Jennings v. UNIVERSITY OF N. CAR. AT CHAPEL HILL

340 F. Supp. 2d 666, 2004 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 21827, 2004 WL 2414526
CourtDistrict Court, M.D. North Carolina
DecidedOctober 27, 2004
Docket1:99CV400
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 340 F. Supp. 2d 666 (Jennings v. UNIVERSITY OF N. CAR. AT CHAPEL HILL) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, M.D. North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jennings v. UNIVERSITY OF N. CAR. AT CHAPEL HILL, 340 F. Supp. 2d 666, 2004 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 21827, 2004 WL 2414526 (M.D.N.C. 2004).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

TILLEY, Chief Judge.

This matter is before the court on the following motions: Defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment [Doc. # 115]; Plaintiffs Motion to Strike Amended Answer by Defendants and for Default Judgment [Doc. # 137]; and Plaintiffs Motion to Strike Exhibits C through H to the Affidavit of Anson Dorrance [Doc. # 142], For the reasons set forth below, both of Plaintiffs Motions to Strike will be DENIED and Defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment will be GRANTED.

I.

The facts of this case viewed in the light most favorable to the Plaintiff are as follows. 1 The sole remaining Plaintiff 2 in this case, Melissa Jennings, was a member of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill (“UNC”) women’s intercollegiate soccer team (“the team”) from August 1996 until she was dismissed from the team in May 1998. During this time, Defendant Anson Dorrance was the team’s head coach and Defendant William Palladi-no was an assistant coach. Also at that time, the following defendants were employed by UNC: Michael Hooker, as Chancellor; 3 Susan Ehringhaus, as Assistant to the Chancellor and Senior University Counsel; John Swofford, as Director of Athletics; Richard Baddour, as Director of Athletics; 4 and Clara Elizabeth *669 (“Beth”) Miller, as Senior Associate Director of Athletics. All of these defendants are sued in their individual capacities. The University is also a defendant in this action.

Ms. Jennings was recruited by Mr. Dor-rance to join the UNO women’s soccer team as a goal keeper. (Jennings Dep. at 31-32.) She did not receive an athletic scholarship. (Dorrance Aff. at 1.) During the two academic years that Ms. Jennings was a member of the team, she claims to have overheard several comments about other team members made by Coaches Dorrance and Palladino, particularly at pre-practice warm-up sessions. Ms. Jennings also claims that on two occasions Mr. Dorrance made direct inquiries into her personal life. Ms. Jennings’ legal claims against the Defendants are based on those comments, remarks, and conversations.

It was common for team members to warm up together before practice by stretching. During those warm-up sessions, the team members would often discuss their personal lives including at times their sexual activities. According to Ms. Jennings, Mr. Dorrance would, on occasion, come over to the players during warm-up time, or when they were congregating at the soccer office on the practice field known as “the Hut.” 5 When he joined them, he would occasionally also participate in their conversations, asking the players about their activities over the weekend and sometimes discussing the people with whom the players were sexually involved. He did not initiate these conversations about sexual activities. Ms. Jennings points to particular comments that Mr. Dorrance allegedly made on a few occasions when he joined the players’ conversations. He allegedly made reference to one players’s sexual partner as the “fuck of the minute” (Jennings Dep. at 52), and asked another if she was going to have a “shag fest” with her boyfriend and if she was going to “fuck him and leave him” (Id. at 53, 63). According to Ms. Jennings, Mr. Dorrance used the word “fuck” very often. (Id. at 38, 79.) Mr. Dorrance also allegedly talked about boys coming out of the players’ windows after one player said she had climbed into one person’s window after a sexual encounter with a different person. (Id. at 64; Keller Dep. at 121.)

Ms. Jennings claims Mr. Dorrance also sometimes commented on players’ physical attributes, including their legs and breasts. (Jennings Dep. at 44, 51, 83) She alleges that he once called one player a “fat ass” (Id. at 91) and that he sometimes referred to another player, who was thought to be a lesbian, by a masculine name (Id. at 97, 98). Ms. Jennings also claims to have overheard Mr. Dorrance in a conversation with Mr. Prentice refer to an “Asian threesome,” which she interpreted as Mr. Dor-rance and two members of the team. (Id. at 44.) She says that he “made [one member of the team] out to be the team slut” and actually called that player a “slut,” possibly in Mr. Palladino’s presence. (Id. at 76.) Finally, Ms. Jennings claims to have heard from other players that Mr. Dorrance told Ms. Keller he would like to be a “fly on the wall” the first time one player had sex. (Id. at 52.) Some players, including those who were the subjects of the comments, appeared to be flattered, or at least not offended, by Mr. Dorrance’s behavior. (Id. at 87, 88, 90; see Affs. of Falk, Fettig, Dacey.) Others appeared to *670 Ms. Jennings to be upset by it. (Jennings Dep. at 49-50, 97-98.)

Mr. Palladino seems to have joined in the conversations and made comments less frequently than Mr. Dorrance. His role appears to have been a passive one, laughing at something the players said or at a comment Mr. Dorrance made about a player. (Keller Dep. at 125.) Ms. Jennings alleges that she once heard him and Mr. Dorrance “joking back and forth about [how] they had been sending dirty e-mails, dirty jokes between them.” (Jennings Dep. at 76.) Ms. Jennings said in her deposition that Mr. Palladino did not humiliate any of the women on the team. (Id. at 106.)

Ms. Jennings did not normally participate in the discussions about dating and sexual activities during team warm-up time, nor was she a target of Mr. Dor-rance’s comments about players’ bodies. On two occasions, however, she was the focus of a conversation in Mr. Dorrance’s presence that made her uncomfortable. During one of those conversations Mr. Dorrance made a direct inquiry of her; during the other he was merely present. The first occurred during warm-up time before practice. When the team was discussing their dating relationships, the conversation turned to Ms. Jennings, ,.and what she was going to do with her, boyfriend that weekend. Mr. Dorrance did not initiate this turn in the conversation, but he did join in the inquiry once it was made, saying ‘Tes, what about Trim’n?” 6 (Id. at 67.) Ms. Jennings did not respond to any of the speculation about her weekend. (Id. at 68.) Shortly after that incident, her teammates asked whether one of Ms. Jennings’ male friends who had attended a game was her boyfriend. Mr. Dorrance was also present for that conversation. (Id. at 73.)

After the fall season and before the end of her freshman year, Ms. Jennings claims to have met with Mr. Dorrance individually. This “end-of season” meeting allegedly took place in Mr. Dorrance’s hotel room while the team was attending a tournament in Santa Clara, California. Mr. Dor-rance. began the meeting by discussing Ms. Jennings’ grades, which were low enough that she may have been in danger of becoming academically ineligible to play soccer. (Id. at 129-30.) He expressed that she needed to bring her grades up to the team standard;.

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Bluebook (online)
340 F. Supp. 2d 666, 2004 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 21827, 2004 WL 2414526, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jennings-v-university-of-n-car-at-chapel-hill-ncmd-2004.