Frazier, Romelia H. v. Delco Electronics

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedAugust 24, 2001
Docket99-2710
StatusPublished

This text of Frazier, Romelia H. v. Delco Electronics (Frazier, Romelia H. v. Delco Electronics) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Frazier, Romelia H. v. Delco Electronics, (7th Cir. 2001).

Opinion

In the United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit

No. 99-2710

Romelia Hazel Frazier,

Plaintiff-Appellant,

v.

Delco Electronics Corporation,

Defendant-Appellee.

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Wisconsin. No. 97-C-690--J.P. Stadtmueller, Chief Judge.

Argued October 26, 2000--Decided August 24, 2001

Before Bauer, Posner, and Ripple, Circuit Judges.

Posner, Circuit Judge. The plaintiff brought suit against her employer, charging sexual harassment in violation of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and a failure to accommodate a disability in violation of the Americans with Disabilities Act. The district court granted summary judgment for the defendant. So far as the charge of sexual harassment is concerned, the court held that the plaintiff could not use the doctrine of continuing violation to avoid the 300-day administrative statute of limitations applicable to Title VII suits in Wisconsin and that in any event she had failed to show that the alleged harassment was based on her sex.

Taken as favorably to the plaintiff as the record permits, the facts tell the following story. Late in 1991 the plaintiff’s car was stolen, and from then till she got a new car in February of the following year she rode to work with another worker in Delco’s Milwaukee plant, Bester Spears. He lived near her and had just been divorced by his wife, who by a curious coincidence had the same first name as the plaintiff (the plaintiff uses Hazel, her middle name, as her first name) and the same date of birth. These coincidences seem to have fascinated Spears, who after he stopped driving Frazier to work would frequently drive past her home and sometimes park in front of it and watch her. After some weeks or months of this, he approached her at work and told her he had seen her husband barbecuing in his backyard. She told him to stay away from her. He was angered by her rebuff and took to calling her "bitch" when he encountered her in the workplace. In November 1992 came the explosion. Spears approached Frazier as she was talking to a coworker, and to avoid being brushed by him she stepped back. This set him off. He started screaming at her, saying he was "sick and tired of her goddamn ass." He screamed that she was a "slut," a "motherfucker," a "whore," and a "motherfucking whore." When she asked him whether he was talking to her, he replied, "Yes, you fucking whore, I’m talking to you, you motherfucker. I’m sick and tired of your motherfucking ass. You goddamn bitch, you slut, walking by me like I’m dirt." He threatened to take her outside and "kick her motherfucking ass" and kill her. He acted as if he were going to hit her. A male coworker grabbed him and pushed him out of the area. The coworker then escorted Frazier to the nurse’s office, while Spears shouted at her to "go outside to settle the matter."

Frazier complained immediately to her supervisor. A union representative, Alston, interviewed Spears, who admitted that he had called Frazier names, explaining that she had stopped talking to him in the last couple of months. Alston thought that Spears looked as if he were about to explode with anger.

In the following weeks and months, Spears did not speak to Frazier, but he glared at her ominously. Although he worked at the opposite end of a large plant, he haunted her end of it, staring through the window of her work area and sometimes pushing the door open and sticking his head in and staring at her. She complained continuously both to management and to the union. In March of 1993, Alston, the union representative handling the matter, told her not to file a formal grievance because he was working with management to resolve the problem.

The following month Alston met with management and after the meeting told Frazier that Spears had been instructed to stay away from Frazier’s work area and refrain from the actions she had complained about. Four days later, Frazier obtained a temporary restraining order, and the following month an injunction, forbidding Spears to have any contact with her for one year.

In June, Spears was transferred to a Delco plant in the Milwaukee suburbs and Frazier breathed a sigh of relief. Not for long; for in August she was transferred to the same plant. She told her union representative at this plant about the injunction and for a time was able to avoid Spears. But beginning in September of 1993 Spears began appearing unexpectedly three or four times a day in Frazier’s work area. He would glare at her, as before, sometimes sticking his head inside the door to the area and making faces at her. Once, in December, he jumped in front of a forklift that she was driving, forcing her to stop abruptly. He stood laughing and making faces at her. She called the police, and an officer came to the plant and told Spears to keep away from her.

The next month Spears was transferred to a different shift and again Frazier thought she was free of him. But he returned to her shift in March. Throughout all this the company had not disciplined Spears, and now it told Frazier that it would do nothing to prevent him from contacting her at work. This was the last straw. Frazier had a nervous breakdown and was on sick leave for almost two years, not returning until Spears moved to Louisiana. It was in March of 1994 that she filed her complaint with the EEOC, and this means that the statute of limitations, unless tolled, barred her from complaining about Title VII violations that occurred before May of 1993. The worst incident had occurred months earlier, in November 1992, when Spears had screamed at her, menaced her, and threatened to kill her; and the defendant argues that she should have filed her complaint within 300 days of that, since she argues that the company, though on notice that she was being harassed, never did anything to stop it.

This might be correct if the defendant were Spears rather than the company, and the charge was assault or threat. But a violation of Title VII that is based on a claim of harassment by a coworker doesn’t occur until the employer has failed to take reasonable steps to bring the harassment to an end. E.g., Hostetler v. Quality Dining, Inc., 218 F.3d 798, 809 (7th Cir. 2000); Smith v. Sheahan, 189 F.3d 529, 533 (7th Cir. 1999); Star v. West, 237 F.3d 1036, 1038 (9th Cir. 2001); Breda v. Wolf Camera & Video, 222 F.3d 886, 889 (11th Cir. 2000). Obviously that did not occur in November 1992. The company could not be expected to rectify a situation within minutes of its occurrence. It wanted time to investigate the matter in order to protect Spears’s rights. It was entitled to take some time and until that time passed its failure to act would not be actionable and so the statute of limitations would not begin to run. Delaware State College v. Ricks, 449 U.S. 250, 257, 259 (1980); Cada v. Baxter Healthcare Corp., 920 F.2d 446, 449 (7th Cir. 1990). This is a principle more fun damental than the doctrine of continuing violation, which in a sexual harassment case permits the plaintiff to delay suit until an ambiguous situation of possible but uncertain harassment has ripened into an unmistakable case, a case that any reasonable person would recognize as harassment. Russell v. Board of Trustees, 243 F.3d 336, 343 (7th Cir. 2001); DeClue v. Central Illinois Light Co., 223 F.3d 435, 435 (7th Cir. 2000); Galloway v. General Motors Service Parts Operations, 78 F.3d 1164, 1166 (7th Cir. 1996); O’Rourke v. City of Providence, 235 F.3d 713, 732 (1st Cir. 2001); Rush v.

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Frazier, Romelia H. v. Delco Electronics, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/frazier-romelia-h-v-delco-electronics-ca7-2001.