Lee v. Delta Air Lines, Inc.
This text of 778 So. 2d 1169 (Lee v. Delta Air Lines, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Cathy LEE
v.
DELTA AIR LINES, INC., and Eugene Galassi.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fifth Circuit.
*1170 Clement P. Donelon, Metairie, LA, Counsel for plaintiff-appellant.
Keith M. Pyburn, Jr., McCalla, Thompson, Pyburn, Hymowitz & Shapiro, New Orleans, LA, and Andrea L. Bowman, Delta Airlines, Inc., Atlanta, GA, Counsels for defendants-appellees.
Court composed of Judges CHEHARDY, McMANUS and H. CHARLES GAUDIN, Judge Pro Tempore.
*1171 CLARENCE E. McMANUS, Judge.
The instant matter arises out of Plaintiff-Appellant's claim that she was sexually harassed at her place of employment. For the reasons that follow, we affirm the summary judgment entered in favor of Defendant-Appellee, Lee's former employer, Delta Airlines.
STATEMENT OF THE CASE
This matter was instituted on February 16, 1995, when Plaintiff-Appellant, Cathy Lee, filed a Petition for Damages naming as defendants Appellee, Delta Air Lines, Inc., and Eugene Galassi, a former employee of Delta.
Delta filed a Motion for Summary Judgment on January 31, 2000; the motion was heard on February 18, 2000. Judgment was granted in Delta's favor at the conclusion of the hearing; a written judgment was signed on February 24, 2000.
On February 28, 2000, the trial judge designated the above judgment as a "final" judgment under LSA-C.C.P. art.1915, and on March 29, 2000, the trial judge signed an order which included a finding that there was no reason to delay an appeal from the summary judgment.
Lee's Motion for Devolutive Appeal was filed March 29, 2000.
FACTS
The following facts are gleaned from the documentary evidence submitted in connection with the motion for summary judgment.
The incident in question occurred on October 9, 1994, at the New Orleans International Airport. The individual Defendant, Eugene Galassi is, and had been before the hearing above, deceased.
The record contains parts of a deposition given by Lee, in which the following testimony is found, including a description of the incident which gives rise to this suit. Lee stated that on the date in question, while she was at her desk using the phone, Galassi stood behind her and "rubbed" his genitals against her in an action which she interpreted as sexual in nature. When Lee screamed and ordered Galassi to "stop," he did so. However, Lee testified that once he had stopped, he laughed at her and told her to "get off the Goddamn telephone." Lee did testify that Galassi had never touched her before this incident, but had, on an unspecified number of occasions, called her a bitch.
Lee testified that Galassi had been employed by Delta as a baggage handler, and that his job entailed removing luggage from moving belts to place it onto carts. She also testified that Galassi "had no business" near her desk, that his job did not involve doing any work at the desk where she had been seated when the incident occurred.
Lee testified that she subsequently asked that Galassi not be allowed to work near her. However, she stated that she had seen Galassi at least once after the above incident, when he had been assigned to work in her area. Lee stated that she had spoken with "Scuddy" about the incident, but could not remember when. She also admitted that she "may have" told Mr. Decareaux that she did not want to "do anything" about the incident, that she didn't want to "deal with it" at that time.
Lee also executed an affidavit regarding the incident in February of 2000, some six years after the incident took place. In the affidavit, Lee related that Galassi had "come up from behind her and rubbed his genitalia against her buttocks." She stated that she had been tremendously upset and frightened during the incident. Lee also stated that "it was clear to her that Galassi rubbed himself up against her because he was mad at her because she was on the phone and not working." Finally, in her affidavit, Lee stated that she had been unaware of any Delta policy against sexual harassment.
Lee's handwritten note reporting the incident, addressed to Mr. Fred Scudgins, *1172 and dated October 25, 1994, is also found in the record. In the note, Lee complained that "Gene sneaked up behind me and put his arms over my shoulders and began making heavy body contact on my buttocks with his penis, grinding and rolling on me. I dropped the telephone screaming and fighting Gene off of me." She also stated in the letter that she had been afraid Gene would harass her again, and requested that she and he not be assigned to work together again.
The record includes other documentary evidence.
By way of a letter dated December 28, 1994, Fred H. Scudgins, the supervisor of operations services, reported the incident to Linda Small, the station manager of Delta's facilities at the airport. In the letter, Scudgins informed Small that Lee had, at first, been unwilling to cooperate in an investigation of the incident, that she had told him she "did not want to make a big deal" out of the incident. Scudgins noted in the letter that Lee's written statement had only been provided to him after Galassi had resigned from Delta, over an incident unrelated to the incident with Lee.
In a memo from Herb Poche (whose position is not indicated) to Scudgins, Poche related that Lee had not wanted to "discuss or report" the incident.
An affidavit by Leo A. Decareaux is included in the record, in which Decareaux states that Galassi had admitted to "dancing" behind Lee, but had denied actually making physical contact with her. In the affidavit, Decareaux stated that he had reprimanded Galassi, and had threatened possible job loss as a result of any further such conduct. In addition, Decareaux stated that Galassi had not been permitted to work in the bag room after the one incident.
The record also contains a sheet outlining Delta's "Standard Practice" regarding sexual harassment. The sheet contains the following language:
SEXUAL HARASSMENT
It is Delta's policy to provide a work environment free of unnecessary and inappropriate distractions, including harassment of employees on the basis of sex. Accordingly, Delta strictly prohibits sexual harassment.
Sexual harassment includes unwelcome sexual advances, requests for sexual favors, and other verbal or physical conduct of a sexual nature such as uninvited touching or sexually related comment when:
. . .
C. The conduct has the purpose or effect of unreasonably interfering with an individual's work performance or creating an intimidating, hostile or offensive working environment.
Sexual harassment is serious misconduct that may result in disciplinary action up to and including discharge.
Finally, we note that the record contains some portions of a deposition given by Dr. Robert Ancira in which Dr. Ancira testified that Lee had suffered Post-traumatic Stress Disorder as a result of the incident.
LAW AND ARGUMENT
Plaintiff has filed several assignments of error, all relating to the trial judge's oral reasons for judgment. However, this matter comes to us as a review of a summary judgment: our review of the trial judge's findings are therefore of a severely limited scope. Instead, in determining whether summary judgment is appropriate, appellate courts review evidence de novo under the same criteria that govern the trial court's determination of whether summary judgment is appropriate. Schroeder v.
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778 So. 2d 1169, 2001 WL 79756, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lee-v-delta-air-lines-inc-lactapp-2001.