Redding v. Florida, Department of Juvenile Justice

401 F. Supp. 2d 1255, 2005 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 29472, 2005 WL 3150247
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Florida
DecidedOctober 17, 2005
Docket4:04CV257-RH/WCS
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 401 F. Supp. 2d 1255 (Redding v. Florida, Department of Juvenile Justice) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Redding v. Florida, Department of Juvenile Justice, 401 F. Supp. 2d 1255, 2005 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 29472, 2005 WL 3150247 (N.D. Fla. 2005).

Opinion

*1256 ORDER DENYING DEFENDANT’S RENEWED MOTION FOR JUDGMENT AS A MATTER OF LAW

HINKLE, Chief Judge.

This is ah employment discrimination action. Plaintiff, a supervisor at a juvenile detention facility whose performance had by all accounts been outstanding, made a good faith claim of gender discrimination. Plaintiff was promptly subjected to a long and pervasive campaign of retaliation. The retaliatory actions included keeping plaintiff on an unfavorable shift, issuing an unfounded verbal reprimand and four unfounded “counseling” memoranda, canceling training that plaintiff had been scheduled to receive, providing plaintiff insufficient staff, undermining plaintiffs relations with her staff, assigning plaintiff unfavorable duties, refusing to allow plaintiff to return to work after a medical absence until she provided an extraordinary verification of fitness for duty, refusing for nearly a month to allow plaintiff to work while wearing an unobtrusive heart monitor as directed by her physician, constantly treating plaintiff disrespectfully, and generally subjecting plaintiff to an abusive work environment on a daily basis. After plaintiffs attitude progressively worsened and she became insubordinate — as a result, in substantial part, of her shoddy treatment — she was fired.

Plaintiff -brought this action alleging gender discrimination and retaliation. After a seven-day trial, the jury returned a special interrogatory verdict finding that plaintiff was not the victim of gender discrimination, that plaintiff was subjected to an abusive work environment in retaliation for having complained in good faith of gender discrimination, that retaliation was a substantial or motivating factor in plaintiffs termination, and that plaintiff would have been terminated anyway, even in the absence of retaliation. This was a verdict for defendant on the gender discrimination claim, for plaintiff on the retaliatory abusive environment claim, and for defendant on the retaliatory termination claim. The jury awarded damages of $13,000 on the retaliatory abusive environment claim.

Defendant now has renewed its motion for judgment as a matter of law as originally made during the trial. Defendant asserts, in effect, that the retaliation to which plaintiff was subjected was not substantial enough to be actionable. I deny the motion.

In order to prevail on a claim of employment discrimination, an employee must show that he or she suffered effects that rise to a required threshold level of sub-stantiality. The issue here is whether defendant’s retaliation against plaintiff rose to that level.

The many opinions addressing this issue in this circuit and elsewhere have not always used the same language to describe the required level of substantiality. But the principles that emerge from the opinions are, at least to the extent necessary for resolution of the case at bar, clear and consistent.

First, it is clear that Title VII prohibits both discrimination based on prohibited characteristics such as race or gender, on the one hand, 1 and retaliation for having opposed or participated in an investigation of such discrimination, on the other hand. 2 *1257 For convenience, I refer in this order to claims asserting discrimination based on prohibited characteristics as race or gender claims, without referring to the other (equally important) prohibited characteristics.

Second, it also is clear that the requirement that a plaintiff meet a threshold level of substantiality applies both to race or gender claims and to retaliation claims. Whether the threshold is the same for both categories of claims may be less clear, but the better view is that it is the same. 3 Indeed, the Eleventh Circuit has repeatedly cited interchangeably its various decisions dealing with the required level of substantiality in race or gender cases, on the one hand, and retaliation cases, on the other. 4 More importantly, there is an enormous practical benefit to treating the standard as identical for both types of claims, which often are tried together to a single jury. 5 Neither side in the case at bar has taken issue with the proposition that the required level of sub-stantiality is the same in race or gender claims and retaliation claims.

Various terms have been used in discussing the required level of substantiality. Thus, for example, courts have referred to “tangible” effects, always including within that term the loss of money as well as other direct financial impacts, and always making clear that such tangible effects are not the only effects covered by Title VII. Courts have referred to “adverse employment action,” sometimes (but not always) as a synonym for any action that rises to the required level of substantiality. Courts also have referred to a “hostile work environment” or “abusive work environment,” usually as a descrip *1258 tion of nonfinancial effects that reach the required level of substantiality. That is how I use the terms in this opinion.

The Supreme Court has repeatedly made clear thát requiring a person to work in a hostile or abusive environment because of race or gender is actionable. Thus, for example, in Harris v. Forklift Systems, Inc., 510 U.S. 17, 114 S.Ct. 367, 126 L.Ed.2d 295 (1993), the Court said that an employee who is subjected to a “severe or pervasive” hostile or abusive environment because of race or gender may recover under Title VII even without showing actual psychological harm. Although Harris was a sexual harassment case, the Court relied on the language of the statute prohibiting race or gender discrimination generally, 6 and the Court cited cases dealing not only with sexual harassment but with other forms of gender 7 and national origin 8 discrimination. The Court’s holding that an environment that is sufficiently “severe or pervasive” is actionable plainly applies not only to sexual harassment claims but also to other types of discrimination prohibited by Title VII. And because the required level of substantiality is the same for race or gender claims, on the one hand, and retaliation claims, on the other hand, subjecting an employee to a hostile or abusive environment in retaliation is actionable, just as is subjecting an employee to a hostile or abusive environment based on race or gender. Neither side has taken issue with this proposition in the case at bar. 9

None of these terms — tangible effects, adverse employment action, hostile or abusive work environment — are terms that jurors use in daily conversation. These or any other terms can be used in jury instructions to explain the governing concepts, So long as adequate definitions are given.

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Bluebook (online)
401 F. Supp. 2d 1255, 2005 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 29472, 2005 WL 3150247, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/redding-v-florida-department-of-juvenile-justice-flnd-2005.