Dunlap v. Kansas, Department of Health & Environment

127 F. App'x 433
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedApril 1, 2005
Docket02-3331
StatusUnpublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 127 F. App'x 433 (Dunlap v. Kansas, Department of Health & Environment) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dunlap v. Kansas, Department of Health & Environment, 127 F. App'x 433 (10th Cir. 2005).

Opinion

ORDER AND JUDGMENT *

WILLIAM J. HOLLOWAY, JR., Circuit Judge.

Plaintiff-appellant Elke Dunlap sued her employer, the State of Kansas Department of Health and Environment, under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 42 U.S.C. §§ 2000e-2000e(16), alleging discrimination based on gender and national origin and unlawful retaliation. The district judge granted the defendant’s motion for summary judgment, and Dunlap now appeals.

I

The facts, as viewed through the prism of the defendant’s summary judgment motion, are set out in detail in the district court’s thorough opinion, 211 F.Supp.2d 1334 (D.Kan.2002), and we will present here only a summary. Plaintiff was born in 1944 in Germany and lived there until she was 19 years old. She then married an American and moved to this country in 1963. She still speaks with an accent. She is a naturalized citizen of the United States. She has been employed by the Kansas Department of Health and Environment since 1992. In October 1997, she began working at a location called Forbes Field in the Office of Information Systems.

In the spring of 1998, she was placed under the supervision of Phil Breedlove, and most of her allegations come from that time. Plaintiff testified that she often overheard Breedlove make fun of female employees who spoke with accents. Breedlove would gather with other men after teaching a computer class and use a Spanish accent to mock questions that women had asked during the class. This would often occur close to plaintiffs work station where she could hear the conversation.

Plaintiff said that after trying to ignore this for awhile, she asked Breedlove to stop it. When that failed to stop the behavior, she approached Breedlove’s supervisor, Pam Tierce. However, nothing was done and the practice continued until plaintiffs desk was moved away from where this was going on.

It is not clear how frequently this had occurred. Plaintiff testified that it would occur at least weekly and sometimes three times in a single day, depending on the number of classes Breedlove had and the number of foreign born speakers in the classes. Breedlove never attempted to mimic a German accent, nor did he make any remarks about persons of German ancestry. Plaintiff did testify in deposition, however, that Breedlove would sometimes pretend not to understand her accent in order to force her to repeat words that he knew were difficult for her to pronounce.

In February 1999 plaintiff became involved in a “cowboy hat incident.” A former high level employee who habitually wore a cowboy hat had retired. One day soon afterward, Tierce and Breedlove saw a cowboy hat at plaintiffs work station with a note on it saying “RIP.” They interpreted this as a celebratory note. The suggested inference was that the retired *435 supervisor was not popular and other supervisors knew it.

Plaintiff was not at work that day (although the district court indicated that the hat with the note had been at her station for some days by this time) and denied knowing anything about the hat and note. Tierce immediately called and reported the “incident” to a personnel officer. Plaintiff received a letter, which she now contends was a reprimand but which defendant characterized as a letter of concern, from the Secretary of the Department. The letter said that the display was “disrespectful” and had caused “undue disruption to the workplace.” The letter was not placed in plaintiffs personnel file.

Plaintiff contended that Breedlove knew that the hat did not belong to her and knew that she was not at work that day. Therefore, she alleged, he had lied to implicate her in the incident. She also contended that she was disproportionately punished over it. The owner of the cowboy hat, a male, and two American-born female receptionists, who in April 1999 had cowboy hats with RIP on them, were not reprimanded at all, Dunlap maintains.

On June 22, 1999, plaintiff Dunlap was delayed by traffic and was late returning from lunch. She put a leave slip in Breed-love’s box as a result. She said that he became infuriated about it, for unexplained reasons. However, he approved the leave, which was at his discretion.

Plaintiff also alleged two instances of disparate treatment related to leave or “rearranged time.” First, plaintiff testified that her request for leave to care for her seriously ill husband was scrutinized more closely than the request of a male employee whose pet ferret became mortally ill. Plaintiff testified that an American-born male was given two days off either to care for his sick pet ferret or to grieve over the animal’s passing, without any question. In contrast, when plaintiffs husband was seriously ill and she requested leave to care for him, she was questioned about the need for it.

The second incident occurred after Tierce became plaintiffs direct supervisor instead of Breedlove, and this incident involves “rearranged time.” Although we have not been given a definition of this term, from the context it clearly seems to mean a flexibility in an employee’s hours provided for the employee’s convenience. Thus, for example, an employee who was an hour late for work because of a dental appointment could, we infer, make up the time by staying one hour later than usual, avoiding the necessity of using accumulated leave for such a minor contingency. One day when Dunlap was late to work because of traffic, she requested “rearranged time” but this was refused by Tierce. In contrast, males “got away with anything they wanted to,” according to plaintiffs testimony.

Plaintiff filed her first administrative complaint with the Kansas Human Rights Commission on March 22, 1999. She complained about the mocking of females with accents and that she had been harassed and discriminated against based on her gender and ancestry with regard to the cowboy hat incident. Plaintiff contended in the district court that Breedlove began retaliatory conduct after she filed the charge. She cited the leave slip incident and also said that Breedlove began taking duties away from her. She alleged that he drafted a job description for her that appeared designed to demote her from Office Assistant IV to Office Assistant II. Breed-love made about five requests to have her removed from his supervision.

Plaintiff filed an amended administrative charge on August 19, 1999, adding two instances of allegedly discriminatory treat *436 ment based on gender and ancestry. The first of these two alleged discriminatory acts is not discussed on appeal. The second was the June 22nd incident described supra.

Plaintiff allegedly suffered severe mental distress with accompanying physical symptoms. These include anxiety attacks, depressions, headaches, crying spells, vomiting, shaking and other symptoms. She could not pinpoint the onset of her ailments but said that it got “out of hand” after she received the letter of reprimand about the cowboy hat.

II

Ms. Dunlap first argues that the district court erred in determining that defendant was entitled to judgment as a matter of law on her claim of a hostile work environment.

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127 F. App'x 433, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dunlap-v-kansas-department-of-health-environment-ca10-2005.