Stacey Yerkes v. Ohio State Highway Patrol

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedDecember 19, 2022
Docket22-3030
StatusUnpublished

This text of Stacey Yerkes v. Ohio State Highway Patrol (Stacey Yerkes v. Ohio State Highway Patrol) 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
Stacey Yerkes v. Ohio State Highway Patrol, (6th Cir. 2022).

Opinion

NOT RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION File Name: 22a0527n.06

Case No. 22-3030

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT FILED Dec 19, 2022 ) STACEY ARNOLD YERKES, DEBORAH S. HUNT, Clerk ) Plaintiff - Appellee, ) ) ON APPEAL FROM THE v. ) UNITED STATES DISTRICT ) COURT FOR THE SOUTHERN OHIO STATE HIGHWAY PATROL, et al., ) DISTRICT OF OHIO Defendants, ) ) GENE SMITH; MICHAEL KEMMER, ) OPINION WILLIAM STIDHAM; SCOTT WYCKHOUSE, ) ) Defendants - Appellants. )

Before: McKEAGUE, THAPAR, and READLER, Circuit Judges.

McKEAGUE, Circuit Judge. Plaintiff-Appellee Stacey Yerkes, a former Ohio State

Highway Patrol employee, claims that Defendants-Appellants Lieutenant William Stidham,

Captain Michael Kemmer, Major Gene Smith, and Scott Wyckhouse caused her to be

constructively discharged from her job, due to her sex and/or sexual orientation. She brought suit

against Defendants under § 1983 for sex discrimination in violation of the Fourteenth Amendment.

Defendants appeal the district court’s denial of qualified immunity for all four of them, alleging

that their actions do not constitute a constitutional violation and that the law regarding their actions

was not clearly established. Because our caselaw on this issue is conflicting, and thus the law is

not clearly established, we REVERSE. Case No. 22-3030, Yerkes v. Ohio State Highway Patrol, et al.

I. Facts and Procedural History

A. Facts

Plaintiff Stacey Arnold Yerkes worked at the Ohio State Highway Patrol from 1994 until

2018. Yerkes identifies as a gay female. The four Individual Defendants in this case—Lieutenant

William Stidham, Captain Michael Kemmer, Major Gene Smith, and Scott Wyckhouse—worked

with Yerkes at the Patrol. Yerkes’ direct supervisor was Lieutenant Nathan Dickerson, who is not

a party to this suit. Defendant Stidham was Dickerson’s supervisor, Defendant Kemmer was

Defendant Stidham’s supervisor, and Defendant Smith was Defendant Kemmer’s supervisor.

Defendant Wyckhouse was one of Yerkes’s coworkers. At the time of the relevant events, Yerkes

worked as a Criminal Interdiction Training Sergeant, training law enforcement officers.

Yerkes alleges that beginning in 2017, Defendants targeted and criticized her for minor

infractions that other officers frequently engaged in without comment. These issues included

leaving her vehicle on and unattended and failing to wear her Patrol-issued hat during a traffic

stop. Yerkes also alleges that—in contrast to similarly situated men in her position—she was

required to perform “demeaning” tasks that did not fall within her job description. Yerkes provided

evidence in the form of testimony from Dickerson that Defendants Kemmer, Stidham, and

Wyckhouse made discriminatory and degrading comments about women, such as calling them

slurs and questioning their merit. Dickerson also attested that slurs were used in the presence of

Defendant Smith, who did not attempt to put a stop to them or to censure the speakers. Finally,

Dickerson attested that Defendants Kemmer and Stidham made potentially misogynistic and

homophobic comments specifically about Yerkes.

Yerkes complained about her alleged differential treatment by Defendants to Dickerson on

December 6, 2017. She also complained about her perceived treatment on January 26, 2018, in a

2 Case No. 22-3030, Yerkes v. Ohio State Highway Patrol, et al.

Patrol meeting attended by Defendants Kemmer and Stidham. Three days later, on January 29,

2018, she filed a charge with the Equal Opportunity Employment Commission based on sex and

sexual orientation discrimination.

The next day, Defendant Wyckhouse told Defendant Stidham that several of his

supervisees were discussing and were upset about a tattoo on Yerkes’s forearm that she supposedly

covered with an approved medical sleeve,1 in a potential violation of Patrol policy.2 Yerkes

obtained the tattoo in 2017. Defendant Stidham and Defendant Wyckhouse reported the tattoo

issue to Defendant Kemmer. On February 2, 2018, Defendant Kemmer called a meeting with

Yerkes and requested that she take off the medical sleeve and show her tattoo (or lack thereof).

When Yerkes declined to do so, Defendant Kemmer told her she was being insubordinate.

Defendant Kemmer told Defendant Smith what occurred, and Defendant Smith reported the issue

to the Office of Personnel.

The Office of Personnel investigated and created a report for the incident. Yerkes was

charged with (1) violating the tattoo policy and (2) insubordination for declining to show

Defendant Kemmer her tattoo. Captain Linek—at the time head of the Office of Personnel—and

his staff3 reviewed the report and recommended that Yerkes be terminated unless she agreed to

1 Defendant Stidham attests that he had already heard rumors about the tattoo in August 2017, which he discussed with Dickerson and later the Office of Personnel and his supervisor at the time, Captain Richard Meadows. Defendant Stidham alleges that Meadows told him that Dickerson, as Yerkes’s direct supervisor, would follow up regarding the problem. Finally, Defendant Wyckhouse attests that he, Dickerson, and Defendant Stidham discussed the tattoo rumors again in October 2017, at which time Dickerson allegedly lied and said that he checked and that Yerkes did not have the tattoo. 2 The policy states: “(3) All uniformed employees . . . hired prior to July 22, 2015 [such as Yerkes], with tattoos, brandings, or body art that are visible in any class of uniform shall not be required to remove the existing tattoo, branding, or body art but shall not add to, modify, enhance or receive additional tattoos, brandings, or body art. . . . (4) Tattoos, brandings, or body art will be covered by any employee while representing the Division and not in uniform at any event or meeting, i.e., speech details, court appearances, public events, etc.” R. 104-6 at PID 6362. 3 Captain Linek also attested that supervisors are consulted regarding their subordinates’ discipline as a “matter of course,” and that he did in fact consult with Defendant Kemmer regarding Yerkes’s discipline. R. 86, PID 3809–11, 3881–82, 3923–24. 3 Case No. 22-3030, Yerkes v. Ohio State Highway Patrol, et al.

sign a Last Chance Agreement (LCA). The LCA would have demoted her, diminished her job

responsibilities, and required her to get her tattoo removed. The LCA further mandated that Yerkes

waive her legal rights concerning the incident, waive her right to file future EEOC charges about

past activity, and withdraw her current EEOC charge. The disciplinary decision was approved by

John Born, Director of the Department of Public Safety. On February 12, 2018, Yerkes chose to

retire instead of accepting the LCA or being terminated and having her file marked with a “not in

good standing” designation. Her successor was a male.

Because Yerkes wore an allegedly approved medical sleeve that covered the tattoo, there

is a factual dispute as to whether Yerkes’ tattoo violates the policy. There is also a factual dispute

as to whether the tattoo in combination with the supposed insubordination would normally

constitute a fireable offense. Yerkes alleges that multiple other troopers—males—had tattoos in

violation of the policy but were never reported or disciplined for them. Defendants allege that some

other troopers did face discipline for their tattoos. The Patrol’s Rule 30(b)(6) deponent admitted

that the Patrol relied on supervisors to report infractions of the tattoo policy, and that “but for”

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Stacey Yerkes v. Ohio State Highway Patrol, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stacey-yerkes-v-ohio-state-highway-patrol-ca6-2022.