IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
AT KNOXVILLE
July 11, 2005 Session
LASCHINSKI T. EMERSON v. OAK RIDGE RESEARCH, INC., a/k/a OAK
RIDGE REALTY HOLDING, INC., AND NATHANIEL REVIS
Direct Appeal from the Circuit Court for Anderson County
No. 98LA0497 Hon. James B. Scott, Jr., Judge
No. E2004-01974-COA-R3-CV - FILED OCTOBER 5, 2005
D. MICHAEL SWINEY , J., concurring in part and dissenting in part.
I find it necessary to dissent, respectfully, as to two parts of the majority’s Opinion.
I concur with the majority’s Opinion except as further expressed herein.
I respectfully dissent to that portion of the majority’s Opinion affirming the attorney
fee award. I fully concur with the majority’s holding that the 2000 amendment to the Whistleblower
Act, Tenn. Code Ann. § 50-1-304, created a new measure of damages for such claims in addition to
those allowed prior to that amendment, and, therefore, the majority correctly holds “the Trial Court
erred in applying this amendment retroactively to allow attorney’s fees in this case.”
Where I depart from the majority’s Opinion on the attorney fee award is its analysis
and ultimate decision to affirm the fee award “by the application of these THRA provisions....” I
agree with the majority that an “employer” under the THRA is a “person” as defined by the THRA
that employs eight or more persons within the state. Tenn. Code Ann. §§ 4-21-102(4) and (14). It
was the corporate defendants’ not employing eight or more persons that was the basis, as affirmed
by the majority, for the Trial Court’s grant of summary judgment as to Plaintiff’s initial THRA
harassment claim. The majority does not reverse this judgment by the Trial Court as to Plaintiff’s
underlying THRA claim that she was sexually harassed, but then does so as to Plaintiff’s THRA
retaliation claim to justify the award of attorney fees.
I also agree with the majority’s statement that our Legislature has “decided that sexual
harassment would not be actionable against the employer unless there were eight or more
employees....” See Tenn. Code Ann. § 4-21-102(4), and § 4-21-401(a). I also take no issue with the
majority’s holding that “the legislature created an independent cause of action in favor of any
employee who is retaliated against for reporting any acts or practices declared discriminatory, and
also protects the individual employee from [an individual] … who aids, abets, and otherwise
commands an employer to engage in employment-related discrimination....” (emphasis added.)
Where I disagree with the majority is its further conclusion that somehow or another
in a retaliation situation the “employer” initially claimed to have committed the “acts or practices
declared discriminatory” does not have to have eight or more employees. Even if an individual can
be held liable for retaliation under the THRA, that is not the end of the discussion. In that event, the
individual can be held liable for retaliation, as applicable here, only when, as acknowledged by the
majority, that individual retaliates “in any manner against a person because such person has opposed
a practice declared discriminatory by this chapter or because such person has made a charge, filed
a complaint, testified, assisted or participated in any manner in any investigation, proceeding or
hearing under this chapter....” Tenn. Code Ann. § 4-21-301(1) (emphasis added). The problem here
for Plaintiff is that while she may have been retaliated against for opposing her harassment, the
retaliation was not for opposing “a practice declared discriminatory by this chapter or because...[she]
has made a charge, filed a complaint, testified, assisted or participated in any manner in any
investigation, proceeding or hearing under this chapter.”
Plaintiff never contended that she made a charge, filed a complaint, or testified or
participated in any investigation, proceeding, or hearing under this chapter. She simply complained
to the harasser himself, and never made a charge, filed a complaint, or testified or participated in any
investigation, proceeding or hearing under the THRA at least until after the alleged retaliation had
occurred. Likewise, Plaintiff was not retaliated against because she “opposed a practice declared
discriminatory by this chapter....” While Plaintiff certainly opposed being harassed or discriminated
against, the harassment was not “a practice declared discriminatory by this chapter” because her
employer did not employ eight or more employees. As acknowledged by the majority, “only an
‘employer’ can be liable for sexual harassment pursuant to the THRA....” It is also acknowledged
by the majority that a “person” is not an “employer” under the THRA unless it employees eight or
more persons within the state.
What retaliation Plaintiff was protected from by the THRA was retaliation for
opposing “a practice declared discriminatory by this chapter or because...[Plaintiff] has made a
charge, filed a complaint, testified, assisted or participated in any manner in any investigation,
proceeding or hearing under this chapter....” Tenn. Code Ann. § 4-21-301(1). Here, as
acknowledged by the majority, there was no “employer” under the THRA. Without any “employer”
under the THRA, there could be no sexual harassment by an “employer” as defined by the THRA
itself. The THRA, as enacted by our Legislature, does not prohibit or make discriminatory sexual
harassment by a “person” which employees fewer than eight employees. This being so, Plaintiff
cannot be said to have “opposed a practice declared discriminatory by this chapter” because there
simply was no act or practice by a THRA defined “employer” which was declared discriminatory
by the THRA. In short, Plaintiff opposed being harassed, but the harassment was not a practice
declared discriminatory by the THRA because Plaintiff’s employer was not an employer under the
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THRA itself. I believe the language of the THRA is clear and that it requires a decision contrary to
that reached by the majority as to the affirmance of the award of attorney fees based on the THRA.
I disagree with the majority’s view that Kilgore v. Garner, 1996 WL 469693 (Tenn.
Ct. App. August 20, 1996) is not applicable to this case. Even if individual liability can attach under
the statute for retaliation and for aiding or abetting, there first must be a discriminatory practice by
a statutorily defined “employer”. Here, as in Kilgore, there is no statutorily defined “employer”
involved, and, therefore, no practice declared discriminatory by the THRA. Without there first being
a practice declared discriminatory, the exact situation here, an employee such as Plaintiff cannot be
retaliated against for opposing a nonexisting “practice declared discriminatory by this chapter....”
Tenn. Code Ann. § 4-21-301(1) and § 4-21-401(1). While Plaintiff may well have been
discriminated against and harassed because of her sex, such harassment or discrimination is not
prohibited under the THRA. Simply put, in a situation where the employee’s employer employs less
than eight employees, neither an individual who retaliates against the employee nor the employee’s
employer are liable under the THRA for this retaliation related to the employee opposing acts or
practices which are not prohibited under the THRA itself. See Tenn. Code Ann. § 4-21-201(4); § 4-
21-301; § 4-21-401(1). This was a policy decision made by our Legislature, and any change to that
policy is one properly addressed by our Legislature.
For the reasons discussed above, I would reverse that portion of the Trial Court’s
judgment awarding attorney fees. The majority is correct that our Legislature has decided, although
I would not say arbitrarily, that “sexual harassment would not be actionable against the employer
unless there were eight or more employees....” The majority is correct that a reading of the THRA
as I suggest means that persons in any organization employing less than eight employees are not
prohibited by the THRA from engaging in practices which would be “practice[s] declared
discriminatory by this chapter” if the organization had eight or more employees. Likewise those
same persons also are not liable for retaliating against an employee who opposes these practices
which have not been declared discriminatory by the THRA. This was a policy decision by our
Legislature. I believe such a broad increase of the coverage of THRA as proposed by the majority
is a policy decision best left to our Legislature, and respectfully suggest that perhaps it is one that
would be appropriate for our Legislature to revisit at this time.
I also, respectfully, dissent as to the majority’s holding that under the facts of this
case, Plaintiff’s acts in “reporting”, or in fact complaining or objecting only to Revis himself, was
sufficient under the Whistleblower Act. Again, I agree with much of what the majority says. For
example, I take no issue with the majority’s holding rejecting the argument that “an employee’s
actions in reporting illegal activities to a person within the employment setting, instead of an outside
entity, are merely private or proprietary, and thus do not promote public safety and welfare.”
Merryman v. Central Parking System, Inc., 1992 WL 330404 (Tenn Ct. App. Nov. 13, 1992).
However, I believe the majority reads Merryman too narrowly as I believe it clearly
stands for the proposition that an employee to qualify as a “whistleblower” must do something more
than merely complain to the alleged harasser. Id. at *2. The majority attempts to circumvent this
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requirement by noting that Revis was both the “offending supervisor and company management”
when Plaintiff made her complaints to Revis. To hold as the majority does means that any time an
employee is harassed or otherwise discriminated against by a supervisor who also is management,
the employee solely by complaining to the harasser himself about his actions triggers
“whistleblower” protection. I instead would hold that Plaintiff’s actions in reporting and
complaining solely to Revis was private in nature as I believe under the Whistleblower Statute even
when the harasser is in a management position, the employee must do more than merely and solely
complain to the harasser himself to trigger the Whistleblower Statute. I do not believe the
Whistleblower Statute is written so broadly that an employee by complaining solely to the
employee’s harasser/supervisor about his actions would qualify as an act seeking to promote public
safety, welfare, or the public good. For these reasons, I respectfully dissent from the majority’s
decision to affirm the Trial Court’s denial of Defendant’s Motion for Directed Verdict as to the
Whistleblower Statute.
As other than discussed above, I concur fully in the remainder of the majority’s Opinion.
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D. MICHAEL SWINEY, JUDGE
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