Hertzberg, Julie K. v. SRAM Corporation

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedAugust 2, 2001
Docket00-1825
StatusPublished

This text of Hertzberg, Julie K. v. SRAM Corporation (Hertzberg, Julie K. v. SRAM Corporation) 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
Hertzberg, Julie K. v. SRAM Corporation, (7th Cir. 2001).

Opinion

In the United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit

No. 00-1825

JULIE K. HERTZBERG,

Plaintiff-Appellee,

v.

SRAM CORPORATION,

Defendant-Appellant.

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division. No. 96 C 6944--Milton I. Shadur, Judge.

ARGUED FEBRUARY 23, 2001--DECIDED August 2, 2001

Before FLAUM, Chief Judge, and RIPPLE and WILLIAMS, Circuit Judges.

RIPPLE, Circuit Judge. Julie Hertzberg brought this action against her former employer, SRAM Corporation ("SRAM"), for sexual harassment and retaliatory discharge. A jury returned a verdict in favor of Ms. Hertzberg on her sexual harassment claim and awarded her $20,000 in punitive damages. However, the jury returned a verdict for SRAM on the retaliatory discharge claim. The district court nevertheless granted Ms. Hertzberg equitable relief in the form of back and front pay. On appeal, SRAM challenges all of these awards. For the reasons set forth in the following opinion, we affirm in part and reverse in part the judgment of the district court.

I

BACKGROUND

A. Facts

In November 1994, SRAM, a manufacturer of bicycle components, hired Ms. Hertzberg as a shipping coordinator in its Elk Grove Village, Illinois warehouse. Almost immediately, Ms. Hertzberg experienced difficulties with Manuel Loayza, a co-worker. On numerous occasions, Loayza told Ms. Hertzberg that she was not as qualified as he, that women could not perform shipping responsibilities as well as men and that he would take over her job. Ms. Hertzberg also had disagreements with Loayza about shipping procedures and about a book that Loayza had failed to return to Ms. Hertzberg.

Ms. Hertzberg was upset by Loayza’s comments and, according to her testimony, complained to her immediate supervisor, Brian Lester, on at least three occasions./1 During one of their meetings concerning Loayza, Lester told Ms. Hertzberg that she was "being too emotional, just like a woman." R.68 at 34. The last time that Ms. Hertzberg spoke to Lester concerning Loayza’s remarks, Lester put his hand on Ms. Hertzberg’s knee and told her he would take care of it. Ms. Hertzberg perceived that Lester was unable or unwilling to curb Loayza’s behavior. Consequently, she ceased bringing her complaints to Lester.

On the advice of another SRAM employee, Dee Whatmore, Ms. Hertzberg complained to plant manager George Margelos concerning Lester’s and Loayza’s behavior toward her. Whatmore accompanied Ms. Hertzberg to Margelos’ office; there, Ms. Hertzberg reported Lester’s actions, as well as detailed the problems that she had been experiencing with Loayza. According to Ms. Hertzberg, Margelos "seemed to shrug . . . off" her concerns. R.68 at 54. Following this meeting, Margelos had at least one discussion with Lester concerning the propriety of Lester’s touching Ms. Hertzberg. Ms. Hertzberg apparently did not have any further difficulties with Lester. The record is inconsistent regarding the actions Margelos took with respect to Loayza. Margelos testified to at least one conversation with Loayza about his comments that occurred shortly after Ms. Hertzberg’s complaint; Loayza remembered this conversation, too, but believed that it occurred after Ms. Hertzberg’s departure had become a fait accompli. Loayza apparently never was warned formally or disciplined for his comments, and, despite Ms. Hertzberg’s repeated complaints to Margelos, the comments continued unabated until her departure from SRAM. Ms. Hertzberg’s employment with SRAM ended on February 6, 1995, although how it ended is not clear. Ms. Hertzberg testified that she was terminated from her employment by Lester because she was being "too disruptive." Id. at 55. Ms. Hertzberg’s ex-husband and Whatmore both confirmed that Ms. Hertzberg had told them that she was fired. Lester and Margelos, however, denied terminating Ms. Hertzberg. They testified that Ms. Hertzberg gave two weeks’ notice. Shortly thereafter, she informed Lester that she was reconsidering. Margelos told Lester, however, that they were going to hold firm to her resignation./2

After leaving SRAM, Ms. Hertzberg wrote to SRAM’s president, Stan Day. In the letter, she related her history of problems with Loayza, that she had voiced concerns about "certain procedures Manuel was using" and that she did not believe Loayza was a "team play[er]." Def.’s Ex. 1. She also told Day that she had not intended to resign, but only had wanted her concerns addressed. She did not request any action from Day, but provided her number to him "[i]f [he] would like to respond." Id. Ms. Hertzberg did not state that she had been the victim of sexual harassment, nor did she inform Day that her discharge was motivated by her harassment-related complaints.

During the time that Ms. Hertzberg was employed at SRAM, SRAM had in place a sexual harassment policy. The policy required that complaints be made through the chain of command, all the way to Day. Ms. Hertzberg had seen the employment manual containing the sexual harassment policy on only one occasion; she did not have a personal copy of the employment manual and, therefore, was not familiar with the requirements of the policy. Margelos testified that he was familiar with the policy and that the policy stated that SRAM did not tolerate sexual harassment. Lester had the same understanding of the policy. Neither individual, however, had received training in harassment issues or how to conduct a sexual harassment investigation.

B. District Court Proceedings

After pursuing her claims through administrative channels, Ms. Hertzberg filed a two-count complaint in district court. In her complaint, Ms. Hertzberg first alleged that she had been sexually harassed by Loayza and Lester. The second count of her complaint alleged that SRAM had fired her in retaliation "for having opposed and complained about the hostile and offensive work environment." R.1 at 5. Ms. Hertzberg’s complaint did not include a claim for discriminatory discharge, only retaliatory discharge. Ms. Hertzberg did not allege, either as part of count one or as a separate count, that she was constructively discharged-- that her working conditions were so intolerable that she was forced to resign.

Ms. Hertzberg’s claims proceeded to trial. After the close of Ms. Hertzberg’s case, and again at the end of all of the evidence, SRAM moved for judgment as a matter of law on all aspects of Ms. Hertzberg’s claims, including the availability of punitive damages. The district court reserved ruling on the motion.

The jury then was instructed on Ms. Hertzberg’s claims of sexual harassment and retaliatory discharge. These were the only two bases of recovery submitted to the jury. The jury returned a verdict for Ms. Hertzberg on the sexual harassment claim for which it awarded her $20,000 in punitive damages./3 The jury, however, returned a verdict for SRAM on the retaliatory discharge claim.

Ms. Hertzberg then sought equitable relief from the district court in the form of back pay and front pay. She claimed that she was entitled to approximately $56,000 in back pay and ten years’ front pay based on her actuary’s testimony. Ms. Hertzberg did not file a supporting memorandum with the district court detailing why she was entitled to lost wages in the absence of a jury finding that she had endured a discriminatory discharge, actual or constructive.

In response, SRAM argued that back and front pay were available to Title VII plaintiffs only when they had proven discriminatory discharge. Because Ms. Hertzberg never had claimed that she was constructively discharged, and because the jury rejected her retaliatory discharge claim, SRAM maintained that lost pay was not available to Ms. Hertzberg./4

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Bluebook (online)
Hertzberg, Julie K. v. SRAM Corporation, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hertzberg-julie-k-v-sram-corporation-ca7-2001.