Pamela Reed v. Delta Air Lines, Inc.

19 F.3d 19
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedApril 13, 1994
Docket93-5031
StatusUnpublished

This text of 19 F.3d 19 (Pamela Reed v. Delta Air Lines, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pamela Reed v. Delta Air Lines, Inc., 19 F.3d 19 (6th Cir. 1994).

Opinion

19 F.3d 19

NOTICE: Sixth Circuit Rule 24(c) states that citation of unpublished dispositions is disfavored except for establishing res judicata, estoppel, or the law of the case and requires service of copies of cited unpublished dispositions of the Sixth Circuit.
Pamela REED, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
DELTA AIR LINES, INC., Defendant-Appellee.

No. 93-5031.

United States Court of Appeals, Sixth Circuit.

Feb. 24, 1994.
As Amended on Denial of Rehearing and
Rehearing En Banc April 13, 1994.

Before: NELSON and BATCHELDER, Circuit Judges, and CONTIE, Senior Circuit Judge.

PER CURIAM.

This is a sexual harassment case in which the plaintiff seeks damages from her employer because of the misconduct of a first-line supervisor. The employer promptly fired the supervisor when it learned of his inappropriate behavior. Summary judgment was entered in favor of the employer, and the plaintiff has appealed. Upon de novo review, we conclude that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the defendant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. We shall therefore affirm the district court's disposition of the case.

* The plaintiff, Pamela Reed, started with defendant Delta Airlines in 1978 as a reservation sales agent in Knoxville, Tennessee. Delta's Knoxville office employs about 150 reservation sales agents and eight reservation sales supervisors. Each supervisor oversees a team of fifteen to twenty sales agents, and the supervisors report to the Chief Supervisor, Ms. Deborah Freshwater. Ms. Freshwater, in turn, reports to the Reservation Sales Manager, Ms. Mary Howington. An individual named Shan Harris, who was a Delta employee for 23 years and a reservation sales supervisor throughout Ms. Reed's employment, became Ms. Reed's supervisor in April of 1991.

A. Evidence of a Hostile Environment

Ms. Reed says that sometime during the period between 1980 and 1982--long before he became her supervisor--Mr. Harris cornered her in a stockroom and kissed her. When she reprimanded him, he laughed and left the room. Ms. Reed told a co-worker about the incident, and the story ultimately came to the ears of two other reservation sales supervisors, Messrs. Patterson and McGee. They told Ms. Reed that they thought she was lying and that any future complaints of a similar nature would be grounds for her dismissal. There is no indication in the record that either Ms. Howington or Ms. Freshwater knew about any of this prior to the lawsuit, although their predecessors were aware of the incident.

A second episode between Mr. Harris and Ms. Reed occurred eight or ten years later, in November of 1990, at a marketing meeting both were attending in Asheville, North Carolina. Ms. Reed says that Mr. Harris invited her to spend the night with him. She refused and left the meeting early. Ms. Reed did not tell Ms. Howington, Ms. Freshwater, or anyone else at Delta about the incident before bringing suit.

During the summer of 1991, according to Ms. Reed, after Mr. Harris had become her supervisor, he initiated discussions in which he questioned her about personal matters, including her recent marital separation. In the course of these conversations he also made personal animadversions on his own marital situation. These discussions became uncomfortable, according to Ms. Reed, when Mr. Harris began to make professions of love and expressed sexual desire for her. Ms. Reed says that she responded to Mr. Harris' overtures by telling him he was crazy.

Ms. Reed says there were two occasions that summer when Mr. Harris touched her in an inappropriate manner. Ultimately, she says, Mr. Harris sexually assaulted her. She describes the incident as follows:

"... I was going to use his phone. His phone was on the credenza behind him. And I was facing him. And he stands up, stands with his leg in between mine, and pushes me on his desk, and kissed me at that time ... [He] put his hand up my shirt. And he had pushed me down on his desk and pulled my underwear over, put his finger inside of me and kissed my leg."

Ms. Reed reported the incident to Marilyn Bible, and through her it came to the attention of Ms. Howington. After promptly investigating the incident and interviewing both parties, Ms. Howington recommended that Mr. Harris be fired for having engaged in sexual activity in the office. (Mr. Harris did not deny that sexual activity occurred, but he gave a different account of the nature of the activity and claimed that Ms. Reed was a willing participant.) Ms. Howington's recommendation was approved, and Mr. Harris was discharged.

Aside from these incidents, Ms. Reed says, Mr. Harris repeatedly made sexual comments directed toward her and other female co-workers. On four or five occasions, she says, he issued generalized invitations, before groups of sales agents, to participate in lewd activities with him. She also alleges that Mr. Harris regularly told her she was "sexy" and occasionally picked up magazines and made suggestive remarks to her and others about the women depicted in them. There is no contention that any employee--including Ms. Reed herself--reported any of this to Mr. Harris' superiors.1

Ms. Reed describes one incident, connected with the birthday of one of her co-workers, that did come to management's attention. To mark the co-worker's birthday, employees put up balloons shaped like breasts along the hallways, in plain view of the staff and customers. Although management clearly was aware of this situation, nobody ordered that the decorations be removed.

Delta had a published policy against sexual harassment in the workplace, but Ms. Reed and her co-workers never complained to management about Mr. Harris' conduct or any other workplace conduct they found offensive. Delta contends that they did not complain because Ms. Reed and her co-workers were willing participants in the sexual commentary that occurred in the office. Mr. Harris testified that Ms. Reed was a flirtatious person who regularly talked about her sexual activities, commented on the appearance of male employees, and once asked him, after she had undergone breast implant surgery, if he would like to see her "new" breasts.

After Mr. Harris was fired, Ms. Reed requested a transfer out of the Knoxville office. The request was not granted, and Ms. Reed says that she was subjected to various forms of retaliation by co-workers who were upset with her for having caused Mr. Harris to lose his job. Ms. Reed complains that Delta did nothing to ameliorate this situation.

B. Evidence of Quid Pro Quo Harassment

In 1986 Ms. Reed let Delta know that she would like to become a flight attendant. Mr. Harris was aware of this desire, and Ms. Reed says that Harris told her explicitly that he would help her get the flight attendant position if she would engage in sexual intercourse with him. On a subsequent occasion, conversely, when Ms. Reed told Mr. Harris that she was patching things up with her husband. Mr. Harris told her that he would prevent her from getting an in-flight position. Ms. Reed admits, however, that he later told her he would not interfere.

Although Ms. Reed acknowledges that Mr.

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