Mulvin v. City of Sandusky

320 F. Supp. 2d 627, 2004 WL 1304013
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Ohio
DecidedJune 14, 2004
Docket3:02 CV 7567
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 320 F. Supp. 2d 627 (Mulvin v. City of Sandusky) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mulvin v. City of Sandusky, 320 F. Supp. 2d 627, 2004 WL 1304013 (N.D. Ohio 2004).

Opinion

ORDER

CARR, District Judge.

This is a Title VII retaliation case in which plaintiff David Mulvin, the former *630 Director of Public Services for defendant City of Sandusky, alleges that the City and its employees, SuAnne Brown, Edward Feick, Frank Fosco, John Ginty, Michael Kresser, William Mason, Frank Valli, Gerald Lechner, Don Icsman, and Robert Schultz, terminated his employment in violation of Title VII and Ohio Revised Code § 4112 after he reported sexual harassment by defendant Lechner. Plaintiff also alleges state law claims for violation of Ohio public policy, negligent supervision or retention, abuse of process, tortious interference with employment relations, and civil conspiracy.

This court has jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. §§ 1331 and 1367. Pending is defendants’ motion for summary judgment. For the following reasons, that motion will be granted, in part and denied in part.

BACKGROUND

Plaintiff began working for the City of Sandusky, Ohio in 1987, and was promoted to the position of Director of Public Services in 1993. He served in this position until his termination in October, 2001. Plaintiff says that he received no negative performance evaluations during his employment, and that at the time of his discharge he was responsible for the supervision of several City departments and had successfully supervised several large public projects. Defendant Lechner is City Manager and was plaintiffs direct supervisor. Defendants Icsman and Schultz are City Law Director and Director of Administrative Services, respectively, and defendants Brown, Feick, Fosco, Ginty, Kresser, Mason, and Valli are former or current City Commissioners.

The events leading up to this lawsuit began in May, 2001, when Connie Nicholson began working as plaintiffs administrative secretary. Nicholson had previously worked with Lechner. During the first week of Nicholson’s employment, she and Lechner hugged at a training session. A short time later, she and Lechner hugged again while Nicholson was at City Hall delivering mail. When they hugged a third time, while Nicholson was making another mail delivery, plaintiff claims that Nicholson later told him she “attempted to pull away. Despite Nicholson’s resistance, Lechner pulled her in and hugged her again. It was at this point that Nicholson told Lechner she was uncomfortable with the hugging and that she would not hug him anymore.” (Doc. 52, at 3).

Defendants dispute this characterization of the third hug and claim that the hugging was mutually agreeable and “friendly.” (Doc. 33, at 3). Defendants claim that Lechner stopped the hugs when Nicholson told him after the third hug that they had “hugged enough.” (Id. at 4). Defendants allege that plaintiff saw the initial hug between Lechner and Nicholson and repeatedly questioned her about the hugs in the weeks that followed; defendants further allege it was plaintiffs repeated questioning that caused Nicholson to question the appropriateness of the hugging. Plaintiff disputes defendants’ assertions as to when he learned of the hugging, claiming that he knew nothing of the hugging until early July, 2001, when Nicholson told him about the incidents.

Plaintiff says that when Nicholson told him about the hugs in July, 2001, she expressed concern about them. In mid-July, plaintiff alleges that Nicholson called him to tell him that Lechner was coming to the office. According to plaintiff, Nicholson indicated that she wanted plaintiff to return so that she would not be alone when Lechner arrived. Plaintiff was not there when Lechner arrived, however, and plaintiff claims that Nicholson called him again, very concerned. At this time, plaintiff says he called Sue Skinner, a management employee who worked next door, and *631 asked her to talk to Lechner. He also says he advised Nicholson to leave the building, which she did. (Doc. 52, at 4).

A short time after this incident, plaintiff says that he walked by Lechner’s office and heard Nicholson’s voice inside; later, Nicholson told plaintiff that “she was glad [plaintiff] ... showed up at City Hall because Lechner let her go when he heard [plaintiffs] voice.” (Id.). Plaintiff says that Nicholson reported to him that Lech-ner had called her several times, asked her what she was wearing, and sent her an email, the contents of which she would not show to plaintiff. (Id. at 4-5).

Plaintiff claims that on July 20, 2001, “Nicholson, who appeared to have been crying, came to [plaintiff] and told him that her encounter with Lechner was ‘really bad today.’ Nicholson proceeded to tell [plaintiff] that Lechner had kissed her, held her so tight she could feel he was sexually excited and fondled her breasts.” (Id. at 5).

Skinner, who is not a party to this lawsuit, says that Nicholson told her that Lechner’s hugs were “more than just a friendly hug,” that it got to the point where Lechner put his hand underneath her shirt and rubbed Nicholson’s back, and that at the time he did this they were behind his office door and she felt trapped. (Doc. 48, at 32). Skinner also told the City investigator in August, 2001 that Nicholson had told her that being alone with Lechner made Nicholson uncomfortable and that Lechner had held Nicholson so tightly she “could feel through his pants that he was excited.” (Doc. 52, at 5; doc. 48 at 38-39). Skinner also says that Nicholson told her she did not want the incidents to be reported to anyone because “she could handle the situation” and she was fearful of losing her job. (Doc. 48, at 32-33, 46).

Nicholson does remember talking to Skinner about Lechner, but she claims that both plaintiff and Skinner embellished what happened to her. She admits that she hugged Lechner three times, and on the third occasion told him that she did not want to hug him anymore. She claims, however, that she was never afraid of losing her job and that she felt pressured and intimidated by plaintiff and others investigating the incidents. (Doc. 49, at 41-43).

On July 31, 2001, plaintiff reported Lechner’s alleged harassment of Nicholson to defendant Icsman, the City’s Law Director. According to City policy, he had an obligation as her supervisor to report the alleged harassment, regardless of whether she wanted him to report the incidents. Plaintiff alleges that shortly after he reported the harassment to Icsman, Lechner retaliated against plaintiff for the action by calling departments over which plaintiff had supervisory authority and telling them to report to Lechner, rather than to plaintiff. He also alleges that on August 14, 2001, Lechner sent him an email questioning his state of mind, accusing him of “unprofessional management practices,” and threatening to reduce the number of departments over which he had supervisory control. (Doc. 52, at 8).

Plaintiff claims that the day after receiving the email, he called defendant Schultz to discuss the alleged retaliation, noting that he had never been disciplined before submitting the report about Lechner. Schultz decided to investigate the sexual harassment allegations.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Schlobohm v. Ash
D. Kansas, 2025
West v. Visteon Corp.
367 F. Supp. 2d 1160 (N.D. Ohio, 2005)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
320 F. Supp. 2d 627, 2004 WL 1304013, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mulvin-v-city-of-sandusky-ohnd-2004.