Gawley, Janice M. v. Indiana University

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedDecember 31, 2001
Docket00-1819
StatusPublished

This text of Gawley, Janice M. v. Indiana University (Gawley, Janice M. v. Indiana University) 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
Gawley, Janice M. v. Indiana University, (7th Cir. 2001).

Opinion

In the United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit

No. 00-1819

JANICE M. GAWLEY,

Plaintiff-Appellant,

v.

INDIANA UNIVERSITY,

Defendant-Appellee.

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Southern District of Indiana, Indianapolis Division. No. 96 C 466--Larry J. McKinney, Chief Judge.

ARGUED NOVEMBER 30, 2000--DECIDED December 31, 2001

Before FLAUM, Chief Judge, and EASTERBROOK and ROVNER, Circuit Judges.

ROVNER, Circuit Judge. Janice Gawley sued her employer for sexual harassment, hostile work environment, retaliation, and the Indiana tort of spoliation of evidence. The district court first denied summary judgment, then changed course after the Supreme Court issued two key decisions, and granted summary judgment in favor of the employer. We affirm.

A.

We credit Gawley’s version of the facts and draw all reasonable inferences in her favor because she is the party opposing summary judgment. Hostetler v. Quality Dining Inc., 218 F.3d 798, 802 (7th Cir. 2000). Gawley worked as a police officer for the Indiana University Police Depart ment from 1983 until 1996. Her immediate supervisors were Sergeant McClain and Lieutenant Shutte, who in turn reported to Captain Wilken. Captain Wilken reported to Chief Norris. In the absence of her regular shift commanders, other persons ranking above her in the police department’s paramilitary structure directed her work assignments. Jerry Minger was a lieutenant in the department’s Uniform Division, and his main responsibilities involved uniforms and equipment. As the department quartermaster, he felt responsible for pointing out elements of behavior or appearance that required correction. Some department records referred to Minger as a department supervisor, and his job description specified that he had command responsibilities over subordinate personnel in emergency situations. At times, Minger filled in as Gawley’s shift commander and initiated a disciplinary procedure against her on one occasion. He also supervised Gawley when she performed public relations duties. According to other department personnel, Minger had some supervisory authority over all officers who ranked below him in the department’s paramilitary organization. He also had some disciplinary authority over lower ranking officers such as Gawley. That authority was limited in certain areas. For example, while Minger had authority over uniforms, weapons and equipment, he did not have final authority to hire or fire employees. He was, however, authorized to initiate disciplinary proceedings against junior officers relating to any aspect of the officer’s conduct.

Apparently in his role as quartermaster, Minger began commenting to Gawley in November 1994 about the fit of her pants. In particular, he remarked in an offensive manner on a number of occasions that Gawley’s pants were too tight, and that she was overweight./1 He made these comments in a demeaning manner in front of other department personnel. At times, he made up to three comments a day. For example, in front of other personnel, Minger told Gawley she was "getting bigger than a barge," and in front of visiting government personnel, he yelled across a street "Hey, Gawley, pants are too tight" or "Pants seem awfully tight" while laughing. When fitting Gawley for a bullet proof vest, he remarked about her breast size, saying "a D cup, that’s big wow." He continued to remark about her breast size at two other fitting sessions and finally groped her breast while adjusting a bullet proof vest on her. Two other officers witnessed the groping incident, and one commented that if Minger had done this to her, she would have punched him. Gawley estimated that she asked Minger to stop making the offensive comments at least ten times. On two occasions when she asked Minger to stop, other officers were present, including a sergeant and a fellow officer who later became a sergeant. Gawley also produced evidence that the department had a history of sexual harassment of its female employees dating back to the early 1980s. Other female employees related a number of incidents over the years involving Minger and other male employees who made offensive gestures and comments to female employees.

On June 14, 1995, Gawley lodged her first formal complaint about Minger through internal department procedures. She did not mention Minger’s breast groping in that complaint because she was embarrassed by the incident, and believed she would have an opportunity to bring it to light during the investigative process. Captains Wilken and Poliskie investigated Gawley’s complaint. They interviewed Minger several times, but did not question Gawley at that time. They did not contact Deborah Delay, an employee who wrote a memorandum corroborating Gawley’s version of events. In the meantime, on June 22, Gawley went to the university’s Office of Women’s Affairs ("OWA") to discuss her complaint. She told the intake counselor about the groping incident, and the counselor led her to believe there was nothing OWA could do about the incident. Gawley next approached the Office of Affirmative Action ("OAA"), where she did not mention the groping incident to investigator Tammy Chappell because she was angry and believed she would get the same response as was given by the OWA. The next day, Gawley met with Wilken, Poliskie andLieutenant Timothy Lewis.

Wilken spoke with Chappell that day as well, and Wilken then decided to issue a counseling memorandum to Minger based on the comments about Gawley’s pants, weight and breast size. The memorandum did not address the groping incident, which Gawley had not yet mentioned to Wilken./2 According to Gawley, Wilken had accepted at face value Minger’s claim that he had not intended to offend Gawley when he made these various comments, in spite of the fact that the university’s sexual harassment policy provided that a claim that the harassment was unintentional is disallowed as a defense. Minger’s harassment of Gawley ceased as of June 1995, after he received the counseling memorandum. Although the counseling memorandum issued and the harassment stopped, the investigation continued through the other procedures that Gawley initiated. Chappell drafted a report as a result of OAA’s investigation, and on August 30, 1995, faxed the draft to Chief Norris, stating that she did not anticipate any major changes to the draft. Chief Norris reacted with anger upon reviewing the draft. He did not attend a meeting scheduled to discuss the draft, and Chappell later apologized to Norris for any misunderstandings about the report. Although Gawley never saw any reports (or drafts) issued by OAA, Norris shared the report with Minger and other personnel. Ultimately, the report was changed to remove many of the conclusions Chappell reached that were critical of Minger and the department. The recommendations in the watered-down report were never implemented. The university never issued a final report, and Norris refused to meet with Gawley during this time period.

Gawley believed that some of the actions taken during the investigation were retaliation for her complaints of sexual harassment. For example, Norris released a copy of the OAA report to Lieutenant Butler, a department officer not in Gawley’s chain of command. Butler then wrote a memo highly critical of the report. Gawley also complained that Schutte ordered her to lie on a case report, that her case reports were subject to greater scrutiny than other officers’ reports, that she was subjected to silent treatment by department administrators, and that the department’s open-door policy was closed to her.

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