Rose Butler Erma Gracia v. Ysleta Independent School District

161 F.3d 263, 1998 U.S. App. LEXIS 28614, 74 Empl. Prac. Dec. (CCH) 45,653, 78 Fair Empl. Prac. Cas. (BNA) 561, 1998 WL 792557
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedNovember 16, 1998
Docket97-50362
StatusPublished
Cited by70 cases

This text of 161 F.3d 263 (Rose Butler Erma Gracia v. Ysleta Independent School District) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rose Butler Erma Gracia v. Ysleta Independent School District, 161 F.3d 263, 1998 U.S. App. LEXIS 28614, 74 Empl. Prac. Dec. (CCH) 45,653, 78 Fair Empl. Prac. Cas. (BNA) 561, 1998 WL 792557 (5th Cir. 1998).

Opinion

PATRICK E. HIGGINBOTHAM, Circuit Judge:

We review the district court’s entry of judgment against two teachers suing the Ysleta Independent School District for sexual harassment. The district court granted summary judgment against one and a motion for judgment as a matter of law against the other following a jury verdict in her favor. We find that there was no hostile environment actionable under Title VII, and affirm.

I.

Rose Butler and Erma Gracia were teachers in the East Point Elementary School when they began receiving anonymous mail at their homes. Gracia began receiving letters early in the fall semester of 1992, and Butler began receiving similar letters sometime thereafter. Some of the letters Gracia received suggested that she would benefit from a romantic relationship: “You probably could use a man in your life to calm some of that frustration down,” “A dude a day keeps the crazes [sic] away!”, and “What You Need Is New [sic] good Men,” the last of which was affixed to a card containing three personal ads from a local newspaper. Other mailings included statements making no claims about Gracia’s romantic life, such as ‘You are still trying to control everyone’s life [sic].” While some of the letters were typewritten, others were more elaborate, apparently composed on a personal computer and including varied typography and occasional illustrations.

The letters Butler received were similar to Gracia’s, including for example notes stating, “When you drive down the street you look like you’re pissed off,” and “When are you going to start dressing like an adult? Don’t you have a mirror at home?” Arguably the most offensive mailings to Butler were a greeting card containing a picture of the naked buttocks of four women with a caption stating that “the winner is you (for being the perfect asshole),” and a cartoon entitled “Bitch Woman.”

Gracia began to suspect that someone from work was sending her the letters, and she brought the letters to Principal Kirk Irwin. In turn, Irwin called in Assistant Principal Kenneth Walker and requested that he look into the letters. Gracia later inquired of Walker whether something was being done. Gracia testified that he stated that nothing was being done. Gracia also testified that Walker handed her the letters and stated that he thought he knew who had written them and that he would get back to her.

In April 1993, Gracia discovered that Butler had also been receiving anonymous mail, in addition to prank phone calls. Sometime also that spring, both teachers, along with at *266 least 13 others, including 11 females, were assigned different grade levels within the school, new assignments they did not want. Gracia and Butler began to suspect that Irwin was responsible for the letters they received. In part, Gracia became suspicious because the unwanted grade reassignment occurred during Teacher Appreciation Week. She also suspected Irwin because a letter Butler received used the phrase “winds of change,” which was apparently a favorite phrase of the principal’s, and because the misspellings of certain words suggested Irwin’s authorship. Gracia testified that once she began to suspect Irwin, she withdrew from a number of extracurricular activities and started to leave school early. Gracia and Butler nonetheless waited until the end of the school year to report their suspicions. They testified that they waited because the central office had always accepted Irwin back after periods of absence and were afraid he ■would return.

In late May, Butler reported the anonymous mail to the El Paso Police Department. Detective Scott Graves began investigating, requesting that Irwin come to the police station. Irwin came on July 1 but became upset when Graves requested that he submit to fingerprinting. Irwin refused to give his prints. Detective Graves also met that day with two Ysleta officials, Superintendent Anthony Trujillo and Associate Superintendent Robert Durrett, to request copies of any fingerprints of Irwin they had on file. He hoped to match such fingerprints to one that he lifted from a letter that Butler had given him, but Trujillo and Durrett indicated that they had no such fingerprints.

Trujillo and Durrett were previously unaware of the plaintiffs’ allegations, but they had been investigating Irwin for sending lewd faxes to male administrators. These faxes were similar in execution and tone to the mailings Gracia and Butler received. One, for example, stated, “On the underwear of life * You are a poop stain,” and another stated, “Heard you were busy making love to yourself.” One of these faxes was identical to the mailing Butler received that urged the recipient to begin dressing like an adult.

Durrett consulted with Mario Lewis, Ysle-ta’s attorney, who then met with Graves. In an effort to obtain his fingerprints, Lewis and Durrett enclosed materials in a plastic liner and on July 8 Lewis handed the packet to Irwin. Lewis also asked Irwin directly if he had been harassing employees, although he may have been inquiring only about the faxes to male employees. Graves tested the plastic liner but found the fingerprints there unsuitable. A warrant was issued to obtain Irwin’s fingerprints.

Meanwhile, the plaintiffs met with Durrett on July 13, 1993, and again on July 19. Gracia testified that at the July 19 meeting, they requested that Durrett remove Irwin from the school immediately, and that Dur-rett responded that there was a great deal of support for Irwin at the central office. Dur-rett left the matter to the police. On returning from a vacation, he called a couple of times to check on the status of the police inquiry, but did nothing more.

Graves, who had been sidetracked by an unrelated murder investigation, found on August 5th that the fingerprint from the letter Butler received matched Irwin’s. Shortly thereafter, Irwin was suspended with pay and notified that Trujillo was contemplating suspending him without pay and recommending his termination. Trujillo ultimately allowed Irwin to take paid sick leave until October 15, which was the effective date of his resignation. In the meantime, the district appointed as interim principal Nancy Evans, who refused to cancel Gracia’s and Butler’s grade level reassignments.

Both teachers filed suit against Ysleta, claiming sex discrimination under a “hostile work environment” theory pursuant to Title VIL See 42 U.S.C. § 2000e. The defendant filed a motion for summary judgment before Chief Judge Hudspeth, who granted it as to Butler but denied it as to Gracia. The court found that Gracia’s case raised a factual issue as to whether the school district took prompt remedial action after she brought the harassing letters to the attention of Irwin and Walker in December 1992, and followed up with Walker afterward. Butler, on the other hand, notified no one in the district about her problem until July 1993. The court rejected *267 Butler’s claims that the district had “constructive knowledge” of the harassment on the basis of the investigation of Irwin’s faxes to male administrators, or that Irwin’s status as an agent for the school district made the district liable. After July 1993, the court found, the district took prompt and effective remedial action.

The case was subsequently transferred to Judge Furgeson, who presided over a jury trial of Gracia’s claim.

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161 F.3d 263, 1998 U.S. App. LEXIS 28614, 74 Empl. Prac. Dec. (CCH) 45,653, 78 Fair Empl. Prac. Cas. (BNA) 561, 1998 WL 792557, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rose-butler-erma-gracia-v-ysleta-independent-school-district-ca5-1998.