Kristina Garcia v. Beaumont Health Royal Oak Hosp.

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedOctober 7, 2022
Docket22-1186
StatusUnpublished

This text of Kristina Garcia v. Beaumont Health Royal Oak Hosp. (Kristina Garcia v. Beaumont Health Royal Oak Hosp.) 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
Kristina Garcia v. Beaumont Health Royal Oak Hosp., (6th Cir. 2022).

Opinion

NOT RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION File Name: 22a0399.06

No. 22-1186 FILED UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS Oct 07, 2022 FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT DEBORAH S. HUNT, Clerk

) KRISTINA GARCIA, ) Plaintiff-Appellant, ) ) ON APPEAL FROM THE UNITED v. ) STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR ) THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF BEAUMONT HEALTH ROYAL OAK ) MICHIGAN HOSPITAL; RACHEL LUCA, ) ) OPINION Defendants-Appellees. )

Before: BATCHELDER, GRIFFIN, and KETHLEDGE, Circuit Judges.

Alice M. Batchelder, Circuit Judge. While working at Beaumont Health Royal Oak

Hospital as a respiratory therapist, Kristina Garcia allegedly suffered sexual harassment and

retaliation at the hands of a coworker, Rachel Luca. In response, Beaumont disciplined Luca and

prevented the two of them from interacting again. But because Beaumont still scheduled Garcia

to work the same shift as Luca on an infrequent basis, Garcia resigned in February 2019, and sued

for employment discrimination. She claimed Beaumont’s actions created a hostile work

environment, that Beaumont discriminated against her based on her gender, and that it failed to

prevent Luca from retaliating against her in the workplace. The district court granted Beaumont

summary judgment on all of Garcia’s claims, finding her work environment tolerable and

Beaumont’s response reasonable. We AFFIRM. No. 22-1186, Garcia v. Beaumont Health Royal Oak Hosp., et al.

I. Factual Background and Procedural History

Garcia began working at Beaumont in 2011. Respiratory therapists generally work in pairs

throughout the hospital and report to four department-level supervisors during the day shift. When

a supervisor is not onsite (as is often the case during the midnight shifts of weekends or holidays),

the charge therapist supervises the other respiratory therapists. Charge therapists respond to staff

needs and handle issues that arise during a shift.

A. Sexual Harassment

Garcia and Luca worked together at Beaumont until December of 2018. During the

midnight shift of July 29-30, 2018, Garcia, Luca, and a third coworker, Colleen Kaye, chatted

during a scheduled break about their bras and the varying qualities and styles. Comparing bra

types, all three women pulled out their bra straps to show the others. Garcia alleges that while she

was showing her bra strap, Luca suddenly walked over to Garcia, reached down Garcia’s shirt,

pinched her nipple, and pulled her breast out of her bra. When Garcia angrily asked why Luca

grabbed her breast, Luca stated, “well, you have nice nipples,” and laughed.

Just over a week later, on August 6, Garcia complained to Antoinette Carroll, one of the

day-shift supervisors, about the incident and recorded the entire conversation on her phone.

During the conversation, the following exchange occurred,

Garcia: “Because like I said Net [Antoinette Carroll], I’m really, if that was a man I would’ve hit him without thinking.”

Carroll: “Well, he would have been out of the job. He would have been gone. Because that’s sexual harassment. And guess what? It’s sexual harassment on her part, too.”

At the conclusion of the conversation, Carroll asked Garcia to put her complaint in writing. Garcia

did so and in her written complaint she asked to not be paired with Luca where they could be alone.

2 No. 22-1186, Garcia v. Beaumont Health Royal Oak Hosp., et al.

A week later, on August 13, Carroll interviewed Kaye and Luca separately to learn more

about the incident. While she initially believed Garcia’s accusation, after completing her

interviews with Luca and Kaye, Carroll concluded the accusation was unsubstantiated. Both Luca

and Kaye claimed the alleged assault did not occur, while Luca explained that she accidentally

touched Garcia while examining her bra strap–nothing more. Luca further claimed that Garcia not

only made up the accusation but began discussing it with others in the staff room. Despite her

findings, Carroll still warned Luca, prohibiting her from any inappropriate conversations,

behavior, or touching of Garcia. Carroll also prohibited Luca from speaking about the incident

with anyone. Garcia reported no issues of sexual harassment after the July 29-30 incident, and

does not claim that Luca ever sexually harassed her again. In fact, other than a brief attempt at

conversation on October 27 in which Garcia walked away before Luca could speak to her, Garcia

never interacted personally with Luca at all after the July incident.

B. Retaliation

On August 27, 2018, Garcia complained to Carroll, claiming Luca retaliated against her by

telling coworkers that Garcia lied about the incident and made up her story to get Luca fired.

Garcia noticed during this time that coworkers did not want to be in a room alone with her anymore

and attributed it to Luca’s gossip.

Beaumont immediately acted on the complaint, attempting without success to reach Luca

by telephone almost every day from August 27 through August 31. No one was able to reach Luca

until September 7, when a supervisor located her in-office and interviewed her. After concluding

that Luca had violated Carroll’s directive to keep the complaint confidential, Beaumont disciplined

Luca, putting her on a performance enhancement plan on October 18, 2018.

3 No. 22-1186, Garcia v. Beaumont Health Royal Oak Hosp., et al.

C. Scheduling Complaints and Garcia’s Resignation

Garcia alleges that, contrary to her wishes, Beaumont scheduled her as charge therapist

while Luca was on shift a total of five times between October 13 and December 9. While

Beaumont did technically schedule her for those shifts (although never paired in a two-person

group), Garcia worked as charge therapist with Luca under her supervision only one of those five

times. During that shift, Garcia did not interact with Luca at all.

During the first week of December, Luca did not show up to work, leading Beaumont to

terminate her employment. On December 13, 2018, Garcia learned that Luca had been arrested

and sent to jail, confined for a period of two to three months. Sometime around February of 2019,

Garcia began hearing rumors that Luca would both be released from jail soon and would resume

her employment at Beaumont. This fear, combined with Garcia’s perception that her request to

not be scheduled with Luca had not been honored in the past, caused her to resign her position on

February 28, 2019.

D. Procedural History

On June 6, 2019, Garcia filed this lawsuit alleging sex discrimination, sexual orientation

discrimination, and retaliation. She later amended her complaint and added Michigan Elliot-

Larsen Civil Rights Act (ELCRA), Mich. Comp. Laws § 37.2101 et seq., claims. Her amended

complaint stated all claims against Beaumont and an ELCRA retaliation claim against Luca. Luca

failed to defend herself against the suit and Garcia moved for default judgment. Beaumont

objected and the district court, to avoid inconsistent judgments, denied Garcia’s motion for default

judgment without prejudice until her claim against Beaumont could be heard on the merits. When

Beaumont moved for summary judgment, the court granted the motion.

4 No. 22-1186, Garcia v. Beaumont Health Royal Oak Hosp., et al.

After summary judgment, Garcia renewed her motion for default judgment as to Luca,

while Beaumont moved for a bill of costs to be taxed for various litigation expenses. Garcia

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