Monday, April 13, 2009

Office Romance





The Risks

Careerbuilder.com reports that 40 percent of respondents to a recent survey say that they have dated a co-worker. When employees get involved romantically, the employer can wind up getting sued, under several theories:

1. There is the case of the employee who will not take "no" for an answer. He or she pursues an object of affection at the workplace to the point where the object of affection is uncomfortable being at work. The object of affection now has a sexual harassment lawsuit. A Sav-On store manager convinced a Los Angeles Superior Court jury that she was the subject of such attention and of retaliation for resisting her male manager's advances, and recovered $3 million in damages, which was affirmed on appeal. See Clifford v. American Drug Stores, Inc., Case No. B158635, (Cal. Ct. App. Aug. 22, 2005).

2. There is the case of two employees in what at least appears to be a consensual relationship. Eventually, the relationship sours, and one romantic partner makes life miserable at work for the other partner. This is a particular problem when one partner has a higher position at the workplace, as there may be a viable claim of coercion. In one such case, a Los Angeles Superior Court jury awarded a secretary at Northrop Corporation $500,000 in compensatory damages and $250,000 in punitive damages. The case settled for $1.3 million after plaintiff filed a motion for her attorney fees. Darrow v. Northrop Corp., Case No. BC067428 (L.A. Superior Ct. Aug 1, 1997). In another such case, a federal court jury awarded a security guard $827, 500 in compensatory damages and $4,137,500 in punitive damages (which the court reduced to $300,000). Paterson v. California Dept. of General Services, Case No. 05-CV-00827 (E.D. Cal. Apr. 10, 2008).

3. There is the case of a high-level manager who flaunts his or her romantic relationships with subordinates in the workplace. Even if the subordinates who are romantically involved with the manager do not complain, other employees may have claims that they felt demeaned by the conduct. The California Supreme Court recognized the validity of such a claim in Miller v. Department of Corrections, 36 Cal.4th 446, 115 P.3d 77 (2005).

What To Do

To reduce sexual harassment liability risk associated with two employees' being involved in an office romance, some employers have such employees sign relationship agreement, or love contract. Through the agreement, the employees acknowledge that they are in a voluntary and mutual consensual romantic relationship and that no harassment has taken place. The efficacy of such agreements has not yet been validated by any court decision. For an example of what such an agreement might look like, click here.

Whether or not an employer chooses to implement a love contract procedure, it must make sure that it follows accepted anti-harassment procedures. That means (1) have a strong anti-harassment policy written into the employee handbook and posted prominently in the workplace, (2) provide anti-harassment training for all your employees, (3) ensure that the policy includes an effective complaint procedure that all managers and supervisors have been trained in, (4) if a complaint is received, make sure that it is investigated immediately, (5) if an investigation reveals a violation of policy, take prompt and effective action to deal with the wrongdoing.

If an employer acts promptly and effectively when first notified of a harassment situation, it may reduce or eliminate its liability. For a case where an employer escaped liability for an employee dating relationship that went sour, see Forrest v. Brinker International Payroll Company, LP, Case No. 07-1714 (1st Cir. Dec. 19, 2007).

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