While there are federal and state laws that protect employees from racial discrimination in the workplace throughout the country, these laws are not always uniform in terms of the severity or pervasive enough of the complained of conduct that constitute an actionable hostile work environment. Generally speaking, when the racially discriminatory conduct is so severe or pervasive as to change the nature of the job, a worker has grounds to bring a lawsuit for hostile work environment. But what type of conduct meets the standard for a successful claim? More specifically, can a single instance of race-based discrimination create a hostile work environment? The answer may depend on where the suit is filed. For example, in New Jersey, our courts have held that a single racial epithet can constitute a hostile work environment, while other courts outside New Jersey have adopted a strict rule that a single racial epithet, no matter how offensive, can never be enough to constitute a hostile work environment.
The Bone case is reminiscent of a 2019 case decided by recently appointed Supreme Court Justice, Amy Coney Barrett, when she sat on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit. In Smith v. Ill. Dept. of Transportation, 936 F.3d 554 (7thCir. 2019), an employee for the Illinois Department of Transportation was fired after a probationary period of employment during which he allegedly performed quite poorly. The employee sued the Department, arguing that it had subjected him to a hostile work environment and fired him in retaliation for his complaints about racial discrimination. The Circuit Court affirmed the dismissal of his claims for failing to establish a hostile work environment as a matter of law. In his lawsuit, the employee claimed he was treated differently from other employees due to his race and his supervisor called him the n-word during a confrontation. The employee was fired two weeks after the confrontation. Addressing the hostile work environment claim, the Circuit Court found that the majority of the harassment he cited was unconnected to his race and arose from generally unpleasant and profane language that was used routinely toward all employees. The one incident, however, that plainly constituted race-based harassment was when one of his supervisors called him a “stupid ass [n-word]” after finding out that he had filed a complaint with the Equal Employment Opportunity office. The Court noted that “while there is no ‘magic number of slurs’ that indicates a hostile work environment, an ‘unambiguously racial epithet falls on the more severe end of the spectrum.’” Even still, a plaintiff cannot win a hostile work environment claim simply by proving that the word was said unless he can also show that it altered the conditions of his employment. Unlike in Bone, the Seventh Circuit Court found that the plaintiff failed to prove even his own subjective belief that being called the n-word created a hostile work environment. The court found that because his entire employment had been rocky, and by the time he was called the n-word his termination proceedings were already under way, there was no proof that the racial slur changed the always unpleasant work environment. Because he could not show that the distress he suffered from being called the n-word was distinct from the distress he suffered routinely at work, the plaintiff’s claim for hostile work environment was dismissed.
Thankfully for employees in New Jersey, the State Supreme Court has recognized that even one instance of racially based harassment can create a hostile work environment. In Taylor v. Metzger, 152 N.J. 490 (1998), the central issue was whether a single derogatory racial comment directed against a subordinate employee by a supervisor created a hostile work environment in violation of the New Jersey Law Against Discrimination. In this case, a county sheriff’s officer claimed that her employer, the county sheriff, called her a “jungle bunny” in the presence of another supervisor, the undersheriff. The plaintiff disclosed the event to the media and, as a result, it was publicized in several newspapers, causing the plaintiff to receive harassing phone calls and hate mail. Following the incident, however, the plaintiff did not lose any income and her basic job duties remained unchanged.
The Court found that when a plaintiff alleges racial harassment under the Law Against Discrimination, she must demonstrate that the defendant’s conduct would not have occurred but for her race, and it was severe or pervasive enough to make a reasonable African American employee believe that the conditions of employment were altered and the working environment was hostile or abusive. The Court held that under this standard, one incident of harassment could create a hostile work environment.
Noting that the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission also recognizes that a single incident, if sufficiently severe, can create a hostile environment, the court cautioned that it would be a rare and extreme case. Racial epithets, however, are regarded as especially egregious and capable of having a severe impact. Because the defendant’s remark was unambiguously demeaning and undoubtedly a racist slur, and because it was uttered by a superior officer to a subordinate, the Court found that it alone created a hostile work environment. Contrary to the more recent cases out of Alabama and the Seventh Circuit, the Taylor Court noted that the test of severity does not require evidence of an actual change in working conditions in order for there to be a hostile work environment. Rather, discrimination itself is the harm, and it is the harasser’s conduct, not the plaintiff’s injury that must be severe or pervasive.
These cases indicate that New Jersey’s anti-discrimination laws offer protection against racial discrimination in the workplace that other states do not. The New Jersey Supreme Court’s recognition that the reasonable person standard should be a reasonable African American, and that the severe and pervasive standard should be applied to the offensive conduct rather than the change in working conditions, are key to these protections. Pursuant to this case law, New Jersey continues to demand that employers safeguard their workplaces from attitudes of prejudice that inject hostility and abuse into the working environment and cause employees of color to suffer harm and discrimination.