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PUBLISHED
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
No. 20-2361
TONYA R. CHAPMAN,
Plaintiff – Appellant,
v.
OAKLAND LIVING CENTER, INC.; ARLENE SMITH; MICHAEL SMITH;
STEVE SMITH,
Defendants – Appellees.
------------------------------
EQUAL EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY COMMISSION,
Amicus Supporting Appellant.
Appeal from the United States District Court for the Western District of North Carolina, at
Asheville. Martin K. Reidinger, Chief District Judge. (1:18-cv-00345-MR-WCM)
Argued: December 9, 2021 Decided: August 30, 2022
Before KING and WYNN, Circuit Judges, and KEENAN, Senior Circuit Judge.
Vacated and remanded by published opinion. Judge King wrote the opinion, in which
Judge Wynn and Senior Judge Keenan joined.
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ARGUED: Kimberly Veklerov, Gregory Eng, UNIVERSITY OF VIRGINIA SCHOOL
OF LAW, Charlottesville, Virginia, for Appellant. Jonathan Woodward Yarbrough,
CONSTANGY, BROOKS, SMITH & PROPHETE, LLP, Asheville, North Carolina, for
Appellees. Jeremy Daniel Horowitz, U.S. EQUAL EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY
COMMISSION, Washington, D.C., for Amicus Curiae. ON BRIEF: J. Scott Ballenger,
Jennifer Elchisak, Third Year Law Student, Zev Klein, Third Year Law Student, Jehanne
McCullough, Third Year Law Student, Carly Wasserman, Third Year Law Student,
Appellate Litigation Clinic, UNIVERSITY OF VIRGINIA SCHOOL OF LAW,
Charlottesville, Virginia, for Appellant. Jill S. Stricklin, CONSTANGY, BROOKS,
SMITH & PROPHETE, LLP, Winston-Salem, North Carolina, for Appellees. Gwendolyn
Young Reams, Acting General Counsel, Jennifer S. Goldstein, Associate General Counsel,
Sydney A.R. Foster, Assistant General Counsel, Anne W. King, Appellate Litigation
Services, Office of General Counsel, U.S. EQUAL EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY
COMMISSION, Washington, D.C., for Amicus Curiae.
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KING, Circuit Judge:
Tonya R. Chapman, the Black plaintiff in this civil rights action on appeal from the
Western District of North Carolina, alleges that she was subjected to multiple instances of
racial harassment and other discrimination during two periods of employment with the
defendant Oakland Living Center, Inc. (“OLC”). According to Chapman, she was
compelled to resign for good in the summer of 2018 after repeatedly being called a
“n*****” by the six-year-old son of an OLC supervisor, defendant Steve Smith, and
grandson of OLC’s owners, defendants Arlene Smith and Michael Smith. 1 In this appeal,
Chapman contests the district court’s award of summary judgment to OLC on her hostile
work environment and constructive discharge claims under both Title VII of the Civil
Rights Act of 1964 and 42 U.S.C. § 1981. See Chapman v. Oakland Living Ctr., Inc., No.
1:18-cv-00345 (W.D.N.C. Nov. 24, 2020), ECF No. 64 (the “Order”). As explained herein,
we vacate the judgment and remand for further proceedings on the claims against OLC. 2
1
We have sanitized the racial epithet repeatedly hurled at Chapman by replacing
that atrocious term with “n*****” and the “n-word.” In so doing, we do not mean to
diminish the impact of that slur.
2
By its Order, the district court also awarded summary judgment to Arlene,
Michael, and Steve Smith on § 1981 claims lodged against them in their individual
capacities. Although Chapman designated each of the Smiths as an appellee, she does not
ask this Court to reinstate those claims.
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I.
A.
The record reflects that OLC, owned by Arlene and Michael Smith, operates an
assisted living facility in Rutherfordton, North Carolina. During the summer of 2018,
Arlene and Michael’s son Steve Smith served as a supervisor at the facility while training
to take over his parents’ business. Three of Steve’s sons (Arlene and Michael’s grandsons)
— the six-year-old boy who called Chapman the n-word and his older twin brothers —
were regularly present at the facility. The Smiths are white.
During her first period of employment with OLC, from 2004 to 2015, Chapman had
worked as a housekeeper, cook, and personal care aide at the assisted living facility.
According to Chapman, she experienced racial harassment and other discrimination
perpetrated by members of the Smith family in that 11-year span. The alleged
discrimination included the following:
● In 2009 or 2010 when photographing Chapman for an employee
identification badge, Arlene Smith insisted on shooting Chapman
from both the front and the side (unlike other employees only
photographed from the front), commented “I’m going to take a picture
of you from the side and I’m going to give you some slave numbers,”
and then wrote the so-called “slave numbers” on Chapman’s badge
(the “badge incident”), see J.A. 52; 3
● In 2012 or 2013, Chapman overheard Arlene’s teenage niece, who
was then employed by OLC as a “med tech,” tell another employee
that Arlene and Michael Smith “had to buy another condo because
there were too many blacks at Myrtle Beach” (the “condo comment”),
see id. at 84;
3
Citations herein to “J.A. __” refer to the contents of the Joint Appendix filed by
the parties in this appeal.
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● In February 2014, on the birthday Chapman shared with Steve Smith’s
twin sons, Chapman had to clear the facility’s dining room for a
monkey-themed birthday party for the twins, and then Steve and his
wife gave Chapman a cake arguably depicting a Black figure hanging
from a noose and told her to leave so the children could enjoy the party
(the “birthday incident”); and
● Despite Chapman’s repeated requests for support to advance at the
facility by obtaining a med tech license, Arlene never gave Chapman
or any other Black employee such support, finally prompting
Chapman to quit (the “lack-of-advancement issue”).
An OLC employee named Patricia Warner contacted Chapman in 2018 and
persuaded her to return to work at the assisted living facility. Chapman then resumed
employment with OLC, as a weekend cook. Although OLC denies that Warner was
Chapman’s supervisor in the kitchen, Chapman understood Warner to have that role, with
the authority to set Chapman’s schedule, give instructions for meal preparation, and
recommend employee discipline to Arlene and Michael Smith. Higher-level supervision
was provided by Steve Smith, who had not been working for his parents’ business during
Chapman’s first period of employment with OLC.
One day in July 2018, Chapman was preparing cupcakes for the assisted living
facility’s residents and set some aside for Steve Smith’s sons to decorate. Chapman knew
without being told that the boys would spend time in the kitchen that day because they
were at the facility “all the time” and “always in the kitchen with [her].” See J.A. 62, 64.
When the six-year-old boy finished decorating his cupcakes and Chapman refused to give
him more, he hit and kicked Chapman and told her, “My daddy called you a lazy ass black
n*****, because you didn’t come to work.” Id. at 67 (the “July 2018 n-word incident”).
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Chapman’s evidence is that she reported the July 2018 n-word incident to Warner the next
day but did not say anything about it to Steve, Arlene, or Michael Smith. Chapman
explained that Arlene and Michael were absent from the facility that day, and that she opted
to report the incident to Warner as an intermediary rather than to Steve directly because
she “figured it probably would sound better coming from, you know, another [supervisor].”
Id. at 70. Warner apparently did not, however, share Chapman’s report of the July 2018
n-word incident with any of the Smiths.
On August 24, 2018, at the beginning of Chapman’s shift at the assisted living
facility, the same six-year-old boy called for Chapman to come outside and watch him do
tricks on his bicycle. She did, but the boy was soon summoned by his father, allowing
Chapman to return inside and clean up the dining room. A short time later, the boy came
to a window and yelled for Chapman by her first name, “Tonya.” See J.A. 76. She opened
the window and told the boy that she had to work. In response, the boy said, “N*****,
n*****. Get to work, n*****.” Id. (the “first August 2018 n-word incident”). Chapman
promptly reported the first August 2018 n-word incident to Warner.
At the time of the first August 2018 n-word incident, Arlene and Michael Smith
were out of town. Steve Smith was present at the assisted living facility, learned from
Warner what his son said, and then confirmed it with Chapman. Shortly thereafter, Steve
brought the boy into the facility’s kitchen to apologize, pushing him toward Chapman. The
boy refused to approach Chapman and instead ran to Warner and cried. Steve then exited
the kitchen, without eliciting an apology from the boy or offering his own apology. Rather
than taking his son with him, Steve left the boy with Chapman and Warner. Thereafter,
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the boy said to Chapman in Warner’s presence, “Tonya, you are a n*****.” Id. at 79 (the
“second August 2018 n-word incident”). Following the second August 2018 n-word
incident, Chapman finished washing dishes and then left the facility without completing
her shift, telling Warner, “I’ve got to go. I can’t stay here. I can’t. I’m sorry. [Six] year
olds should not know that.” Id. at 81. As Chapman departed, one of Steve’s twin sons
asked Chapman where she was going. Chapman responded, “I’ve got to go. I can’t stay.
I can’t stay.” Id. at 82. Chapman never again worked for OLC.
According to Steve Smith, he had spanked his six-year-old son in the assisted living
facility’s parking lot before bringing him to the kitchen to apologize to Chapman. For her
part, Chapman did not witness the purported spanking. She also surmised that any
punishment Steve might have imposed “couldn’t have been too bad for [the boy] to come
back in there and say it again.” See J.A. 80.
Arlene Smith has since acknowledged that, although OLC had an employee
handbook during Chapman’s employment, there was only one copy and that copy was kept
at the assisted living facility’s front desk. Arlene did not know whether Chapman had
reviewed the lone copy of the employee handbook. Moreover, Arlene could not recall
whether the employee handbook contained a policy for reporting harassment, and OLC has
not produced evidence of any such policy.
B.
On September 26, 2018, Chapman filed a charge of discrimination against OLC
with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (the “EEOC”), alleging race
discrimination based on the three n-word incidents. Chapman specified in her EEOC
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charge that the alleged discrimination was limited to July and August 2018. She referred
therein to Steve Smith as “my supervisor” and Warner as a “co-worker.” See J.A. 100.
With respect to the July 2018 n-word incident, Chapman asserted that in response to being
called a “n*****” by Steve’s son, “I told [the boy] to stop, but I did not report it.” Id.
Chapman further relayed that Steve was immediately made aware of the first August 2018
n-word incident by Warner and promised “he would take care of it,” but he failed to prevent
the second August 2018 n-word incident that quickly followed. Id. In Chapman’s words,
she then “left work and did not return because of the treatment.” Id.
Notably, Chapman did not check the box in her EEOC charge for a “continuing
action,” mention her earlier period of employment with OLC from 2004 to 2015, or
indicate that any additional racial harassment or other discrimination (such as the badge
incident, the condo comment, the birthday incident, or the lack-of-advancement issue)
occurred during that time span. The EEOC issued Chapman a right-to-sue letter on
September 28, 2018.
C.
Proceeding pro se, Chapman initiated this civil rights action in the Western District
of North Carolina on December 3, 2018. Subsequently retained counsel filed the operative
Amended Complaint of April 1, 2020. Relevant here, the Amended Complaint alleges the
claims against OLC — for a hostile work environment and constructive discharge — under
both Title VII and 42 U.S.C. § 1981. The Amended Complaint premises those claims not
only on the three n-word incidents that occurred during Chapman’s employment with OLC
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in the summer of 2018, but also additional incidents of racial harassment and other
discrimination dating to her earlier period of employment from 2004 to 2015.
OLC filed its motion for summary judgment on September 3, 2020. A few days
later, on September 9, 2020, Chapman’s counsel was granted permission to withdraw from
representation, leaving Chapman without a lawyer in the summary judgment proceedings.
Chapman filed pro se responses to OLC’s summary judgment motion and appeared pro se
at a motion hearing conducted by the district court on October 23, 2020.
By its Order of November 24, 2020, the district court awarded summary judgment
to OLC on Chapman’s hostile work environment and constructive discharge claims. As
further discussed below, the court concluded that it could consider only the evidence of the
three n-word incidents that occurred in 2018 — and not the racial harassment and other
discrimination allegedly perpetrated against Chapman during her earlier period of
employment. In the court’s view, the evidence of the three n-word incidents failed to
engender a factual dispute meriting a jury trial and OLC was entitled to judgment as a
matter of law.
Chapman timely noted this appeal, and we possess jurisdiction pursuant to 28
U.S.C. § 1291. On appeal, Chapman is represented by pro bono counsel from the
University of Virginia School of Law. Additionally, the EEOC filed an amicus curiae brief
on Chapman’s behalf and participated in the oral argument.
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II.
We review de novo a district court’s award of summary judgment, viewing the facts
in the light most favorable to the non-moving party. See Walker v. Donahoe, 3 F.4th 676,
682 (4th Cir. 2021). Summary judgment is appropriate only when “the movant shows that
there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment
as a matter of law.” See Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a).
III.
In our analysis, we first conclude that the district court erred in awarding summary
judgment to OLC on Chapman’s hostile work environment claim, considering just the three
n-word incidents. We next rule that the court erred by granting OLC summary judgment
on Chapman’s constructive discharge claim, also based on the three n-word incidents
alone. Finally, we recognize that the court was wrong to exclude any consideration of the
racial harassment and other discrimination allegedly perpetrated against Chapman during
her earlier period of employment. On those bases, we vacate the court’s judgment and
remand for further proceedings on the claims against OLC.
A.
We begin with Chapman’s hostile work environment claim against OLC,
considering only the three n-word incidents at this point in our discussion. The elements
of a hostile work environment claim are the same under Title VII and 42 U.S.C. § 1981.
See Boyer-Liberto v. Fontainebleau Corp., 786 F.3d 264, 277 (4th Cir. 2015) (en banc).
Specifically, the “plaintiff must show that there is (1) unwelcome conduct; (2) that is based
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on the plaintiff’s race; (3) which is sufficiently severe or pervasive to alter the plaintiff’s
conditions of employment and to create an abusive work environment; and (4) which is
imputable to the employer.” Id. (alteration and internal quotation marks omitted).
1.
In addressing Chapman’s hostile work environment claim, the district court focused
on the fourth element — whether the three n-word incidents perpetrated by Steve Smith’s
six-year-old son are imputable to OLC — because that is the only element that OLC argued
is not satisfied. See Order 8. Nevertheless, the court made remarks pertinent to the third
element, i.e., whether the three n-word incidents amount to conduct that is sufficiently
severe or pervasive to alter Chapman’s conditions of employment and create an abusive
work environment. Specifically, the court observed “that the child used atrocious language
that is entirely unacceptable in society”; that “[t]here is no question that ‘the word “n****r”
is pure anathema to African-Americans, as it should be to everyone’”; and that Chapman
“certainly did not and does not deserve to be called that epithet or any other epithet by a
six-year-old child or by anyone else at her place of employment or anywhere else.” Id. at
12 (quoting Freeman v. Dal-Tile Corp., 750 F.3d 413, 422 (4th Cir. 2014)).
Rejecting Chapman’s hostile work environment claim on the fourth element, the
district court concluded that the three n-word incidents are not imputable to OLC. See
Order 8-12. The court applied the standard for cases in which the alleged harasser is a third
party. Id. at 8-9. Under that standard — which is a negligence standard similar to that
utilized when the harasser is the victim’s mere co-worker (rather than a supervisor) — an
employer is liable for a third party “creating a hostile work environment if the employer
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knew or should have known of the harassment and failed to take prompt remedial action
reasonably calculated to end the harassment.” See Freeman, 750 F.3d at 423 (internal
quotation marks omitted).
With respect to the July 2018 n-word incident, the district court faulted Chapman
for not reporting that “incident to a supervisor or anyone that could have reprimanded the
child or corrected the situation.” See Order 10. The court declined to conclude otherwise
based on Chapman’s evidence that she reported the incident to Patricia Warner. Id. at 10
n.3. First, the court deemed that evidence to be inconsistent with Chapman’s EEOC
charge, in which she stated that in response to the July 2018 n-word incident, “I told [the
boy] to stop, but I did not report it.” See J.A. 100; see also Order 10 n.3 (relating that, in
her EEOC charge, Chapman “asserted that she did not report this incident”). Second, the
court concluded that any report to Warner “does not suffice for evidence of notice to a
supervisor” because “Warner was not [Chapman’s] supervisor as the term is defined for
discrimination claims.” See Order 10 n.3. The district court relied on Vance v. Ball State
University, wherein the Supreme Court defined “supervisor” for the purpose of imputing a
supervisor’s harassment to the employer. See 570 U.S. 421, 431 (2013) (holding “that an
employer may be vicariously liable for an employee’s unlawful harassment only when the
employer has empowered that employee to take tangible employment actions against the
victim,” such as hiring and firing).
Turning to the first August 2018 n-word incident, the district court ruled that “[t]he
uncontroverted evidence is that as soon as Steve Smith was alerted that the child directed
a racial slur at [Chapman], he punished the child.” See Order 10. As for the second August
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2018 n-word incident, the court faulted Chapman for “resign[ing] before reporting this
incident, thus giving OLC no opportunity to react.” Id. The court did not blame Steve for
failing to prevent the second August 2018 n-word incident by inadequately punishing his
son for the first, observing that “[a]n employer’s remedial actions must be ‘reasonably
likely to stop the harassment,’ but need not be guaranteed to stop the harassment.” Id. at
10-11 (quoting EEOC v. Xerxes Corp., 639 F.3d 658, 674 (4th Cir. 2011)). The court
elaborated:
Spanking the child after the [first August 2018 n-word incident] may not
have stopped the harassment in this case, but it was an effort directed to
reasonably stop the harassment. [Chapman] offers no suggestion as to what
additional punishment should have been directed toward the child to be more
effective other than indicating that Steve Smith should not have left the child
in the kitchen to “say it again.” After the second [August 2018 n-word]
incident, when Steve Smith would have learned of the insufficiency of his
discipline, more stringent measures could have been taken, such as keeping
the child at home. But [Chapman] did not give [OLC] the opportunity, as
she immediately quit.
Id. at 11 (citation omitted). Summarizing its ruling on the fourth element of Chapman’s
hostile work environment claim, the court related that Chapman “has not set forth evidence
to create a genuine issue of material fact supporting the claim that the child’s actions should
be attributed to OLC as a matter of law,” thereby entitling OLC to the award of summary
judgment. Id. at 12.
2.
a.
Although OLC raised only a fourth-element challenge to Chapman’s hostile work
environment claim in the district court, OLC now contends on appeal, relevant to the third
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element, that the three n-word incidents are insufficiently severe or pervasive to alter
Chapman’s conditions of employment and create an abusive work environment. Because
Chapman has replied to the merits of that argument — and has not complained that it was
forfeited — we address it. But see Muth v. United States, 1 F.3d 246, 250 (4th Cir. 1993)
(observing that “issues raised for the first time on appeal generally will not be
considered”). 4
As we have explained, the third element of a hostile work environment claim
“requires a showing that the environment would reasonably be perceived, and is perceived,
as hostile or abusive.” See Boyer-Liberto, 786 F.3d at 277 (internal quotation marks
omitted). “Whether the environment is objectively hostile or abusive is judged from the
perspective of a reasonable person in the plaintiff’s position.” Id. (internal quotation marks
omitted). 5 That assessment “is made by looking at all the circumstances.” Id. (internal
quotation marks omitted).
OLC would have us distinguish this case from those, such as Boyer-Liberto, where
we have recognized that even a single use of the n-word or a similar racial slur by a
supervisor can engender a hostile work environment. See, e.g., Boyer-Liberto, 786 F.3d at
Meanwhile, OLC asserts on appeal that Chapman forfeited most of her appellate
4
arguments by failing to raise them — pro se — in the district court. We have considered
OLC’s assertions of forfeiture and roundly reject them.
5
In its amicus brief, the EEOC asks us to “follow the approach of other circuits that
examine whether the harassment in question would be perceived as severe or pervasive by
a reasonable person of the same protected class.” See EEOC Amicus Br. 11-12 (internal
quotation marks omitted). We need not consider today whether that is the appropriate
standard, however, as applying it would not change the outcome of this appeal.
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280 (recognizing that an alleged supervisor’s “two uses of the ‘porch monkey’ epithet —
whether viewed as a single incident or as a pair of discrete instances of harassment — were
severe enough to engender a hostile work environment”). According to OLC, the repeated
use of the n-word here is not objectively severe because it “was uttered by a young child.”
See Br. of Appellees 46.
As Chapman counters, however, the boy who uttered the slurs was not just any
“young child,” but the grandson of OLC’s owners and the son of a supervisor being
groomed to take over the family business. See Reply Br. of Appellant 18 (“OLC wants to
emphasize the fact that these words came from a child, while ignoring whose child he
was.”). Thus, a reasonable person in Chapman’s position could “fear that the child had his
relatives’ ear and could make life difficult for her.” Id.; cf. Boyer-Liberto, 786 F.3d at 279
(deeming it relevant to the third element inquiry that the harasser had “repeatedly and
effectively communicated to [the victim that the harasser] had [the employer’s] ear and
could have [the victim] fired”).
Moreover, in the July 2018 n-word incident, the boy directly attributed the slur to
his father, along with a negative commentary on Chapman’s work performance. As the
boy put it, “My daddy called you a lazy ass black n*****, because you didn’t come to
work.” See J.A. 67. Whether or not the boy was being truthful, the invocation of his father
can reasonably be seen as further amplifying the severity of the boy’s comment to
Chapman. Additionally, the comment combined “the most egregious of all racial insults”
(the n-word) with “a vile stereotype . . . dating back to chattel slavery” (being lazy). See
Reply Br. of Appellant 20.
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Simply put, a reasonable person in Chapman’s position could perceive a
“tremendous difference between an insult from (say) a customer’s six-year-old child and
the powerful statement from a supervisor’s son that ‘My daddy called you a lazy ass black
n*****, because you didn’t come to work.’” See Reply Br. of Appellant 18 (quoting J.A.
67). And the harassment did not stop there. A short time later, in the first and second
August 2018 n-word incidents, the same boy hurled the n-word at Chapman several more
times and told her to “[g]et to work.” See J.A. 76, 79.
Notably, it matters not if the boy was too young to understand the force of his words
or if he lacked intent to harm Chapman, for “harassment based on a protected characteristic
may be actionable where it ‘has the purpose or effect of unreasonably interfering with an
individual’s work performance or creating an intimidating, hostile, or offensive working
environment.’” See EEOC Amicus Br. 13-14 (quoting Meritor Sav. Bank, FSB v. Vinson,
477 U.S. 57, 65 (1986)). Indeed, a reasonable person in Chapman’s position could perceive
the boy’s comments to be “especially humiliating” because of his young age, and his
“constant presence in the [assisted living facility’s] kitchen” to pose a threat “that another
incident could occur at any time.” Id. at 18-19 (internal quotation marks omitted).
Considering all of the foregoing circumstances, the fact that the three n-word
incidents were perpetrated by a six-year-old boy does not preclude a finding that those
incidents are sufficiently severe or pervasive to alter Chapman’s conditions of employment
and create an abusive work environment. Accordingly, we reject OLC’s contention that it
is entitled to summary judgment for lack of an adequate showing on the third element of
Chapman’s hostile work environment claim.
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b.
With respect to the fourth element of Chapman’s hostile work environment claim,
the issue is whether the three n-word incidents are imputable to OLC. The district court
applied an appropriate standard, under which an employer is liable for a third party
“creating a hostile work environment if the employer knew or should have known of the
harassment and failed to take prompt remedial action reasonably calculated to end the
harassment.” See Freeman, 750 F.3d at 423 (internal quotation marks omitted) (adopting
standard for third-party harassment similar to standard for co-worker harassment). The
court went on to err, however, in its fourth-element analysis.
(1)
Significantly, the district court addressed only whether OLC had actual knowledge
of the six-year-old boy’s racial slurs against Chapman, without considering whether OLC
had constructive knowledge of that harassment. As we have emphasized, “an employer
cannot avoid Title VII liability for [third-party] harassment by adopting a ‘see no evil, hear
no evil’ strategy.” See Freeman, 750 F.3d at 423 (alteration in original) (quoting Ocheltree
v. Scollon Prods., Inc., 335 F.3d 325, 334 (4th Cir. 2003) (en banc)). Thus, “[k]nowledge
of harassment can be imputed to an employer if a reasonable person, intent on complying
with Title VII, would have known about the harassment.” See Ocheltree, 335 F.3d at 334
(alteration and internal quotation marks omitted). “Under this rule an employer may be
charged with constructive knowledge of [third-party] harassment when it fails to provide
reasonable procedures for victims to register complaints.” Id.
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Here, the record indicates that OLC failed to provide reasonable procedures for
complaints of workplace harassment. OLC has produced no evidence that it had any
harassment reporting policy in July and August 2018, when the three n-word incidents
occurred. Moreover, Arlene Smith has related that although OLC had some sort of
employee handbook during Chapman’s employment, there was only one copy and that
copy was kept at the assisted living facility’s front desk where Chapman may never have
seen it. In these circumstances, a reasonable jury could charge OLC with constructive
knowledge of all three n-word incidents.
(2)
On the issue of OLC’s actual knowledge of the July 2018 n-word incident, the
district court rejected Chapman’s contention that she informed OLC of the incident by
reporting it to Patricia Warner, who Chapman said she understood to be her supervisor in
the assisted living facility’s kitchen. We have recognized that a reasonable jury could find
that an employer had notice of harassment where the victim complained to her supervisor.
See EEOC v. Sunbelt Rentals, Inc., 521 F.3d 306, 319 (4th Cir. 2008).
Nonetheless, the district court disregarded Chapman’s evidence of her report to
Warner for being inconsistent with the statement in her EEOC charge that in response to
the July 2018 n-word incident, “I told [the boy] to stop, but I did not report it.” See J.A.
100. In other words, the court construed the EEOC charge to mean that Chapman did not
report the incident to anyone. We see a feasible and more generous interpretation of the
EEOC charge: that Chapman meant she did not report the July 2018 n-word incident to
Arlene, Michael, or Steve Smith. Such an interpretation is consistent with the evidence
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herein that Arlene and Michael were absent from the assisted living facility at the relevant
time, and that Chapman opted to report the incident to Warner as an intermediary rather
than to Steve directly because she “figured it probably would sound better coming from,
you know, another [supervisor].” Id. at 70. The competing interpretations of the EEOC
charge present a credibility determination for a jury, not a reason to refuse to consider
Chapman’s evidence of her report to Warner.
Additionally, the district court concluded that any report to Warner could not serve
as notice to OLC of the July 2018 n-word incident because Warner does not qualify as a
“supervisor” as that term was defined by the Supreme Court in Vance. See 570 U.S. at 431
(describing a “supervisor” as an employee empowered to hire, fire, or take other tangible
employment actions). Although the district court suggested that the Vance definition
extends to all discrimination claims, the Supreme Court actually devised it for the limited
purpose of imposing vicarious liability against an employer for harassment perpetrated by
a supervisor. See id. at 423 (explaining that the Court was deciding the open question of
“who qualifies as a ‘supervisor’ in a case in which an employee asserts a Title VII claim
for workplace harassment”).
Accordingly, the relevant question is not whether Warner qualifies as a “supervisor”
under Vance. Rather, the proper question is whether Warner’s position at OLC —
whatever it is labelled — would allow a reasonable jury to find that OLC knew or should
have known of the July 2018 n-word incident as a result of Chapman’s report of that
incident to Warner. See, e.g., Freeman, 750 F.3d at 423 (ruling “that a reasonable jury
could find that [the employer] knew or should have known of the harassment” based on
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the victim’s evidence that her supervisor “knew of all three of the most major incidents”);
Howard v. Winter, 446 F.3d 559, 569 (4th Cir. 2006) (concluding “that a reasonable trier
of fact could find that [the victim’s] conversation with [a senior human resources official
who did not supervise the victim] was sufficient to place the [employer] on notice of [the
harasser’s] behavior”). That question is yet unanswered.
(3)
Regarding OLC’s actual knowledge of the subsequent harassment, the district court
determined that Steve Smith was immediately alerted and appropriately responded to the
first August 2018 n-word incident, and that Chapman’s abrupt resignation deprived OLC
of an opportunity to learn of and deal with the second August 2018 n-word incident. In
thereby relieving OLC of liability, the court relied on our precedent recognizing that “Title
VII requires only that the employer take steps reasonably likely to stop the harassment.”
See Xerxes Corp., 639 F.3d at 674 (internal quotation marks omitted). Under that
precedent, “it is possible that an action that proves to be ineffective in stopping the
harassment may nevertheless be found reasonably calculated to prevent future harassment
and therefore adequate as a matter of law.” Id. at 670 (alteration and internal quotation
marks omitted).
Unlike the district court, we discern a genuine dispute of fact as to whether Steve
Smith’s response to the first August 2018 n-word incident — spanking his young son,
dragging the boy to the assisted living facility’s kitchen to apologize to Chapman, and then
abruptly leaving the boy crying and recalcitrant with Chapman and Warner, without even
offering his own apology — was reasonably calculated to prevent further harassment. That
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is, “[a] reasonable trier of fact could conclude that leaving a distressed six-year-old child,
who has just been making racist comments, alone in the workplace with the victim and
target of those comments certainly is not action ‘reasonably calculated’ to stop the
harassment or to repair the working environment.” See Br. of Appellant 23. To be sure,
we have found a jury issue where an employer’s response to reports of workplace
harassment was far more robust. See, e.g., EEOC v. Cent. Wholesalers, Inc., 573 F.3d 167,
177 (4th Cir. 2009) (concluding that although the employer “took a number of steps” to
curb alleged harassment, including conducting investigations, holding meetings with the
victim and her harassers, and having an anti-discrimination policy in place, its “response
was not without its apparent shortcomings”).
“Of course,” as we have explained, “the reasonableness of [OLC’s] actions depends,
in part, on the seriousness of the underlying conduct.” See Pryor v. United Air Lines, Inc.,
791 F.3d 488, 498 (4th Cir. 2015). Furthermore, it is significant — though not dispositive
of the adequacy of Steve Smith’s response — that the response proved ineffective and that
the second August 2018 n-word incident quickly followed the first. Id. at 499 (recognizing
that “the effectiveness of an employer’s actions remains a factor in evaluating the
reasonableness of the response”).
Finally, a jury could also be swayed by this point made by Chapman: that Steve
Smith’s “response would have been inadequate even if the child had apologized.” See Br.
of Appellant 24. As Chapman has cogently asserted,
[s]urely an employee in Ms. Chapman’s position is owed more from her
employer than a coerced apology delivered by a six year old child. An
apology would have left two questions entirely unaddressed: first, how the
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child developed these racial attitudes and the shockingly specific view that
Ms. Chapman was a “lazy ass black n*****” who “didn’t come to work,”
and second, whether the child would remain a constant presence in the
workplace. A serious and appropriate response to an incident of this severity
would have required a real reckoning with how it happened, how OLC would
prevent it from recurring, and how Ms. Chapman’s confidence in the
integrity of her workplace and her primary supervisor could be restored.
Id. at 24-25 (quoting J.A. 67).
***
At bottom, in assessing the fourth element of Chapman’s hostile work environment
claim, a reasonable jury could find that OLC had either or both constructive and actual
knowledge of the three n-word incidents and that its response was insufficient. We
therefore vacate the district court’s award of summary judgment on the hostile work
environment claim and remand for further proceedings. 6
B.
We next address Chapman’s constructive discharge claim, still considering only the
three n-word incidents. This Court’s standard for constructive discharge once required a
showing that the “employer deliberately ma[de] the working conditions intolerable in an
effort to induce the employee to quit.” See Honor v. Booz-Allen & Hamilton, Inc., 383
F.3d 180, 186 (4th Cir. 2004) (internal quotation marks omitted). Under that standard, the
plaintiff had to “allege and prove two elements: (1) the deliberateness of [the employer’s]
6
On remand, the district court may consider an alternative theory of liability
advanced by Chapman with respect to her hostile work environment claim: “that OLC is
vicariously liable because the harassment that Ms. Chapman experienced was aided by
OLC’s agency relationship with [Steve Smith].” See Br. of Appellant 29. We do not
unnecessarily consider that theory today.
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actions, motivated by racial bias, and (2) the objective intolerability of the working
conditions.” Id. at 187.
Critically, however, “as a result of intervening Supreme Court case law,
‘deliberateness’ is no longer a component of a constructive discharge claim.” See EEOC
v. Consol Energy, Inc., 860 F.3d 131, 144 (4th Cir. 2017) (citing Green v. Brennan, 578
U.S. 547 (2016)). That is, “[t]he Supreme Court now has clearly articulated the standard
for constructive discharge, requiring objective ‘intolerability’ — ‘circumstances of
discrimination so intolerable that a reasonable person would resign’ — but not
‘deliberateness,’ or a subjective intent to force a resignation.” Id. (quoting Green, 578 U.S.
at 560).
Here, the district court erroneously applied the old standard and rejected Chapman’s
constructive discharge claim for failure to “present sufficient evidence to create a question
of fact as to whether OLC deliberately attempted to induce her to resign.” See Order 12-
13. Consequently, we vacate the court’s award of summary judgment to OLC on the
constructive discharge claim and remand for a reassessment of that claim under the proper
standard, which does not require a showing of “deliberateness.” In so doing, we decline
OLC’s request to affirm the summary judgment award on the alternative ground — not yet
passed on by the district court — that Chapman has failed to establish “intolerability.”
C.
We lastly confront Chapman’s evidence of racial harassment and other
discrimination allegedly perpetrated against her during her first period of employment with
OLC, from 2004 to 2015. That evidence includes the previously-defined badge incident,
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condo comment, birthday incident, and lack-of-advancement issue. Although the
Amended Complaint premises Chapman’s hostile work environment and constructive
discharge claims on both the three n-word incidents and the 2004-2015 evidence, the
district court excluded the 2004-2015 evidence from its analysis of those claims. Instead,
the court treated the 2004-2015 evidence — particularly the badge incident and the birthday
incident — as being the basis for separate and additional hostile work environment claims
under Title VII and § 1981. See Order 13-14.
From there, the district court ruled that Chapman could not pursue a Title VII claim
premised on the badge or birthday incident because she had not mentioned those incidents
or even her earlier period of employment in her EEOC charge. See Order 14-15. The court
relied on our decisions including Chacko v. Patuxent Institution, wherein we recognized
that “[i]f the claims raised under Title VII exceed the scope of the EEOC charge and any
charges that would naturally have arisen from an investigation thereof, they are
procedurally barred.” See 429 F.3d 505, 509 (4th Cir. 2005) (internal quotation marks
omitted).
The district court further ruled that any § 1981 claim based on the badge or birthday
incident was barred under the applicable four-year statute of limitations. See Order 15; see
also Guessous v. Fairview Prop. Invs., LLC, 828 F.3d 208, 223 (4th Cir. 2016) (“Hostile
work environment claims under § 1981 are subject to a four year limitation period.”). The
court recognized that “hostile work environment claims under Title VII [and Section 1981]
are also subject to the ‘continuing violation’ theory for establishing limitations periods,”
see Order 15 (alteration in original) (quoting Guessous, 828 F.3d at 223), but deemed that
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of no help to Chapman because the badge and birthday incidents “were in an entirely
different period of employment and are, therefore, not part of the same actionable hostile
work environment,” id. (internal quotation marks omitted).
As Chapman emphasizes in this appeal, whether or not the district court properly
disallowed separate and additional hostile work environment claims premised only on the
2004-2015 evidence, the court erred in excluding any consideration of the 2004-2015
evidence as part of the hostile work environment and constructive discharge claims
involving the three n-word incidents that occurred in 2018. And that consideration does
not depend on the “continuing violation” theory.
Rather, under Supreme Court precedent, Chapman is entitled to “us[e] the prior acts
as background evidence in support of [her] timely claim[s].” See Nat’l R.R. Passenger
Corp. v. Morgan, 536 U.S. 101, 113 (2002). Thus, notwithstanding the district court’s
rulings, the trier of fact “would still be entitled to consider [the 2004-2015 evidence] to
assess witness credibility and to decide other issues, such as whether OLC had notice of
the environment and whether it would be reasonable to expect Ms. Chapman to pursue
further complaints for the 2018 incidents.” See Br. of Appellant 21. For example, the jury
could conclude that “a reasonable person in Chapman’s position could have perceived past
discriminatory incidents involving the child’s grandparents and parents as confirmation
that challenging the [three n-word incidents] could lead to unwelcome consequences.” See
EEOC Amicus Br. 17. The jury also “could conclude that viewing the child’s conduct
through the lens of his family members’ prior actions rendered the [three n-word] incidents
more severe.” Id.
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In these circumstances, due consideration must be given on remand to the racial
harassment and other discrimination allegedly perpetrated against Chapman during her
earlier period of employment. At minimum, it is relevant background evidence in support
of the hostile work environment and constructive discharge claims premised on the three
n-word incidents.
IV.
Pursuant to the foregoing, we vacate the judgment of the district court and remand
for such other and further proceedings as may be appropriate.
VACATED AND REMANDED
26