Lindsey v. Bd. of Trs. of the Univ. of Ky.

552 S.W.3d 77
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedFebruary 2, 2018
DocketNO. 2016-CA-000521-MR
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 552 S.W.3d 77 (Lindsey v. Bd. of Trs. of the Univ. of Ky.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lindsey v. Bd. of Trs. of the Univ. of Ky., 552 S.W.3d 77 (Ky. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinions

JONES, JUDGE:

*80Tonya Lindsey has appealed from the orders of the Fayette Circuit Court granting summary judgment and dismissing her claims for violations under the Kentucky Civil Rights Act, including both race and gender discrimination under KRS 2 344.040 and retaliation under KRS 344.280. In addition to alleging that the circuit court erred in granting summary judgment and abused its discretion in evidentiary rulings, Lindsey argues that the circuit court judge should have recused or been disqualified from presiding over the case. After careful review, we affirm the circuit court's order regarding discrimination and find no error in the circuit court judge's refusal to recuse; however, we reverse the circuit court's order regarding retaliation and remand Lindsey's retaliation claim for further proceedings.

I. BACKGROUND

In 1990, Lindsey, an African-American woman, began working at the University of Kentucky ("UK").3 Lindsey alleges that during her tenure at UK she was passed over for promotion to the Clinical Coordinator position on three separate occasions. Lindsey asserts that UK's decisions not to promote her were impermissibly driven by the race and gender biases of her supervisors in violation of Kentucky's Civil Rights Act.

The first time Lindsey applied to be Clinical Coordinator was in 1999. Lindsey testified in her deposition that she was interviewed for the position, but another woman, Denise Holder ("Holder"), who was not African-American, got the position. Lindsey testified that she talked to the chief physician in the department about not being promoted, but she did not bring up race. Lindsey also talked to Terry Allen ("Allen"), the head of the equal opportunities office at UK. She told him that she felt qualified for the Clinical Coordinator position based upon the job description; however, she felt like she had not been offered the job due to her gender and race. Lindsey believed that she was more qualified than Holder, given that Lindsey had her certified nursing assistant license.

When the Clinical Coordinator position opened up again on February 25, 2002, Lindsey testified in her deposition that she again applied for the position. But the records reviewed by Catherine Lasley-Employment Manager of UK's Human Resources ("HR") office-indicate that Lindsey did not actually apply for the position at that time. Lindsey said that she had asked Julia Snow ("Snow"), who was the administrative staff officer for the department,4 about interviewing for the position *81and that Snow told her that she would not have to interview for the position since she was already employed in the department. As it turns out, however, Snow was not in charge of promoting someone to that position. Subsequently, Lindsey was never interviewed, and the position, ultimately, was given to Gary Broome ("Broome"). Broome was not working for UK at the time he was awarded the position.

Lindsey testified that she applied for the Clinical Coordinator position a third time in October of 2003.5 However, the application process was clouded by Broome's unusual resignation. Despite being on an improvement plan, such that Snow had been coaching Broome to better manage the clinic, Broome told UK that he was going to resign from his Clinical Coordinator position. Consequently, UK posted the position online, and Lindsey applied for the position. But Broome changed his mind about resigning before UK hired anyone. Broome asked to remain Clinical Coordinator, and UK obliged, hoping that Broome's performance would improve. Accordingly, because Broome did not resign, UK took down its online posting.

A few months later, however, after Broome accepted a different position at UK, the Clinical Coordinator position was once again opened. UK posted the position online for seven days in January of 2004, requiring a second application from Lindsey to be considered for the position. But Lindsey did not see the January 2004 posting and, therefore, did not submit an on-line application. Instead, Lindsey learned at an informal staff meeting that Tracey Eades ("Eades"), a white male co-worker who learned about the reposted position from Snow, was temporarily filling the Clinical Coordinator position until a new Clinical Coordinator was hired. At that meeting, Lindsey asked Snow why Eades was temporarily filling the position, and Snow allegedly responded by telling Lindsey "to understand that [Lindsey's] a black woman, and [she] cannot have a management position." Snow allegedly explained that Lindsey was from a different world and that black women are "aggressive or dominant, assertive."

Snow, however, denied making those remarks in her deposition. Snow claimed that, in trying to establish a rapport with Lindsey, she had told Lindsey about her daughter's coach who was a "wonderfully assertive" black woman. Snow claimed that she admired her daughter's coach and that she told Lindsey that she wanted to be more assertive and direct in the way she communicated, like Lindsey, her daughter's coach, and Jocelyn Hill, a black employee in the department. Snow denied ever using the word "aggressive[.]"

Later that day, after the informal staff meeting, Snow asked Lindsey if she was still interested in the Clinical Coordinator position and then informed Lindsey that the position had been posted again but taken down. Lindsey later learned that the position had ultimately been given to Eades.

At a meeting on March 10, 2004, Allen addressed Snow's remarks to Lindsey as well as Eades's previous remark to Lindsey, which was prior to Eades's position as Clinical Coordinator. As co-workers, Eades had asked Lindsey what she would think if someone told her, "I haven't seen you in a coon's age." Eades explained that he had heard the phrase and had considered using it colloquially, but he knew the word "coon" was a derogatory term towards African-Americans, *82so he decided to ask Lindsey, whom Eades considered a friend, if "coon's age" was similarly derogatory and if she would be offended if someone used that phrase when speaking to her. Eades thought that Lindsey would give him an honest answer. And, Lindsey did: she told Eades that the phrase was offensive. Although Eades did not think Lindsey was offended by his question at that time, Eades later found out, as Lindsey's supervisor, that she had been offended.

At the meeting on March 10, 2004, Lindsey said that the remarks by Snow and Eades had created a hostile working environment. Furthermore, Lindsey alleged that she had been discriminated against; Lindsey alleged that she had been repeatedly passed over for promotion to the Clinical Coordinator position for race-based and gender-based reasons. Lastly, she requested that no one retaliate against her because of her complaints.

On April 9, 2004, Lindsey filed a Stage 1 grievance, alleging illegal acts of discrimination and retaliation. Lindsey alleged, in her grievance, that Eades had disciplined Lindsey with a written warning for refusing to setup a proctology room, which Dr. Curtis J. Clark witnessed and testified about in a deposition, in retaliation for Lindsey's accusations of discrimination at that meeting on March 10, 2004.

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552 S.W.3d 77, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lindsey-v-bd-of-trs-of-the-univ-of-ky-kyctapp-2018.