Juarez v. State of Utah

263 F. App'x 726
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 5, 2008
Docket06-4254
StatusUnpublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 263 F. App'x 726 (Juarez v. State of Utah) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Juarez v. State of Utah, 263 F. App'x 726 (10th Cir. 2008).

Opinion

*730 ORDER AND JUDGMENT *

TIMOTHY M. TYMKOVICH, Circuit Judge.

Margarita Juarez appeals the district court’s grant of summary judgment to the State of Utah’s Department of Health— Family Dental Plan on her claims for retaliation, disparate treatment, sexual harassment, and hostile work environment. Exercising jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291, we AFFIRM.

Background

General Background Facts

Utah’s Department of Health—Family Dental Plan (Family Dental) provides dental sendees to Medicaid and state aid recipients. Andrea Hight, the dental program administrator for Family Dental, hired Ms. Juarez as a dental assistant on October 7, 2003. She remained employed by Family Dental during all times relevant to her claims. Her direct supervisor was Mark Palmer and her primary work location was the Family Dental clinic in Salt Lake City.

Family Dental periodically sends dentists and dental assistants to other locations in Utah, where they provide dental services at temporary clinics for short periods. In December 2003, Ms. Juarez accompanied Dr. S., a dentist employed by Family Dental, to provide dental services in Enterprise, Utah. She again accompanied Dr. S. on a week-long work trip to Bicknell, Utah, in January 2004.

The first incident arises from the Bicknell trip. Shortly after that trip, on January 28, 2004, Dr. S. reported to Ms. Hight that Ms. Juarez made advances to him during the return drive. He claimed that Ms. Juarez was in the passenger seat and she threw her arms around him, kissed him, and told him that she loved him and wanted to be with him for eternity. Dr. S. indicated to Ms. Hight that Ms. Juarez’s conduct made him uncomfortable and that he would prefer not to be alone with her in the future. He said he did not want any serious action taken against her, but that he was concerned that she would retaliate against him. Ms. Hight informed Dr. S. that Human Resources would do an investigation and she asked him to keep his complaint confidential..

Ms. Hight and Mr. Palmer informed Ms. Juarez about Dr. S’s complaint of sexual harassment the next day. She denied the allegations, but she made no complaint against Dr. S. at that time. The following day, however, Ms. Juarez reported to Mr. Palmer that during the Bicknell trip, she and Dr. S. were at a restaurant when he pulled out a $100 bill, showed it to her, and told her it was hers if she would go back to his room and have sex with him. She told Mr. Palmer this made her very upset and that she got up and walked out of the restaurant. Mr. Palmer immediately reported Ms. Juarez’s complaint to Ms. Hight, who reported it to Human Resources for investigation. 1

*731 In a meeting with Ms. Hight and Shelley Miles from Human Resources on February 18, Ms. Juarez stated that Dr. S. should be fired. She indicated that she had researched his background and she gave them a Division of Occupational & Professional Licensing (DOPL) report and a police report, but they gave these documents back to her. 2 Ms. Hight stated that she was aware that Dr. S. was on probation with DOPL, but that his probation was not relevant to the sexual-harassment investigation. Ms. Miles advised Ms. Juarez to be careful about what she said about Dr. S., because it could be seen as retaliatory.

After this meeting, Ms. Juarez took medical leave from February 19-24, claiming stress and anxiety. While she was on medical leave, she submitted a complaint to DOPL alleging that Family Dental management was altering patient records to cover up for its poor record keeping. She admitted in her deposition that the only basis for this allegation was that she had observed Ms. Hight and other employees pulling and reading mass numbers of charts, which she said they normally did not do, and that she had seen a sticky note with Dr. S’s name on one of the charts. Her complaint to DOPL also reiterated her sexual harassment claim against Dr. S. In response to Ms. Juarez’s complaint, DOPL began an investigation.

On March 11, Family Dental placed both Ms. Juarez and Dr. S. on paid administrative leave, pending the outcome of the sexual harassment investigation. Dr. S. resigned from Family Dental on March 22, indicating that he had accepted a position in another state. Ms. Juarez returned to work on March 29.

On May 18, Ms. Miles notified Ms. Juarez by letter that the sexual-harassment investigation had been completed. She explained that Family Dental had waited until the DOPL investigation involving the clinic was completed before making a final determination on the allegations of misconduct against Ms. Juarez and Dr. S. The letter noted the parties’ conflicting stories and denials, and the lack of corroboration, and stated that Family Dental was unable to make a determination whether unlawful harassment had occurred. Ms. Miles concluded, “We will continue monitoring the work environment to ensure that you are not subjected to retaliation by others in the work place because of the complaint.” Aplt.App., Vol. II at 487.

Ms. Juarez filed a complaint with the Utah Anti-Discrimination & Labor Division and the EEOC on July 14, 2004, claiming retaliation and discrimination based on race, color, sex, and national origin. In that complaint, she repeated her claim of sexual harassment by Dr. S., and stated that since making that claim she had been subject to “constant harassment and adverse employment actions.” Id. at 489. She filed this action on January 19, 2005. After the close of discovery, Family Dental moved for summary judgment on the remaining claims 3 and the district court granted the motion in an order dated September 11, 2006, 2006 WL 2623905 (Order). Ms. Juarez filed a timely appeal.

*732 Ms. Juarez’s Allegations and Evidence

Ms. Juarez makes a series of allegations that fall roughly into four categories.

(1) Ms. Juarez alleges that Family Dental made changes to her job duties in retaliation for her making a sexual-harassment complaint against Dr. S. She claims that immediately after she returned from administrative leave, Mr. Palmer gave her a new job description that omitted any supervisory duties, he told her she would no longer be assisting dentists chairside, and she was made a permanent “runner.” 4 She also complains that at this time Mr. Palmer offered her a receptionist job, but she declined to accept that position and was never required to take it. •

The nature of the supervisory duties that she claims she lost is unclear from the record. When she pointed out the omission of these duties from her job description to Mr. Palmer, she admits that he assured her that her job had not changed. The evidence showed that before she made her sexual-harassment complaint, her job duties included sometimes functioning as a runner.

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