Kannenberg v. Labor & Industry Review Commission

571 N.W.2d 165, 213 Wis. 2d 373, 1997 Wisc. App. LEXIS 1070
CourtCourt of Appeals of Wisconsin
DecidedSeptember 18, 1997
Docket97-0224
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 571 N.W.2d 165 (Kannenberg v. Labor & Industry Review Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Wisconsin primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kannenberg v. Labor & Industry Review Commission, 571 N.W.2d 165, 213 Wis. 2d 373, 1997 Wisc. App. LEXIS 1070 (Wis. Ct. App. 1997).

Opinion

VERGERONT, J.

Aldene Kannenberg appeals the affirmance of a decision of the Labor and Industry Review Commission (LIRC) finding that she was not sexually harassed in her employment within the meaning of § 111.36(l)(b) and (br), Stats., and § 111.32(13), Stats., 1 and was not subjected to retaliation as prohib *376 ited by § 111.322(3), Stats. 2 She contends that LIRC erred in the legal standards it applied to determine whether there was sexual harassment and that the evidence shows that she was subject to sexual harass *377 ment and retaliation. We conclude that LIRC applied the correct legal standards on the sexual harassment claim, and that its decision on that claim is supported by substantial evidence in the record and is a reasonable application of the law. We therefore affirm.

BACKGROUND

Kannenberg began work on January 2, 1991, at Walker Stainless Equipment Company in New Lisbon, Wisconsin, as a second-shift tool room attendant in the transportation division. She was the only woman working among 20-25 men on the second shift. Kannenberg's complaints to Walker personnel about behavior she considered sexually harassing began in mid-February 1993. She filed a complaint with LIRC's Equal Rights Division (ERD) in November 1993. 3 While the complaint was being investigated, Kan-nenberg was disciplined for discourteous behavior to a supplier and she filed a complaint for retaliation as a result of that discipline. The ERD issued determinations of probable cause on both complaints in the summer of 1994. Kannenberg filed a third complaint based on incidents that occurred in the fall of 1994. Rather than have the ERD conduct an investigation of the third complaint, the parties agreed to have the allegations of that complaint heard at the hearing already scheduled on the first two complaints.

Following the hearing, the ERD issued a decision determining that Walker did not discriminate against Kannenberg, did not engage in sexual harassment, and did not retaliate. LIRC agreed with the ERD decision *378 and adopted the examiner's findings and conclusions as its own, after modifying one finding. LIRC's findings of fact, as modified, are as follows.

Kannenberg's primary responsibility was to issue tools and parts stored in the tool room to the employees who were assembling the equipment. The company's rule was that when employees wanted a tool, they had to fill out a requisition slip and the tool room attendant would then get the tool. However, before Kannenberg's employment, the employees and the tool room attendant followed these rules only loosely. Shortly after she was hired, one of Kannenberg's supervisors told her he wanted her to strictly enforce the rules. At the time Kannenberg was hired, pictures of nude and scantily clad women had been commonly displayed around the workplace, including the tool room. After she was hired, however, Walker's management instructed the pinups in the tool room be taken down, and they were. Male employees still kept pinups on the inside of their tool boxes, which were about waist high and had cupboard type doors.

In mid-February of 1993, while on break in the lunchroom, Kannenberg found a photograph of a man and woman having sexual intercourse. She complained to her immediate supervisor, Tom Baldwin, who gave the photo back to her without saying anything. She complained the next day to the shop supervisor, Kevin Klinker. Klinker spoke with other employees about the photo and concluded that it had not been left for the purpose of offending her but had been passed around among employees during the first shift and simply left on the lunchroom table.

Later that month Kannenberg complained to Klinker about pinups of naked women that were taped inside the doors of an open tool box belonging to *379 another employee, Reisenhauer, because she believed the pictures were purposely being displayed to offend her. Klinker spoke with the employee and ascertained that the pictures were not being displayed to deliberately offend Kannenberg. Walker's management responded by ordering employees to keep their tool boxes closed if they contained pinup pictures. On March 12,1993, management posted a directive on the bulletin board next to the time clock that all employees were to immediately remove sexually oriented pictures, jokes and similar items from the premises. Management personnel orally publicized the directive as they went through the plant to see if the directive was being followed. Compliance with the directive was good, and Kannenberg did not again complain about seeing such items at work.

The male employees commonly spoke foul language in the plant and although management asked them to watch their language when they were around the tool room out of consideration for Kannenberg, she overheard foul language from time to time. At no time, however, did any employee address foul language to Kannenberg or call her by a vulgar or obscene name. During the summer of 1993 these three incidents occurred, the first of which Kannenberg reported to management: (1) two coworkers, McCullough and Reisenhauer, yelled "fuck you" to each other in front of Kannenberg with the intention of provoking her, although the epithets were not directed at her; (2) she heard McCullough shout "oh fuck" near her, and believed that the expletive was intended to offend her, although the circumstances indicated the employee was not intending to address her; and (3) one coworker pulled at another's trousers when Kannenberg was retrieving some tools for them; when she returned, the *380 second coworker, with his back to her, was hitching up his trousers and saying, "I wonder if this could be considered sexual harassment."

That same summer approximately four obscene drawings or words appeared on the cardboard covers of the requisition pads kept at the gate to the tool room including: (1) A cartoon of a mouse with a human phallus and the words "here, pussy pussy"; (2) a cartoon of a man, penis showing, wearing a mask, and labeled "southy"; (3) the words "wanna see my penis"; and (4) a drawing of a penis. None of the drawings or words were specifically directed at Kannenberg. Through her attorney, Kannenberg provided copies of these drawings to Walker's management in August of 1993. Management questioned several employees about the items, including the one employee who Kannenberg suspected of making one of the drawings. Everyone questioned denied knowledge of the drawings. The suspected employee left employment with Walker soon after. There were no more obscene drawings or words on the requisition pad after that time.

On another occasion that summer, Kannenberg became upset by her coworkers' practice of cutting out pieces of the cardboard covers of requisition pads for tool chips.

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Bluebook (online)
571 N.W.2d 165, 213 Wis. 2d 373, 1997 Wisc. App. LEXIS 1070, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kannenberg-v-labor-industry-review-commission-wisctapp-1997.