A federal district court docket in japanese Pennsylvania backed Philadelphia-based Drexel College’s argument {that a} White male direct report resisted being supervised by a Black compliance exec due to her administration type and never due to her race, coloration or intercourse, in accordance with a Feb. 9 ruling in Gunter v. Drexel College.
Notably, “not all of the blame lies with [the White male]. Drexel did a poor job of speaking its expectations to [him] and ensuring that he adhered to these expectations,” the court docket noticed.
Drexel and the chief’s lawyer didn’t reply to requests for a remark.
The chief served as vice chairman and chief compliance privateness and inner audit (IA) officer. She was chargeable for administrative administration of the IA division and the White male as a result of he was head of the IA division.
Her predecessor was additionally a White male who gave the White male IA head extensive berth in operating the division. He most well-liked “staying in [his] lane,” in accordance with court docket paperwork. He confined his position to duties comparable to reviewing and approving time sheets and budgets and had restricted interplay with the IA head and IA staff.
Against this, the chief took a “extra concerned method.” She favored to have one-on-one conferences with the IA head and his employees and take part in his hiring selections, the report confirmed.
She believed the IA head discriminated in opposition to her because of her race and intercourse as a result of, in contrast to along with her predecessor, he was proof against her supervision. As examples, she stated he excluded her from a job interview for his second-in-command, requested her to run issues by him earlier than making bulletins to his employees, and repeatedly objected to different actions, comparable to when she requested him to assist her replace the division’s web site.
For his half, he believed she was interfering along with his authority over IA operations and compromising IA’s independence, in accordance with court docket data. Drexel’s chief working officer, who’s White, assured him this was not the case and issued him a verbal warning for being disrespectful.
After about three years, the chief complained to HR that his conduct was discriminatory and harassing. An outdoor lawyer investigated and concluded he wasn’t participating in race- or gender-based discrimination or harassment. The COO then eliminated him from the chief’s supervision.
The chief later sued Drexel for allegedly violating Part 1981 of the Civil Rights Act of 1866 and Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 by subjecting her to a race- and sex-based hostile work surroundings. Following a three-day bench trial, the court docket granted judgment to Drexel.
“To go from having near-total autonomy over a division to having to report back to a supervisor who anticipated updates, deliverables, and communication wouldn’t be straightforward,” and the IA division head “struggled mightily” with the change, the court docket identified.
Nevertheless, his responses weren’t discriminatory microaggressions, however moderately “harmless office misunderstandings,” the court docket discovered.
It defined that to the extent some responses might have been microaggressions, comparable to when he allegedly complained to the chief about her tone and requested her to cease arguing, she did not display the remarks resulted from race- or gender-based animus.
Importantly, the court docket stated the IA head used no slurs and didn’t have interaction in intimidating conduct, and there was no proof he bodily threatened or humiliated the chief.
Whereas his conduct might have made him troublesome to work with and probably insubordinate, the chief’s declare failed as a result of below the required “extreme or pervasive” commonplace, it will not have created an abusive working surroundings for an affordable particular person in comparable circumstances, the court docket held.
The identical plaintiff in Gunter v. Drexel College filed a special lawsuit final yr alleging the establishment additionally violated the People with Disabilities Act by not accommodating her PTSD when it required her to attend a Zoom assembly. That case was ultimately dismissed by the choose after the plaintiff missed a deadline.

