Rodney Green Charlan Green v. Dillard's, Inc., National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, Kansas City Branch, Amicus on Behalf Of

483 F.3d 533, 2007 U.S. App. LEXIS 7801, 2007 WL 1012941
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedApril 5, 2007
Docket06-1918
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 483 F.3d 533 (Rodney Green Charlan Green v. Dillard's, Inc., National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, Kansas City Branch, Amicus on Behalf Of) 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
Rodney Green Charlan Green v. Dillard's, Inc., National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, Kansas City Branch, Amicus on Behalf Of, 483 F.3d 533, 2007 U.S. App. LEXIS 7801, 2007 WL 1012941 (8th Cir. 2007).

Opinion

MURPHY, Circuit Judge.

Rodney and Charlan Green, an African American couple, brought this action against the retailer Dillard’s Inc. under 42 U.S.C. § 1981, which provides that all persons shall have the equal right “to make and enforce contracts.” The Greens allege that they were prevented from closing a purchase by the discriminatory conduct of a Dillard’s employee who refused to wait on them and called them “Fucking niggers.” The district court granted Dillard’s motion for summary judgment, and the Greens appeal. We reverse and remand.

I.

There was considerable discovery in this case from which we relate the evidentiary background. We review a grant of summary judgment de novo, viewing the facts in the light most favorable to the nonmov-ing party. Wells v. SCI Mgmt., L.P., 469 F.3d 697, 700 (8th Cir.2006).

On August 11, 2002, Rodney and Char-lan Green went to the Dillard’s store in the Metro North Mall in Kansas City, Missouri to buy a handbag, purse, and watch for Charlan. They went directly to the watch counter in the accessories section *535 where watches were displayed in a locked display case. Although there were two clerks in the section, neither approached the Greens who looked at the watches in the glass case for about ten minutes while waiting to be helped. One of the clerks was leaning against a wall with her arms folded, and Charlan went up to her and asked, “Ma'am, can you help us?” The clerk was Linda McCrary, and she said “No” to Charlan and continued to stand in the same position. The Greens testified that they were stunned by her response and immediately turned to leave the store, but the other clerk in the section, Veronica Agüero, yelled, “Ma'am, I’ll help you when I’m finished here.” Agüero was helping other customers at the time so the Greens waited at the purse counter. Although McCrary was still in the accessories department, she made no move to help the Greens while they waited.

When Agüero came over to the purse counter to assist the Greens, McCrary followed. She stood by the register with her arms crossed and glared at the Greens while they looked at the merchandise. With Aguero’s help, Charlan selected a purse, a matching wallet, and a key chain to buy. When she saw this, McCrary loudly asked Agüero, “Are they getting all that? How are they paying for it?” Agüero said nothing in response and Rodney wrote a check to Dillard’s in the amount of $555.62 to pay for the items. Agüero asked for identification, then accepted the cheek and rang up the sale. Throughout this transaction McCrary kept staring at the Greens and muttering under her breath.

After his check was accepted, Rodney asked McCrary, “Ma'am, there’s other people, can you help somebody else?” McCrary answered, “I can, but I’m not.” Rodney was offended by McCrary’s behavior and asked Agüero to call a manager. After putting their selections in a bag, Agüero asked the Greens if there was anything else they were interested in buying. Charlan said that she would like to purchase a wristwatch. Agüero and Char-lan then went to the nearby watch counter.

Rodney stayed behind at the register where the Greens had made their purchases. McCrary also remained there with an “even more intent” hostile expression on her face according to Rodney. An uncomfortable silence followed so he pulled out his identification and credit cards and laid four credit cards on the counter to show McCrary he was a bona fide customer. He told her, “Ma'am I don’t have to steal anything. I can buy anything in the store I like. I have four platinum cards here.” He added that he was a police officer. McCrary approached the counter on which Rodney had laid his credit cards, looked at the cards, and said, “Platinum. Huh.” Then she stepped back and said, “Fucking niggers” and stalked off. Being called “niggers” made Rodney feel as if he had been physically assaulted and treated as less than human. He felt unable to remain in the store or to make any further purchases “after being called the most heinous name in the world.”

Meanwhile Charlan and Agüero had returned from the watch counter in order to get the keys for the watch case. They both heard McCrary’s epithet. Charlan testified that she felt humiliated and publicly embarrassed by McCrary’s words and conduct. Agüero apologized and told the Greens that “she [McCrary] had been disciplined for this before.”

It was at this point that a Dillard’s sales manager, Amanda Andreasen, arrived. She approached Rodney and asked what was going on. Rodney informed her what had happened and what McCrary had said to them. Andreasen apologized several times and said that Dillard’s had “had *536 problems with [McCrary] with this before.” While Andreasen and the Greens were talking, Andreasen received a phone call. As she listened to the caller, An-dreasen’s face colored and tears came to her eyes. After the conversation ended she told the Greens, “That was one of the customers that overheard what was said.”

The Greens testified that they were so upset by the incidents with McCrary that they were unable to complete their intended purchase of the watch. Rodney also told Andreasen they wanted to return the items they had already purchased. An-dreasen returned his check and the Greens left the store. The next day Andreasen and assistant store manager Anita Harrold called McCrary into a disciplinary meeting and fired her. The paperwork which An-dreasen filled out in order to document the termination stated that McCrary had been “muttering comments about the customer” and “was rolling her eyes and making undertones of some prejudice [sic] remark.” Two days after the incident the manager of the store, David Bousum, called Rodney and then Charlan about it. Bousum indicated to both that McCrary had been “disciplined for this before” and had now been discharged. Bousum offered the Greens a 20% discount on their next purchase, but they declined it. Bousum later sent the Greens a letter of apology that renewed the same discount offer.

In August 2004 the Greens brought this action, alleging that Dillard’s had violated § 1981 by interfering with their rights to make and enforce contracts. Documents and testimony were produced in discovery which showed that McCrary had worked at Dillard’s for about five months before she was fired and had been subjected to disciplinary action prior to the incidents with the Greens. On August 8, 2002, McCrary had received a written warning from assistant store manager Anita Harrold about rude behavior to a customer who wanted to buy a $800 handbag, as well as to another customer who was writing a check. Although McCrary was required by Dillard’s policies to sign the written warning, she refused to do so but no further action was taken. Harrold testified that she was aware that McCrary had received verbal warnings in the previous months about the way in which she treated customers, but she did not remember the race of the complaining customers. There was also testimony that at the Metro North Dillard’s, oral reprimands were not recorded or placed on file and that Dillard’s had no company wide policy on such warnings.

On McCrary’s employment application at Dillard’s she had listed two past employers.

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483 F.3d 533, 2007 U.S. App. LEXIS 7801, 2007 WL 1012941, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rodney-green-charlan-green-v-dillards-inc-national-association-for-the-ca8-2007.