Steck v. Francis

365 F. Supp. 2d 951, 2005 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 6886, 2005 WL 925932
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Iowa
DecidedApril 21, 2005
Docket04-3026-MWB
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 365 F. Supp. 2d 951 (Steck v. Francis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Steck v. Francis, 365 F. Supp. 2d 951, 2005 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 6886, 2005 WL 925932 (N.D. Iowa 2005).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER REGARDING THE DEFENDANTS’ MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT

BENNETT, Chief Judge.

TABLE OF CONTENTS

I. INTRODUCTION. ÍO cn Q

A. Factual Background. CO co Oi

1. The parties. CO cn <1

2. Allegations of harassment. oí

*956 3. Allegations of retaliation. ÍD ÜI 00

B. Procedural Background. ÍD ÜI CO

1. The Complaint. CO CR CO

2. The motion for summarg judgment 0 OI CO

II.LEGAL ANALYSIS. CD CJI

A. Standards For Summary Judgment ... CD Oí

B. Steck’s Hostile Environment Claim ... CD C5

1. Arguments of the parties. CD 0"5

2. Analysis. CD Ci

a. The required showings. CO C5

i.Federal and Iowa claims CD

ii. The prima facie case .... CD

iii. Actionable harassment .. CD 05

b. Determination without regard to the harasser’s status CD G3

c. Relevance of the harasser’s status. CO OI)

i.Eighth Circuit precedent. CD 05

ii. Other courts. CD Cü

iii. Additional considerations. CD

iv. The proper calculus. CD

d. Determination in light of the harasser’s status .... CD

1. Arguments of the parties. CD

a. Continued viability of the burden-shifting analysis CD

b. First-stage challenges. CD

c. Third-stage CD

d. Summary. CO

2. Analysis. CD

C. Steck’s Retaliation Claim. CO

III.CONCLUSION. .978

Even apparently immutable legal principles, such as the stone tablet edict of Title VII that “thou shalt not discriminate because of sex,” 1 must be applied through an active analytical process involving such tools as “sliding scales,” “burden-shifting analyses,” and “balancing tests,” rather than a static yardstick, if courts are to evaluate properly the circumstances of each case. After all, the situations to which legal principles must be applied are not lithographs, but motion pictures, involving interactions, not just juxtapositions, of circumstances, persons, and personalities. This case, which involves a female police officer’s claims of a sexually hostile work environment created by relatively few sexually-charged comments by a male chief of police and retaliation for complaining about such harassment, demonstrates why such an active analytical process is required.

I. INTRODUCTION

A. Factual Background

The court will not attempt here an exhaustive dissertation of the undisputed and disputed facts in this case. Rather, the court will identify the core of undisputed facts and sufficient of the disputed facts to put in context the parties’ arguments for and against summary judgment.

*957 1. The parties

Plaintiff Karen Steck has been employed as a police officer with the Fort Dodge Police Department (the Department) since 1999. Defendant Thomas Francis has been a police officer with the Department since 1977. Francis became the Department’s “Acting Chief’ in August of 2002, replacing Chief Ivan Metzger, and was appointed as the permanent Chief in September of 2003. The parties agree that Steck and Francis had known each other since Steck was a child, because Steck was a friend of Francis’s daughter, she lived in the house next door to the Francises, and at one time, played on a basketball team coached by Francis.

2. Allegations of harassment

Steck contends that she has had two major disputes with the Department during her tenure. Steck’s first dispute with the Department, which arose in 1999 after she became pregnant, concerned light duty assignment. However, that dispute was resolved to Steck’s satisfaction, after her attorney became involved, when she was transferred to the detective unit. The parties agree that Francis had no involvement in that dispute. The court also does not read Steck’s Complaint in this action to assert any claim based on the dispute in 1999, although Steck apparently contends that this first dispute is relevant to the present dispute.

The second dispute, which is the subject of Steck’s present lawsuit, arises from four comments by Francis in 2001 and 2003 that Steck contends created a sexually hostile work environment. Francis does not deny making the comments. Rather, Francis and the City contend that the comments are insufficient to create a hostile environment that is actionable pursuant to either Title VII or the Iowa Civil Rights Act. Consequently, the court will describe in turn the four comments upon which Steck’s hostile environment claim relies.

Francis made the first comment on which Steck’s hostile environment claim is based in the summer of 2001, while Steck and Francis were working with the Storm Lake Police Department during RAG-BRAI festivities. 2 During the course of a meeting with several officers on the street, Francis purportedly noticed Steck eating a large amount of food and commented, “You aren’t pregnant again, are you?” Although Steck was apparently offended by the question, she did not complain about this comment to any of her supervisors at the time.

Francis also made the second comment at issue here at some point during calendar year 2001, when Steck and other officers were watching a video on newly-purchased Department equipment. Francis walked by and commented to Steck, “Don’t be bringing any videos of you naked in the shower.” Steck asserts that this comment, which was directed solely at her in the presence of other male officers, made her feel uncomfortable. Therefore, she told then-Chief Ivan Metzger about the comment. The parties dispute whether Steck asked Chief Metzger not to do anything about the comment, but they agree that Chief Metzger spoke to Francis about the comment, and that Steck felt Chief Metz-ger’s handling of the incident was adequate at the time.

Francis allegedly made the third comment at issue here in March 2003, when he approached Steck to ask her whether or *958 not she had read the local newspaper that morning.

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Bluebook (online)
365 F. Supp. 2d 951, 2005 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 6886, 2005 WL 925932, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/steck-v-francis-iand-2005.