John C. Bonnell and Nancy L. Bonnell v. Albert Lorenzo, William MacQueen and Gus J. Demas, Mark Cousens

241 F.3d 800, 2001 U.S. App. LEXIS 2968, 2001 WL 214243
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedMarch 1, 2001
Docket99-2047
StatusPublished
Cited by234 cases

This text of 241 F.3d 800 (John C. Bonnell and Nancy L. Bonnell v. Albert Lorenzo, William MacQueen and Gus J. Demas, Mark Cousens) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
John C. Bonnell and Nancy L. Bonnell v. Albert Lorenzo, William MacQueen and Gus J. Demas, Mark Cousens, 241 F.3d 800, 2001 U.S. App. LEXIS 2968, 2001 WL 214243 (6th Cir. 2001).

Opinions

CLAY, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which COLE, J., joined. NELSON, J., (pp. 827-28), delivered a separate concurring opinion.

OPINION

CLAY, Circuit Judge.

Defendants, Albert. Lorenzo, William MacQueen, and Gus J. Demás, appeal from the order granting Plaintiffs, John C. Bon-nell and his wife Nancy L. Bonnell, injunc-tive relief as to Defendants’ disciplinary suspension of John Bonnell from his teaching position at Macomb Community College (“the College”), in this case brought by Plaintiffs for, among other things, violation of John Bonnell’s civil rights under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 and § 1985. This case presents us with the difficult task of balancing the precious First Amendment rights of a professor in the academic setting, against the legal obligation of a college to guarantee the rights of students to learn in an environment free of sexual harassment and hostility. Mindful of the significant import of the respective interests involved, we conclude that the balance tips in favor of the College such that the district court erred in granting the extraordinary relief of a preliminary injunction under the specific facts of this case. We therefore REVERSE the district court’s order.

BACKGROUND

Plaintiff has taught English Language and Literature at the College since the Fall of 1967. Plaintiff is a member of the Macomb Community College Faculty Or[803]*803ganization (“MCCFO”) and is employed pursuant to a Collective Bargaining Agreement (“CBA”).1

In a memorandum dated February 19, 1998, entitled “Obscene and vulgar language in classroom,” MacQueen informed Plaintiff that the parent of one of Plaintiffs students (not the complainant in the instant case) had filed a letter of complaint against him based upon a handout that Plaintiff had circulated to the members of his class. The handout, entitled “My Semester Overview,” is actually a review of Plaintiffs class prepared by one of Plaintiffs former students in 1991. The handout, as quoted in the memorandum, states as follows:

“Next, the language that was used during the first four weeks or so of class, in my opinion, was very inappropriate and distasteful. Never before have I encountered an English teacher who used the word “fuck” so openly and so frequently in a classroom discussion. In addition, the use of words such as “pussy5’ and “cunt” are simply uncalled for and very offensive to many, including me. I really feel that language such as this is very degrading to women.”

(J.A. at 101.) MacQueen went on to inform Plaintiff that “[although I do not know the context in which these words are used, I am concerned that your use of such language in the classroom will give rise to a claim of sexual harassment on the theory that this language creates a hostile learning environment for women. Simple knowledge of your past use of this language places the College under a legal duty to investigate whether you are creating a hostile learning environment.” (J.A. at 101.) Accordingly, a meeting was scheduled with Plaintiff, his MCCFO representative, and MacQueen, Dr. Ruth Reed, James Van Eman (the College’s General Counsel), and Margaret MacTavish (the College’s Affirmative Action Officer), for February 26, 1998 to investigate the matter.

Plaintiff agreed to the meeting and defended his use of such language. Plaintiff maintained that none of the terms at issue were directed to a particular student and were only used for demonstrating an academic point. Plaintiff claimed that he used the terms to “point out the chauvinistic degrading attitudes in society that depict women as sexual objects, as compared to certain words to describe male genitalia, which are not taboo or considered to be deliberately intended to degrade.” (J.A. at 30.)

The February 26, 1998, investigation concluded with MacQueen issuing a warning to Plaintiff via a memorandum dated March 4, 1998, entitled “Obscene and vulgar speech,” which states in relevant part:

This memorandum will confirm my verbal warning to you concerning your use of obscene and vulgar language in the classroom....
Unless germane to discussion of appropriate course materials and thus a constitutionally protected act of academic freedom, your utterance in the classroom of such words as ‘fuck,’ ‘cunt,’ and ‘pussy’ may serve as a reasonable basis for concluding as a matter of law that you are fostering a learning environment hostile to women, a form of sexual harassment. Federal and state law imposes a duty on the College to prevent the sexual harassment of its students and therefore requires that the College [804]*804discipline you if it finds that you have created a hostile environment.
The principle of academic freedom under the 1st Amendment serves to protect the utterances in question only if they are germane to course content as measured by professional teaching standards. Since the precise frontier between academic freedom and sexual harassment remains to be defined by the courts case by case, a teacher of English literature or composition courses may be able to find safety and comfort under the 1st Amendment only if the words uttered are found in appropriate textual materials and the utterances are pertinent to discussion of those materials. Beyond this point, the teacher enters uncharted territory and proceeds at his or her own risk of being found guilty of sexual harassment. Consequently, you are warned that a general use in the classroom of words like ‘fuck,’ ‘cunt,’ and ‘pussy’ outside a professional exegesis may compel the conclusion that you are creating a hostile learning environment requiring disciplinary action.

(J.A. at 102.)

About eight months later, in November of 1998, a female student enrolled in Plaintiffs English 122 class, and filed a written “sexual harassment” complaint with the College (“the Complaint”), claiming that Plaintiffs classroom language constituted sexual harassment. (J.A. at 230.) The Complaint states in relevant part:

This is a letter of formal complaint against Professor John Bonnell. I am currently a student in Mr. Bonnell’s class, English 122 from 8-9:30 PM on Mondays and Wednesdays. My complaint against Mr. Bonnell is sexual harassment....
Beginning in middle to late September the atmosphere of the class started to change from comfortable to extremely offensive. Mr. Bonnell began using lude [sic] and obscene comments. These comments stemmed from English stories that we were reading in class, and he decided to add his own personal comments. These comments were dehumanizing, degrading, and sexually explicit. Some of the stories that were required reading revealed sexual innu-endoes and implications. This should have been dealt with in a professional and appropriate manner, yet Mr. Bon-nell displayed a lack of maturity, sensitivity, and responsibility, by taking advantage of the conversations to express his own previous sexual experiences. If this class had been a psychology or human sexuality class, I might have understood more of why sex was the major content of our class. This was supposed to be an English class and I feel cheated out of my money because I paid tuition to learn English. I did not pay to hear about Mr. Bonnell’s sexual escapades.

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241 F.3d 800, 2001 U.S. App. LEXIS 2968, 2001 WL 214243, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/john-c-bonnell-and-nancy-l-bonnell-v-albert-lorenzo-william-macqueen-ca6-2001.