Vicki L. Jones v. Paul H. Fitzgerald E.A. (Penny) Westfall Story County Sheriff's Office

285 F.3d 705
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedMay 22, 2002
Docket01-1976
StatusPublished
Cited by76 cases

This text of 285 F.3d 705 (Vicki L. Jones v. Paul H. Fitzgerald E.A. (Penny) Westfall Story County Sheriff's Office) 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
Vicki L. Jones v. Paul H. Fitzgerald E.A. (Penny) Westfall Story County Sheriff's Office, 285 F.3d 705 (8th Cir. 2002).

Opinion

RILEY, Circuit Judge.

After resigning from her clerical support position with the Story County Sheriffs Office, Vicki L. Jones (Jones) sued the county, the county sheriff, Paul Fitzgerald (Fitzgerald), and the former chief deputy sheriff, E.A. (Penny) Westfall (Westfall) for adverse employment action and constructive discharge in violation of the First Amendment under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. Following a jury verdict for Jones, the United States District Court for the Southern District of Iowa denied the defendants’ motion for judgment as a matter of law or, in the alternative, motion for new trial. The defendants appeal. We reverse.

I. BACKGROUND

In July 1991, Story County Sheriff John Stark (Stark) hired Vicki Jones as a secretary to the detectives’ division. Lieutenant Gerry Bearden (Bearden), the former chief of the detectives’ division, supervised Jones for over five years. The detectives’ division was located in the back of the sheriffs office. By virtue of her work detail, Jones’s work station was set apart from the other clerical personnel who worked in the front office area.

Soon after she commenced working, Jones experienced harassment from two office employees — Jane Page (Page), Fitzgerald’s confidential secretary, and Rhonda Goosic (Goosic), a deputy sheriff who supervised all clerical employees except Jones. Jones was divorced and eohabitat-ed with a man. Page and Goosic frequently called Jones a “skank” and made crude remarks about her having sexual relations with a man to whom she was not married. *708 Page and Goosic also harassed Jones by giving her unassigned clerical work, making faces at her, sticking out tongues at her, whispering in hushed voices in her presence, abruptly ceasing conversations in her presence, socially isolating and excluding her, and exhibiting hostile attitudes toward her.

Jones informed her supervisor of this harassment. Lieutenant Bearden offered to help Jones, but she declined. Jones told Bearden she preferred to handle the situation herself.

In 1992, Fitzgerald campaigned for the office of Story County Sheriff against the incumbent sheriff, Stark. Fitzgerald won the election and assumed office in January 1993. A year later Fitzgerald hired West-fall as his chief deputy.

In the spring of 1994, Jones complained verbally to Fitzgerald about being harassed by Page and Goosic. On November 8, 1994, Jones submitted a formal complaint to Fitzgerald with a copy to Bear-den. 1

The next day Jones met with Fitzgerald and Westfall concerning her written complaint. Fitzgerald noted, and Jones agreed, that the most severe harassment had occurred during the first year and a half of her employment under Sheriff Stark’s administration. Fitzgerald also informed Jones that after she had earlier lodged a verbal complaint of harassment, he had spoken to Page- and to Goosic, who was Page’s immediate supervisor, had ordered the harassment to cease and believed the harassment had ended. Jones responded that while the harassment of a sexual nature had ceased, the general harassment continued. Rather than sexual harassment now, Jones explained “we don’t speak” “[e]xcept for on a business level.”

During the meeting, Fitzgerald and Westfall asked Jones to cite specific examples of harassment. After referring to “attitudes,” Jones cited two examples — one occasion when Page told a fellow employee Jones did not know certain aspects of her job, and another occasion when Goosic called Jones “a liar.” Jones also complained of a tense working atmosphere, bad attitudes, immature childish actions ranging “from being snotty to ... making faces,” and clerical employees being told not to talk to Jones. ’ Fitzgerald directed Westfall to investigate Jones’s written complaint. Westfall later spoke to Goosic *709 and a clerical employee; however, no further action was taken on Jones’s complaint.

Throughout the next year, Jones made no complaints of harassment. On November 8, 1995, Westfall approached Jones and inquired if she was continuing to experience sexual harassment problems with the front office personnel. Jones responded she was not, stating the front office workers avoided her and she avoided them.

In late 1995, Fitzgerald learned Goosic had embezzled funds from the sheriffs office. Goosic resigned her position and was prosecuted. Lieutenant Gary Foster (Foster) assumed Goosic’s supervisory duties over the clerical personnel.

The following March 1996, Bearden officially announced his intention to oppose Fitzgerald in the November election. Jones openly supported Bearden’s candidacy for sheriff and actively campaigned for him. Bearden lost the November 1996, election to Fitzgerald.

On November 20, 1996, Fitzgerald began implementing several organizational changes. Fitzgerald promoted Page, his confidential secretary, to Office Services Supervisor, a newly created position which was responsible for supervising all clerical staff within the sheriffs office. Page now reported to Foster. Foster and Jones exchanged work station locations. Jones moved from the detectives’ division located in the back of the office to the front office. Jones retained the same duties, except she no longer answered the telephone for the detectives’ division. Page became Jones’s immediate supervisor.

Although Jones believed her involuntary transfer to be an act of political reprisal for supporting Bearden’s campaign, she did not object to being supervised by Page. Initially, Jones encountered no problems working under Page. However, after the first month, Jones felt isolated and excluded from interaction with the front office personnel. Throughout 1997, Page’s hostility towards Jones intensified. Page might have referred to Jones as “a crazy bitch” when talking to Goosic and, after Jones quit, Page told a prospective employer of Jones that Jones and Bearden were “birds of a feather.” Despite the open hostility, Jones did not complain to her superior officers. She had “learned early on just to kind of come to terms with things and do my work, ... just get by and pay attention to the task at hand.”

Effective January 1, 1997, Sheriff Fitzgerald transferred his political opponent, Bearden, from the detectives’ division to the patrol division and also transferred Deputy Terry Stark, who supported Bear-den’s candidacy, from the patrol division to the jail division. Later, Fitzgerald twice denied requests by Deputy Bradley Anderson, a Bearden supporter, for a transfer to the patrol division. Instead, Fitzgerald transferred Anderson to the jail division. Fitzgerald also denied applications by James Atkinson, a Bearden supporter, for transfers to the patrol and detectives’ divisions.

In August 1997, Page completed a written employee performance evaluation of Jones and rated Jones’s work quality as good. Jones received high marks in job knowledge, attitude, potential, personal appearance and work station organization. She received the highest rating available for her dependability, her initiative and her adaptability. Jones had no low marks, and her lowest rating was for quantity of work output because she “[tjurns out required amount but seldom more.” Page’s written comments about Jones were positive.

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