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Kimberly DAHMS vs.
COGNEX CORPORATION & others. [FN1]No. SJC-10348.
May 5, 2009. - October 15, 2009.
Employment, Sexual
harassment.
Evidence,
Settlement offer, Judicial discretion, Relevancy and
materiality, Hearsay, State of mind.
Practice, Civil,
Instructions to jury.
CIVIL ACTION commenced in the
Superior Court Department on June 24, 1999.
The case was tried before
Stephen E. Neel, J.
The Supreme Judicial Court on its own initiative transferred
the case from the Appeals Court.
Wendy H. Sibbison for
the plaintiff.
Joan A.
Lukey (
Elizabeth E.
Feeherry with her) for Cognex Corporation & another.
Justine H. Brousseau
for John J. Rogers, Jr.
Rebecca G. Pontikes, Tara M. Swartz, & Jonathan J. Margolis,
for Massachusetts Chapter of the National Employment Lawyers
Association, amicus curiae, submitted a brief.
Catherine C. Ziehl & Beverly I.
Ward, for Massachusetts Commission Against
Discrimination, amicus curiae, submitted a brief.
Present: Marshall, C.J., Ireland, Spina, Cowin, Cordy, & Gants,
JJ.
CORDY, J.
Kimberly Dahms,
an employee of Cognex Corporation (Cognex), filed a civil
complaint alleging that John J. Rogers, an officer of Cognex,
subjected her to "quid pro quo" sexual harassment over the
course of several years in violation of G.L. c. 151B, § 4(16A) [FN2];
Cognex and Robert J. Shillman, the chief executive officer of
Cognex, aided and abetted Rogers's harassment by failing
promptly to investigate his conduct and take corrective measures
to stop it; Rogers and Shillman created a hostile work
environment in violation of G.L. c. 151B, § 4(16A); and all
three defendants wrongfully retaliated against her in violation
of G.L. c. 151B, § 4(4), because she reported being sexually
harassed and filed a charge with the Massachusetts Commission
Against Discrimination (MCAD). She also claimed that Rogers was
liable for assault, battery, and intentional infliction of
emotional distress. The trial commenced on October 1, 2003, and
on November 10, the jury returned a verdict for the defendants
on all counts. Dahms appealed, arguing that the judge erred in
allowing certain evidence to be introduced, excluding certain
other evidence, and in instructing the jury on hostile work
environment sexual harassment. We transferred the case from the
Appeals Court on our own motion. [FN3] We affirm.
1.
The
trial. The following evidence was introduced at trial. In
1981, Shillman cofounded Cognex, a company that designs and
manufactures computer systems that can "see" their surroundings.
Dahms, who held a bachelor of science degree in computer
engineering, was hired by Cognex in 1990 and by 1996 had become
its director of customer satisfaction. In her position at Cognex,
Dahms was subject to a noncompete agreement. Dahms reported to
Patrick Alias, the executive vice-president of sales and
marketing at Cognex, who reported to Shillman. Rogers, a
certified public accountant, joined Cognex in 1991 and, at
different times held the titles of vice-president of finance and
administration, chief financial officer, and treasurer.
In 1996, Rogers moved to the town where Dahms lived, and the two
sometimes traveled to work together. Dahms testified that she
and Rogers began discussing the failure of one of his recent
romantic relationships, and that Rogers was "heart-broken."
Rogers testified that they also discussed Dahms's boy friend at
that time, a Cognex engineer named Michael Cook, and that from
the summer of 1996 until the summer of 1997 they frequently
discussed their personal lives and relationships.
Much of
the trial focused on the broadening of the relationship between
Rogers and Dahms in 1996 and 1997. Dahms testified that she and
Rogers "became
friendly" and sometimes saw
each other outside of work. Marilyn Matz, who at the time of
trial was a senior vice-president in charge of engineering at
Cognex, testified that Dahms and Rogers appeared to be friends,
and that they "chatted" and "danced at parties." Jo Ann Woodyard,
vice-president of corporate employee services at Cognex
(including human resources and corporate communications),
testified that Dahms "obviously had a friendship with [Rogers],"
and that during the first half of 1997, she increasingly saw
Dahms socialize with Rogers at company events, at times placing
a "hand on the [other's] arm" and frequently socializing in
hallways and in meetings. She said Dahms appeared "happy" and
"friendly." She also reported often seeing Dahms in Rogers's
office with the door closed.
Dahms testified that Rogers
asked her to accompany him to his high school reunion and that
this made her uncomfortable. She also testified that he asked to
spend a weekend with her in her rented ski house; Rogers denied
this. Dahms further testified that she never had any romantic
interest in Rogers; Rogers testified that she initiated a first
kiss, and that she "had very strong feelings" for him.
As
of January, 1997, Rogers was dating a woman whom he later
married. By the spring, 1997, Dahms was living with Cook, whom
she later married. Around that
time, Dahms
began receiving voicemails from Rogers, which she recorded and
kept; he described her as beautiful, said that he dreamed of
her, and said that he wanted to kiss her. Rogers testified that
Dahms left him voicemails with a similar tone, but that he did
not have any reason to record them. Dahms denied that she had
left such voicemails for Rogers.
In March, 1997, Dahms
and Rogers took a business trip to Japan. She testified that at
dinner one night, he told her that he would have a role in her
next promotion. He had a lot to drink that night, she said, and
he later tried to push open the door to her hotel room; she shut
the door and locked it, and thirty minutes later he returned and
pounded on the door. Dahms was upset by this and telephoned a
friend, Denise Donovan, in the United States, to talk about it.
Rogers denied Dahms's version of events, testifying that she
invited him to her room that night, and that he left the room
without incident.
Finally, Dahms and Rogers testified
that they went on a rafting trip in June, 1997, together with
their future spouses. Dahms said that the trip was uneventful,
except that Rogers once stated that he was "the guy who decided
how much money [Cook] and [Dahms] made." Rogers said that Dahms
was excited about the trip, and that he and Dahms talked about
how they might be better suited for each other than the people
they were dating at the time because they both
enjoyed outdoor activities.
After the rafting trip,
Dahms testified, she ended all nonwork contact with Rogers. Soon
thereafter, Rogers registered complaints about Dahms to her
direct supervisor, Alias, on her use of a company credit card,
her travel expenses, and her criticism concerning an
unsuccessful Cognex project. Dahms told Alias in August, 1997,
that such criticism might not be objective because she had told
Rogers that she "didn't want to date him." [FN4]
In
September, 1997, Dahms approached Shillman to discuss Rogers's
conduct, and played the voicemails for him. [FN5] Shillman was
"outraged" and "distraught" that "Rogers had gotten involved
with a female at Cognex against [his] specific orders." [FN6] He
began pacing around his office, and told Dahms that "this would
be the last time that Mr. Rogers would do that." He told Dahms
that he would fire Rogers if she wished; she initially did not
respond, but later told Shillman that she did not want him to
fire Rogers.
|
[FN7] He asked Dahms to write a summary of Rogers's
actions, and to deliver to him copies of the tape
recordings of the voicemails. Approximately one month
later, Dahms sent Shillman the tapes and a two-page
memorandum highlighting Rogers's conduct. |
After the meeting with Dahms, Shillman began
an investigation into Rogers's conduct, and reminded Rogers that
he was prohibited from engaging in any type of romantic
relationship with a Cognex employee. He did not inform Rogers of
Dahms's complaint because she had asked him to keep the report
confidential. Rogers lied to Shillman, saying that he had not
"asked anybody out at Cognex." Shillman testified that he
believed Rogers had "misbehaved," but struggled over the proper
response in light of Dahms's request that Rogers not be fired.
Shillman then approached Woodyard for advice; she surprised
him by saying he should "take a step back" before acting. She
told him that Dahms and Rogers "had a very close relationship,"
and had had dinners and dates together. He testified that in
light of this information (which he was told was "company
knowledge"), he was "confused why [Dahms] would make these
claims." He began asking Cognex employees about their
relationship, and learned that Dahms had cooked food for Rogers;
that they went on skiing, rafting, and other trips together;
that they had gone on double-dates together; and that they
visited each others' homes. He testified that at this point,
although he was still inclined to fire Rogers for becoming
involved with a Cognex employee, he had concluded that Rogers's
"voice-mails were wanted, not unwanted" and that Dahms was
"making a false claim" about the harassment. He continued to
weigh his response to Rogers's behavior, and checked in with
Dahms approximately five times in the months
following the receipt of her memorandum to see if Rogers was
bothering her in any way; she said he was not. There were no new
developments regarding Dahms's harassment claims, and Shillman
testified that by 1998 he "was comfortable that the matter of
John Rogers and [Dahms] was over." [FN8]
On May 13, 1998,
Cognex held a meeting with an important customer. The customer
had reported serious problems with some Cognex products, and
requested the meeting to discuss how Cognex would solve them.
During the meeting, several Cognex employees gave presentations
outlining and discussing the project from various points of
view. Shillman testified that when Dahms stood to give her own
presentation, she stated that the problems were caused by Matz,
who was in the room. This, Shillman testified, angered him, and
that it was "frankly the worst thing that can happen in front of
a customer." [FN9] He pulled Dahms aside in the parking lot as
they were leaving the meeting, and told her that he was
disappointed that she would "blame other people in the company
in front of a customer." In response, she said, "Bob, I want you
to pay my legal fees," referring to her having consulted with a
lawyer in the summer of 1997 about a possible harassment claim
arising from Rogers's conduct. He said that he would consider
paying them if she submitted receipts, but that her legal claim
was not connected to her behavior in the meeting with
the customer. [FN10] One month later, she
submitted legal bills totaling $4,500. Shillman then called
Dahms to a meeting, and offered her $5,000 and 10,000 shares of
Cognex stock if she would agree to release the company and its
officers and employees from any claims of harassment she might
have arising out of Rogers's conduct. She rejected the offer.
Dahms filed a complaint with the MCAD on August 7, 1998. In
addition to sexual harassment claims against Rogers, the
complaint alleged that Cognex had created a sexually hostile
work environment, and that Shillman (personally) had both
sexually harassed Dahms and had created a hostile work
environment. [FN11] Shillman testified that he was shocked to be
named personally in the MCAD complaint, that he had never
sexually harassed anyone, and that he knew the claims against
him were false. [FN12] At that point, he said, he began
gathering evidence to defend himself. He sent an electronic mail
message (e-mail) to Woodyard asking her for copies of
photographs and videotapes of Dahms, descriptions of any
complaints employees had made about Dahms, and a "list of
rumors/things that you've heard about [Dahms] ... with some
information about how we can track these rumors down." He
testified that he sought to demonstrate that "she enjoyed being
at the company," and that "she was an active participant and
enjoyed the culture of the company," which, as others described
it, was based on a "work hard, play hard" team building
philosophy.
Over the next few
months, Dahms's attorney and the defendants sent several letters
to each other in an attempt to negotiate a settlement of the
MCAD claim. [FN13] On August 21, 1998, Dahms's attorney outlined
the terms that Dahms would accept in settlement, and also wrote
that "it is our position that a court would not be likely to
enforce a non-compete agreement given the egregious behavior of
the company." On September 15, Dahms's attorney wrote that "Ms.
Dahms will not agree to abide by the non-compete agreement,
which would preclude her from finding any meaningful employment
for the next two years. As previously stated to you, we believe
Cognex has very little likelihood of enforcing the
agreement...." On October 14, Dahms's attorney sent a new
settlement offer to counsel for Cognex, writing that, "[w]ith
regard to the suggestion of Ms. Dahms remaining with Cognex,
that is not an option." None of these letters was introduced in
evidence. [FN14]
Shillman then wrote a letter to Dahms on
October 27, 1998, stating that in an October 7 meeting and in
the previous letters from "your attorney," Dahms had made
"unequivocal statements that [she] would not remain at Cognex
under any circumstances and that it simply was not open for
discussion," and had "expressed insistence that [she] intend[ed]
not to be bound by the non-compete provisions" that she signed
when joining the company. As a consequence, he
wrote, while Dahms remained an employee of Cognex, her
access would be restricted, including access to the physical
facility, proprietary information, and strategic planning. She
would be required to leave Cognex by 6:30 P.M. each day and to
leave meetings when strategic discussions began, and her access
to computer files would be limited to those deemed necessary for
her work.
|
[FN15] Shillman testified that the restrictions were
necessary only because Dahms had stated an intention to
leave the company and compete with it, and that he
personally informed Dahms that the restrictions would be
lifted "if she would reaffirm her noncompete
commitment." [FN16] |
On
June 24, 1999, Dahms filed the present civil complaint, and
alleged that these restrictions (among other things) constituted
retaliation for the filing of her MCAD complaint in August,
1998. Over the ensuing months, Shillman testified that Dahms
spent a large portion of each day at Cognex working on her legal
case, and that she was "inundat[ing]" coworkers with e-mails and
voicemails about her claims. [FN17] Alias testified that Dahms
came to work less frequently, and was not working well with her
Cognex peers. She was terminated on June 6, 2000; Alias
testified that he made the decision to terminate her because he
"wasn't able to make her work."
2.
Discussion. On appeal,
Dahms argues that the judge committed five errors
that alone or in combination require a new
trial: (1) allowing the defendants to introduce in evidence
references to settlement negotiations; (2) admitting evidence of
Dahms's dress, speech, and conduct, which she contends was
inadmissible "character and propensity evidence"; (3) excluding
Denise Donovan's testimony about the substance of Dahms's
telephone call to her from Japan; (4) excluding evidence of the
general release date of a movie, a matter, Dahms contends, was
relevant to Rogers's credibility; and (5) instructing the jury
to enter a judgment for the defendants on the hostile work
environment claim if Dahms was "a willing participant in sexual
behavior in her workplace."
a.
Evidence referring to
settlement negotiations. Dahms argues that the judge
improperly allowed in evidence Shillman's October 27, 1998,
letter and his related testimony on Dahms's intention to leave
and compete with the company, thereby improperly presenting the
contents of a settlement negotiation to the jury. "We do not
disturb a judge's decision to admit evidence absent an abuse of
discretion or other legal error."
Zucco v. Kane, 439 Mass.
503, 507 (2003).
Typically, offers of settlement are
inadmissible to prove or disprove a defendant's liability.
Id. at 509. This rule
attempts "to encourage settlements by
limiting the collateral consequences of a decision to
compromise." Id. There
are, however, exceptions to that rule. First, factual statements
made during the course of settlement negotiations are
admissible. See M.S. Brodin & M. Avery, Massachusetts Evidence §
4.6, at 183 (8th ed.2007), and cases cited. Second, evidence
regarding the settlement may be admissible if it "is relevant
for some other purpose.... There may be situations ... in which
evidence of a settlement, or the amount of a settlement, will
bear on some issue in the case other than damages, and an
automatic rule of exclusion should not be applied."
Morea v. Cosco, Inc.,
422 Mass. 601, 603 (1996).
The evidence admitted in this
case was relevant for a purpose other than liability or damages
on the MCAD claim about which the negotiations related. The
evidence was probative of whether the work restrictions imposed
by Shillman subsequent to the filing of that claim were imposed
for a nonretaliatory purpose. Specifically, the statements made
in settlement negotiation correspondence were properly admitted
for the purpose of demonstrating Shillman's state of mind at the
time he imposed the work restrictions on Dahms.
The judge
carefully weighed the benefits and potential prejudice of this
evidence. In discussions with Dahms's counsel, the judge agreed
that the evidence (devoid of the settlement
context) might appear to show an unequivocal threat by Dahms to
leave and compete with the company. He attempted to lessen any
prejudicial impact of that evidence, without revealing the
settlement negotiations themselves, by instructing the jury
(during Shillman's testimony) "as a matter of law that those
statements are not unconditional statements that [Dahms]
intended, absolutely intended not to ... comply with the
noncompete provision. So, to the extent that a layperson reading
the letters might conclude otherwise ... that conclusion would
be mistaken." Dahms accepted this formulation by the judge and
made no objection to it.
In context, neither the judge's
rulings admitting the evidence nor his subsequent instruction
was erroneous.
b.
Evidence of Dahms's clothing, speech, and conduct. Before
trial, Dahms filed a motion "to exclude alleged character
evidence of plaintiff's sexual behavior, general sexual
predisposition, and 'wild' nature." The defendants opposed that
motion, arguing that evidence "regarding Ms. Dahms's dress,
speech, conduct and behavior is probative of her claim that the
'work hard, play hard' culture subjected her to an unwelcome
(i.e., hostile) work environment by all of the defendants." The
judge's failure to rule on the motion was effectively a denial.
Dahms argues on appeal that her motion
should have been allowed, and that the judge improperly allowed
the introduction of evidence regarding her clothing, speech, and
conduct which, she contends, was irrelevant "character and
propensity evidence" and unfairly prejudiced the jury against
her.
At trial, Dahms's counsel was the first to mention
evidence of this type. In his opening statement, her attorney
said that Shillman once told Dahms, "You're partially at fault
for this. You dress provocatively. You turn men on. You're
responsible for Mr. Rogers' behavior." [FN18] Counsel then
called Shillman as the first witness, and specifically raised
the issue of Dahms's clothing in questions to him, asking him
several times whether he had told Dahms "that her appearance and
work attire were provocative and seductive."
|
[FN19] Her attorney also introduced five photographs of
Dahms at Halloween parties, stating, "These are the
costumes you complained were too provocative or
seductive, right?" [FN20] Finally, Dahms's attorney
introduced photographs of Dahms at other Cognex
functions; several photographs of other Cognex employees
wearing Halloween costumes; and a photograph of Shillman
wearing a dress at a Cognex event. |
On
cross-examination, Shillman explained that in his view Dahms had
worn inappropriately revealing clothing in
a large meeting with Cognex employees. He also testified that
she made a crude joke at a Cognex party, which was recorded on
videotape and introduced in evidence; and told a sexual story to
coworkers, who Shillman later tried to interview in preparing to
defend against the hostile work environment claim. Rogers
subsequently testified about several statements Dahms made to
him, including statements about her sexual preferences; a story
she told him about why she was late for skiing; and a story
relating to the movie, "There's Something About Mary." He
testified that the bluntness of her language surprised him at
first, but later became a mutual joke. Rogers also testified
that in Japan, he told Dahms that her career would advance more
quickly if she would "tone down her dress a little bit."
Finally, Matz and Woodyard testified that Dahms wore
inappropriate and revealing clothing at work up until the time
she filed the MCAD complaint. [FN21]
The MCAD has
explained: "In determining whether a[c]omplainant has
established that an environment is hostile or abusive, a
totality of the circumstances must be considered." [FN22]
Canniff v. Power Print, Inc.,
22 M.D.L.R. 339, 340 (2000). By claiming that she had been
unwillingly subjected to such an environment, Dahms made
relevant her own behavior in the workplace and with coworkers.
However, evidence of a plaintiff's dress and conduct is not
relevant per se; judges must take care to ensure that evidence
of that nature is allowed only when its
probative value outweighs the prejudicial impact to the
plaintiff.
The judge did not abuse his discretion in
admitting this evidence. The evidence of Dahms's language,
apparel, and conduct, as described by Shillman, Rogers,
Woodyard, and Matz, was probative of whether she was
subjectively offended by her work environment or by Rogers's
conduct. See Canniff v. Power
Point, Inc., supra. It concerned behavior in the
workplace and at company events, or interactions with the
defendants by whose conduct she claims to have been harassed. It
was not admitted (nor admissible) as character evidence or to
paint Dahms as a "loose" woman, predisposed to welcome any
advances. [FN23]
Some evidence of Dahms's apparel was
relevant for another purpose: to show Shillman's state of mind
when he sent the e-mail to Woodyard asking for photographs and
videotapes of Dahms taken at company events. Dahms alleged that
this e-mail was part of "Cognex's and Shillman's brutal campaign
of retaliation and harassment." Shillman wrote the e-mail after
Dahms filed her MCAD complaint alleging that he had sexually
harassed her and had created a hostile environment at the
company. In these circumstances, Shillman was properly permitted
to explain that he believed the photographs would show that
Dahms was an "active participant in the
environment at Cognex" (including the company parties), and that
her claims of a hostile work environment were therefore "totally
false."
Where her attorney was the first to elicit
testimony about Dahms's clothing, and introduced photographs of
Dahms, Shillman, and Cognex employees dressed in party costumes,
the judge did not abuse his discretion in concluding that the
defendants' evidence on this subject also should be admitted.
Moreover, the judge appropriately engaged in a constant and
careful weighing of probative value versus potential prejudice
of evidence regarding the plaintiff's dress, speech, and conduct
throughout the trial.
c.
The telephone call from Japan. Dahms argues that the
judge improperly excluded Denise Donovan's testimony about the
substance of Dahms's telephone call to her from Japan. Hearsay
"is generally inadmissible unless it falls within an exception
to the hearsay rule."
Commonwealth v. Rice, 441 Mass. 291, 305 (2004). On
appeal, Dahms argues that the statements in the telephone call
should have been admitted under the "state of mind" exception to
that rule.
Dahms testified that after Rogers tried to
push the door to her hotel room open and
"was pounding" on the door, she "called my girlfriend ...
in the United States and told her what had just happened." When
Rogers took the stand, he denied pushing or banging on the door.
Dahms's counsel then called Donovan to rebut Rogers's testimony.
Donovan testified that she received a telephone call from Dahms
from Japan on the night in question. When she was asked to
describe Dahms's "demeanor" during the call, the judge permitted
her to testify (over defense counsel's objection) that Dahms
"was upset." Defense counsel then objected to any further
questions concerning what Dahms told Donovan about why she was
upset. At sidebar, Dahms's counsel argued that the conversation
fell under either the spontaneous utterance or state of mind
exceptions to the hearsay rule.
The judge first concluded
that the telephone statements made by Dahms were not spontaneous
utterances. Dahms does not contest this ruling on appeal, and so
we do not address it. Next, he rejected the state of mind
exception as a basis for admitting the substance of the
conversation. He reasoned that Dahms was sufficiently able to
demonstrate her state of mind through Donovan's testimony that
she sounded "upset" on the telephone, and ruled that Dahms's
counsel could pursue further that subject ("how she said it, her
tone of voice, if she was crying"). [FN24] Finally, the judge
noted that the testimony from Donovan that Dahms called her was,
standing alone, relevant to rehabilitating Dahms in
the face of earlier cross-examination
(based on Dahms's deposition testimony) suggesting that Dahms
was not being truthful about having made the call, and had gone
directly to bed after Rogers left.
It was within the
discretion of the judge to admit Donovan's testimony about the
statements made by Dahms during the telephone call. "The state
of mind exception to the hearsay rule allows the admission of
extrajudicial statements to show the state of mind of the
declarant if it is relevant to a material issue in the case."
Commonwealth v. Brooks,
422 Mass. 574, 581 (1996). Dahms's statements were likely
relevant to whether she was subjectively offended by Rogers's
alleged advances. However, "[i]n assessing whether a judge has
abused his discretion, 'we do not simply substitute our judgment
for that of the judge, rather, we ask whether the decision in
question rest[s] on whimsy, caprice, or arbitrary or
idiosyncratic notions.' "
Massachusetts Ass'n of Minority Law Enforcement Officers v.
Abban, 434 Mass. 256, 266 (2001), quoting
Boulter-Hedley v. Boulter,
429 Mass. 808, 811 (1999). See
Davis v. Boston Elev. Ry., 235 Mass. 482, 502 (1920)
(abuse of discretion defined as view or action "that no
conscientious judge, acting intelligently, could honestly have
taken"). The judge's ruling did not rise to the level of an
abuse of discretion where he permitted Donovan to testify that
Dahms contacted her and was upset on the telephone.
d.
Evidence of movie's general release date. Rogers was
called to the stand by Dahms and cross-examined by defense
counsel. During that cross-examination, Rogers testified to a
number of graphic stories Dahms had told him during a skiing
trip he took with Dahms in 1997 regarding sexual activity. He
also testified that, "I think it was" on this ski trip that
Dahms told him an off-color story relating to the movie "There's
Something About Mary." Dahms's attorney attempted to elicit
testimony on redirect examination that the movie was not
released until 1998, in an effort to impeach his credibility.
Rogers testified that he did not know when the movie was
released. Shortly after Rogers's testimony was completed,
Dahms's attorney rested without reserving any right to introduce
further evidence about the movie.
Dahms's attorney later
asked the judge to take judicial notice of the movie's release
date, and presented four movie "almanacs" for the judge to read.
The judge denied the request, reasoning that the information did
not fall into a category for which judicial notice was
appropriate. No evidence concerning the movie was introduced
during the defense case. However, near the conclusion, Dahms's
attorney asked to introduce "rebuttal testimony" to address the
date of the movie. The judge denied the request.
The judge acted within his discretion. As
the judge stated in his ruling, quoting
Drake v. Goodman, 386
Mass. 88, 94 (1982), "a party would be well-advised to obtain
the judge's ruling on the matter of his right to present a
rebuttal witness before resting his case-in-chief." Here,
Dahms's attorney failed to propose a proper method for
introducing this evidence prior to resting.
e.
Jury instruction on hostile
work environment. Dahms contends that the judge gave an
erroneous instruction on the claim that Rogers and Shillman
created a hostile work environment in violation of G.L. c. 151B,
§ 4(16A).
For purposes of this claim, the relevant
statute defines sexual harassment as "sexual advances, requests
for sexual favors, and other verbal or physical conduct of a
sexual nature when ... such advances, requests or conduct have
the purpose or effect of unreasonably interfering with an
individual's work performance by creating an intimidating,
hostile, humiliating or sexually offensive work environment."
G.L. c. 151B, § 1(18). To prevail, Dahms was required to show
that the "conduct alleged was sufficiently severe and pervasive
to interfere with a reasonable person's work performance,"
Muzzy v. Cahillane Motors,
Inc., 434 Mass. 409, 411 (2001), and that she found the
conduct "subjectively offensive."
Id. at 412 n. 2, quoting
Messina v.
Araserve,
Inc., 906 F.Supp. 34, 36 (D.Mass.1995).
The judge
gave a lengthy instruction on this claim, including several
paragraphs on its subjective element. Dahms challenges a portion
of one sentence in the instruction:
"If
you find that Ms. Dahms was a willing participant in sexual
behavior in her workplace, or that she willingly
participated with Mr. Rogers in sexual banter or discussions of
a sexual nature, or that she did not consider his conduct
offensive to her at the time it was occurring,
then she has not proven this
subjective element of her hostile environment sexual harassment
claim " (emphasis added).
Shillman and Cognex had
filed a number of requested jury instructions, including a
request that the judge instruct that "[i]f you determine that
Ms. Dahms was a willing and active participant in the atmosphere
at Cognex ... Ms. Dahms cannot prevail on her hostile work
environment claim." Counsel for Dahms objected to this language
at the charge conference, and the judge agreed to change it to
"a willing and active participant in the
conduct of which she complains,"
(emphasis added), to which Dahms's counsel replied, "That would
be fine." The italicized language, however, did not appear in
the actual instruction. [FN25]
We
agree that, as given, the sentence objected to by Dahms was an
incorrect statement of the law to the extent that it suggested
that a judgment for the defendants would be required if Dahms
was a willing participant in
any sexual behavior in her workplace. While it was proper
for the jury to consider Dahms's behavior within Cognex in
evaluating her hostile workplace environment claim, and evidence
of her willing participation in sexualized behavior in the
workplace was probative of whether she was subjectively offended
by the work environment that she claims the defendants created,
such evidence is not dispositive. The fact finder is not
required to return a verdict for the defendants merely because
the plaintiff participated in sexualized behavior with
third-party coworkers. In
Canniff v. Power Point, Inc., 22 M.D.L.R. 339 (2000), for
example, the MCAD upheld a hearing commissioner's determination
that although an employee took part in sexual banter in the
workplace, she was nonetheless subjectively offended by certain
actions, and subjectively felt that the defendant created a
hostile workplace.
The defendants rely on
Ramsdell v. Western Mass. Bus
Lines, Inc., 415 Mass. 673, 678-679 (1993), for the
proposition that the judge's charge was correct. The
Ramsdell case, however,
does not directly address this issue. In that
case, the plaintiff filed hostile work environment claims
against the company where the plaintiff was employed and her
direct superior. Id. at
673 n. 1. The hearing commissioner found that the plaintiff had
" 'invited' or provoked [the] bawdy exchanges" with her
supervisor that formed the basis of her claim; and for that
reason concluded that she was not subjectively offended by the
behavior she claimed created a hostile workplace.
Id. at 675. This court
affirmed, reasoning that the hearing officer's determination was
based on substantial evidence.
Id. at 677-678. The
Ramsdell case does not support the judge's instruction
that any sexual behavior
in the workplace disqualifies a hostile environment claim
against a particular defendant; it merely reaffirms the settled
rule that a hostile workplace claim fails if the plaintiff was
not subjectively offended by the particular conduct that formed
that basis of the claim. The case does not validate this
instruction.
However, "[a]n error in jury instructions is not grounds for
setting aside a verdict unless the error was prejudicial--that
is, unless the result might have differed absent the error."
Blackstone v. Cashman,
448 Mass. 255, 270 (2007), citing Mass. R. Civ. P. 61, 365 Mass.
829 (1974) and Abramian v.
President & Fellows of Harvard College, 432 Mass. 107,
118-119 (2000). We are persuaded that no prejudice occurred.
During his instruction, the judge
repeatedly pointed the jury's attention toward the particular
conduct alleged against Shillman and Rogers, which formed the
basis of the hostile work environment claims. [FN27] In
addition, the instruction related only to a single claim. Dahms
does not allege error in the judge's instructions on her claims
that Rogers engaged in quid pro quo sexual harassment, that
Cognex and Shillman aided and abetted Rogers in this harassment,
and that the defendants retaliated against Dahms when she
complained. The jury rejected each of these claims, and in doing
so, plainly found Dahms's testimony, which formed the basis of
all of her claims, not to be credible.
Judgment affirmed.
|
FN1. Robert J. Shillman and John J. Rogers, Jr. |
|
FN2. Dahms initially made a similar claim against
Shillman. At trial, she abandoned the claim. See note
12, infra. |
|
FN3. We acknowledge amicus briefs submitted by the
Massachusetts Chapter of the National Employment Lawyers
Association and the Massachusetts Commission Against
Discrimination (MCAD). |
|
FN4. Dahms testified that she subsequently played for
Patrick Alias the voicemail messages that Rogers had
left for her, and that Alias told her that she might
want to "follow-up with [a] lawyer." |
|
FN5. Prior to this meeting, Alias had informed Shillman
that Dahms had complained to him about Rogers, and that
he (Alias) had told Dahms to consult with a lawyer about
her complaint. Shillman later disciplined Alias for
violating a company policy that provided that someone in
Dahms's position be referred first to the human
resources department, and then to see Shillman if she
remained "uncomfortable." |
|
FN6. Earlier in his employment at Cognex, Rogers had
romantic relationships with two female employees who
reported to him. There were no allegations of sexual
harassment; however, Shillman determined that it was
inappropriate for Rogers to be romantically involved
with Cognex employees who reported to him and had fined
him $10,000 for the first relationship and $100,000 for
the second. Shillman also delayed the vesting of some
stock options that Rogers was due to receive. |
|
FN7. Shillman testified that Dahms told him that she did
not want Rogers to be fired, but just wanted "to make
sure my job here is secure," and that he |
|
gave her "that sense of security." |
|
FN8. In December, 1997, Shillman became further
convinced that the matter had ended when Rogers
announced that he had become engaged to marry. |
|
FN9. Dahms testified that she never mentioned Matz's
name during the meeting, nor did she know that Matz's
department was involved in the project. Matz testified
that Dahms told the client that it was the engineering
department's fault. Matz was in charge of that
department. |
|
FN10. Dahms testified that Shillman had earlier promised
to pay her legal bills, and that she was merely asking
how she should submit her receipts for reimbursement. |
|
FN11. After the MCAD complaint was filed, the Cognex
board of directors appointed three outside directors to
a special committee to investigate the charges against
the company and its officers. The board concluded that
there was no sexual harassment, but that Rogers should
be fired for unprofessional conduct. Rogers was fired on
November 17, 1998. |
|
FN12. Dahms initially included a claim of "quid pro quo"
sexual harassment |
|
against Shillman in her complaint filed in the Superior
Court, but later abandoned it. At trial, Dahms testified
only that Shillman "created" a hostile work environment. |
|
FN13. As discussed later, the jury did not learn that
these letters were part of an ongoing settlement
negotiation. |
|
FN14. The September 15 letter was briefly entered in
evidence, but quickly withdrawn. |
|
FN15. The October 27 letter was admitted in evidence. |
|
FN16. On November 9, 1998, Dahms told Woodyard that she
would abide by the noncompete agreement, and referred
Woodyard to a letter written by Dahms's attorneys
stating the same. |
|
FN17. Electronic mail messages (e-mail) from other
employees supported this testimony. Glenn Wienkoop, an
executive vice-president of engineering, sent an e-mail
on November 2, 1998, stating that he hoped to "end the
wasted e-mail efforts by [Dahms]," and that she was
"totally disconnected as she has been while this legal
issue has been in progress." Peter Herman, who was hired
to |
|
replace Dahms as the head of customer service for one
Cognex project, wrote an e-mail on January 25, 1999: "I
would appreciate it if you would not send to me any more
voice-mails from Kim Dahms unless they begin adding more
value.... My time is far too precious to listen to what
appear to be someone who spend[s] their days focused on
political BS versus solving customer problems and
satisfying their needs." |
|
FN18. Defense counsel made no mention of evidence of
this kind in their opening statements. |
|
FN19. Shillman answered, "I did tell her on at least one
occasion that I felt that she dressed inappropriately
for a business setting." |
|
FN20. Counsel asked whether Shillman "told [Dahms] that
her Halloween costumes were too provocative and
seductive." Shillman answered, "I probably said they
were 'hot,' ... [or] see-through." Finally, counsel
asked Shillman to describe one of her Halloween
costumes, which he described as a see-through Empire
State Building. |
|
FN21. The testimony of Matz and Woodyard regarding
Dahms's attire at work was not objected to at trial on
the grounds raised on appeal. |
|
FN22. The MCAD is charged with enforcing G.L. c. 151B
and its "interpretation of its governing statute is
entitled to substantial deference."
Bynes v. School Comm.
of Boston, 411 Mass. 264, 269 (1991). |
|
FN23. Other evidence of Dahms's conduct offered by the
defendants was properly excluded. For example, on direct
examination, Woodyard began to testify about Dahms's
being intoxicated at a 1996 Cognex holiday party. The
judge asked for a sidebar, and defense counsel explained
that Woodyard would testify that she saw Dahms, who
appeared intoxicated, in the restroom "stamping herself
all over her body with a bingo stamp"; and that she saw
Dahms leave the restroom, go over to the bar, and "creat[e]
a little bit of a ruckus because the bartender wouldn't
serve her any more alcohol." After a lengthy sidebar
discussion, the judge concluded that the prejudicial
impact of the testimony outweighed its value in
demonstrating whether Dahms found the work environment
to be sexually hostile. |
|
FN24. Dahms's counsel declined the judge's invitation,
stating, "I'll probably leave it at that." |
|
FN25. At the conclusion of the jury instructions,
counsel made their |
|
objections at a sidebar conference. One of the
objections made by Dahms involved the instruction
complained of on appeal. Specifically, counsel told the
judge that "there was a sentence raised on the
subjective standard in the hostile environment
instruction ... that said 'If you find that Ms. Dahms
was a willing participant in sexual behavior in her
workplace' and then went on to say 'if she has not
proven the subjective element of her hostile environment
sexual harassment claim,' and then there where two other
clauses, but they were each using the word 'or.' We
think that's not a correct statement of the law."
Dahms's counsel then went on to note other objections
not raised here. The judge engaged in conversation about
those other objections, but there was no further
discussion about the one challenged on appeal. |
|
FN26. Modified slightly, the judge's instruction would
be correct on this element: |
|
"To prove her claim of hostile environment sexual
harassment against [the] defendant, [the plaintiff] must
prove that she actually found the conduct to be hostile,
intimidating, or threatening to her, and that it
interfered with her work environment. In making this
determination, you must consider the totality of the
circumstances and the over-all atmosphere of the
workplace, which can include any evidence, if there was
any, of [the plaintiff's] sexual conduct toward [the
defendant], as well as any evidence, if there was any,
of sexual |
|
banter or comments she engaged in with other coworkers.
|
|
"[In addition to the over-all atmosphere of the
workplace, you must also consider the specific conduct
of the defendant that the plaintiff claims was
offensive.] If you find that [the plaintiff] was a
willing participant [in that conduct] ... or that she
did not consider [that] conduct offensive to her at the
time it was occurring, then she has not proven this
subjective element of her hostile environment sexual
harassment claim." |
|
FN27. For example, "[t]he plaintiff claims that she was
subjected to a hostile work environment
by each of the
defendants "; "the plaintiff must prove by a
preponderance of the evidence that ...
the sexual advances,
requests, or conduct was in fact hostile,
intimidating, or humiliating to the plaintiff, Ms. Dahms";
"[y]ou must determine whether the plaintiff, by her
conduct or speech, indicated that
the conduct at issue
was unwelcome, not whether the plaintiff's actual
participation in the conduct, if any, was voluntary"; "[i]n
making the factual determination of unwelcome conduct,
you must consider the plaintiff's subjective view of
the conduct at issue.
For example, whether the plaintiff took offense at the
conduct, and the degree
to which the plaintiff initiated or was a willing
participant in the conduct would be relevant to
your determination." (Emphases added.) |