Hunt v. State of Mo., Dept. of Corrections

119 F. Supp. 2d 996, 2000 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 16608, 2000 WL 1707482
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Missouri
DecidedAugust 30, 2000
Docket99-4158-CV-C-5
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 119 F. Supp. 2d 996 (Hunt v. State of Mo., Dept. of Corrections) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hunt v. State of Mo., Dept. of Corrections, 119 F. Supp. 2d 996, 2000 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 16608, 2000 WL 1707482 (W.D. Mo. 2000).

Opinion

ORDER AND MEMORANDUM *998 “Department”) [Doc. #42], For the reasons set forth below, the Motion is granted, in part, and denied, in part.

*997 LAUGHREY, District Judge.

*998 I. Factual Background

A. Contract Between the Department and Favorite Nurses

Leopoldstadt, Inc., d/b/a Favorite Nurses, Inc. (“Favorite Nurses”) 1 is a private company that assigns contract nurses to various worksites throughout the country. In October 1997, the Department and Favorite Nurses signed a contract whereby Favorite Nurses would provide “employee health nurses” to various Missouri prisons. Under the contract, the nurses were to conduct nursing assessments, diagnose and provide care plans, coordinate an employee health program, conduct TB testing and other specified nursing activities at the Jefferson City Correctional Center (“JCCC”).

The contract states:

the contractor represents himself or herself to be an independent contractor offering such services to the general public and shall not represent himself/herself or his/her employees to be an employee of the State of Missouri. Therefore, the contractor shall assume all legal and financial responsibility for taxes, FICA, employee fringe benefits, workers compensation, employee insurance, minimum wage requirements, etc

The nurses’ pay, employee benefits, vacation, and income withholding were all handled by Favorite Nurses. The nurses were, however, required to have JCCC employees sign off on their timecards. Favorite Nurses also had its own separate sexual harassment policy and grievance procedure.

According to the contract, the nurses were to work “independently with a minimum of supervision” by Department employees. The Department contends that nurses were not subject to regular perfor-manee evaluations by it, but rather, Favorite Nurses was responsible for such reviews. The Department was, however, permitted to review the nurses to insure “conformance with established nursing policies.” It is not clear how such a review would differ from a performance evaluation. The nurses were additionally required to undergo background and security checks prior to beginning work in a Department of Corrections’ facility.

B. Plaintiffs’ Employment at JCCC

Pursuant to the contract terms, specific preidentified nurses were to be provided to the Defendants by Favorite Nurses. Substitutions of personnel could not be made by Favorite Nurses without prior notice and approval by the Department. The Plaintiffs, Rebecca Hunt and Susan Nürn-berg, were initially contacted, interviewed and told they had a job by Department employee Julie Ives, RN-V. Hunt alleges that Ives informed her that if the “program” was successful, the Plaintiffs’ positions would become full-time Department positions at the end of the year. According to Plaintiffs, the Department contacted Hunt before contracting with Favorite Nurses. Hunt had previously been providing nursing services to the Department while she worked as a public health nurse for Cole County, Missouri. When Cole County stopped providing nursing services to the Department, the Department sought out Favorite Nurses and identified Hunt as the person they wanted to work at JCCC. Nürnberg was allegedly identified by Hunt as a person who should be interviewed as well.

The Department acknowledges that Ives was responsible for providing Plaintiffs information about “nursing protocols” and' other nursing related questions. David Dormiré, Superintendent of JCCC, acted as the Plaintiffs’ on-site contact person. The record is unclear how much direction *999 was given to the Plaintiffs by the Defendants.

When Plaintiff began working at JCCC as part of the Favorite Nurses “program,” they were given a tour by Mitch Seaman and Rodney Perry. During the tour, Plaintiffs allege that Seaman and Perry made inappropriate comments, “leered” at the Plaintiffs’ chests and posteriors, and stood uncomfortably close to them. Perry and Seaman also allegedly followed the Plaintiffs to the women’s bathroom, and then stood outside in a manner that made the Plaintiffs uncomfortable.

The Plaintiffs complained about Seaman and Perry’s conduct to Ives. Ives allegedly downplayed the situation, and opined that she personally found Berry to be attractive. Comments from one other JCCC employee indicate that Ives held both Seaman and Perry in high regard. In any event, Ives spoke with Seaman and Perry concerning the complaints, but did not initially inform any of her superiors.

After their initial complaint, the Plaintiffs allege that both Perry and Seaman continued to harass them, albeit in different ways. Perry allegedly became “hostile, unfriendly, gruff, demanding and uncooperative.” On one occasion, he allegedly demanded that both Plaintiffs be fired. On another occasion, Perry allegedly ordered Nürnberg to draw a blood sample from an inmate for an HIV test, a procedure that Nürnberg was not authorized to perform. When Nürnberg informed Perry she lacked authorization to do such a procedure, Perry became irate and threatened that she would be sorry if she didn’t do it.

Seaman, as opposed to showing hostility, allegedly continued to make sexual overtures toward Hunt. He allegedly made sexually inappropriate comments, and asked Hunt personal questions on a daily basis. These included questions and comments about Hunt’s love life, home life, whether she had a husband or boyfriend, how her body looked, how her clothes looked, that she would look good in a swim suit, and that she needed a man around the house. He allegedly made references to his personal sex life and made sexually suggestive gestures in the workplace. The Plaintiffs also allege that they had problems getting accident/incident reports from Perry and Seaman. The Plaintiffs allege that the combined conduct of Seaman and Perry made it impossible to do their jobs.

The Plaintiffs complained to Ives again, as well as to some of Ives’ superiors, including one Major Eberle. Upon learning of this, Ives allegedly shouted “Why did you involve that goddamn motherfucker Eberle?,” and hung up the phone on Nürn-berg. The Plaintiffs then met with Eberle, Dormiré, and Associate Superintendent Jerry Curtit. At the meeting, Dormiré allegedly told the Plaintiffs that they were “doing the program a lot of damage,” and suggested that they ought to withdraw their complaints. Further, after the meeting, when Nürnberg was eating a candy bar, Curtit allegedly told her to “shove it in [her] mouth to keep it quiet.”

The Plaintiffs assert that after their initial complaints, Ives too began to retaliate against them. Ives failed for several months to get employee files that the Plaintiffs needed to do their jobs. The Plaintiffs further allege that Ives would not give them necessary nursing protocols. Ives also attempted to change Nurnberg’s schedule, requiring her to report in at 5:30 a.m.

After the complaints, the Plaintiffs allege that Dormiré began treating them less favorably.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
119 F. Supp. 2d 996, 2000 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 16608, 2000 WL 1707482, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hunt-v-state-of-mo-dept-of-corrections-mowd-2000.