing the incident as a "wet t-shirt contest." Apparently there was a rumor circulating that Dube had thrown a glass of wine on one of the men so she could see his nipples.

When Mastrogiacomo returned from his trip, he asked Dube to resign. Dube refused. She subsequently attended a meeting with Mastrogiacomo and Riel-Piatt, at which Mastrogiacomo informed her that her employment was terminated. Riel-Piatt told Dube that her job performance was the reason for her termination. Dube, however, asked if it had to do with the dinner, to which Mastrogiacomo allegedly responded "'Yuh. Women are not supposed to be accommodating (sic) men.' And I crossed that line and there is too many things that were going on with rumors and he didn't want me to work there anymore." Id. at 158.

5 Discussion

1 . Standard of Review

Summary judgment is appropriate when there is no genuine

issue of material fact and the moving party is entitled to

judgment as a matter of law. Rule 56(c), Fed. R. Civ. P.; Lehman

v . Prudential Ins. Co. of Am., 74 F.3d 323, 327 (1st Cir. 1996).

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