Sexual Harassment.
Publié le 10/05/2013
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A person who believes he or she has experienced sexual harassment on the job has a limited period of time in which to file a complaint with the EEOC.
After the EEOCinvestigates the matter, it issues a right to sue letter, regardless of its conclusions about the matter.
The victim then has 90 days to file a lawsuit against the employer in federal court.
If he or she is successful in the lawsuit, the victim can receive up to $300,000 in compensatory damages for each incident of unlawful harassment, aswell as back pay, attorneys’ fees, and possibly additional money damages under state or local law.
If the victim was fired or did not receive a promotion as a result ofthe harassment, the court may order reinstatement or promotion.
The court may also order the harasser to discontinue the unlawful conduct.
B In Schools
Title IX prohibits sex discrimination, including sexual harassment, in all federally funded educational institutions.
The federal agency responsible for enforcing Title IX,the Office of Civil Rights of the Department of Education, has issued guidelines that help define the scope of that law with respect to sexual harassment.
The guidelinesdiscuss two types of sexual harassment.
The first type involves a coercive tradeoff—for example, a threat by a professor to give a student a poor grade unless thestudent has sex with the professor.
This type of harassment is known as quid pro quo, a Latin phrase meaning “this for that.” The second type of sexual harassment discussed by the guidelines involves unwanted sexual behavior that creates a hostile or intimidating environment.
A victim of sexual harassment in school can file a lawsuit against the school in federal court for monetary damages under Title IX.
The victim need not complain to theOffice of Civil Rights first.
Educational institutions in violation of Title IX may also lose federal funding.
V SUPREME COURT OPINIONS
The Supreme Court of the United States began hearing sexual harassment cases in the mid-1980s.
Its first rulings described what behaviors constitute unlawful sexualharassment under the federal laws prohibiting sex discrimination.
More recently, the Court has considered who is legally responsible when a victim proves that sexualharassment occurred.
A Defining Sexual Harassment
In 1986 in the case of Meritor Savings Bank v.
Vinson , the Supreme Court first recognized as unlawful both types of sexual harassment defined by the EEOC guidelines—that is, harassment involving a coercive tradeoff and harassment that creates a hostile or intimidating environment.
The Court unanimously concluded thatboth types of sexual harassment were actionable under Title VII—meaning victims of such harassment could sue their employer for monetary damages.
In the Meritor case, a female employee alleged that the bank’s male vice president invited her to dinner and, afterward, suggested going to a motel to have sex.
She testified that although she initially refused to go to the motel, she later agreed for fear of losing her job.
The employee also alleged that the vice president repeatedlymade sexual demands of her during business and nonbusiness hours, and that during the next few years they had sex approximately 40 to 50 times.
The trial courthad concluded that because the sexual relationship between the employee and her supervisor was voluntary, the sexual conduct was unrelated to the employee’scontinued employment, and therefore the employee was not a victim of sexual harassment.
The Supreme Court ruled that the employee might be able to show that thesupervisor’s actions had illegally affected her employment conditions by creating a hostile and intimidating environment.
Whereas the trial court in the Meritor case focused on whether the employee suffered any tangible economic loss, the Supreme Court relied on the language of the EEOC guidelines regarding a hostile work environment.
The Court compared sexual harassment to racial discrimination, stating: “Sexual harassment which creates ahostile or offensive environment for members of one sex is every bit the arbitrary barrier to sexual equality at the workplace that racial harassment is to racial equality.”The Court cautioned that to constitute harassment, the behaviors must be sufficiently severe and pervasive so as to “alter the conditions of [the victim’s] employmentand create an abusive working environment.” It indicated that employees may sue for sexual harassment even if they did not resist the harassment or suffered no lossof tangible benefits.
According to the Court, to determine whether unlawful sexual harassment has occurred, trial courts should assess whether the victim indicated thatthe sexual advances were unwelcome, and not whether the victim’s participation was voluntary.
In 1993 the Supreme Court again addressed a case in which an employee claimed that her supervisor had sexually harassed her by creating a hostile workingenvironment.
In Harris v.
Forklift Systems, a female employee alleged that her male supervisor, in front of fellow employees, insulted her because she was a woman, made unwelcome sexual innuendoes, and asked her and other female employees to remove coins from his front pants pocket.
The trial court concluded that althoughsome of the supervisor’s comments offended the employee and would offend a reasonable woman, they were not severe enough to affect the employee’s psychologicalwell-being, to interfere with her work performance, or to create an abusive or intimidating work environment.
The trial court therefore dismissed the case.
The Supreme Court reversed the trial court’s decision and held that conduct need not “seriously affect an employee’s psychological well-being or cause the employee tosuffer injury” in order to be actionable under Title VII.
So long as a reasonable person could perceive the environment to be hostile or abusive, and the victim actuallyperceives it as such, it need not also be psychologically damaging.
The Court acknowledged that the law did not provide a precise test for determining whether behaviorconstituted sexual harassment.
The Court indicated that judges or juries should determine whether an environment is hostile by looking at all of the circumstances,based on a number of factors.
These factors include the frequency and severity of the harassing conduct; whether it is physically threatening or humiliating; andwhether it interferes with an employee’s work performance.
According to the Court, the proper standard for determining sexual harassment is a middle path betweenconduct that is merely offensive and conduct that causes a tangible psychological injury.
In 1998 the Supreme Court, in Oncale v.
Sundowner Offshore Services , ruled that unlawful sexual harassment could occur between members of the same sex.
The Court did not examine the specifics of the employee’s complaint on appeal because the trial court had ruled summarily (without any trial to examine the facts) that theemployee had no basis for a lawsuit under Title VII.
Instead, the Court simply determined that the trial court erred in automatically dismissing the case.
The Court’sdecision also reiterated the standard expressed in the Harris case, which requires courts to assess alleged harassment from the perspective of a reasonable person considering all the circumstances.
B Responsibility for Sexual Harassment
The Supreme Court has decided several cases regarding when employers and educational institutions are legally responsible (liable) for sexual harassment byemployees.
An employer or educational institution that is deemed liable must pay monetary damages to the victim of sexual harassment.
In its 1986 decision in Meritor Savings Bank v.
Vinson, the Court refused to issue a definitive rule on employer liability under Title VII.
However, the Court noted that the general principles of agency should govern responsibility for sexual harassment.
Under these principles, employers can be liable for certain wrongdoings by theirsupervisory employees (agents) because of the legal relationship between the two parties.
For example, employers are liable for harm caused by their supervisoryemployees if the employee's role as a supervisor helped him or her carry out the harmful actions.
Applying these principles, lower courts have generally foundemployers liable for sexual harassment when managers took tangible, job-related action—such as unwarranted termination or demotion—against employees whorefused their sexual advances..
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