Nieves-Borges v. El Conquistador P'ship

936 F.3d 1
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedAugust 21, 2019
Docket18-1008P
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 936 F.3d 1 (Nieves-Borges v. El Conquistador P'ship) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nieves-Borges v. El Conquistador P'ship, 936 F.3d 1 (1st Cir. 2019).

Opinion

United States Court of Appeals For the First Circuit

No. 18-1008

LEONIDES NIEVES-BORGES, MAHALIA FALCO,

Plaintiffs, Appellants,

v.

EL CONQUISTADOR PARTNERSHIP, L.P., S.E., d/b/a EL CONQUISTADOR RESORT, A WALDORF ASTORIA RESORT; EL CONQUISTADOR WALDORF ASTORIA RESORT; EL CONQUISTADOR RESORT,

Defendants, Appellees.

APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF PUERTO RICO

[Hon. Gustavo A. Gelpí, Jr., Chief U.S. District Judge]

Before

Howard, Chief Judge, Lipez and Barron, Circuit Judges.

Glenn Carl James for appellant. Mariel Y. Haack-Pizarro, with whom Liana M. Gutiérrez- Irizarry was on brief, for appellees. Gail S. Coleman, with whom James L. Lee, Deputy General Counsel, Jennifer S. Goldstein, Associate General Counsel, and Elizabeth E. Theran, Assistant General Counsel, were on brief, for amicus curiae Equal Employment Opportunity Commission.

August 21, 2019 LIPEZ, Circuit Judge. Appellant Leonides Nieves-Borges

("Nieves") claims that he was sexually harassed for more than a

decade, and thus subjected to a hostile work environment, by the

human resources director at the Puerto Rico resort where he worked.

Nieves further asserts that resort managers retaliated against him

for complaining about this treatment. He brought claims for sexual

harassment and retaliation under both Title VII of the Civil Rights

Act of 1964 and Commonwealth law, all of which were dismissed by

the district court in a summary judgment for the defendant.1 We

conclude that the district court properly dismissed the

retaliation claims. However, the district court incorrectly held

that alleged incidents of harassment that occurred earlier than

2014 were time-barred, an error that contributed to other flaws in

its analysis. We therefore vacate dismissal of the sexual

harassment claims based on a hostile work environment and remand

for reconsideration of those claims.

1Nieves's wife, Mahalia Falco, also is a plaintiff/appellant. Because her claims are derivative of her husband's, we refer only to Nieves throughout this opinion. Similarly, we refer in the singular to Nieves's employer -- El Conquistador Resort -- although the complaint names multiple El Conquistador corporate entities as defendants.

- 2 - I.

A. Factual Background

We draw our factual summary primarily from the district

court's opinion and the defendant's Statement of Uncontested

Material Facts ("SUMF"), including its exhibits.2 In so doing, we

bypass Nieves's contention that the district court improperly

struck his opposition to the resort's motion for summary judgment

and its accompanying Statement of Material Contested Facts. We

need not consider the opposition because, relying solely on the

SUMF and exhibits, we detect flaws in the district court's

reasoning that require reconsideration of Nieves's hostile work

environment claims, and nothing in the stricken materials would

change our evaluation of the retaliation claims. Like the district

court, we also describe the allegations in Nieves's complaint where

relevant to our discussion.

Nieves worked at the El Conquistador Resort in Fajardo, Puerto

Rico,3 from October 1993 until his termination in July 2015,

serving as the food and beverage manager at the time of his

2 The SUMF contains 188 paragraphs and forty-six exhibits. The exhibits include a lengthy statement that was part of Nieves's complaint filed with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, an internal complaint he submitted to the hotel, and excerpts from the depositions of Nieves, his wife, and other resort employees.

3 The parties refer to the El Conquistador as a "hotel." We use the broader term "resort," consistent with the property's formal name. The El Conquistador Resort, inter alia, features multiple food and beverage venues.

- 3 - discharge. He claims that the resort's director of human resources

("HR"), Luis Álvarez, sexually harassed him for thirteen years,

between 2001 and 2014. He alleges a general pattern of sexually

charged interactions, unfair criticisms of his work, and multiple

specific incidents. Nieves testified in his deposition that

Álvarez touched him "[a] gazillion times" between 2001 and 2014.

He claimed the behavior included, on average, two or three episodes

every week in which Álvarez would seek him out and, finding him,

"examin[e] with his eyes the physical body of Mr. Nieves in a very

sexual manner from up to down," as well as repeated requests to

socialize after hours.4

One specific incident emphasized by Nieves in his complaint

allegedly occurred in 2007, when he and Álvarez were in Orlando

for a convention, and Álvarez invited him to join other resort

managers for lunch. No one else arrived at the restaurant and, as

the two men were finishing lunch, Álvarez allegedly put his hand

on Nieves's leg and said, "what [do] we do next?" Nieves claims

4 When asked at his deposition what aspect of the social invitations was "sexual in nature," Nieves replied:

The way he said it, the way he looked at me, the way his eyes would glow up and look at me in a very pervasive manner, the way he would touch my hands and grab me and not let go and just look at me.

- 4 - that Álvarez then displayed his hotel keys, shaking them in the

air.5

Nieves's complaint also highlights three alleged interactions

in 2014 in which Álvarez sought after-hours contact at Álvarez's

home. First, on May 26, Álvarez called at 7:47 PM to invite Nieves

to his residence to show him "something." Second, on July 3,

Álvarez called Nieves at 6:15 PM to invite him over to discuss

work-related matters. Third, on August 19, at 8:20 AM, Álvarez

again invited Nieves to his home "to socialize" and, during that

conversation, allegedly touched Nieves's hands "in a very sexual

manner, . . . sexually looking [at his] physical body from up to

down," and invited him to have drinks after work. Nieves testified

that another incident, in October 2014,6 allegedly occurred in a

5 We note that the SUMF acknowledges this alleged encounter, although the document does not include the details of touching or display of keys. The SUMF contains the following entry: "As to the alleged 2007 business trip, Plaintiff was forced to admit that Mr. Álvarez did not invite Plaintiff to his hotel room, he allegedly asked him what he wanted to do next." SUMF ¶ 146. In support, the paragraph cites to the following excerpt from Nieves's deposition:

Q: The fact of the matter is that he asked you what you wanted to do next. He did not say, "Come to my room." Did he? Nieves: He did not say that. 6 Although the excerpt of Nieves's deposition that is attached to the SUMF does not include the date of the alleged cafeteria incident, the district court placed it in October 2014, evidently relying on the prior page of the deposition, which was attached to Nieves's opposition to the motion for summary judgment. We follow the district court's lead in dating the incident.

- 5 - resort cafeteria, when "Álvarez was staring at [him] in a predatory

manner" as Nieves waited in line to be served.

Deposition testimony from at least three individuals

corroborated Nieves's allegation of repeated touching. A co-

worker saw Álvarez run his hand down Nieves's back on one occasion

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