Soloski v. Adams

600 F. Supp. 2d 1276, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 20584, 2009 WL 545785
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Georgia
DecidedMarch 2, 2009
Docket1:06-cv-03043
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 600 F. Supp. 2d 1276 (Soloski v. Adams) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Soloski v. Adams, 600 F. Supp. 2d 1276, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 20584, 2009 WL 545785 (N.D. Ga. 2009).

Opinion

ORDER

MARVIN H. SHOOB, Senior District Judge.

The matter before the Court is the Magistrate Judge’s Report & Recommendation (R & R) and plaintiffs and defendants’ objections to the R & R.

Background

The Court adopts the following undisputed facts as stated in the R & R:

This case arises out of allegations that Plaintiff made comments to a female subordinate that she considered to constitute sexual harassment. While Plaintiff acknowledges having made the alleged comments, he contends that they did not violate the University’s Nondiscrimination and Anti-Harassment (NDAH) Policy and that he should not have been forced to resign from his deanship and formally sanctioned as a result of those comments.
Plaintiff is a current tenured professor at, and former Dean of, the University of Georgia’s Grady College of Journalism and Mass Communications. Plaintiff was hired by the University of Georgia (“UGA” or “the University”) to serve as the Dean of Grady College in the Spring of 2001. During the time period, Defendant Michael F. Adams was the President of UGA. Arnett Mace was the Senior Vice President for Academic Affairs and Provost at UGA....
*1291 On May 18, 2005, Janet Jones Kendall (“Kendall”), an employee of Grady College in external affairs, presented Plaintiff with a letter complaining that he had made two comments which she contended (1) were offensive to her and (2) created a hostile work environment. Upon receiving the letter, Plaintiff immediately forwarded it to the UGA Office of Legal Affairs (“OLA”), which then began an investigation of Kendall’s allegations____ The allegations mentioned in Kendall’s letter became the sole basis for an eventual finding by the OLA that Plaintiff violated UGA’s NDAH Policy. The two comments were made, respectively, seven months and one month before Kendall wrote the letter complaining about them, but shortly after her supervisor had complained of Kendall’s work. There is no evidence that Kendall objected to the comments or asked Plaintiff to refrain from such comments prior to writing. There is no evidence of other comments made by Plaintiff to Kendall that she thought constituted acts of sexual harassment during the four years they worked together.
Plaintiff admits making the comments referenced in Kendall’s letter, but claims that they were not intended to be sexual in nature. The first comment was made on October 14, 2004, at an off-campus University dinner function. Plaintiff stated to Kendall: “You have brown eyes. I don’t believe I’ve ever noticed that before. What color are my eyes.” (The Court will refer to this as [the] “eyes” comment.) Plaintiff explained to Washington during the investigation that he made the “eyes” comment in the context of a discussion about his recent Lasik eye surgery, and did not intend it to be a sexual advance.
The second comment was made six months later at a large, off-campus event in Atlanta, the “Capital Campaign Kickoff,” on April 14, 2005. Plaintiff said to Kendall: “That is a nice dress. It really shows off your assets.” (The Court will refer to this as the “assets” comment.) Plaintiff contends that he did not mean the “assets” comment in a sexual way. Just before making the comment, Plaintiff had been talking about assets disputed in his pending divorce.
From May 18, 2005 to June 29, 2005, the UGA OLA conducted a sexual harassment investigation into the allegations made by Kendall against Plaintiff. The complaint was assigned for investigation to Kimberly Ballard-Washington (“Washington”), the former Associate Director for the UGA OLA.... Washington made the finding that Plaintiff violated the NDAH policy by committing sexual harassment as defined by the policy.
The parties have included facts in their filings regarding several other incidents that Washington uncovered in her investigation, even though as noted above, the finding of a violation of the NDAH policy relied only on the “eyes” and “assets” comments. First, it was alleged that Plaintiff made comments to others about Kendall being pictured in a magazine published in Athens, “Athens Magazine,” and that Plaintiff had a copy of the magazine in his office. In the magazine, Kendall wore only a bathing suit. She was working for the UGA College of Journalism at the time she posed for the magazine. Second, Washington was informed that Plaintiff requested that Kendall hand out awards at the Peabody Awards event, an annual function of the Grady School of Journal *1292 ism. Kendall told Washington that she believed the request that she present the awards was based on her appearance, and that she had refused to do as requested. Third, Kendall told Washington that she had been told that, at a Christmas party, Plaintiff said to a group that, “if [Kendall] was here, all this food would be gone.” According to Kendall, as reported by her to Washington, she had also been told that Plaintiff went on to say, “I don’t know how she does that [eat so much] and keep that figure or keep that body or something of that nature, she must purge.”
On May 12, 2005, six days before she gave Plaintiff the letter containing her sexual harassment complaint, Kendall was reprimanded by her supervisor, Sherrie Whaley, for sending inappropriate emails to various people outside of the University and for her tone in dealing with Plaintiff and Whaley.... It was Washington’s perception that prior to Kendall’s making her complaint, Kendall and other employees in her department had become frustrated because supervision of them had recently increased. According to Whaley, Kendall had a “poor attitude” and was “not doing her job” around the time she made the complaint against Plaintiff. One employee interviewed by Washington, Sandy Mayfield, stated to Washington that Kendall had a “pattern” of filing complaints against employers in response to supervision____
According to Plaintiff, on June 16, 2005, Washington told him in a telephone conversation that “they were going to find him in violation of the sexual harassment policy.” Plaintiff assumed that Washington was referring to Mace and Adams.... Plaintiff claims that this telephone conversation was the first time he had any indication that be would not be exonerated of the charges of sexual harassment.
Also on June 16, 2005, Plaintiff received a call from Kelly Simmons, a reporter for the Atlanta Journal Constitution (“AJC”). Plaintiff contends that Simmons had “a considerable amount of the details” regarding the investigation. On June 17, 2005, during the time that the UGA OLA was still investigating the sexual harassment complaint against Plaintiff, the AJC ran an article that revealed that UGA was investigating Plaintiff for sexual harassment. The article quoted Mace as confirming the existence of the investigation. According to Washington, UGA’s NDAH policy requires that a sexual harassment allegation remain confidential until an official finding is made, and that information about an investigation not be released to the press until ten days after the official finding.

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Bluebook (online)
600 F. Supp. 2d 1276, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 20584, 2009 WL 545785, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/soloski-v-adams-gand-2009.