Nycoca Hairston v. Christine Wormuth

6 F.4th 834
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedJuly 29, 2021
Docket20-1806
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 6 F.4th 834 (Nycoca Hairston v. Christine Wormuth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nycoca Hairston v. Christine Wormuth, 6 F.4th 834 (8th Cir. 2021).

Opinion

United States Court of Appeals For the Eighth Circuit ___________________________

No. 20-1806 ___________________________

Nycoca Hairston

lllllllllllllllllllllPlaintiff - Appellant

v.

Christine Wormuth, Secretary, Department of the Army1

lllllllllllllllllllllDefendant - Appellee ____________

Appeal from United States District Court for the Eastern District of Arkansas - Pine Bluff ____________

Submitted: April 14, 2021 Filed: July 29, 2021 ____________

Before KELLY, GRASZ, and KOBES, Circuit Judges. ____________

KELLY, Circuit Judge.

Nycoca Hairston, a former employee of the Pine Bluff Arsenal (the Arsenal), sued the Secretary of the Department of the Army (the Army) under Title VII of the

1 Secretary of the Army Wormuth is automatically substituted for former Secretary of the Army Ryan D. McCarthy pursuant to Federal Rule of Appellate Procedure 43(c)(2). Civil Rights Act of 1964, 42 U.S.C. § 2000e et seq. Hairston alleges that she was subject to a hostile work environment based on sex and that the Army retaliated against her after she reported sexual harassment. The district court entered summary judgment in favor of the Army, and Hairston appeals. We affirm in part and reverse in part.

I.

On January 28, 2013, the Army hired Hairston as a general supply specialist in the Property Book Office within the Arsenal’s Directorate of Logistics. Hairston’s immediate supervisor was Duane Johnson, an equipment manager at the Arsenal. Her second-level supervisor was Deborah Moncrief, and her team leader was Elizabeth Blackwood. The first year of Hairston’s employment was a probationary period.

Shortly after Hairston was hired, Johnson allegedly told a number of Hairston’s coworkers that he thought she was “pretty” and had “a nice booty.” Though Hairston was initially unaware of these comments, she says other employees informed her of them later.

Throughout the time Hairston worked at the Arsenal, many of the employees had personal and professional conflicts with one another that affected the work environment. Hairston was involved in a number of these conflicts, which, according to Johnson, became increasingly acrimonious after she joined the office. Moncrief addressed some of these issues at an employee meeting in July 2013, where she allegedly said she was “so sick and tired of you back-stabbing bitches” and accused the people present of “acting like big babies.”

In addition to the broader interpersonal problems at the Arsenal, Hairston also recalls two incidents from the summer of 2013 in which Johnson directed conduct toward her that made her feel uncomfortable. On one occasion, Hairston claims that

-2- Johnson approached her and her coworker Kae Spencer when the three were the only people in the office. According to Hairston, Johnson stood in front of their cubicles and told them they could not leave without giving him a hug. Though Spencer and Hairston complied without protest, neither wanted to hug him. The second incident took place on August 16, when Moncrief hosted a party for Arsenal employees at her house. The party took place during work hours but involved drinking, and Hairston attended along with several of her coworkers, including Johnson. Hairston alleges that at one point during this event, Johnson picked up a saltshaker and intentionally dropped it down the front of her shirt. When she asked him why he had done that, he smiled and responded, “That’s the best place for it.” In Hairston’s recollection, Johnson seemed drunk. Hairston claims that the two were alone when this incident occurred and that no one else witnessed it, but that she told one of her coworkers what happened as she left the party.

On around August 29, Hairston talked to her coworker John Bynum about Johnson’s conduct at the party. Though Bynum was an Equal Employment Opportunity (EEO) assistant at the Arsenal, Hairston did not file a formal report at that point. During Bynum’s deposition, he recalled Hairston saying that Johnson had dropped a soda bottle, not a salt shaker, “down her breasts” and that she told Bynum she “could handle it and whatnot, and she didn’t want to get in trouble because she was a probationary employee.” Bynum recommended that she report the incident to Moncrief or to the EEO office. The following day, Bynum informed Sharon Bolden, the Arsenal’s EEO manager, about the incident at the party. Bolden asked Bynum to prepare a memo about his conversation with Hairston, which he did. Bolden then brought the information to Moncrief in order to, in Bolden’s words, “let her know what had happened and that she needed to take some necessary action to do an inquiry into the concern.” At that point, Hairston still had not filed an EEO complaint.

-3- Around September 4, during a meeting with Moncrief, Johnson learned that Hairston had accused him of putting a “bottle down her blouse.” Johnson denied this allegation and accused Hairston of causing “chaos” in the workplace. The same day, he forwarded Moncrief an email he originally sent her several months earlier, on March 27, 2013. The March 27 email recounted an interaction Johnson had with Hairston around March 12. According to Johnson, Hairston came into his office to discuss “personal issues,” including an affair she had with another employee before he began working at the Arsenal. Hairston told Johnson she was lonely and “horney”; though these comments made Johnson uncomfortable, he said he “let [them] pass.” On September 5, Johnson sent Moncrief a “Memorandum for Record” listing a number of other allegations against Hairston, including that Hairston had once rubbed Johnson’s arm and pressed her breasts against his back while talking to him; that Hairston complained her coworkers were jealous of her because of her looks; that Hairston had performed her work assignments unsatisfactorily and had refused training; and that other employees had complained to him about Hairston lashing out at them and causing “drama.” Johnson stated that he had “been uncomfortable with Ms. Hairston since” the incident on March 12.

Over the following days, Johnson sent Moncrief multiple emails recounting other employees’ allegations of unprofessional and inappropriate conduct from Hairston. In one email, he told Moncrief that two employees witnessed Hairston rubbing the leg of another employee, Larry Richardson, under the table during a meeting. In another, he attached a complaint from an employee named Kelley Dancer, who accused Hairston of threatening to hit her car after the two were involved in a dispute in the parking lot. Dancer also said Hairston gave her “bad looks” and recounted an incident in which she attempted to talk to Hairston about a “work situation” and Hairston responded by “put[ting] her hands over her ears and chant[ing] ‘I’m not listening.’” According to Johnson, he sent all of these emails to Moncrief at her request.

-4- On September 30, Moncrief called Hairston into her office for a meeting. George Whale, the Arsenal’s representative from the Army’s Sexual Harassment Assault Prevention Response (SHARP) program, was also there. Moncrief told Hairston what she had heard about Johnson’s conduct at the party and asked whether the allegation was true. Hairston confirmed that it was. Moncrief also introduced Whale and asked Hairston if she wanted to speak with him privately, but Hairston declined. Whale told Hairston that he would report that she did not intend to go forward with a complaint. Hairston claims she chose not to go forward because she feared retaliation and would have preferred that the incident had been reported just to Whale or Bolden, not Moncrief.

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