George L. Gipson v. Kas Snacktime Co. ( 1999 )


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  •                     United States Court of Appeals
    FOR THE EIGHTH CIRCUIT
    ___________
    No. 98-1212
    ___________
    George L. Gipson,                       *
    *
    Plaintiff - Appellant,            *
    * Appeal from the United States
    v.                                * District Court for the
    * Eastern District of Missouri.
    KAS Snacktime Company,                  *
    *
    Defendant - Appellee.             *
    ___________
    Submitted: September 25, 1998
    Filed: March 12, 1999
    ___________
    Before LOKEN, JOHN R. GIBSON, and KELLY,1 Circuit Judges.
    ___________
    LOKEN, Circuit Judge.
    In July 1991, George L. Gipson, an African-American, sued his employer,
    KAS Snacktime Company (“KAS”), asserting claims of race discrimination in
    employment in violation of Title VII and the Missouri Human Rights Act (“MHRA”),
    Mo. Rev. Stat. §§ 213.010-213.095. Gipson’s claims were based upon the allegedly
    racist conduct of his former supervisor, Rick Brank. The district court dismissed the
    1
    Regrettably, the Honorable John D. Kelly passed away on October 21, 1998.
    MHRA claims as time-barred or not administratively exhausted. A bench trial
    resulted in a judgment in KAS’s favor on the Title VII claims, based upon the court’s
    finding that Gipson’s acrimonious relationship with Brank “was not due to racial
    bias.”
    Gipson appealed. In an earlier decision, we affirmed all but the dismissal of
    Gipson’s hostile work environment claim under the MHRA as time-barred. As to that
    claim, because Gipson’s charge to the Missouri agency and his summary judgment
    response to the court alleged continuing racial harassment by Brank until February
    1991, well within the MHRA statute of limitations period, we reversed the dismissal
    and remanded for further proceedings. Gipson v. KAS Snacktime Co., 
    83 F.3d 225
    ,
    229-30 (8th Cir. 1996) (“Gipson I”). On remand, at the conclusion of an unusual
    evidentiary procedure urged by Gipson’s counsel, the district court2 granted KAS
    judgment as a matter of law on this claim. Gipson again appeals. We affirm.
    As relevant to this appeal, Gipson I established two ground rules for the
    proceedings on remand: first, Gipson had sufficiently alleged a continuing hostile
    work environment violation. That claim is not time-barred if the harassment
    continued after July 27, 1989, when the two-year statute of limitations began to run.
    Second, if Gipson proves a hostile work environment violation, he may only recover
    damages incurred after July 27, 1989. 
    See 83 F.3d at 229-30
    . On remand, both
    parties made the district court’s task unnecessarily difficult, KAS by urging the court
    to ignore the first part of this law of the case, and Gipson by urging the court to treat
    the second part as implicitly overruled by later Eighth Circuit cases.3 The court
    2
    The HONORABLE STEPHEN N. LIMBAUGH, United States District Judge
    for the Eastern District of Missouri.
    3
    We decided in Gipson I that damages for continuing employment
    discrimination violations are limited to the relevant statute of limitations period,
    based upon our unanimous en banc decision in Ashley v. Boyle’s Famous Corned
    -2-
    instead kept the parties within the legal parameters of Gipson I, which resulted in the
    following trial procedure.
    On the eve of trial, KAS filed a motion in limine to exclude all of Gipson’s
    evidence, complaining that Gipson was attempting to retry his entire case under the
    guise of a hostile work environment claim. Gipson responded, in essence, that
    everything relevant to his unsuccessful disparate treatment claims was also relevant
    to his hostile work environment claim. The district court applied Gipson I in
    resolving this issue. Noting that Gipson could only recover damages incurred after
    July 27, 1989, but that evidence of racial harassment prior to July 1989 might be
    relevant in proving that racial harassment occurred during the damage period, the
    court ruled:
    plaintiff will be restricted to that evidence which has some probative
    value on the issue of whether Brank’s treatment of plaintiff was
    motivated by a racially discriminatory attitude, and if so, whether
    Brank’s discriminatory conduct was so severe or pervasive that it
    created a work environment abusive to the plaintiff.
    Beef Co., 
    66 F.3d 164
    (8th Cir. 1995). In the district court and again on appeal,
    Gipson argues this decision was implicitly overruled by Jenson v. Eveleth Taconite
    Co., 
    130 F.3d 1287
    (8th Cir. 1997), cert. denied, 
    118 S. Ct. 2370
    (1998); Delph v. Dr.
    Pepper Bottling Co. of Paragould, Inc., 
    130 F.3d 349
    (8th Cir. 1997); and Varner v.
    National Super Markets, Inc., 
    94 F.3d 1209
    (8th Cir. 1996), cert. denied, 
    117 S. Ct. 946
    (1997). We have carefully reviewed those later decisions and conclude, not
    surprisingly, that none addressed the damages question at issue in Ashley and Gipson
    I. Eighth Circuit panels do not “overrule” one another and certainly do not act in
    conflict with prior decisions of the court en banc. Until modified or overruled by the
    court en banc, Ashley and Gipson I are the law of this Circuit (with the obvious
    caveat that Gipson I involved a damages issue under Missouri law and therefore may
    be affected by subsequent decisions of the Missouri Supreme Court).
    -3-
    Five days later, after selecting a jury and further discussing these evidentiary issues
    with counsel informally, the court put the results of these discussions on the record,
    outside the jury’s presence. Reducing rather lengthy remarks to what is essential for
    purposes of this appeal, the court stated:
    The plaintiff, in order to show a continuing pattern of the creation
    of the hostile work environment claim, want[s] to elicit evidence that
    occurred before July the 27th, 1989.
    It is the opinion of the Court, as we had discussed informally with
    counsel off the record, that I think that could conceivably come in under
    a so-called continuing violation doctrine, provided that there were clear
    racial overtones.
    *    *    * *      *
    Counsel for the plaintiff indicated that she felt that this restricted
    her from presenting the case as she would prefer to present it, and that
    as a result, if she did, in fact, present the evidence of the [one] incident,
    that does have obvious clear racial overtones, that it would not be
    sufficient, in and of itself, to show a continuing pattern.
    *    *   *     *   *
    We . . . discussed th[e] possibility [that counsel] could very easily
    make the record on appeal simply by . . . an offer of proof as to what the
    various testimony would be . . . so that could constitute a record which
    could be subject to an ultimate appeal. . . . I’m a little concerned about
    whether this will be an effective record for which the Appellate Court
    could make a decision. . . . [But if] counsel feels we could do this . . .
    and that we can develop a record that is appealable, and that is
    something the Court of Appeals can, in fact, consider and make an
    ultimate determination on, why, I am ready to do it.
    -4-
    After further discussion both on and off the record, and at the urging of counsel for
    Gipson, the court agreed to send the jury home for the day and to proceed by means
    of an offer of proof by Gipson’s counsel of the evidence she intended to introduce at
    trial. Counsel then offered to prove the following:
    – At Gipson and Brank’s first meeting in July 1987, Brank refused to shake
    hands, refused to acknowledge Gipson’s gift of a company jacket, and told Gipson
    to “[f]ire the fat black guy that wears glasses, because he just doesn’t fit in around
    here,” referring to Lionel Harris, the only black district sales manager. Told that
    Harris was a top performer, Brank replied, “I don’t care, I want him fired.”
    – In August 1987, Brank threatened to fire Gipson if he ever walked in front
    of him into a store. Later that month, Brank accused Gipson of not returning a
    telephone call, threatened to rip his head off, and advised Gipson to look for another
    job. One morning when Gipson arrived at work, Brank demanded to know where he
    had been, commenting that he should “rip [Gipson’s] head off, and if it was ten years
    ago, I would do it.”
    – In the fall of 1987, Brank rejected Gipson’s recommendation of a pay
    increase for Lionel Harris, commenting that Harris was “not going to get a raise as
    long as I’m here,” and that it was “personal.” Around that time, Brank gave Gipson
    an unfair performance appraisal, said he’d be reevaluated in 90 days, and began to
    issue unwarranted or untrue written reprimands. When Gipson asked Brank for a
    performance review at the end of the 90 days, Brank refused and threatened to fire
    him.
    – In October 1987, during an acrimonious exchange about coffee in the office,
    Brank threatened “to rip [Gipson’s] head off” and called him a “dumb nigger.”
    – In February 1988, Gipson complained to KAS’s Director of Human
    Resources, Charles Kester, about Brank’s abusive treatment. In a subsequent
    -5-
    meeting with KAS officials and Brank, Gipson accused Brank of racial discrimination
    and asked KAS to investigate. Characterizing the conflict as a communications
    problem, the KAS officials declined to investigate and asked Brank and Gipson to put
    their differences behind them. In June 1988, Brank’s supervisor told Gipson: “I don’t
    want to hear anything about discrimination, don’t talk to me about it.”
    – Brank belittled and criticized Gipson for trivial matters in front of
    subordinate managers. During a 1988 meeting with district sales managers, Brank
    accused Gipson of not making eye contact with him and threatened to “slap the hell
    out of” him and fire him if this persisted.
    – In the fall of 1988, Brank put Gipson on probation and advised him several
    times to quit. Brank warned Gipson that if KAS had to fire him, they would make
    sure he’d never work in the industry again. In February 1989, Brank told Gipson he
    had survived the probationary period but was not off the hook.
    – In January 1989, Gipson again asked Kester to investigate Brank’s racial
    discrimination. Kester declined to take action. Brank later told Gipson that Kester
    had told Brank about the meeting, and nothing would save Gipson.
    – In March 1989, Gipson was demoted from regional sales manager to district
    sales manager and assigned to a rural sales territory far from his home.
    – In November 1990, Gipson’s new supervisor, regional sales manager Ralph
    Marler, gave Gipson an unfair written reprimand.
    – During a December 1990 business outing (not otherwise described), Brank
    told Gipson to quit because KAS didn’t need his “kind.”
    -6-
    – In January 1991, Gipson was reassigned to the St. Louis office while Brank
    was on vacation. When Brank returned, he told Gipson, “ If you say one negative
    thing, you’ll be fired.” When Gipson replied that he wanted to be treated with
    respect, Brank suspended him and ordered him off the company premises. Two days
    later, “someone else” told Gipson to return to work. Brank left KAS shortly
    thereafter.
    After hearing Gipson’s offer of proof and the arguments of counsel, the district
    court concluded the October 1987 coffee incident in which Brank allegedly made “an
    extremely offensive racial comment” to Gipson is admissible evidence of continuing
    racial harassment, but Gipson has no evidence of racial harassment occurring after
    July 27, 1989, and therefore Gipson could not “make a submissible case to the jury
    showing a continuing pattern of racial harassment sufficient to make [his] workplace
    hostile.” The court entered judgment for KAS. Gipson did not object to this trial
    procedure. On appeal, he asks us to reverse the adverse judgment, overrule Gipson
    I, and rule that his punitive and emotional distress damage claims should be submitted
    to a jury.
    II.
    Gipson argues his offer of proof contained sufficient evidence for a jury to find
    that KAS committed a continuing violation of the MHRA by maintaining a racially
    hostile work environment. The MHRA prohibits an employer from “discriminat[ing]
    against any individual with respect to his compensation, terms, conditions, or
    privileges of employment, because of such individual’s race.” Mo. Rev. Stat. §
    213.055. In applying the MHRA, we “are guided not only by Missouri law but also
    by federal employment discrimination decisions which are applicable and
    authoritative under the MHRA." Tart v. Hill Behan Lumber Co., 
    31 F.3d 668
    , 671
    (8th Cir. 1994) (quotation omitted); see Swyers v. Thermal Science, Inc., 
    887 S.W.2d 655
    , 656 (Mo. App.1994).
    -7-
    An employer violates Title VII if “the workplace is permeated with
    discriminatory intimidation, ridicule, and insult that is sufficiently severe or pervasive
    to alter the conditions of the victim’s employment and create an abusive working
    environment.” Harris v. Forklift Systems, Inc., 
    510 U.S. 17
    , 21 (1993) (citations
    omitted). The same standards are generally used to evaluate claims of hostile work
    environment based upon sexual harassment and racial harassment. See Faragher v.
    City of Boca Raton, 
    118 S. Ct. 2275
    , 2283 n.1 (1998); Meritor Sav. Bank v. Vinson,
    
    477 U.S. 57
    , 66-67 (1986). In determining whether a workplace environment was
    sufficiently hostile or abusive, we look at the totality of the circumstances, including
    “the frequency of the discriminatory conduct; its severity; whether it is physically
    threatening or humiliating, or a mere offensive utterance; and whether it unreasonably
    interferes with an employee’s work performance.” 
    Harris, 510 U.S. at 23
    . See White
    v. Honeywell, Inc., 
    141 F.3d 1270
    , 1275 (8th Cir. 1998).
    When an employer is accused of a continuing violation that began prior to the
    statute of limitations period, such as a racially discriminatory hostile work
    environment, the employee must prove that the violation continued into the
    limitations period; “the critical question is whether any present violation exists.”
    United Air Lines, Inc. v. Evans, 
    431 U.S. 553
    , 558 (1977) (emphasis in original); see
    
    Ashley, 66 F.3d at 167-68
    . Therefore, to avoid the claim being time-barred, Gipson’s
    offer of proof must be sufficient to show that after July 27, 1989, he was a victim of
    intimidation, ridicule, and insult on account of his race that was sufficiently severe
    or pervasive to alter the conditions of his employment. We therefore look first at
    Gipson’s offer of proof concerning his work environment after July 27, 1989.
    In March 1989, Gipson was demoted to district sales manager and transferred
    from the St. Louis office to a rural sales route. This took him out from under Brank’s
    direct supervision. Gipson’s offer of proof ignored the period from March 1989 to
    November 1990, except to complain he was forced to work in a rural area far from his
    home. There is no evidence Gipson had any contact with Brank from the time of the
    -8-
    demotion until December 1990. Thus, Gipson presented no evidence of a hostile
    work environment from July 1989 to late 1990, the first sixteen or seventeen months
    of the limitations period.
    Gipson’s offer of proof included only three alleged instances of racial
    harassment in the limitations period. In November 1990, he received a written
    reprimand containing “incorrect facts” from Marler, who reported to Brank but was
    not accused of racial animus. In December 1990, Brank made an offensive and
    racially-tinged comment (“your kind”) at some sort of business outing. In January
    1991, Gipson was reassigned to St. Louis and had an unpleasant run-in with Brank
    shortly thereafter. Brank then left KAS in February 1991. We conclude this
    evidence, standing alone, is insufficient to establish an actionable hostile work
    environment.
    Marler’s work-related reprimand was neither racial nor harassment. Brank’s
    comments in December 1990 and January 1991, and his peremptory suspension of
    Gipson, might well permit an inference of racial animus, particularly when viewed
    in the context of Brank’s more explicitly racial comments prior to July 1989.
    Compare 
    Delph, 130 F.3d at 356-57
    . However, viewed under the totality of the post-
    July 1989 circumstances, these two incidents are neither severe nor pervasive enough
    to create a hostile work environment. The Supreme Court has repeatedly emphasized
    that this cause of action is limited to extreme work conditions. See Faragher, 118 S.
    Ct. at 2284 (“conduct must be extreme to amount to a change in the terms and
    conditions of employment”); Oncale v. Sundowner Offshore Serv., Inc., 
    118 S. Ct. 998
    , 1003 (1998), and cases cited. “Conduct that is not severe or pervasive enough
    to create an objectively hostile or abusive work environment -- an environment that
    a reasonable person would find hostile or abusive” -- is not actionable. 
    Harris, 510 U.S. at 21
    .
    -9-
    Likewise, our cases upholding hostile work environment liability have
    invariably presented far more hostile or abusive circumstances. See, e.g., Bailey v.
    Runyon, No. 98-1030, slip op. at 6-7 (8th Cir. Feb. 8, 1999) (repeated unwelcome
    sexual advances); Hathaway v. Runyon, 
    132 F.3d 1214
    , 1222 (8th Cir. 1997)
    (physical sexual overtures followed by eight months of intimidating snickers); 
    Delph, 130 F.3d at 352
    (intimidation plus “a steady barrage of racial name-calling”); Ways
    v. City of Lincoln, 
    871 F.2d 750
    , 755 (8th Cir. 1989) (evidence included fifty
    examples of racial harassment); Hall v. Gus Constr. Co., 
    842 F.2d 1010
    , 1012 (8th
    Cir. 1988) (incessant verbal abuse and offensive physical touching); Gilbert v. City
    of Little Rock, 
    722 F.2d 1390
    , 1394 (8th Cir. 1983) (“more than a few isolated
    incidents of harassment must have occurred”), cert. denied, 
    466 U.S. 972
    (1984).
    Brank’s alleged behavior in December 1990 and January 1991, though undeniably
    offensive and rude, was not so severe that a reasonable person would find the terms
    or conditions of Gipson’s work environment had been altered.
    Most of Gipson’s offer of proof related to Brank’s alleged conduct prior to July
    1989. In proving a claim of hostile work environment, background evidence from the
    pre-limitations period may be relevant to illuminate whether the plaintiff’s work
    environment during the limitations period was sufficiently hostile or abusive. But
    here, there was a twenty-one month period from March 1989 to December 1990 in
    which there was no alleged contact between Gipson and Brank. A complete break of
    this magnitude precludes a finding that a racially hostile work environment existing
    at the time of Gipson’s demotion by reason of Brank’s harassment continued
    unabated until Gipson was transferred back to the St. Louis office. See Garrison v.
    Burke, 
    1999 WL 13515
    at *5 (7th Cir. Jan. 14 1999) (two year respite from
    harassment precludes finding of continuing violation); Konstantopoulos v. Westvaco
    Corp., 
    112 F.3d 710
    , 716 (3d Cir. 1997) (seven month gap between harassing
    incidents allowed “effects of prior incidents to dissipate”), cert. denied, 
    118 S. Ct. 1079
    (1998). Thus, as the district court perceived, this evidence was not relevant to
    -10-
    the question whether Gipson was the victim of a hostile work environment after
    November 1990.
    Because Gipson failed to prove a hostile work environment at any time after
    July 27, 1989, this MHRA claim is time-barred, without regard to whether Gipson’s
    offer of proof was sufficient to support an inference that Brank’s conduct was, in
    general, motivated by racial bias. As to this latter question, the district court may
    well have applied an unduly restrictive test in excluding pre-limitations period
    evidence because it lacked “clear racial overtones.” In addition to Brank’s racially
    offensive comment in October 1987, some of his other alleged conduct, such as his
    treatment of Gipson the first day they met in July 1987, seems relevant in proving that
    his continuing conduct toward Gipson was racially motivated. But absent evidence
    of a hostile work environment violation in the limitations period, any such evidentiary
    errors were obviously harmless.
    The judgment of the district court is affirmed. Because we affirm the district
    court’s judgment of dismissal, we need not reach the punitive damages and emotional
    distress damages issues raised by Gipson on appeal.
    A true copy.
    Attest:
    CLERK, U. S. COURT OF APPEALS, EIGHTH CIRCUIT.
    -11-