Hammoud v. Jimmy's Seafood, Inc.

CourtDistrict Court, D. Maryland
DecidedMay 29, 2024
Docket1:21-cv-01593
StatusUnknown

This text of Hammoud v. Jimmy's Seafood, Inc. (Hammoud v. Jimmy's Seafood, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hammoud v. Jimmy's Seafood, Inc., (D. Md. 2024).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF MARYLAND LAMA HAMMOUD * Plaintiff, * Civil Action: MJM-21-1593 v. * JIMMY’S SEAFOOD, INC. * Defendant. *

* * * * * * * * * MEMORANDUM OPINION Plaintiff Lama Hammoud (“Plaintiff”) commenced this civil action against Defendant Jimmy’s Seafood, Inc. (“Defendant”) alleging employment discrimination and harassment based on religion and sex, as well as retaliation, in violation of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 42 U.S.C. § 2000e et seq., and the Maryland Fair Employment Practices Act, Md. Code Ann., State Gov’t § 20-601 et seq. Currently pending are Defendant’s Motion for Summary Judgment (ECF 62) and Motion to Strike (ECF 73). Defendant requests summary judgment on all claims and moves to strike portions of Plaintiff’s response to the Motion for Summary Judgment. Plaintiff

opposes both motions. The motions are fully briefed and ripe for disposition. No hearing is necessary. See Local Rule 105.6 (D. Md. 2023). For the reasons set forth below, the motions will be granted in part and denied in part. I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND Defendant operates Jimmy’s Famous Seafood (the “Restaurant”), a restaurant in Dundalk, Maryland. Plaintiff was employed by Defendant during two separate time periods: the first from October 2015 to February 2018, and the second from February 2019 to August or September 2020.1 Pl. Dep., Def. Exh. 4, ECF 62-6, at 136:11–19, 142:21–143:2, 143:20–144:2, 154:1–6. Plaintiff makes no allegations of unlawful discrimination or retaliation during her first period of employment. Id. at 145:15–17. Plaintiff worked primarily as a server at the Restaurant but would also work shifts as a bartender from around September 2019 to the end of her second period of employment Id. at

148:7–16. Plaintiff’s younger sister, Dania Hammoud (“Dania”), came on as a bartender in or about October 2019. The Hammoud sisters are Muslim. Id. at 222:17; Dania Decl., Pl. Exh. 2, ECF 70-3, ¶ 2. Plaintiff states in her declaration that she does not believe that any other bartender, server, or food truck worker (besides herself and Dania) identified as Arab or Muslim during her time at Restaurant. Pl. Decl., Pl. Exh. 9, ECF 70-12, ¶ 24. Saad Abou El Seoud, also known as “Habibi,” had worked at Restaurant since 1996. El Seoud Dep., Def. Exh. 3, ECF 62-5, at 9:4–8. El Seoud is Muslim. Id. at 24:13–14. During the relevant period, El Seoud was employed as a kitchen manager, id. at 13:9–20, but was known to be present throughout Restaurant, see Coleman Dep., Pl. Exh. 5, ECF 70-9, at 31:12–32:5 (“I never

seen [sic] [El Seoud] like just in the kitchen.”); Ritz Dep., Pl. Exh. 6, ECF 70-10, at 38:9–18 (“[El Seoud] was all over the place.”). The dining room and back bar would close sometime between 9:00 p.m. and 11:00 p.m., but the kitchen would remain open until 12:00 a.m., and the front bar would close around 2:00 a.m. Parker Dep., Pl. Exh. 4, ECF 70-8, at 23:14–24:3; Ritz. Dep., ECF 70-10, at 121:6–10. El Seoud was often the only manager on duty after midnight and typically would close the front bar and let the bartenders know when they could leave. Pl. Dep, Pl. Exh. 1,

1 The precise end date for Plaintiff’s second period of employment is in dispute. Plaintiff testified at her deposition that Defendant constructively discharged her on August 26, 2020, when she was locked out of the electronic work schedule following a two-week suspension. Pl. Dep., ECF 62-6, at 340:21–341:1, 341:4–8. Defendant maintains that Plaintiff abandoned her job when she failed to reply to a manager’s offer to return to work on September 3, 2020. Def. Exh. 33, ECF 62-35. ECF 70-2, at 491:7–17; Coleman Dep., ECF 62-12, at 35:18–36:2; Ritz. Dep, ECF 70-10, at 128:4–10; El Seoud Dep., ECF 62-5, at 35:8–20. El Seoud was viewed as a person of authority by servers and bartenders. Several of them testified that he would give them orders and work assignments. Dania Decl., ECF 70-3, ¶ 6; Coleman Dep., ECF 70-9, at 118:18–119:12; Ritz Dep., ECF 70-10, at 126:17–127:9. Individuals in management testified that El Seoud could not assign

bartenders tasks but was there to assure they complied with a pre-written checklist. J. Minadakis Dep., Def. Exh. 2, ECF 62-4, at 31:1–33:11; Singh Dep., Def. Exh. 14, ECF 62-16, at 30:2–13. A. Pre-Pandemic Period: September 2019 to March 2020 Plaintiff testified that she began suffering harassment by El Seoud when she and Dania started bartending at the Restaurant in the fall of 2019, in large part because the role involved serving alcohol and interacting with male customers at the bar. Pl. Dep., ECF 70-2, at 223:1–2. El Seoud would tell Plaintiff that she was “not a good Muslim” for drinking and serving alcoholic beverages, and that Muslim women should not be tending bar or “talking to guys.” Pl. Dep., ECF 70-2, at 302:13–19, 303:14–20, 305:12–15. Plaintiff testified that she would rarely stay after her

shift to have a drink, but when she did, El Seoud would go out of his way to make her feel uncomfortable. Id. at 306:12–16. According to Plaintiff, El Seoud expressed disapproval of Plaintiff or Dania wearing tight clothing and showing skin, even though their attire complied with the Restaurant’s dress code. Id. at 305:21–306:11; Dania Decl., ECF 70-3, ¶ 12. El Seoud did not make such comments to or about other female bartenders at the Restaurant. Dania Decl., ECF 70- 3, ¶ 12. El Seoud once told Dania that her mother had done a bad job raising her and Plaintiff, that he could not believe she would allow her Muslim daughters to become bartenders, and that they should have been raised by their father.2 Dania Decl., ECF 70-3, ¶ 4. As with Plaintiff, El Seoud would tell Dania that she was “not Muslim” for showing skin, drinking, tending bar, and speaking to men. He would also shame her for having a tattoo, telling her that it was improper for Muslims to have tattoos. Id. On one occasion, Dania remarked to El Seoud that she spoke Arabic well, and he replied that it did not matter because she and Plaintiff “weren’t Muslim.” Id.

According to Plaintiff and Dania, El Seoud would often stare at them in an angry and uncomfortable manner during their shifts. Pl. Dep., ECF 70-2, at 224:13–21, 243:13–244:9, 380:9– 385:3; Dania Decl., ECF 70-3, ¶¶ 6, 9. Other bartenders testified to having seen El Seoud stare at Plaintiff and Dania for long periods of time while they worked. Coleman Dep., ECF 70-9, at 64:21– 65:6; Ritz. Dep., ECF 70-10, at 57:5–58:8. For example, Jayda Coleman, a female bartender, testified that El Seoud would sometimes stand in place and stare at Plaintiff and Dania for twenty or thirty minutes at a time and that if this had been done to her, she would have found it “very weird and uncomfortable.” Coleman Dep., ECF 70-9, at 124:21–125:10. Plaintiff and Dania claim that El Seoud would single them out and require them—and only

them—to perform extra tasks when closing the bar. Pl. Dep., ECF 70-2, at 160:13–161:14; Dania Decl., ECF 70-3, ¶ 6. At least once, he required Plaintiff to stand on top of the bar and the tables and dust and wipe down the lamps and windowsills before she could leave. Pl. Dep., ECF 70-2, at 159:2–161:17, 235:3–236:2; Ritz Dep., ECF 70-10, at 54:5–56:14, 134:10–20, 144:3–18. El Seoud disputes Plaintiff’s allegations about his behavior toward her and Dania, testifying at his deposition that he never stared at either of them and never made any comments to them about religion, drinking, talking to men, serving as bartenders, or their outfits. El Seoud Dep., Pl. Exh. 3, ECF 70-7, at 61:13–68:21. However, Defendant does not dispute certain portions of

2 According to Dania, when she first met El Seoud, he told her he had known her as a baby because he used to know her father. Dania Decl., ECF 70-3, ¶¶ 3–4.

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Hammoud v. Jimmy's Seafood, Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hammoud-v-jimmys-seafood-inc-mdd-2024.