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In the United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit ____________ No. 02-2529 MICHAEL J. HAMM, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. WEYAUWEGA MILK PRODUCTS, INC., Defendant-Appellee. ____________ Appeal from the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Wisconsin. No. 00-C-1283âWilliam E. Callahan, Jr., Magistrate Judge. ____________ ARGUED DECEMBER 10, 2003âDECIDED JUNE 13, 2003 ____________ Before FLAUM, Chief Judge, and POSNER and WILLIAMS, Circuit Judges. WILLIAMS, Circuit Judge. Michael Hamm alleges that he was sexually harassed at work by his male coworkers and was terminated as a result of his complaints about the harassment in violation of Title VII. The district court concluded that Hamm could not establish that he was discriminated against âbecause ofâ sex as required by Title VII and granted summary judgment in favor of Hammâs employer, Weyauwega Milk Products. Because we agree with the district court that Hammâs evidence only supports work performance conflicts or speculation concerning his sexual orientation, we affirm. 2 No. 02-2529 I. BACKGROUND Michael Hamm, a heterosexual male, began working at Weyauwega Milk Products, a producer of dairy products including cheese, in 1992. Hamm held numerous posi- tions during his employment and his job responsibilities generally included cleaning the equipment and work area, maintaining the supplies, and filling in for other produc- tion employees during breaks or days off. Hamm was regarded as a good employee until approximately 1997, when Weyauwega hired a friend of Hammâs, Jeff Zietlow. Beginning in early 1998, Hamm filed a number of com- plaints with Weyauwega management and with the Wiscon- sin Equal Rights Division (ERD) alleging harassment by his male coworkers. The Weyauwega plant where Hamm worked was almost entirely male; no women worked in any of the areas of the plant in which Hamm worked. Hamm filed his first written complaint with Weyauwega management on January 15, 1998, stating that Dean Bohringer, one of Hammâs coworkers, threatened that if Hamm did not do his job properly, then Bohringer would âkick [his] ass to make [him] do so.â1 Hamm also de- scribed an incident in the break room in which Bohringer allegedly threw the door open and âstarted cursing and swearingâ at Hamm for failing to replace an empty barrel of cleaning fluid. Hamm further alleged that Bohringer threw the chemical barrel across the room, screamed at him, and told him he should quit. Hamm admits that he yelled back at Bohringer during the incident. Hammâs complaint related another event during which Bohringer yelled at Hamm because, in Hammâs view, Bohringer 1 Many of the comments made in connection with Hammâs complaints contain vulgar and offensive language, but we believe direct quotes of the language used are required in order to accurately describe Hammâs allegations. No. 02-2529 3 believed that he was disrupting equipment and not work- ing quickly enough. Also, beginning in late 1997, and continuing into 1998, Weyauwega began to have concerns about Hammâs work performance. Many of the complaints about Hammâs work performance by Weyauwega management and Hammâs coworkers centered around their perception that Hamm spent too much time talking to Zietlow and engaging in horseplay. In response to Hammâs initial complaint, Weyauwega instructed Bohringer to âcut down on his swearing when he is madâ and told Hamm to reduce the amount of time he visits with other employees and to more closely follow plant procedures. During the summer of 1998, Weyauwega documented a number of work errors committed by Hamm including failing to perform his work duties, damaging a milk truck, and spending too much time talking to Zietlow. Weyauwega eventually gave Hamm a final written warning letter dated August 18, 1998 instructing him to 1) stop the horseplay in which he was involved, 2) stop talking to Jeff Zietlow other than for job-related activities, and 3) cooper- ate with fellow employees and act as a team player.2 In September of 1998, Hamm filed his first complaint with the ERD. His complaint alleged that he was called a âfaggot,â âbisexual,â and âgirl scout,â and that his coworker 2 Beginning in late summer 1998, Hamm also filed a number of reports with Weyauwega police regarding incidents at work or involving work employees. For example, in August 1998, Hamm complained that he was being verbally abused at work, stating that his coworkers were yelling at him, complaining that he was not doing his job, and turning his machines on and off. As similar claims were made in Hammâs complaints to Weyauwega and the ERD, we address these allegations through Hammâs complaints to those organizations. 4 No. 02-2529 Dean Bohringer threatened to snap his neck and threw things at him. Hamm also stated he was retaliated against for reporting these incidents to Weyauwega management. In response to Hammâs complaints, Weyauwega set up a meeting between Weyauwega management, Hamm, and Bohringer. During the meeting, Bohringer apologized to Hamm, and Hamm promised to focus on correctly perform- ing his job. Although exact dates of its genesis are unknown, it is undisputed that during this time a rumor existed among workers at the plant that Hamm and Zietlowâs friend- ship was romantic in nature. Hammâs coworkers thought it odd when Hamm gave Zietlow a boat and let him use his four-wheel vehicle. The sometimes contentious nature of their friendship also drew the attention of coworkers. Hamm called the police department in January 1999 to report that Zietlow, then under age 21, was in a bar drinking and again in February 1999 to report that Zietlow threatened him. Around the same time, Hamm called the police to report that his vehicle had been dam- aged in the Weyauwega parking lot, and he indicated in his deposition that he believed Zietlow had damaged the vehicle. He also reported that Zietlow had scratched his face. Hamm sued Zietlow in January of 1999 for the return of his four-wheeler, two chain saws, and money that Zietlow had borrowed but not returned. Zietlow was suspended by Weyauwega in early 1999 for striking Hammâs brother, Joe Hamm, also a plant employee, with a pipe. After Zietlow returned to work, Hamm reported that Zietlow soaked him with a water hose. Zietlow was termi- nated in March of 1999. Hamm filed his second complaint with Weyauwega on March 24, 1999, claiming that coworker Fred Kivisto accused Hamm of âlooking out of the corner of my eyes at himâ and had threatened Hamm with a pipe. Hamm also alleged that Kivisto told coworkers that Hamm was No. 02-2529 5 a homosexual and warned them not to bend over in front of him. Kivisto admitted in his deposition that he told Hamm ânot to be sizing me up.â Approximately two months later, on May 25, 1999, Hamm filed another complaint with Weyauwega alleging that Mike Fischer, a coworker, and Bohringer were watching him while he worked. He also complained that Weyauwega had not adequately addressed his earlier complaints. Hamm filed a fourth written complaint with Weyauwega on June 7, 1999, claiming that Bohringer yelled obscenities at him, ordering him to get off a forklift. He also re- peated his complaint that Kivisto told coworkers not to bend over in front of him. Weyauwega investigated Hammâs newest complaints. According to Weyauwega, its interviews with Hammâs coworkers revealed that they were frustrated with his inability to complete work tasks correctly and with his instigation of problems and rumors at the plant. During his interview for the investigation, Hamm suggested that Bohringer and Fischer were trying to get him fired. Hamm also filed a second complaint with the ERD in early June 1999, alleging retaliation by his coworkers for filing his first ERD complaint. Hamm alleged, among other things, that Carl Wodrich, a coworker, and Fischer com- plained about Hammâs work performance and interfered with his work equipment in retaliation for Hammâs ERD complaint; that Kivisto threatened him with a pipe; that Frank Young, another coworker, threatened to âshove the water hose up [Hammâs] assâ after he was hit with the water from the hose; that management âthought I was âthat wayâ because they had reason to believe Jeff Zietlow might be âthat wayâ â; and that âDean Bohringer stated I was a worthless piece of human flesh and later on shoved me or purposely ran into me in the hallway.â Weyauwega offered Hamm a severance agreement on June 14, 1999, with two and one-half weeksâ pay; Hamm 6 No. 02-2529 negotiated an increase to seven weeksâ pay on June 15, 1999, but left his final approval of the agreement open. Hamm underwent an exit interview reviewing COBRA and 401(k) paperwork, and Hamm cleaned out his locker. Hamm was not scheduled for work again, and he filed a claim for unemployment compensation on June 22, 1999. In a letter dated July 7, 1999, Weyauwega informed Hamm that it regarded him as âvoluntary quitâ as of July 1, 1999, unless he agreed to an enhanced severance agree- ment. On July 9, 1999, Hamm filed a third complaint with the ERD restating his complaints about Bohringerâs outburst while Hamm was on the forklift and the comments by Kivisto. He also alleged that he was terminated in retalia- tion for his complaints. In September of 2000, Hamm filed suit in federal court, alleging that he was sexually harassed and retaliated against for filing complaints with Weyauwega and with the Wisconsin Equal Rights Division in violation of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 42 U.S.C. § 2000e, et seq. After at least nineteen depositions were taken and dis- covery was exchanged, Weyauwega moved for summary judgment. The district court granted summary judgment in favor of Weyauwega. Hamm appeals. II. ANALYSIS We review the district courtâs decision to grant sum- mary judgment de novo. Hilt-Dyson v. City of Chicago, 282 F.3d 456, 462 (7th Cir. 2002). Summary judgment is properly entered âagainst a party who fails to make a showing sufficient to establish the existence of an ele- ment essential to that partyâs case, and on which that party will bear the burden of proof at trial.â Celotex Corp. v. Catrett, 477 U.S. 317, 322 (1986). In determining wheth- er a genuine issue as to any material fact exists, we con- No. 02-2529 7 strue all facts and draw all reasonable inferences in favor of Hamm, the nonmoving party. See Hilt-Dyson, 282 F.3d at 462. A. Sexual harassment claim Hammâs claim, that he was sexually harassed by his male coworkers, requires us to navigate the tricky legal waters of male-on-male sex harassment. The protections of Title VII extend to both women and men. Oncale v. Sundowner Offshore Servs., Inc., 523 U.S. 75, 78 (1998) (âTitle VIIâs prohibition of discrimination âbecause of . . . sexâ protects men as well as women.â). Further, sexual harass- ment claims are not limited to situations in which an individual is harassed by someone of the opposite sex, but may be made in cases such as this one, when same- sex sexual harassment is alleged. Id. at 79. The protections of Title VII have not been extended, however, to permit claims of harassment based on an individualâs sexual orientation. Hamner v. St. Vincent Hosp. & Health Care Ctr., Inc., 224 F.3d 701, 704 (7th Cir. 2000). Therefore, in same-sex harassment cases, the central question is wheth- er the harassment occurred âbecause of the plaintiffâs sex.â Id. Hamm alleges that his coworkers did not believe he fit the sexual stereotype of a man, and that their sexual stereotyping is evidence of discrimination âbecause ofâ sex. See, e.g., Price Waterhouse v. Hopkins, 490 U.S. 228, 250-52 (1989) (recognizing sex stereotyping as evidence of sex discrimination); Spearman v. Ford Motor Co., 231 F.3d 1080, 1085 (7th Cir. 2000). In order to evaluate Hammâs claim, we must âconsider any sexually explicit language or stereotypical statements within the context of all of the evidence of harassment in the case [to] determine whether the evidence as a whole creates a reasonable inference that the plaintiff was discriminated against 8 No. 02-2529 because of his sex.â Id. A careful review of the record in this case leads us to conclude that Hamm has not made a showing sufficient to establish that he was discriminated against âbecause ofâ sex.3 Even drawing all reasonable inferences in Hammâs favor, his litany of complaints about the actions of his coworkers inescapably relate to either Hammâs coworkersâ disapproval of his work performance or their perceptions of Hammâs sexual orientation. Hammâs own characterizations of many of the occur- rences underlying his complaint demonstrate that he believed they were related to his job performance. For example, when explaining Bohringerâs alleged verbal abuse during his deposition, Hamm surmised that Bohringer swore at him âbecause apparently he figured I didnât do my job.â This rationale is a restatement of Hammâs Jan- uary 15, 1998 complaint in which he alleged that Bohring- er threatened to âput him in a wheelchairâ and âsnap his neckâ and threw a chemical barrel across the room after finding it empty. These incidents, too, are explained by 3 Our analysis focuses on Hammâs need to show he was discrimi- nated against âbecause of â sex because this appears to be the only element of Hammâs sexual harassment claim contested by Weyauwega. For example, Weyauwegaâs brief does not discuss important questions such as whether all of the allegedly discrimi- natory conduct occurred within 300 days of the filing of Hammâs complaint or is properly considered under the continuing violation doctrine, see Hall v. Bodine Electric Co., 276 F.3d 345, 353 (7th Cir. 2002), whether the harassment suffered by Hamm was âsufficiently severe or pervasive to alter the condition of the victimâs employment and create an abusive working environment,â Meritor Sav. Bank v. Vinson, 477 U.S. 57, 67 (1986), or whether Weyauwega acted negligently in responding to Hammâs com- plaints about his coworkersâ conduct, as required to establish its vicarious liability for sexual harassment, see Hall, 276 F.3d at 356. No. 02-2529 9 Hamm in terms of his job performance: âI have been subjected to unnecessary verbal abuse from Dean Bohringer on many occasions in the past year, I have been threatened to quit or be killed. . . . He claims I do not do my job, I feel he has no right to threaten me if this is his opinion.â Indeed, Hamm concludes the complaint with the observa- tion that: âThe company refuses to have any harassment [illegibile] nature cease, it is always ok to be threatened when other employees feel you are not doing your job.â Similarly, Hamm alleges that on another occasion Bohring- er told him to âGet off that forklift motherfucker. You stupid motherfucker,â after Bohringer discovered Hamm on the forklift that Bohringer typically used. Hammâs statements make evident that these complaints related to work-related disputes, more specifically, an apparent belief by Bohringer that Hamm did not perform his job adequately. Expressions of frustration with Hammâs work perfor- mance were not limited to Bohringer. Hammâs June 1999 ERD complaint succinctly explains an episode with Frank Young: âOn May 4th Frank Young threatened to shove a water hose up my ass for not doing my job correctly.â Hamm also alleges that Mike Fischer tried to force his equipment to malfunction, but also complains that Fischer âmade up a story I was not doing my job.â Hamm has not produced any evidence to show that these episodes are related to anything other than work-related disputes. See Spearman, 231 F.3d at 1085 (use of sexually-explicit in- sults to express anger at plaintiff over work-related con- flicts may be juvenile, but is not sex discrimination). With respect to the other incidents that Hamm submits as evidence of harassment, all the evidence points to the conclusion that they relate to speculation by his cowork- ers about his sexual orientation. Again, Hammâs own com- ments indicate that he perceived the conduct of his cowork- 10 No. 02-2529 ers to relate to their belief about his sexual orientation. Hamm admits that his close friendship with Jeff Zietlow was perceived by his coworkers to be romantic in nature. In his first complaint to the ERD, he explained, âDean Bohringer believes that me and another individual are gay at work, he constantly refers to me and Jeff Zietlow as faggots. Dean has threatened to kill me, snap my neck for what he thinks to be true.â In a note written Novem- ber 12, 1998, and appended to his deposition, Hamm links judgment of his sexuality by his peers to several of his allegations: âI am single so therefore it would more so [be] believed that I was homosexual, I have had numerous people at the plant pick on me on account of this. . . .â His March 24, 1999 complaint contains a similar explana- tion: âFred tells me and other people that I am homosexual and not to bend over by me. . . . I am so sick of being threatened for what people perceive!â In addition to assessing the way in which his coworkersâ statements were experienced by Hamm, see Oncale, 523 U.S. at 81, we also must consider, as in any sex harass- ment case, the âsocial context in which the particular behavior occurs.â Id. Here it is difficult to separate many of Hammâs complaints from the significant amount of horseplay that occurred at the Weyauwega plant. The district court described the evidence in the record of the horseplay at Weyauwega: âHamm testified that during free time, more specifi- cally, âevery evening and every day,â employees spray each other with water hoses; that someone stuck a bed in the womenâs locker room as a prank; that Weyauwega employees went into a coworkersâ locker and âlabeled his Vaseline jack-off jellyâ; and that Bohringer would frequently wrestle/engage in physical horseplay with coworkers during work time. Hammâs brother, Joe Hamm, confirmed that No. 02-2529 11 horseplay takes place at Weyauwega, including employees spraying each other with water hoses daily and throwing cheese curds at each other numerous times each day.â 199 F. Supp.2d 878, 896 n.1 (E.D.Wis. 2002). Hamm ad- mits that even his alleged harassers were the victims of workplace pranks. For example, in his deposition, Hamm described an incident directed at Bohringer in which one of the workers wrote âDean plus [male name]â all over a door. Hamm himself was disciplined for excessive par- ticipation in horseplay at the plant, particularly in his final warning. Of course we do not mean to suggest that the presence of horseplay in a workplace precludes a claim of sexual harassment, but we do recognize that, in some cases, sexually explicit remarks among male coworkers may be âsimply expressions of animosity or juvenile pro- vocation.â Johnson v. Hondo, Inc., 125 F.3d 408, 412 (7th Cir. 1997). Even Hammâs claim that Bohringer referred to him as âgirl scout,â the strongest factual allegation he makes that his coworkersâ actions were linked to his nonconform- ance to sex stereotypes, does not establish that he was discriminated against because of his sex. In his deposi- tion, Bohringer alleged that he referred to his colleagues with this term indiscriminately, and one of Weyauwegaâs managers, Dan Stearns, testified that Bohringer had even used the term to refer to him. Hamm acknowledges that Bohringer called other men at the plant âgirl scouts,â but he calls this fact âimmaterial.â Bohringerâs use of the term to refer to other men, including a supervisor, is hardly immaterial; Hamm cannot point to its use as persuasive evidence that he was treated differently be- cause of his sex when other men at the plant were referred to by the same name. Because there is nothing to sug- gest that Bohringer viewed the other men at the plant 12 No. 02-2529 as nonconforming to sexual stereotypes, his use of the term to describe Hamm cannot support an inference of sex discrimination.4 That the conduct complained of by Hamm does not fall within a sexual stereotyping claim cognizable under Title VII is made even more evident by a comparison to the cases in which courts have found such a claim. In Price Waterhouse, the plaintiff was a woman passed over for a promotion, and partners in the company remarked that she was âmacho,â âovercompensated for being a woman,â and needed to âwalk more femininely, talk more femininely, dress more femininely, wear more make-up, have her hair styled, and wear jewelry.â 490 U.S. at 235. In Doe v. City of Belleville, Illinois, 119 F.3d 563, 568, 576- 77 (7th Cir. 1997), vacated, 523 U.S. 1001 (1998), the male plaintiffsâ sex was constantly questioned; they were ridi- culed for wearing an earring, threatened with sexual assault, and one of the plaintiffsâ testicles was grabbed to determine whether he was male or female. In Nichols v. Azteca Restaurant Enterprises, Inc., 256 F.3d 864, 874 (9th Cir. 2001), the male plaintiff was attacked for walk- ing and carrying his tray âlike a woman,â mocked for not having sexual intercourse with a waitress who was his 4 Other allegations Hamm makes in support of his sex harass- ment claim do not add up. For instance, Hamm argues that Bohringer called him âkidâ and remarked that he had a high- pitched voice. Hamm takes these statements out of context from Bohringerâs deposition; Bohringer commented that Hammâs voice was high-pitched when describing how Hamm screamed at him. In another example, Hamm argues that Kivisto threatened to take him to Lake Michigan and leave him at the bottom of the lake. Yet Hamm concedes in his deposition that this incident took place almost five years before he first complained of harassment, and thus it cannot be used to support his claim. No. 02-2529 13 friend, referred to as âsheâ and âher,â and experienced vulgar name-calling cased in female terms. Unlike Doe and Azteca, where the plaintiffs presented additional evidence that the harassment implicated sex rather than sexual orientation, Hammâs allegations are linked either to his coworkersâ perceptions of his work performance or his sexual orientation. See Oncale, 523 U.S. at 80 (â[W]ork- place harassment . . . is [not] automatically discrimina- tion because of sex merely because the words used have sexual content or connotations.â). Hammâs case more closely tracks Spearman v. Ford Motor Co., 231 F.3d 1080 (7th Cir. 2000). In that case, Spearman claimed that vulgar and sexually explicit insults directed at him and graffiti posted by his coworkers were motivated by sexual stereotyping, arguing that his coworkers per- ceived him to be too feminine to fit the masculine image at Ford. Id. at 1085. He alleged that a coworker called him a âlittle bitch,â and stated that he hated Spearmanâs âgay ass,â that workplace graffiti linked him with AIDS and labeled him as gay, and that he was assigned duties that he believed should be reserved for women. Id. at 1082- 84. This court rejected Spearmanâs claim that this evi- dence established discrimination because of sex and in- stead found that the evidence âclearly demonstrates that Spearmanâs problems resulted from his altercations with coworkers over work issues and because of his ap- parent homosexuality.â Id. at 1085. Hamm attempts to distinguish Spearman by arguing that the plaintiff in that case was homosexual and he is heterosexual. But we do not focus on the sexuality of the plaintiff in determin- ing whether a Title VII violation has occurred. See Hondo, 125 F.3d at 415 (âIn the different sex situation, we do not ask a slew of subjective and invasive questions about the sexual orientation of the perpetrator or the victim. We ask whether the treatment meted out created a hostile work environment because the victim was singled 14 No. 02-2529 out because of his or her gender.â). Indeed, Hamm pre- sents a less difficult case than Spearman in that Hamm himself characterizes the harassment of his peers in terms of work-related disputes and perceptions of his sexual orientation and does not link their comments to his sex. Even when construing all facts and drawing all reasonable inferences in Hammâs favor and considering Hammâs coworkersâ conduct relating to his job performance in conjunction with their comments regarding his sexual orientation in order to form the fullest picture, Hamm has failed to make a sufficient showing that he was ha- rassed because of his sex.5 B. Retaliation claim Hamm also alleges that he was terminated by Weyauwega in retaliation for filing complaints of sexual harassment with the company and the ERD. Weyauwega claims that Hamm was not terminated, and that based on his application for unemployment compensation and his 5 We recognize that distinguishing between failure to adhere to sex stereotypes (a sexual stereotyping claim permissible under Title VII) and discrimination based on sexual orientation (a claim not covered by Title VII) may be difficult. This is especially true in cases in which a perception of homosexuality itself may result from an impression of nonconformance with sexual stereotypes. Doe, 119 F.3d at 593 (âA homophobic epithet like âfagâ for example, may be as much of a disparagement of a manâs perceived effemi- nate qualities as it is of his perceived sexual orientation. . . . [I]t is not always possible to rigidly compartmentalize the types of bias that these types of epithets represent.â). We need not face this difficult problem here because Hamm does not present evidence to establish that the conduct he complains of âwas not merely tinged with offensive sexual connotations, but actually constituted âdiscrimination because of sex.â â Oncale, 523 U.S. at 81. No. 02-2529 15 refusal to respond to the severance agreement, he was properly regarded as âvoluntarily quit.â We need not resolve this dispute, for even if Hamm was terminated he cannot make out a case for retaliation under Title VII. Title VII prohibits an employer from discriminating against an employee âbecause he has opposed any prac- tice made an unlawful employment practice byâ Title VII. 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-3(a). In other words, Title VII protects an employee from âretaliation for complaining about the types of discrimination it prohibits.â Miller v. Am. Family Mutual Ins. Co., 203 F.3d 997, 1007 (7th Cir. 2000). Hammâs sexual harassment claim fails because he has not shown that he was discriminated against âbecause ofâ sex, as required under Title VII. His retaliation claim was properly decided by the district court for the same reason: his complaints to Weyauwega and the ERD did not concern an employment practice that violated Title VII. See Hamner, 224 F.3d at 706-07. III. CONCLUSION For the forgoing reasons, we AFFIRM the decision of the district court. POSNER, Circuit Judge, concurring. Judge Williamsâs opinion is consistent with the cases and the facts, and it reaches a result (denial of liability) that I agree with. I cannot fairly quarrel with the methodological conserva- tism of her approach. But I think it worth recording my conviction that the case law has gone off the tracks in the matter of âsex stereotypingâ and that if it got back 16 No. 02-2529 on, this case could be decided on a simpler and more intuitive ground and one that would reduce future litiga- tion. The case law as it has evolved holds, as Judge Williams explains, that although Title VII does not protect homo- sexuals from discrimination on the basis of their sexual orientation, it protects heterosexuals who are victims of âsex stereotypingâ or âgender stereotyping.â Spearman v. Ford Motor Co., 231 F.3d 1080, 1085 (7th Cir. 2000) (âthe record . . . shows that Spearmanâs co-workers ma- ligned him because of his apparent homosexuality, and not because of his sexâ (so no liability)); Bibby v. Philadel- phia Coca Cola Bottling Co., 260 F.3d 257, 264 (3d Cir. 2001) (if âthe harasser was acting to punish the victimâs noncompliance with gender stereotypes,â then liability); Nichols v. Azteca Restaurant Enterprises, Inc., 256 F.3d 864, 874-75 (9th Cir. 2001) (same); Schmedding v. Tnemec Co., 187 F.3d 862, 865 (8th Cir. 1999) (same) (âalthough Schmedding concedes that the use [in his complaint] of the phrase âperceived sexual preferenceâ may have been confusing, he asserts that the phrase indicates or shows that the harassment included rumors that falsely labeled him as homosexual in an effort to debase his masculinity, not that he was harassed because he is homosexual or perceived as being a homosexualâ). The origin of this curious distinction, which would be very difficult to explain to a lay person (an indication, often and I think here, that the law is indeed awry), is the Supreme Courtâs decision in Price Waterhouse v. Hopkins, 490 U.S. 228 (1989). Part of the evidence that the plain- tiff in that case had been denied promotion because she was a woman was that her male superiors hadnât liked her failure to conform to their expectations regarding feminine dress and deportment. Id. at 235-36. That was indeed a reason to suspect that the firm discriminated against women. But there is a difference that subsequent No. 02-2529 17 cases have ignored between, on the one hand, using evi- dence of the plaintiffâs failure to wear nail polish (or, if the plaintiff is a man, his using nail polish) to show that her sex played a role in the adverse employment action of which she complains, and, on the other hand, creating a subtype of sexual discrimination called âsex stereotyp- ing,â as if there were a federally protected right for male workers to wear nail polish and dresses and speak in falsetto and mince about in high heels, or for female ditchdiggers to strip to the waist in hot weather. If a court of appeals requires lawyers presenting oral argu- ment to wear conservative business dress, should a male lawyer have a legal right to argue in drag provided that the court does not believe that he is a homosexual, against whom it is free to discriminate? That seems to me a very strange extension of the Hopkins case. The âlogicâ of the extension is that if an employer disap- proves of conduct by a man that it would not disapprove of in a woman, or conduct by a woman that it would not disapprove of in a man, the disapproval is âbecause ofâ sex. What is true, as I have said, is that this asymmetry of response may be evidence of sex discrimination; but to equate it to sex discrimination is a mistake. If an employer refuses to hire unfeminine women, its refusal bears more heavily on women than men, and is therefore discrimina- tory. That was the Hopkins case. But if, as in this case, an employer whom no woman wants to work for (at least in the plaintiffâs job classification) discriminates against effeminate men, there is no discrimination against men, just against a subclass of men. They are discriminated against not because they are men, but because they are effeminate. If this analysis is rejected, the absurd conclusion fol- lows that the law protects effeminate men from employ- ment discrimination, but only if they are (or are believed to be) heterosexuals. To impute such a distinction to the 18 No. 02-2529 authors of Title VII is to indulge in a most extravagant legal fiction. It is also to saddle the courts with the mak- ing of distinctions that are beyond the practical capacity of the litigation process. Hostility to effeminate men and to homosexual men, or to masculine women and to lesbi- ans, will often be indistinguishable as a practical matter, especially the former. Effeminate men often are disliked by other men because they are suspected of being homo- sexual (though the opposite is also trueâeffeminate homosexual men may be disliked by heterosexual men because they are effeminate rather than because they are homosexual), while mannish women are disliked by some men because they are suspected of being lesbians and by other men merely because they are not attractive to those men; a further complication is that men are more hostile to male homosexuality than they are to lesbianism. To suppose courts capable of disentangling the motives for disliking the nonstereotypical man or woman is a fantasy. Inevitably a case such as this impels the employer to try to prove that the plaintiff is a homosexual (the em- ployerâs lawyer actually said at the argument that a plaintiffâs homosexuality would be a complete defense to a suit of this kind) and the plaintiff to prove that he is a heterosexual, thus turning a Title VII case into an in- quiry into individualsâ sexual preferencesâto what end connected with the policy of the statute I cannot begin to fathom. An unattractive byproduct of the inquiry is a gratuitous disparagement of homosexualsâas when Hamm in his brief, remarking on how âhis harassers tormented him with the ultimate attack on his masculinity, namely, barraging him with every vulgar, slang phase for a homosexual,â concludes: âFor a heterosexual male, such slurs are tantamount to verbal castrationâ (emphasis mine)âas if they were unwounding when directed at a homosexual male. No. 02-2529 19 âSex stereotypingâ should not be regarded as a form of sex discrimination, though it will sometimes, as in the Hopkins case, be evidence of sex discrimination. In most casesâemphatically so in a case such as this in which, so far as appears, there are no employees of the other sex in the relevant job classificationâthe âdiscriminationâ that results from such stereotyping is discrimination among members of the same sex. The distinction can be illustrated by a pair of examples. If the producer of Antony and Cleopatra refuses to cast an effeminate man as Antony or a mannish woman as Cleopatra, he is not discriminating against men in the first case and women in the second, although he is catering to the audienceâs sex stereotypes. But if a fire department refused to hire mannish women to be firefighters, this would be evi- dence that it was discriminating against women, because mannish women are more likely than stereotypically feminine women to meet the demanding physical criteria for a firefighter. A true Copy: Teste: ________________________________ Clerk of the United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit USCA-02-C-0072â6-13-03
Case Information
- Court
- 7th Cir.
- Decision Date
- June 13, 2003
- Status
- Precedential