Sexual harassment paper ripped in half

New York, N.Y., partners Nancy Wright and Marielle Moore and Samuel Weinstein (Associate-New York) successfully defended the firm’s hotel client and an individually named female manager in a case alleging a hostile work environment, quid pro quo sexual harassment and retaliatory termination of employment. The defense team highlighted the legitimate, nondiscriminatory reasons for plaintiff’s termination (during his brief three-month employment, plaintiff received more than seven counseling sessions in response to at least ten complaints about his performance). Toward the end of his employment tenure, plaintiff sustained a physical injury on the job with a resulting permanent partial disability. Once cleared to return to work, the performance issues and complaints continued. Accordingly, another manager demanded plaintiff’s employment be immediately terminated, noting he was killing the morale of the department. The defense also established that it was only during plaintiff’s termination meeting that he first made allegations of sexual harassment. Plaintiff was repeatedly impeached during his cross-examination by the defense team, which detailed various points in plaintiff’s underlying workers’ compensation and deposition testimony where he had claimed he was terminated due to his injuries. Plaintiff’s impeachment and numerous inconsistencies were highlighted during the defense team’s closing argument, which, coupled with plaintiff’s inability to impeach the defense’s witnesses, resulted in the jury unanimously returning a defense verdict after a mere 30-minute deliberation. The defense verdict was especially gratifying as the accused female manager had lived under the cloud of false sexual harassment claims for nearly 10 years. The claims were dismissed under the New York State Human Rights Law and the plaintiff-friendly New York City Human Rights Law.