Andrea Gogel v. Kia Motors Manufacturing of Georgia, Inc. , 904 F.3d 1226 ( 2018 )


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  •                Case: 16-16850       Date Filed: 09/24/2018       Page: 1 of 49
    [PUBLISH]
    IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT
    ________________________
    No. 16-16850
    ________________________
    D.C. Docket No. 3:14-cv-00153-TCB
    ANDREA GOGEL,
    Plaintiff - Appellant,
    versus
    KIA MOTORS MANUFACTURING OF
    GEORGIA, INC.,
    Defendant - Appellee.
    ________________________
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Northern District of Georgia
    ________________________
    (September 24, 2018)
    Before MARTIN, JULIE CARNES and O’SCANNLAIN, * Circuit Judges.
    MARTIN, Circuit Judge:
    *
    Honorable Diarmuid F. O’Scannlain, United States Circuit Judge for the Ninth Circuit,
    sitting by designation.
    Case: 16-16850    Date Filed: 09/24/2018   Page: 2 of 49
    Before she was fired in 2011, Andrea Gogel was the manager of the Team
    Relations Department of Kia Motors Manufacturing of Georgia, Inc., a subsidiary
    of the Korean Kia Motors Corporation. During her time at Kia, Ms. Gogel heard
    many complaints about how women and Americans were treated at the Korean-
    owned company. She experienced similar treatment herself and, in her view, had
    been denied a promotion because she is a woman and an American. Eventually,
    Ms. Gogel decided to file an EEOC charge about the discrimination she had
    suffered.
    Soon, another Kia employee, an American woman named Diana Ledbetter,
    filed her own EEOC charge. After learning of Ms. Ledbetter’s charge, Kia came to
    believe that Ms. Gogel had “encouraged or even solicited” Ms. Ledbetter to file her
    charge. Kia says it fired Ms. Gogel for that reason.
    Ms. Gogel sued Kia for gender and national origin discrimination and
    retaliation under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 (“Title VII”), 42 U.S.C.
    § 2000e-2(a) & § 2000e-3(a), as well as race and alienage discrimination and
    retaliation under 42 U.S.C. § 1981. The District Court granted summary judgment
    in favor of Kia, and Ms. Gogel appealed. After careful review, and with the
    benefit of oral argument, we reverse the District Court as to Ms. Gogel’s retaliation
    claims under Title VII and § 1981 and otherwise affirm its ruling.
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    I. Background
    In 2008, Kia hired Ms. Gogel as Team Relations Manager for its new plant
    in West Point, Georgia. 1 At that time, she reported to Randy Jackson, who was the
    Director of Human Resources and Administration. Like Ms. Gogel, the head of
    Kia’s department of Human Resources, Robert Tyler, also reported to Mr. Jackson.
    There were Korean counterparts, called “coordinators,” for each management level
    positon. For most of Ms. Gogel’s time at Kia, Justin Yoo and Kevin Kim were the
    Korean coordinators for Team Relations and Human Resources.
    The “overall purpose” of the Team Relations department was to “support an
    environment of positive team relations.” To that end, Ms. Gogel’s department was
    charged with developing policies and standards concerning employee behavior.
    These policies included harassment policies and an EEOC policy. Team Relations
    also helped employees understand “the rules and guidelines of the workplace” by
    offering training and development to new employees as well as to Kia’s suppliers.
    When Ms. Gogel started with Kia, one of the training programs she taught was
    about compliance with American employment law, particularly Title VII, for
    Korean expatriates employed at Kia.
    1
    Because we hear this appeal following a grant of summary judgment in favor of Kia, we
    describe the facts of this case viewing the record in the light most favorable to Ms. Gogel. Essex
    Ins. Co. v. Barrett Moving & Storage, Inc., 
    885 F.3d 1292
    , 1299 (11th Cir. 2018).
    3
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    Ms. Gogel’s department also conducted investigations into policy
    violations, including attendance issues and allegations of harassment or
    discrimination. The exact process for these investigations depended on the
    seniority of the employees involved as well as the severity of the allegations. At
    the conclusion of an investigation, Ms. Gogel would provide Mr. Jackson with the
    relevant facts and sometimes a recommendation. The results of an investigation
    were reviewed by Kia’s legal department and Mr. Jackson.
    In the fall of 2008, Ms. Gogel received a complaint from Diana Ledbetter, a
    General Affairs Specialist, about an inappropriate relationship between Ledbetter’s
    supervisor, Ms. Kisha Morris Tarver, and Kia’s president, Byung Mo Ahn. Ms.
    Ledbetter asked to transfer to the Team Relations department because Ledbetter
    perceived that Ms. Morris was abusing her position without fear of reprisal in light
    of her relationship with President Ahn. When Ms. Gogel received Ms. Ledbetter’s
    complaint, she approached Mr. Jackson for advice on how to appropriately handle
    the matter, given President Ahn’s senior position and the potential risk the
    relationship posed to the company. Mr. Jackson told Ms. Gogel she could not
    investigate Ms. Ledbetter’s complaint. Separately, Mr. Kim, one of the Korean
    coordinators for Ms. Gogel, asked her to investigate how Ms. Morris was treating
    other people and whether she falsified her time, but asked her to do so without
    investigating President Ahn. Mr. Kim indicated Ms. Gogel should keep her
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    investigation “very secret” and not tell Mr. Jackson about it. Ms. Gogel started
    gathering the information he requested. But a few weeks later, Mr. Kim told her
    “to stop the investigation, [ ] not gather any more information, and destroy all
    information” she had collected thus far.
    Ms. Ledbetter made other complaints about workplace conduct as well. For
    example, unlike her male colleagues, she was made to practice saying, “welcome
    Chairman,” while holding flowers to practice greeting visiting male Korean
    executives. She was ordered to serve these executives wine and she was called a
    geisha. When higher level executives visited from Korea, Ms. Ledbetter was
    forced to fill in for the normal receptionist because that receptionist was not
    perceived to be pretty while Ms. Ledbetter was. From 2008 through 2010, Ms.
    Gogel and Ms. Ledbetter met several times to discuss these types of complaints.
    In early 2009, Kia reorganized its departments to include “Head of
    Department” (“HOD”) designations. Mr. Tyler was made HOD for his own
    department (Human Resources) as well as Ms. Gogel’s department (Team
    Relations). Ms. Gogel was the only woman in a similar management role, and she
    was the only one of these managers not designated an HOD. Ms. Gogel
    complained to Mr. Jackson about not receiving the designation, particularly
    because all other department heads got it. Mr. Jackson offered varying
    explanations for not designating Ms. Gogel HOD. Sometimes he said the
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    nondesignation was related to the “timing” of Team Relations being made its own
    department. But other times he claimed the designation of Mr. Tyler was
    “automatic.”
    At first, Ms. Gogel believed Mr. Jackson’s explanation that “timing” was the
    reason she was not promoted. But Ms. Gogel later concluded she was not
    promoted because of gender discrimination and her investigation of Ms. Morris’s
    relationship with President Ahn. As a result of various investigations, including
    the investigation into Ms. Ledbetter’s complaint, Ms. Gogel had observed “some
    extreme cultural differences between the Korean culture and American culture”
    including with regard to “standard employment laws.” Ms. Gogel also noticed Mr.
    Kim’s attitude toward her negatively changed following her discontinued
    investigation into Ms. Morris. In October 2009, Ms. Gogel met with Mr. Jackson
    and Mr. Tyler and told them she felt she was treated differently about the award of
    an HOD designation because of her gender. She also expressed her view that there
    was “a gender issue within the company that impacts multiple people within the
    organization.” In April 2010, Mr. Tyler was promoted to Senior Manager of
    Human Resources and Team Relations.
    Throughout 2010, many American managers expressed concerns about
    treatment by Korean management. These concerns included Americans not being
    given appropriate decision-making authority; not being consulted on issues in their
    6
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    purview; and not having a voice in the company. Mr. Tyler raised these concerns
    with Mr. Jackson, who asked him to gather specific information and examples.
    With input from American managers including Ms. Gogel, Mr. Tyler drafted what
    became known as the “Report of Concerns.” The Report of Concerns was given
    by Mr. Tyler to others at Kia around the end of September 2010. An early version
    of the report referenced the purported relationship between Ms. Morris and
    President Ahn. That portion of the report was removed from a second version in
    October 2010. Ms. Gogel met with Mr. Jackson, Charlie Webb (Kia’s legal
    counsel), and Mr. Tyler in October to reiterate the concerns she had expressed
    since 2009, including President Ahn’s relationship with Ms. Morris and the
    treatment of women and Americans at Kia. Within weeks of that meeting, Ms.
    Gogel emailed Mr. Jackson, Mr. Webb, and Mr. Tyler expressing her concerns
    about how the investigation into the Report of Concerns was conducted and her
    disappointment that it had already closed.
    On November 10, 2010, Ms. Gogel, without counsel, filed her first charge
    against Kia with the EEOC. Her charge alleged she was not designated HOD due
    to discrimination on the basis of gender and national origin. Ms. Gogel did not tell
    Ms. Ledbetter that she had filed this EEOC charge. Yet Ms. Ledbetter learned of
    Ms. Gogel’s EEOC charge from other employees. Around this time, Ms. Gogel
    met with Ms. Ledbetter, and they discussed Kia’s ability to address employee
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    concerns about discrimination. Ms. Ledbetter asked whether Ms. Gogel had
    retained an attorney to represent her. Ms. Gogel replied that she hadn’t, but that
    she had chosen one to meet with, and she passed along that attorney’s name.
    On Friday, December 3, Mr. Webb and Mr. Jackson asked Ms. Gogel to sign
    a document stating she would “not discuss [her] EEOC charge or similar claims
    against [Kia] with Team Members and [ ] not use [her] position to solicit or
    influence Team Members to make claims against [Kia].” The document also
    purported to prohibit Ms. Gogel from seeking assistance from other employees in
    gathering information related to her claim and from accessing files and documents
    that relate to her claim or similar claims against Kia. Ms. Gogel initially refused to
    sign it so that she could discuss it with her counsel. As a result, she was asked to
    go home. On Monday, December 6, she changed her mind, decided to sign the
    document, and returned to work.
    Separately, Mr. Tyler filed an EEOC charge on November 19, making his
    own allegations of national origin discrimination and retaliation. Like Ms. Gogel,
    Kia asked Mr. Tyler to sign a document purporting to limit his ability to solicit
    others and limit his access to Kia’s internal documents, and he did. Kia ultimately
    suspended Mr. Tyler on December 16, 2010 and terminated him on January 6,
    2011 after an investigation into whether he violated the signed statement by
    stealing documents.
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    Meanwhile, before she learned of Ms. Gogel and Mr. Tyler’s EEOC charges,
    Ms. Ledbetter arranged to file her own EEOC charge. She had concluded that
    filing a charge was her “only choice” to get Kia to listen to her. She decided to file
    her charge on her own without encouragement or solicitation from Ms. Gogel or
    Mr. Tyler, and she did not tell them about her intent to file the charge. She filed
    her EEOC charge alleging race, gender, and national origin discrimination on
    December 10.
    Kia received Ms. Ledbetter’s EEOC charge on December 23, 2010. Upon
    receipt of the charge, Mr. Jackson realized and was concerned that Ms. Gogel, Mr.
    Tyler, and Ms. Ledbetter were all represented by the same law firm. He emailed a
    coworker, explaining that he was trying to reach President Ahn to provide “an
    update on Bob [Tyler] and Andrea [Gogel]” because “[i]t looks like Bob and
    Andrea are recruiting others.” At that time, Mr. Jackson’s belief that Ms. Gogel
    and Mr. Tyler had “recruit[ed]” Ms. Ledbetter was based only on observing that all
    three were represented by the same law firm. This concerned Mr. Jackson because
    he did not want Ms. Gogel, as the manager of Team Relations, “soliciting and
    encouraging other people to file lawsuits.”
    In January 2011, Mr. Jackson and Mr. Webb met with Arthur Williams, who
    was one of Ms. Gogel’s subordinates. Mr. Williams told them that Ms. Ledbetter
    met with Ms. Gogel and Mr. Tyler a number of times around the date she filed her
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    charge. He also said Ms. Ledbetter had told him in November 2010 that she, Mr.
    Tyler, and Ms. Gogel were all filing charges against Kia and all had the same
    attorney. Mr. Jackson and Mr. Webb also met with Paul Grimes, another of Ms.
    Gogel’s subordinates, who provided them with similar information about meetings
    among Ms. Gogel, Ms. Ledbetter, and Mr. Tyler or some combination of the three.
    Mr. Grimes acknowledged he had no idea what Ms. Ledbetter and Ms. Gogel
    discussed in those meetings.
    On January 7, 2011, Mr. Jackson and Mr. Webb asked Ms. Gogel to meet
    with them. During this meeting, Mr. Webb asked Ms. Gogel about Ms.
    Ledbetter’s complaints and the prior investigation of President Ahn and Ms.
    Morris. Ms. Gogel explained she intended to investigate the relationship between
    President Ahn and Ms. Morris, but had been prohibited from doing so. Later in the
    meeting, Mr. Webb and Mr. Jackson accused Ms. Gogel of colluding with Ms.
    Ledbetter to file an EEOC charge. They asked about her conversations with Ms.
    Ledbetter and said she violated the “agreement” she signed with Kia on December
    6th. Ms. Gogel denied their accusations, explaining her recent meeting with Ms.
    Ledbetter was not about EEOC charges and was instead about covering the
    cafeteria during the winter holidays. At the conclusion of the meeting, Mr.
    Jackson said to Mr. Webb, “just to be safe, why don’t we go ahead as planned.”
    They then suspended her and instructed security to escort her out of the building.
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    Kia fired Ms. Gogel by letter, sent January 19th. The letter says Kia fired
    Ms. Gogel because “one could conclude that [she] encouraged or even solicited
    [Ms. Ledbetter’s] filing of the charge” and that “[a]t the very least, there is an
    appearance of a conflict of interest.” Mr. Jackson made the decision to fire Ms.
    Gogel. He later explained that when he wrote the letter he was “totally convinced”
    Ms. Gogel “had solicited and encouraged other team members to file a lawsuit
    against the company.” He considered this conduct to violate Ms. Gogel’s job
    duties as Manager of Team Relations. In light of this, he “lost total confidence and
    trust in her to perform . . . job duties that she was hired to do, and [he] could not
    continue her employment with Kia.”
    Ms. Ledbetter, who was on maternity leave at the time, heard that Mr. Tyler
    and Ms. Gogel had been fired. She called Mr. Williams to ask if she was going to
    be fired too. Mr. Williams asked her to meet in person, and they met at a Wal-
    Mart. There, Mr. Williams prodded Ms. Ledbetter to admit Ms. Gogel and Mr.
    Tyler encouraged her to file her EEOC charge. She refused, explaining this was
    not true.2
    2
    The following year, Ms. Ledbetter again sought to transfer to a different department. At
    the time, her EEOC charge was still pending. Two Kia employees, including Randy Jackson,
    told her that if she withdrew her EEOC charge, she would have a better chance of being
    transferred. She said she felt like a “black sheep” at Kia while the charge was pending, so she
    withdrew the charge to “get back in good favor with the company.” Even so, Kia did not grant
    her the transfer. Ledbetter resigned in June 2013 after determining she was never going to be
    allowed to transfer.
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    The EEOC gave Ms. Gogel notice of her right to sue Kia. Ms. Gogel later
    filed her initial complaint in state court alleging discriminatory and retaliatory
    termination claims under Title VII and 42 U.S.C. § 1981. After Kia removed the
    case to federal court, it moved for summary judgment on all claims, and Ms. Gogel
    filed a cross-motion for summary judgment on her retaliation claims. The
    Magistrate Judge issued a report and recommendation that the District Court grant
    Kia’s motion for summary judgment on all counts and deny Ms. Gogel’s motion.
    Over Ms. Gogel’s objections, the District Court adopted the R&R and entered
    judgment against Ms. Gogel. The District Court concluded Kia fired her for failing
    to perform her job duties because she allegedly helped or solicited Ms. Ledbetter in
    filing her EEOC charge against Kia.
    This appeal followed.3
    II. Standard of Review
    “We review a summary judgment ruling de novo, viewing the evidence and
    all factual inferences therefrom in the light most favorable to the party opposing
    the motion.” Essex 
    Ins., 885 F.3d at 1299
    (quotation omitted). A district court
    must grant a motion for summary judgment only if “there is no genuine dispute as
    3
    Before the District Court, Ms. Gogel argued she was discriminated against when Kia
    did not promote her to Head of Department or Senior Manager. The District Court found her
    failure-to-promote claim was barred by the Title VII and § 1981 statutes of limitation. Ms.
    Gogel has not challenged those conclusions, so we do not consider this claim on appeal.
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    to any material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.”
    Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a).
    III.   Discussion
    Ms. Gogel argues that Kia discriminated against her based on her gender and
    national origin and in retaliation for engaging in protected activity. See 42 U.S.C.
    § 2000e-2(a) & § 2000e-3(a); 42 U.S.C. § 1981. We begin with Ms. Gogel’s
    retaliation claims, then turn to her claims of gender and national origin
    discrimination.
    A.    Retaliation claims
    Title VII makes it unlawful for an employer to fire an employee because she
    “opposed any practice made an unlawful employment practice” under Title VII or
    because she has “made a charge, testified, assisted, or participated in any manner
    in an investigation, proceeding, or hearing” under Title VII. 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-
    3(a). “To establish a prima facie case of retaliation under Title VII, the plaintiff
    must show (1) that she engaged in statutorily protected expression; (2) that she
    suffered an adverse employment action; and (3) that there is some causal relation
    between the two events.” Thomas v. Cooper Lighting, Inc., 
    506 F.3d 1361
    , 1363
    (11th Cir. 2007) (per curiam) (quotation omitted). “Once a plaintiff establishes a
    prima facie case of retaliation, the burden of production shifts to the defendant to
    rebut the presumption by articulating a legitimate, non-discriminatory reason for
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    the adverse employment action.” Bryant v. Jones, 
    575 F.3d 1281
    , 1308 (11th Cir.
    2009). “After the defendant makes this showing, the plaintiff has a full and fair
    opportunity to demonstrate that the defendant’s proffered reason was merely a
    pretext to mask discriminatory actions.” 
    Id. Retaliation claims
    under § 1981 are
    analyzed under this same framework. 
    Id. Kia concedes
    Ms. Gogel can show a prima facie claim of retaliation. It
    argues its legitimate, nondiscriminatory reason for firing her was its reasonable
    belief that she encouraged or solicited Ms. Ledbetter to file her EEOC charge
    rather than refer Ms. Ledbetter’s complaint internally. Ms. Gogel says that
    encouraging or soliciting Ms. Ledbetter to file a charge is protected activity and
    that firing her for that reason is direct evidence of retaliation. Although she
    disputes that she “encouraged” or “solicited” Ms. Ledbetter to file her charge, Ms.
    Gogel admits she provided Ms. Ledbetter with the name of an attorney whom she
    intended to meet with to discuss her own pending EEOC charge.
    Kia acknowledges that in most circumstances assisting a coworker with
    filing an EEOC charge is protected activity under the opposition clause and that
    terminating an employee for doing so would be retaliation. See 42 U.S.C.
    § 2000e-(3)(a) (making it unlawful to fire an employee who “assisted” in a Title
    VII proceeding); see also, e.g., Hobgood v. Ill. Gaming Bd., 
    731 F.3d 635
    , 642
    (7th Cir. 2013). But Kia says the manner in which Ms. Gogel encouraged Ms.
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    Ledbetter to file an EEOC charge was unreasonable. In Kia’s view, when a human
    resource employee like Ms. Gogel helps another employee file a discrimination
    charge, that conduct is unreasonable and not protected activity.
    We have “recognized that some otherwise protected conduct may be so
    disruptive or inappropriate as to fall outside [Title VII’s] protection.” Rollins v.
    State of Fla. Dep’t of Law Enf’t, 
    868 F.2d 397
    , 401 (11th Cir. 1989) (per curiam).
    Thus, “to qualify for the protection of the statute, the manner in which an
    employee expresses her opposition to an allegedly discriminatory employment
    practice must be reasonable.” 
    Id. (emphasis added).
    This Court applies a
    balancing test on a case-by-case basis to determine whether the manner in which
    an employee expresses her opposition is reasonable. 
    Id. We balance
    “the purpose
    of the statute and the need to protect individuals asserting their rights [ ] against an
    employer’s legitimate demands for loyalty, cooperation and a generally productive
    work environment.” 
    Id. This Court
    as well as our predecessor court have used this balancing test in
    the context of human resource employees who are alleged to have violated their
    employer’s procedures for reporting complaints. In Whatley v. Metro. Atlanta
    Rapid Transit Auth., 
    632 F.2d 1325
    (5th Cir. 1980 Unit B) 4, the employer fired a
    4
    In Bonner v. City of Prichard, 
    661 F.2d 1206
    (11th Cir. 1981) (en banc), we adopted as
    binding precedent all decisions of the former Fifth Circuit handed down before October 1, 1981.
    
    Id. at 1209.
                                                   15
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    human resource employee who assisted another employee with filing a charge of
    discrimination with the Urban Mass Transit Administration (“UMTA”) and
    included a request that UMTA investigate the charge. 
    Id. at 1327.
    This process
    violated the employer’s procedure, which stated it would internally investigate
    charges before forwarding them to UMTA, allowing the employer to include an
    endorsement or recommendation to UMTA. 
    Id. The former
    Fifth Circuit held that
    the employee was fired for the “manner” in which he had handled the complaint,
    not for processing it. 
    Id. at 1329.
    The Court explained that “[f]ailing to follow
    prescribed administrative procedures is not a statutorily protected activity.” 
    Id. In Hamm
    v. Members of Bd. of Regents of State of Fla., 
    708 F.2d 647
    (11th
    Cir. 1983), a human resource employee sued the Florida Board of Regents and
    various state officials for gender discrimination and retaliation for engaging in
    protected activities. 
    Id. at 649.
    Among other things, this employee “releas[ed]
    investigative reports to the campus newspaper” without prior approval and
    supplied another employee with information contained in personnel files without
    permission. 
    Id. at 653.
    The Hamm Court concluded that “[r]ather than supporting
    a claim of retaliation, the evidence shows that plaintiff repeatedly chose to work
    outside the framework [the University of South Florida] was attempting to
    establish to deal with discrimination claims” and that “[a]n employer may remove
    an employee from a position similar to that at issue here without violating Title VII
    16
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    based on the manner in which the employee undertakes his or her duties.” 
    Id. (citing Whatley,
    632 F.2d at 1329).
    However, not all opposition to employment practices by human resource
    employees is unreasonable. Indeed, prohibiting all such opposition by human
    resource employees would be contrary to the text of Title VII. The statute forbids
    retaliation against “any . . . employee[]” when that employee has “opposed any
    practice made an unlawful employment practice” by Title VII. 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-
    3(a). No doubt, human resource employees count among “any . . . employees,”
    and discriminatory practices aimed even at other employees fall into the broad
    category of “any practice made an unlawful employment practice.” See id.; see
    also Merritt v. Dillard Paper Co., 
    120 F.3d 1181
    , 1186 (11th Cir. 1997) (“[T]he
    adjective ‘any’ is not ambiguous; it has a well-established meaning. . . . ‘[A]ny’
    means all.”). And just like other employees, when human resource employees
    “support[] other employees in asserting their Title VII rights,” they engage in
    protected activity under Title VII’s opposition clause. Littlejohn v. City of New
    York, 
    795 F.3d 297
    , 318 (2d Cir. 2015) (quotation omitted). For this reason, in
    deciding whether a human resource employee’s opposition is reasonable, our
    precedent does not look to the fact that a human resource employee opposes a
    policy, but rather looks to the manner in which she does it. See 
    Rollins, 868 F.2d at 401
    (“If . . . the manner in which the employee complains is found to be
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    unreasonable, it falls outside the protection of the statute . . . .” (emphasis added));
    
    Whatley, 632 F.2d at 1329
    (“[I]t was not the fact that [an equal opportunity
    compliance officer] filed a complaint for [another employee] but the manner in
    which he did so that upset his employer.” (emphasis added)); see also Johnson v.
    Univ. of Cincinnati, 
    215 F.3d 561
    , 580 (6th Cir. 2000) (observing that “the only
    qualification that is placed upon an employee’s invocation of protection from
    retaliation under Title VII’s opposition clause is that the manner of his opposition
    must be reasonable”). We therefore employ the same case-by-case balancing test
    for human resource employees that we use for any other employee, to determine
    whether the manner of their opposition was reasonable.
    The difficulty in this case arises from the idea that human resource
    employees cannot perform their job duties while supporting their coworkers’
    oppositional conduct. But this conflict is overstated. An employer’s desire for a
    loyal, cooperative, and productive human resource employee can be entirely
    consistent with the “purpose of the statute and the need to protect individuals
    asserting their rights.” See 
    Rollins, 868 F.2d at 401
    . That’s because Title VII
    emphasizes employers’ voluntary compliance, as well as the role human resource
    employees play in achieving and maintaining compliance. See Alexander v.
    Gardner-Denver Co., 
    415 U.S. 36
    , 44, 
    94 S. Ct. 1011
    , 1017 (1974) (explaining that
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    “[c]ooperation and voluntary compliance” are the “preferred means” for achieving
    the goals of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964).
    That said, if human resource employees consistently worked outside their
    employer’s internal procedures for addressing discrimination complaints, that
    employer’s ability to achieve voluntary compliance with Title VII would be
    diminished or eliminated. There would be no one to implement its program. See
    Holden v. Owens-Illinois, Inc., 
    793 F.2d 745
    , 753 (6th Cir. 1986) (“In acting like a
    ‘compliance officer,’ plaintiff disabled herself from continuing to work with
    company executives in the voluntary development of affirmative action
    programs.”); Smith v. Singer Co., 
    650 F.2d 214
    , 217 (9th Cir. 1981) (“By filing
    complaints . . . because he disagreed with [his employer’s] choice of policies . . .
    [plaintiff] wholly disabled himself from continuing to represent the company’s
    interests as its liaison with the enforcement agencies, and from continuing to work
    . . . in the voluntary development of nondiscriminatory hiring programs.”).
    Because of the importance of voluntary compliance, a human resource employee
    usually furthers the purpose of the statute and the need to protect people asserting
    their rights by following her employer’s procedures. And when a human resource
    employee handling another employee’s complaint deviates from an internal
    reporting procedure, the manner of the HR employee’s actions may be
    unreasonable. See, e.g., 
    Hamm, 708 F.2d at 654
    ; 
    Whatley, 632 F.2d at 1328
    –29.
    19
    Case: 16-16850     Date Filed: 09/24/2018   Page: 20 of 49
    But not always. There are times when an employer’s internal procedures are
    not effective for certain classes of complaints or the complaints of particular
    people. See, e.g., Tademy v. Union Pac. Corp., 
    614 F.3d 1132
    , 1148 (10th Cir.
    2008) (describing repeated failures to investigate complaints of racism in
    connection with a hostile work environment claim). A human resource employee
    who tries to resolve complaints internally but fails due to the inadequacy of her
    employer’s procedures furthers the “purpose of the statute and the need to protect
    individuals asserting their rights” by going outside the employer’s internal
    procedures. See 
    Rollins, 868 F.2d at 401
    .
    The extent of the deviation from procedure is also a relevant consideration.
    For instance, in Hamm and Whatley, the employees went beyond assisting one
    other employee with a discrimination charge, by making various public statements
    and engaging in other insubordinate conduct. 
    Hamm, 708 F.2d at 652
    ; Whatley,
    
    632 F.2d 1326
    –27. And in each case, these violations occurred multiple times.
    
    Hamm, 708 F.2d at 652
    ; Whatley, 
    632 F.2d 1326
    –27.
    We recognize that deviating from an employer’s internal procedures to
    support another employee’s opposition can be a violation of job duties. This Court
    has acknowledged that when the manner of an employee’s opposition “interferes
    with the performance of his job,” it is often unreasonable. Rosser v. Laborers’ Int’l
    Union of N. Am., Local No. 438, 
    616 F.2d 221
    , 223 (5th Cir. 1980). But an
    20
    Case: 16-16850     Date Filed: 09/24/2018    Page: 21 of 49
    employer cannot defeat the requirements of Title VII by establishing job duties that
    are inconsistent with the statute’s protections. See DeMasters v. Carilion Clinic,
    
    796 F.3d 409
    , 422 (4th Cir. 2015) (“Nothing in the language of Title VII indicates
    that the statutory protection accorded an employee’s oppositional conduct turns on
    the employee’s job description . . . .”). Thus, while their actions opposing
    discriminatory practices must be reasonable, human resource employees are not
    compelled to “take the pro-employer side” when another employee complains of
    discrimination. See 
    id. at 413
    (internal quotation omitted). Instead, Title VII
    protects human resource employees when they “support[] other employees in
    asserting their Title VII rights,” 
    Littlejohn, 795 F.3d at 318
    (quotation omitted),
    and the manner of their support is reasonable, 
    Rollins, 868 F.2d at 401
    . This
    Circuit’s test has always sought to balance achieving the purposes of Title VII with
    avoiding workplace disruption. See 
    Rollins, 868 F.2d at 401
    . In the case of human
    resource employees, sometimes striking that balance will require accepting an
    employee’s opposition to discrimination as protected activity where the employee
    has stepped outside the bounds of work rules to do so.
    Viewing this record in the light most favorable to Ms. Gogel, we conclude
    the manner of her opposition was reasonable. As we see it, Ms. Gogel provided
    Ms. Ledbetter with the name of an attorney whom she was considering hiring for
    her own EEOC charge. When Mr. Jackson realized Ms. Gogel and Ms. Ledbetter
    21
    Case: 16-16850    Date Filed: 09/24/2018   Page: 22 of 49
    were represented by the same counsel, he feared Ms. Gogel had solicited and
    encouraged Ms. Ledbetter to file her charge and fired her for that reason. Were it
    not for Ms. Gogel’s position as a human resource manager, her action of providing
    the name of an attorney in connection with her EEOC charge would be protected
    opposition conduct, because it assisted Ms. Ledbetter with filing her own charge.
    See 
    Hobgood, 731 F.3d at 642
    –43. The only reason Ms. Gogel’s opposition might
    be considered unreasonable stems from her position as a human resource employee
    and corresponding job duty to follow the company’s reporting procedures. But for
    purposes of this Court’s determination about whether the manner of Ms. Gogel’s
    opposition was “reasonable,” that job duty is not paramount. As we explain, Ms.
    Gogel’s conduct was reasonable here.
    Ms. Gogel repeatedly followed Kia policy in notifying Mr. Jackson of her
    complaints of sexism. However, he dismissed her complaints as mere “opinion”
    and conducted no investigation. And after Ms. Gogel met with Mr. Jackson, Mr.
    Webb, and Mr. Tyler to reiterate her concerns of sexism, Mr. Jackson ended the
    meeting, forbade Mr. Tyler from investigating the complaints, and then terminated
    the investigation without conducting any of his own fact-finding. Mr. Tyler’s
    experience was similar: after he submitted his Report of Concerns, no real change
    occurred. Instead, President Ahn berated the American workers for complaining
    about working conditions.
    22
    Case: 16-16850     Date Filed: 09/24/2018    Page: 23 of 49
    Most important is how Ms. Gogel and Kia responded to Ms. Ledbetter’s
    complaints. Ms. Ledbetter repeatedly complained to Ms. Gogel regarding the
    work environment created as a result of her supervisor’s relationship with
    President Ahn. In addressing Ms. Ledbetter’s complaint, Ms. Gogel tried to use
    Kia’s internal framework, but Mr. Jackson forbade Ms. Gogel from investigating.
    And soon after she was secretly authorized by Mr. Kim to conduct an investigation
    into the relationship, he told her to stop the investigation and destroy any notes that
    she had taken. When Ms. Ledbetter complained more generally about sexism in
    her department—whether being forced to practice greeting male executives, pour
    wine for them, or being called a geisha, and Mr. Tyler relayed those complaints,
    Mr. Jackson refused to do anything. As with Ms. Gogel’s complaints, Mr. Jackson
    dismissed the reports as mere “opinion.” Critically, once Mr. Jackson decided a
    matter was unworthy of investigation or corrective action, Kia’s internal
    framework was exhausted. Indeed, Mr. Williams—who had been Ms. Gogel’s
    subordinate and was promoted to her position after her termination—testified that
    if Mr. Jackson “told [him] no, or something . . . that’s the answer.”
    Thus, Ms. Gogel tried to use Kia’s internal reporting framework for years,
    and only gave Ms. Ledbetter the name of an attorney after Kia’s framework had
    proven insufficient to handle Ms. Ledbetter’s complaints. Because Ms. Gogel tried
    to use Kia’s internal framework, her deviation from it furthered the purposes of
    23
    Case: 16-16850     Date Filed: 09/24/2018     Page: 24 of 49
    Title VII, without impacting Kia’s illusory efforts at voluntary compliance. Thus,
    applying the balancing test established in Rollins, and viewing the evidence in the
    light most favorable to Ms. Gogel, we conclude that the manner of her opposition
    was reasonable and her conduct was protected activity.
    Kia argues that finding the manner of Ms. Gogel’s opposition reasonable
    conflicts with the Fifth Circuit’s decision in Jones v. Flagship Int’l, 
    793 F.2d 714
    (5th Cir. 1986). In Jones, an in-house counsel whose duties included investigating
    discrimination charges and representing her employer before state and federal
    administrative agencies sued her employer for gender discrimination under Title
    VII and for violations of the Equal Pay Act. 
    Id. at 716.
    After a trial, the District
    Court entered judgment in favor of the employer. 
    Id. at 718.
    On appeal, the Fifth
    Circuit applied its balancing test, focusing on three actions it concluded “critically
    harmed Flagship’s posture in the defense of discrimination suits brought against
    the company.” 
    Id. at 728.
    Those were Jones’s actions in “(1) filing a
    discrimination suit against Flagship, (2) suggesting that a class action suit would
    follow, and (3) soliciting or inviting others to sue or join in a suit against the
    company.” 
    Id. The Fifth
    Circuit concluded this conduct was not protected
    opposition and provided a legitimate nondiscriminatory reason to fire Jones. 
    Id. Jones is
    easily distinguished from this case. Ms. Gogel was not the in-house
    legal counsel charged with directing EEOC investigations and representing Kia
    24
    Case: 16-16850     Date Filed: 09/24/2018   Page: 25 of 49
    before the EEOC. Also, Ms. Gogel never indicated she planned to file a class
    action on behalf of other Kia employees. At most, Kia believed Ms. Gogel had
    encouraged one or two people to file a charge.
    Rather than consider the reasonableness of a human resource employee’s
    support for another employee’s opposition, the dissent would rule that a human
    resource employee’s “act of soliciting another employee to file a claim—when that
    action violates an essential duty of an employee’s job—is per se unreasonable.”
    Dissent at 46. The dissent says this rule is necessary because of the potential
    adverse consequences for employers, and it calls our opinion “a landmine . . . now
    laid for employers.” 
    Id. at 46–48.
    However, the dissent fails to explain how its per se rule could be consistent
    with the opposition clause of Title VII, which contains no exception for human
    resource employees. See 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-(3)(a). In effect, the dissent would
    reinterpret the opposition clause to avoid what it sees as negative consequences for
    employers. See Dissent at 46–47. But “the avoidance of unhappy consequences is
    [not an] adequate basis for interpreting” the opposition clause, see Nixon v. Mo.
    Mun. League, 
    541 U.S. 125
    , 141, 
    124 S. Ct. 1555
    , 1566 (2004) (Scalia, J.,
    concurring in judgment), and the dissent’s per se rule cannot be reconciled with the
    statute. See 
    DeMasters, 796 F.3d at 422
    ; 
    Littlejohn, 795 F.3d at 318
    . The dissent
    also says our ruling will lead to inadministrable line-drawing problems. Dissent at
    25
    Case: 16-16850     Date Filed: 09/24/2018   Page: 26 of 49
    46–47. But our holding is consistent with this court’s precedent, which has always
    required the “determination of reasonableness [be] made on a case by case basis by
    balancing the purpose of the statute and the need to protect individuals asserting
    their rights thereunder against an employer’s legitimate demands for loyalty,
    cooperation and a generally productive work environment.” 
    Rollins, 868 F.2d at 401
    . We therefore doubt this opinion will lead to the problems the dissent
    describes.
    Viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to Ms. Gogel, the record
    shows that Kia fired her for engaging in protected opposition activity, which she
    carried out in a reasonable manner. We therefore reverse the District Court’s grant
    of summary judgment on Ms. Gogel’s retaliation claims under Title VII and
    § 1981.
    B.    Gender and National Origin Discrimination Claims
    In addition to her retaliation claims, Ms. Gogel also argues that she was
    terminated in violation of Title VII based on her gender and national origin. See
    42 U.S.C. § 2000e-2(a)(1). Ms. Gogel’s claims of gender and national origin
    discrimination are based on circumstantial evidence. This Court primarily uses the
    burden-shifting framework established in McDonnell Douglas Corp. v. Green, 
    411 U.S. 792
    , 
    93 S. Ct. 1817
    (1973), to evaluate discrimination claims based on
    circumstantial evidence at summary judgment. Quigg v. Thomas Cty. Sch. Dist.,
    26
    Case: 16-16850     Date Filed: 09/24/2018    Page: 27 of 49
    
    814 F.3d 1227
    , 1237 (11th Cir. 2016). “Under [the McDonnell Douglas]
    framework, the employee first must show a prima facie case of discrimination.
    Then, the employer must articulate a legitimate, nondiscriminatory reason for the
    adverse employment action. Finally, the employee has to show that the proffered
    reason is mere pretext.” 
    Id. (citations omitted).
    Again here, Kia does not contest that Ms. Gogel established a prima facie
    case of discrimination as it relates to her termination. At step two, however, Kia
    argued that its nondiscriminatory reason for firing her was the previously discussed
    perceived encouragement and solicitation of Ms. Ledbetter to file an EEOC charge.
    Ms. Gogel argues this reason is pretextual and that the real reason was gender and
    national origin discrimination and retaliation for protected activity.
    There is evidence that Ms. Gogel suffered discrimination based on her
    gender and national origin during her employment at Kia. But there is no evidence
    suggesting that discrimination formed a basis for her termination. See Wilson v.
    B/E Aerospace, Inc., 
    376 F.3d 1079
    , 1092 (11th Cir. 2004). Rather, the record
    strongly indicates that Kia fired Ms. Gogel for assisting Ms. Ledbetter with her
    charge. Although this evidence supports Ms. Gogel’s retaliation claims, none of it
    shows the real reason for her firing was gender or national origin discrimination.
    See St. Mary’s Honor Ctr. v. Hicks, 
    509 U.S. 502
    , 515, 
    113 S. Ct. 2742
    , 2752
    27
    Case: 16-16850    Date Filed: 09/24/2018   Page: 28 of 49
    (1993). As a result, we affirm the grant of summary judgment on Ms. Gogel’s
    Title VII claims for gender and national origin discrimination.
    To the extent Ms. Gogel is still pressing her race and alienage discrimination
    claims under 42 U.S.C. § 1981, we also affirm the District Court’s ruling on those
    claims for the same reason. See Standard v. A.B.E.L. Servs., Inc., 
    161 F.3d 1318
    ,
    1330 (11th Cir. 1998) (analyzing § 1981 discrimination claims and Title VII
    discrimination claims together because these statutes “have the same requirements
    of proof and use the same analytical framework”).
    IV.   Conclusion
    We affirm the grant of summary judgment on Ms. Gogel’s claims of sex and
    national origin discrimination under Title VII and § 1981. But we reverse the grant
    of summary judgment on Ms. Gogel’s retaliation claims under 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-
    3(a) and 42 U.S.C. § 1981.
    AFFIRMED IN PART AND REVERSED IN PART.
    28
    Case: 16-16850       Date Filed: 09/24/2018     Page: 29 of 49
    JULIE CARNES, Circuit Judge, dissenting in part and concurring in part:
    As Senior Team Relations1 Manager for Kia, one of Tina Gogel’s essential
    job duties was to try to protect Kia from litigation by working to resolve internally
    discrimination complaints made by employees. She was fired by Kia when
    officials received information indicating that, in contravention of this
    responsibility, Gogel was actually—and clandestinely—trying to drum up lawsuits
    against the company. Specifically, Kia officials concluded that Gogel had
    encouraged and solicited another employee, Diana Ledbetter, to pursue an EEOC
    charge against Kia, and had referred that employee to Gogel’s own attorney to
    assist in filing that charge. As a result of this discovery, Kia officials
    understandably decided that they could no longer trust Gogel to perform the duties
    for which she was being paid, and they feared future and continued treachery on
    her part as a senior manager in a highly significant and sensitive position. Thus,
    they fired her.
    Nonetheless, the majority holds that Kia was prevented from taking any
    adverse action against Gogel because her actions constituted opposition to
    perceived discrimination and were therefore protected under Title VII’s anti-
    retaliation provision. I respectfully, but strongly, disagree. Under our precedent,
    an employee’s “opposition-conduct” is not protected when the means by which she
    1
    Kia uses the term “Team Members” in lieu of the term “employees.” Thus, to translate, Gogel
    functioned as the senior manager for employee relations.
    29
    Case: 16-16850       Date Filed: 09/24/2018       Page: 30 of 49
    expresses that opposition “so interferes with the performance” of her job duties
    “that it renders [her] ineffective in the position for which [she] was employed.”
    Rosser v. Laborers’ Int’l Union of N. Am., Local No. 438, 
    616 F.2d 221
    , 223 (5th
    Cir. 1980).2
    It is hard to argue that a high-ranking manager whose job duties include
    working to resolve employee disputes without litigation can be effective in that
    position if she instead solicits subordinates to sue the company. I therefore dissent
    as to the majority’s reversal of the district court’s grant of summary judgment to
    Kia on the retaliation claim. 3 I explain why.
    I.     Kia’s Reasonable, Good Faith Belief That Gogel Had Solicited a
    Subordinate to Sue the Company
    On November 10, 2010, Gogel filed a charge of discrimination against Kia
    with the EEOC alleging discrimination based on her sex and national origin
    because her position as manager of the Team Relations unit had not been upgraded
    to a head of department designation. On November 19, 2010, Robert Tyler, the
    human resources official to whom Gogel directly reported, filed his own charge
    2
    The Eleventh Circuit has adopted as binding precedent the decisions of the former Fifth Circuit
    rendered prior to October 1, 1981. Bonner v. City of Prichard, 
    661 F.2d 1206
    , 1209 (11th Cir.
    1981) (en banc).
    3
    The majority affirms the district court’s grant of summary judgment to Kia on Gogel’s Title
    VII claims alleging gender and national-origin discrimination. I concur with the majority’s
    analysis and ruling on these claims.
    30
    Case: 16-16850      Date Filed: 09/24/2018      Page: 31 of 49
    with the EEOC alleging discrimination based on national origin and retaliation.
    Gogel and Tyler used the same attorney to file their charges.
    Kia officials did not retaliate in any way against Gogel or Tyler for their
    filing of these charges. 4 But given the sensitivity and influence of the positions of
    these two high-ranking managers, on December 3, Kia requested that each sign a
    document agreeing (1) not to discuss his or her EEOC charge or similar claims
    against Kia with other employees (“Team Members”) nor to “use [his or her]
    position to solicit or influence Team Members to make claims against [Kia]; (2)
    not to create a conflict of interest for another employee by seeking his assistance in
    any fact-finding or information gathering related to Gogel or Tyler’s claims against
    Kia; (3) not to make any statements, written or verbal, to another employee “that
    malign the company”; and (4) not to seek access to any files or documents that
    relate in any way to the merits of Gogel or Tyler’s claims against Kia. (emphasis
    added).
    Gogel initially refused to sign the document, and was placed on
    administrative leave. A few days later, she relented and was allowed to return to
    work. Tyler immediately signed the document. But, thereafter, on two separate
    occasions, he violated the agreement, downloading dozens of documents. See
    4
    To the contrary, on December 22, 2010, Kia gave Gogel a $12,000 discretionary bonus and she
    was told she was doing a good job; earlier, on December 16, Kia granted Gogel’s request for
    four days paid-leave.
    31
    Case: 16-16850       Date Filed: 09/24/2018       Page: 32 of 
    49 Tyl. v
    . Kia Motors Mfg. Georgia, Inc., 702 F. App’x 945, 948 (11th Cir. 2017);
    Tyler v. Kia Motors Mfg. Georgia, Inc., 
    2016 WL 9663168
    , at **8–9 (N.D. Ga.
    Aug. 1, 2016). On December 16, 2010, Kia initiated an investigation into Tyler’s
    computer activities, learning that in the last several months, as well as since the
    agreement, Tyler had forwarded hundreds of emails from Kia networks to his
    personal email accounts. Tyler, 
    2016 WL 9663168
    , at *9. Kia suspended Tyler
    and ultimately terminated him on January 6, 2011, stating in the termination letter
    that Kia “ha[d] lost confidence in [his] trustworthiness and therefore, [Kia] ha[d]
    no alternative but to discharge [him] immediately.” 5 
    Id. In the
    meantime, on December 10, 2010, Diana Ledbetter, an employee on
    the General Affairs team, filed her own EEOC charge alleging discrimination by
    Kia, with her allegation focused largely on an alleged romantic affair between the
    president of the company and a subordinate, among other conduct that she believed
    to be sexist. Randy Jackson, the Director of Human Resources, received notice of
    that charge on December 23. Following so closely on the heels of Gogel and
    Tyler’s charge, Jackson immediately found it noteworthy that Ledbetter was
    represented by the same law firm that Gogel and Tyler used in filing their own
    5
    Tyler subsequently sued, alleging retaliatory termination in violation of Title VII and § 1981.
    The district court granted summary judgment to Kia. On appeal, we affirmed the grant of
    summary judgment concluding that even though Tyler’s prior complaints to Kia about perceived
    discriminatory actions by the latter constituted protected activity, his violation of the
    confidentiality agreement constituted a neutral, non-discriminatory reason for terminating him,
    and Tyler had failed to show that this ground was pretextual. Tyler v. Kia Motors Mfg. Georgia,
    Inc., 702 F. App’x 945, 949–52 (11th Cir. 2017).
    32
    Case: 16-16850     Date Filed: 09/24/2018   Page: 33 of 49
    charges: the Atlanta law firm of Barrett & Farahany. Jackson contacted the
    company’s president and disclosed Jackson’s fear that Gogel (and Tyler) were
    recruiting other employees to sue the company: a concern to Jackson because as
    manager of the Team Relations group, Gogel was “paid to prevent lawsuits,” not to
    solicit or encourage other people to sue the company.
    During a subsequent investigation into whether Gogel had encouraged
    Ledbetter to file a charge, Jackson’s suspicions were confirmed. He heard from
    two subordinates who directly reported to Gogel: Arthur Williams and Paul
    Grimes. Williams reported that Ledbetter had stated to him on multiple occasions
    during the fall that she, Gogel, and Tyler were “working together” to sue the
    company and that they would be using the same attorney. Significantly, Ledbetter
    had indicated that Gogel “was the leader.” In fact, it was from Ledbetter that
    Williams first learned that his boss, Gogel, had filed a charge. In addition,
    Williams reported that Gogel and Tyler had had “repeated meetings” with
    Ledbetter and that both had indicated that they “hated” the Koreans. Paul Grimes
    likewise confirmed during a meeting with Jackson that Grimes believed Gogel and
    Ledbetter were collaborating to prepare a lawsuit against Kia, and that, like
    Williams, Grimes had seen Gogel, Tyler, and Ledbetter meeting frequently.
    Grimes further testified that he believed, based on their comments, that Gogel and
    Tyler hated the Koreans.
    33
    Case: 16-16850     Date Filed: 09/24/2018    Page: 34 of 49
    After this investigation, Jackson spoke to Gogel about his concern that she
    had encouraged Ledbetter to sue the company. Gogel denied having any
    significant recent interactions with Ledbetter. Instead, she indicated that her recent
    conversations with Ledbetter concerned only operational issues, such as cafeteria
    coverage during the upcoming plant shutdown and a misunderstanding about food
    service.
    Shortly thereafter, Kia terminated Gogel’s employment. The termination
    letter explained its reasons for doing so, noting, among other things, the following.
    In a “conflict of interest” document signed in December 2010, Gogel had agreed
    not to solicit or influence other employees to make claims against Kia nor to
    malign the company in any way to other employees. Notwithstanding that
    agreement, as well as Gogel’s independent job responsibilities, credible reports
    indicated that Gogel met with Ledbetter concerning the possible filing of a claim,
    yet Gogel never notified Kia of this potential action, as her job duties required her
    to do. Indeed, the investigation indicated that Gogel had “encouraged or even
    solicited the filing of the charge.” Moreover, although multiple people had
    observed “numerous, lengthy private conferences with [] Ledbetter during the last
    two-three months,” Gogel had denied to Kia officials “any significant recent
    interaction with [Ledbetter].” Finally, “[a]t the very least, there is an appearance
    34
    Case: 16-16850      Date Filed: 09/24/2018    Page: 35 of 49
    of a conflict of interest sufficient to cause [Kia] to lose confidence in the loyalty
    and trust that is required by [Gogel’s] position.”
    After she filed her lawsuit, Gogel finally acknowledged that she had
    conferred with Ledbetter about the latter’s potential filing of a charge against Kia.
    Indeed, Gogel has now admitted that she confided in Ledbetter that she, Gogel, did
    not trust the people at Kia to deal with her concerns and that Gogel was going to
    seek outside assistance (i.e., an attorney). Gogel further testified that she provided
    Ledbetter with the name of the attorney she had chosen: the same attorney who
    ultimately assisted both Gogel and Ledbetter in the filing of their charges.
    In an effort to minimize her now-acknowledged interaction with Ledbetter,
    Gogel nonetheless argues that she did not literally solicit Gogel to sue the
    company. But this parsing by Gogel aside, what is important is what Kia
    reasonably believed to be the case when it fired Gogel. We have repeatedly held
    that in determining whether an employer’s adverse action decision based on
    employee misconduct was made for a legitimate, non-retaliatory reason, one looks
    to the employer’s reasonable beliefs, not to whether the employee was in fact
    guilty of the alleged misconduct. See Alvarez v. Royal Atl. Dev., Inc., 
    610 F.3d 1253
    , 1266 (11th Cir. 2010) (“In analyzing issues like this one, we must be careful
    not to allow Title VII plaintiffs simply to litigate whether they are, in fact, good
    employees.” (internal quotation marks omitted)); Elrod v. Sears, Roebuck & Co.,
    35
    Case: 16-16850     Date Filed: 09/24/2018    Page: 36 of 49
    
    939 F.2d 1466
    , 1470 (11th Cir. 1991) (emphasizing that the relevant inquiry is not
    whether the employee was guilty of misconduct but whether the employer in good
    faith believed the employee had done wrong and whether this belief was the reason
    for the termination). As we explained in E.E.O.C. v. Total Systems Services, Inc.,
    
    221 F.3d 1171
    (11th Cir. 2000): “When an employer is told of improper conduct
    at its workplace, the employer can lawfully ask: is the accusation true? When the
    resulting employer’s investigation . . . produces contradictory accounts of
    significant historical events, the employer can lawfully make a choice between the
    conflicting versions—that is, to accept one as true and to reject one as fictitious—
    at least, as long as the choice is an honest choice.” 
    Id. at 1176.
    Even ignoring Gogel’s present admission that she had conferred with
    Ledbetter regarding the filing of a suit against the company and accepting her tepid
    protestation that she did not exactly encourage Ledbetter to file an EEOC charge,
    Kia nonetheless had a reasonable and good faith belief that Gogel had, in fact,
    actively solicited Ledbetter to do just that. Kia knew that Ledbetter had filed a
    lawsuit against it only a month after Gogel had filed her suit and that she had used
    the same lawyer that Gogel had used. Kia knew that two employees who directly
    reported to Gogel had witnessed multiple meetings between Gogel, Tyler, and
    Ledbetter. And Kia knew that Ledbetter had related to one of these employees that
    she, Tyler, and Gogel were planning together to sue the company and had indicated
    36
    Case: 16-16850     Date Filed: 09/24/2018   Page: 37 of 49
    that Gogel was the leader. Further, Kia knew that, in contravention of her
    responsibility to keep Kia apprised of the status of any employee complaint, Gogel
    had never apprised company officials of Ledbetter’s intentions prior to her filing
    suit.
    II.     Applicable Legal Principles
    Given Kia’s belief that Gogel had solicited Ledbetter to sue the company
    and given Gogel’s particular job duties, one can understand why Kia might find it
    untenable to allow Gogel to remain in her position. Tenable or not, though, Gogel
    argues she is exempt from any negative consequences for the violations of her job
    duties because her actions constituted protected conduct under Title VII. Thus, the
    determinative question on the retaliation claim asserted in this case is whether
    Gogel’s active solicitation of another employee to file an EEOC charge against Kia
    constitutes protected conduct under Title VII. Based on Gogel’s position as Kia’s
    Senior Team Relations Manager, and the essential duties required of her in that
    position, I conclude that it does not.
    Title VII’s anti-retaliation provision prohibits an employer from retaliating
    against an employee who has “opposed any practice made an unlawful
    employment practice by [Title VII]” or “made a charge, testified, assisted, or
    participated in any manner in an investigation, proceeding, or hearing under [Title
    VII].” 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-3(a). The first part of the provision is known as the
    37
    Case: 16-16850      Date Filed: 09/24/2018    Page: 38 of 49
    “opposition clause” and the second part as the “participation clause.” See Total
    Sys. Servs., 
    Inc., 221 F.3d at 1175
    (distinguishing between the “two distinct
    components” of Title VII’s retaliation provision). I agree with the majority that we
    should examine under the opposition clause the question whether Gogel’s act of
    soliciting Ledbetter to file an EEOC charge is protected.
    As set out in the introduction to this dissent, our precedent provides that
    “opposition-conduct” is not protected when the means by which the employee
    expresses that opposition “so interferes with the performance” of her job duties
    “that it renders [her] ineffective in the position for which [she] was employed.”
    
    Rosser, 616 F.2d at 223
    . Since Rosser, this Court has reaffirmed the principle that
    oppositional conduct that might otherwise be protected can lose that status if the
    conduct interferes with an employee’s performance of her duties or renders her
    ineffective in her job. As the majority acknowledges, this Court held in Hamm v.
    Board of Regents of the State of Florida, 
    708 F.2d 647
    (11th Cir. 1983) that a
    plaintiff’s activities in opposition to alleged discrimination did not qualify as
    protected conduct when those activities conflicted with the plaintiff’s essential
    duties as a human resources advisor. The Court in Hamm emphasized that the
    plaintiff had “chose[n] to work outside the framework [her employer] was
    attempting to establish to deal with discrimination claims” by acting as “an
    advocate on behalf of individual employees” rather than as a human resources
    38
    Case: 16-16850    Date Filed: 09/24/2018   Page: 39 of 49
    adviser to her supervisor, as she was hired to do. 
    Id. at 654.
    Consequently, the
    Court explained, protection under Title VII’s opposition clause was unavailable.
    See 
    id. Similarly, the
    plaintiff in Whatley v. Metropolitan Atlanta Rapid Transit
    Authority, 
    632 F.2d 1325
    (5th Cir. 1980), an EEO compliance officer for a Georgia
    public authority who engaged in conduct that might otherwise have constituted
    protected activity, was fired for, among other things, violating normal reporting
    procedures and assuming duties beyond his job description. 
    Id. at 1326.
    We
    rejected the plaintiff’s argument that his discharge constituted actionable
    retaliation. 
    Id. The Fifth
    Circuit likewise has held—in a case very similar to this one—that
    a human resources manager’s solicitation of lawsuits against her employer was not
    protected activity because it rendered the manager ineffective in her job. See Jones
    v. Flagship Int’l, 
    793 F.2d 714
    (5th Cir. 1986). In Jones, the plaintiff was the
    company’s Manager of Equal Employment Opportunity (EEO) Programs, and her
    duties included investigating charges of discrimination brought against the
    company and conciliating such charges, representing the company before various
    agencies, and preparing an affirmative action plan. 
    Id. at 716.
    At some point, the
    plaintiff complained to her supervisors about sexual harassment she had
    experienced, but her grievances were ignored. 
    Id. at 716–17.
    She filed a charge
    39
    Case: 16-16850       Date Filed: 09/24/2018      Page: 40 of 49
    with the EOOC alleging pay discrimination and sexual harassment and was
    ultimately terminated. Of significance to this case, in the course of filing her own
    charge, she also solicited another employee to file a charge of sex discrimination.
    
    Id. at 717.
    Thereafter, she filed a class action complaint. 
    Id. at 718.
    Discussing
    the impact of the plaintiff’s solicitation of another employee to sue the company,
    the Fifth Circuit cited Rosser for the proposition that even sincere opposition to
    discriminatory practices under Title VII “may be so disruptive or inappropriate as
    to fall outside the protections of § 704(a).” 
    Jones, 793 F.2d at 728
    . Further, the
    court agreed that an employer’s right to run its business must be balanced against
    the rights of an employee to express her grievances and promote her own welfare.
    
    Id. Applying the
    above tests to the facts before it, the Fifth Circuit concluded
    that the plaintiff’s conduct in soliciting or inviting others to join in her claim of
    discrimination, coupled with her desire to file a class action suit, was not protected
    conduct and the company’s subsequent discharge of the plaintiff on that basis did
    not constitute retaliation. 
    Id. Our Court
    has cited the Fifth Circuit’s decision in Jones with approval.6 See
    Rollins v. State of Fla. Dep’t of Law Enforcement, 
    868 F.2d 397
    , 401 (11th Cir.
    6
    The majority’s attempt to distinguish Jones is unpersuasive. Like Gogel, Jones had solicited
    another employee to sue his company. There are some minor factual distinctions: Jones was an
    in-house legal counsel who acted as an EEO manager and who planned to file a class action
    40
    Case: 16-16850      Date Filed: 09/24/2018      Page: 41 of 49
    1989) (noting that Jones is “consistent” with this Court’s precedent). Indeed,
    Rollins, which addressed an employee who had been fired after filing multiple
    discrimination complaints, expanded on the “essential duties” test set out in Rosser
    and Hamm. Rollins had compromised none of her essential duties by filing her
    complaints alleging discrimination. She was a technician, not a human resources
    manager, and she filed a complaint on only her own behalf. There was no
    solicitation of other employees to file a complaint, nor would it have been a
    violation of Rollins’s essential duties to solicit other employees as none of her job
    responsibilities involved working with her superiors to resolve discrimination
    complaints. Hence, her claim of discriminatory conduct did not conflict with any
    essential duties of her job nor necessarily render her ineffective as a result of her
    engaging in this conduct, as set out in the Rosser test.
    Nevertheless, even though Rollins had violated no essential duties by filing
    her complaints, we held that Rollins’s act of complaining could lose its protected
    status if she had acted unreasonably in the method by which she complained:
    “[T]the manner in which an employee expresses her opposition to an allegedly
    discriminatory employment practice must be reasonable.” Rollins, at 401. And we
    lawsuit, while Gogel was a senior human resources manager who had filed her own legal action
    against the company during the time period she actively solicited another employee to file an
    EEOC charge. But the governing principle of Jones—that opposition conduct is not protected by
    Title VII when it contravenes an employee’s essential job duties—is equally applicable to the
    factual situation presented here.
    41
    Case: 16-16850      Date Filed: 09/24/2018    Page: 42 of 49
    determined that the manner in which Rollins leveled her grievances was
    unreasonable. Specifically, in making her complaints, she “habitually bypassed the
    chain of command,” the “sheer number and frequency of [the] complaints . . . ,
    most of which were plainly spurious, was overwhelming,” and she “frequently
    expressed her complaints in an insubordinate and antagonistic manner.” 
    Id. at 399
    (footnote omitted). Further, in determining reasonableness, we “balanc[e] the
    purpose of the statute and the need to protect individuals asserting their rights
    thereunder against an employer’s legitimate demands for loyalty, cooperation, and
    a generally productive work environment.” 
    Id. “If, under
    this balancing test, the
    manner in which the employee complains is found to be unreasonable, it falls
    outside the protection of the statute; the employee’s conduct then may be deemed
    an independent, legitimate basis for the denial of her promotion.” 
    Id. Putting these
    tests together, an employee’s oppositional conduct loses its
    protection when it so interferes with the performance of the employee’s job duties
    that it renders the employee ineffective in the position for which she was
    employed. Additionally, even if the oppositional conduct does not interfere with
    an employee’s essential duties, it can still lose its protected status if the method by
    which the opposition is displayed is unreasonable. For example, complaints made
    in an unceasingly disruptive, harassing, and insubordinate manner that undermines
    42
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    the ability of others in the workforce to function effectively can be deemed to be
    unreasonable and thus unprotected.
    Applying here the tests set out in the above caselaw, I conclude that in
    soliciting Ledbetter to file an EEOC charge against Kia, Gogel’s action so
    conflicted with her essential job duties that it rendered her ineffective in her
    position, and it was therefore not protected activity. Gogel’s conduct thus
    constituted a legitimate basis for her termination.7 As noted, Gogel’s essential job
    duties as Team Relations Manager included: (1) investigating and making
    recommendations to Kia concerning the disposition of workplace complaints,
    including complaints involving alleged discrimination and (2) working to resolve
    such complaints internally in order to protect Kia from litigation. Jackson testified
    that he lost all confidence in Gogel’s ability to perform those essential duties when
    he received information suggesting that Gogel had solicited Ledbetter to file an
    EEOC charge against Kia, and rightly so. As Jackson explained in his testimony,
    7
    Contrary to the majority’s suggestion, the rule I apply does not require a blanket exclusion of
    human resources employees generally—or even of Gogel, specifically—from the protection of
    Title VII’s retaliation provision. Gogel is entitled to protection from retaliation for the filing of
    her own EEOC charge under Title VII’s participation clause. See 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-3(a).
    And some of Gogel’s other activities might have warranted protection under the opposition
    clause. For example, Gogel describes in her brief the many times she complained to Jackson
    about alleged workplace discrimination between 2008 and 2010. Those complaints might have
    qualified as protected opposition, but Gogel was not subjected to any adverse action on account
    of them. In fact, as noted, even after years of hearing Gogel’s vocal criticism of the workplace
    environment at Kia and just a month after receiving notice of Gogel’s own EEOC charge,
    Jackson approved paid vacation time for Gogel and also gave her a $12,000 discretionary bonus,
    telling her that she was doing a good job.
    43
    Case: 16-16850     Date Filed: 09/24/2018   Page: 44 of 49
    Gogel had been hired and was paid to prevent lawsuits against the company, not to
    solicit and encourage them. Further, she was required to keep her superiors
    advised of the status of any ongoing grievance by an employee. Obviously, having
    never informed the company that Ledbetter (at Gogel’s behest) was about to file a
    charge, Gogel fell short of that duty as well, not to mention that when questioned
    about her contacts with Ledbetter, Gogel falsely indicated that her only
    conversations had been about operational matters.
    Clearly, Gogel abandoned her responsibility to try to resolve employee
    complaints without litigation when she did the exact opposite: encouraging
    another employee to file a discrimination claim. Respectfully, I do not understand
    how anyone could disagree that this action by Gogel so interfered with the
    performance of her duties that it rendered her ineffective in the job for which she
    was hired. In fact, in concluding that Gogel engaged in protected conduct, the
    majority has offered no disagreement with the above conclusion. Rather, the
    majority largely ignores the above test, instead focusing only on whether it deems
    Gogel’s conduct reasonable under the circumstances. The majority concludes that
    Gogel’s conduct was reasonable. (“Viewing this record in the light most favorable
    to Ms. Gogel, we conclude the manner of her opposition was reasonable.”) (Maj.
    Op. at 21)
    44
    Case: 16-16850     Date Filed: 09/24/2018    Page: 45 of 49
    In a nutshell, the majority bases its conclusion on the fact that Gogel had
    gone through the required reporting procedures to alert the company to Ledbetter’s
    complaint regarding the inter-office affair of a high official and a subordinate, as
    well as other sexist acts by company officials, but to no avail, as those higher than
    Gogel in the company took no investigative or corrective action. (Id. at 23–24)
    That being the case, the majority reasons that Gogel thereby shed her obligation to
    try to help the company avoid litigation, and instead, now transformed into a free
    agent, Gogel was at liberty to encourage a counterattack by the frustrated
    employee.
    I see many problems with this approach. The first problem is the majority’s
    reliance on Rollins to support its position. Because we applied a reasonableness
    test in Rollins to gauge whether that employee’s particular manner of opposition
    remained protected, the majority concludes that Rollins gives us an open field to
    second-guess the reasonableness of an employer’s decision to sanction an
    employee for conduct that contravenes the employee’s essential duties. That is not
    so and that is not what Rollins requires.
    In Rollins, in determining whether the manner of the employee’s opposition
    was reasonable, the Court was actually looking at an act that would otherwise be
    protected absent the particular manner in which it was performed. That is, in
    complaining about discriminatory conduct, Rollins’s complaints certainly
    45
    Case: 16-16850     Date Filed: 09/24/2018    Page: 46 of 49
    constituted protected conduct. But we concluded that her complaint-filing became
    abusive and harassing, given the sheer number of frivolous complaints and the
    insubordinate and antagonistic manner in which she asserted her grievances. Thus,
    the problem was more her style of complaining, with its attendant impact on the
    productive functioning of the workplace, rather than the act itself.
    But in this case, no one is alleging that, by soliciting Ledbetter’s
    participation in a lawsuit, Gogel was overtly disruptive or harassing. To the
    contrary, she was not obnoxious; she was secretive about her conduct. In other
    words, it is not the manner of her actions on which we are focused, but the actions,
    themselves. And those actions violated her core duties. Even applying the Rollins
    reasonableness test here, the act of soliciting another employee to file a claim—
    when that action violates an essential duty of an employee’s job—is per se
    unreasonable.
    Second, this new gloss that the majority has grafted onto our existing tests
    seems utterly unworkable to me. Now, whenever a human resources manager
    urges an employee to sue the company, in contravention of that human resources
    manager’s duties to try to resolve conflicts short of litigation, a reviewing court
    will have to go behind that action to determine the extent to which the court shares
    the human resources manager’s frustration and disappointment with the company’s
    inadequate response to the complaining employee. But what standard do we use to
    46
    Case: 16-16850     Date Filed: 09/24/2018   Page: 47 of 49
    determine when an employer’s response is so inadequate that it permits the human
    resources manager to flout her essential duties by advocating litigation against the
    employer? Do we require mock litigation of the complaining employee’s
    grievance to figure out how we might have handled the complaint had we been the
    employer? If that is so, do we then go through a summary judgment drill as to the
    putative complaint to gauge its degree of merit? Even under the majority’s free-
    form approach to second-guessing the employer, a frivolous or non-meritorious
    claim by an employee would surely not justify a human resources manager’s
    decision to ignore her core responsibilities by encouraging the employee to sue.
    Yet, regardless of whether we decide at the end of this scrutiny that we agree or
    disagree with the company’s response to the complaining employee, it will not
    change the fact that the plaintiff actually bringing the retaliation claim—the human
    resources manager who has solicited the legal action—has acted in direct
    dereliction of her duties to the employer.
    In trying to work through this new standard, our problems as a court are
    nothing in comparison to the landmine that we have now laid for employers. How
    will an employer know when it can permissibly fire an employee whose putative
    protected conduct has so interfered with the performance of her duties that it has
    rendered her ineffective in the job for which she was hired? If Kia is now directed
    to rehire Gogel, must it, each time it receives a complaint from an employee, make
    47
    Case: 16-16850      Date Filed: 09/24/2018    Page: 48 of 49
    sure that its response meets with Gogel’s approval, else otherwise she will be free
    to take matters into her own hand and urge the employee to sue? Is Gogel now, in
    effect, the final arbiter of all Kia’s employment decisions?
    Which brings me to my third problem with the majority’s approach. Gogel
    was not a disinterested human resources manager whose intervention with
    Ledbetter could be attributed solely to an objective assessment of Ledbetter’s
    grievance. Gogel, along with Tyler, was filing her own lawsuit. It was in Gogel’s
    interest to have as many employees as possible join forces with her: both to
    increase her leverage against Kia with her own case as well as to vent her animus
    against Kia. Kia reasonably believed that Gogel had already solicited at least one
    employee to sue. It thus had grounds for concern that Gogel had already violated
    her recent agreement not to solicit other employees to sue the company and not to
    malign the company to other staff members. Under these circumstances, what was
    Kia reasonably expected to do: keep Gogel on and simply hope for the best? To
    the contrary, it seems to me that application of a balancing test based on
    reasonableness results in a conclusion that it was no longer feasible for Kia to
    allow Gogel to continue in her present role with the company.
    In summary, I conclude that Kia reasonably believed that Gogel had
    solicited another employee to file a claim against it, that this advocacy so violated
    Gogel’s essential duties that it rendered her ineffective in her job, and that this
    48
    Case: 16-16850     Date Filed: 09/24/2018   Page: 49 of 49
    action by Gogel therefore did not constitute protected conduct. Not constituting
    protected conduct, this act provided Kia with a legitimate, non-retaliatory reason
    for terminating Gogel. Accordingly, I would affirm the district court’s grant of
    summary judgment on the retaliation claim. I thus respectfully dissent from the
    majority’s decision to the contrary.
    49
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 16-16850

Citation Numbers: 904 F.3d 1226

Filed Date: 9/24/2018

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 1/12/2023

Authorities (19)

Tademy v. Union Pacific Corp. , 614 F.3d 1132 ( 2008 )

james-g-elrod-v-sears-roebuck-and-company-a-new-york-corporation-james , 939 F.2d 1466 ( 1991 )

Phyllis S. Hamm v. Members of the Board of Regents of the ... , 708 F.2d 647 ( 1983 )

Thomas v. Cooper Lighting, Inc. , 506 F.3d 1361 ( 2007 )

Bryant v. CEO DeKalb Co. , 575 F.3d 1281 ( 2009 )

Larry Bonner v. City of Prichard, Alabama , 661 F.2d 1206 ( 1981 )

Paul L. WHATLEY, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. METROPOLITAN ... , 632 F.2d 1325 ( 1980 )

E. Marie Holden, (85-3405), (85-3420) v. Owens-Illinois, ... , 793 F.2d 745 ( 1986 )

Edith ROSSER, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. LABORERS’ ... , 616 F.2d 221 ( 1980 )

Loretta Wilson v. B/E Aerospace, Inc. , 376 F.3d 1079 ( 2004 )

Alvarez v. Royal Atlantic Developers, Inc. , 610 F.3d 1253 ( 2010 )

B.T. JONES, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. FLAGSHIP INTERNATIONAL ... , 793 F.2d 714 ( 1986 )

Merritt v. Dillard Paper Company , 120 F.3d 1181 ( 1997 )

Essie Rollins v. State of Florida Department of Law ... , 868 F.2d 397 ( 1989 )

Nixon v. Missouri Municipal League , 124 S. Ct. 1555 ( 2004 )

John B. Johnson v. University of Cincinnati, Joseph A. ... , 215 F.3d 561 ( 2000 )

McDonnell Douglas Corp. v. Green , 93 S. Ct. 1817 ( 1973 )

Alexander v. Gardner-Denver Co. , 94 S. Ct. 1011 ( 1974 )

St. Mary's Honor Center v. Hicks , 113 S. Ct. 2742 ( 1993 )

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