Richard Wilson v. University of Tennessee at Chattanooga ( 2001 )


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  •                  IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
    AT NASHVILLE
    August 7, 2001 Session
    RICHARD WILSON v. THE UNIVERSITY OF TENNESSEE AT
    CHATTANOOGA
    Appeal from the Chancery Court for Davidson County
    No. 99-3395-1, Irvin H. Kilcrease, Jr., Chancellor
    No. M2000-02573-COA-R3-CV - Filed December 28, 2001
    In this appeal from the Chancery Court for Davidson County Dr. Richard Wilson, the
    Plaintiff/Appellant, contends that the Chancellor erred in affirming an Administrative Judge's
    decision that Dr. Wilson engaged in conduct warranting his dismissal as a tenured faculty member
    at the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga, the Defendant/Appellee, for violation of the
    University's policy against sexual harassment. We reverse the judgment of the Chancery Court and
    remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion. We adjudge costs against the University
    of Tennessee at Chattanooga.
    Tenn. R. App. P.3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Chancery Court Reversed;
    Cause Remanded
    HOUSTON M. GODDARD , P.J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which Charles D. Susano, Jr.,
    joined. Herschel P. Franks, J., not participating.
    Rebecca Wells Demaree and Andrew Lawrence Berke, Nashville, Tennessee, for the Plaintiff/
    Appellant, Richard Wilson.
    Ronald Courtney Leadbetter, Knoxville, Tennessee, for the Defendant/Appellee, The University of
    Tennessee at Chattanooga.
    OPINION
    This is an appeal from the judgment of the Chancery Court for Davidson County affirming
    the decision of an Administrative Judge to terminate the employment of the Plaintiff/Appellant, Dr.
    Richard Wilson as a member of the faculty of the Defendant/Appellee, The University of Tennessee
    at Chattanooga (hereinafter UTC). Although Dr. Wilson has raised several issues in this appeal, our
    determination with respect to but one of these issues makes it unnecessary that we address the other
    issues presented which are, therefore, pretermitted.
    The issue addressed in this opinion is restated as follows:
    Did the Chancery Court err in affirming the finding of the Administrative Judge that Dr.
    Wilson engaged in conduct warranting his dismissal as a tenured faculty member for violation of
    UTC's policy against sexual harassment?
    On April 9, 1998, Dr. Wilson, a tenured professor of political science employed by UTC,
    was conducting his class entitled Comparative Government Asia. During the course of this class
    Dr. Wilson announced that he was in need of typing assistance because the person who ordinarily
    did his typing was unavailable. Diana Oo, a student in the class, volunteered to help Dr.Wilson with
    his typing and he advised her that she would be compensated for doing so.
    At Dr. Wilson's instruction, Ms. Oo called him the next morning and made arrangements to
    meet him that afternoon at a rental house owned by him. The record shows that, at the time, Dr.
    Wilson rented apartments in this house to UTC students and that his own living quarters were also
    located there.
    Upon her arrival at the rental house, Dr. Wilson conducted Ms. Oono to an apartment in the
    house which was between tenants and in which he had placed a chair and a desk-type table upon
    which was set up a laptop computer and a dictaphone. Dr. Wilson showed Ms. Oo how to operate
    the dictaphone and requested that she type some material which he had previously recorded onto a
    micro-cassette. Dr. Wilson then left the room and did not return until approximately one hour later
    by which time Ms. Oo had completed the requested typing. The apartment door was wide open
    during the time Ms. Oo was inside and the doors to other apartments in the house were visible from
    the spot where Ms. Oo was typing.
    After his return, Dr. Wilson stood behind Ms. Oo, who was still seated, and reviewed her
    work. Ms. Oo testifies that Dr. Wilson then complimented her typing and touched or massaged her
    shoulders "a little longer than I thought was the norm." Ms. Oo further testifies that this made her
    feel "slightly uncomfortable, but I think that ... I thought it was just me. I thought everything was
    fine."
    Dr. Wilson then sat down on a waterbed frame located next to the desk and he and Ms. Oo
    engaged in conversation for a few minutes until she told him that she would need to leave to meet
    a friend for lunch. As she and Dr. Wilson were saying good-bye, Ms. Oo attempted to put her shoe
    back on, having previously removed it to operate the dictaphone. Before she could do so, however,
    Dr Wilson put it on for her and touched her ankle which Ms. Oo testifies she decided was
    inappropriate. Ms. Oo states that Dr. Wilson then requested that after lunch she return to type
    additional material and she agreed to do so because "I was still unsure if what he had done was
    actually inappropriate and I didn't want to offend him in any way. So I just acquiesced."
    At lunch Ms. Oo told her friend, Jyoti Maurya, about being touched by Dr. Wilson. When
    asked by her attorney how she felt at the time she was talking to Ms. Maurya, Ms. Oo testifies as
    follows:
    Q: How did you feel at the time you were talking to Jyoti?
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    A: I felt confused.
    Q: Did you tell her that?
    A: Yes. I told her that I thought it was strange but that I wasn't sure if he
    intended to be inappropriate.
    Ms. Maurya accompanied Ms. Oo upon her return to Dr. Wilson's house when they finished
    lunch. Ms. Oo attests that Dr. Wilson "seemed less warm and friendly" than he had at their earlier
    meeting and that he told her that he would no longer need her and would pay her at a later date. Ms.
    Maurya testified that she heard Dr. Wilson tell Ms. Oo that she could finish the work on some other
    day. Ms. Oo and Ms. Maurya then left.
    The next day Ms. Oo told another friend, Jamie Allison, of her encounter with Dr. Wilson.
    Ms. Oo testifies that she wasn't sure whether what happened was inappropriate and she wanted to
    use Ms. Allison as a sounding board.
    A few days later Ms. Oo also described Dr. Wilson's conduct to Dr. Foud Moughrabi, acting
    head of the Political Science Department at UTC. Following a second meeting with Dr. Moughrabi,
    Ms. Oo encountered Dr. Wilson in a campus parking lot. Ms. Oo attests that Dr. Wilson was very
    angry that there had been a complaint filed against him and demanded to know what the problem
    was and what he could do to reconcile the problem. Ms. Oo further testifies that after this
    confrontation she was very worried about what her grade would be in Dr. Wilson's class.
    After her conversation with Dr. Wilson in the parking lot, Ms. Oo contacted Barbara
    Wofford, an affirmative action officer with UTC., and told her of Dr. Wilson's conduct.
    Ms. Oo states that, although she did not want to continue attending Dr. Wilson's class after
    encountering him in the parking lot, she agreed to do so at Dr. Moughrabi's insistence. Richard
    Kernea, another student in the class, testifies that prior to the next class meeting he advised Dr.
    Wilson that he and the other class members, Jeanine Griffey and Kaylene Brooks1, were aware of
    Ms. Oo's complaint and that they were all discussing it. When class began Ms. Oo testifies that Dr.
    Wilson asked her if she had anything to say to which she responded that she did not. Dr. Wilson
    then announced that he desperately needed a typist. Ms. Oo testifies that she had the impression that
    Dr. Wilson was trying to make her feel guilty so she volunteered once again to assist him if he would
    provide her with the necessary equipment and if he would allow her to do the typing at her home.
    Ms Oo attests that Dr. Wilson then gave her the dictaphone telling her to be sure not to get her foot
    caught up in the wire again.
    Ms. Oo completed the semester in Dr. Wilson's class and received a grade of A which she
    attests is the grade she deserved. She further attests that Dr. Wilson never acted inappropriately
    1
    There were on ly fou r students in Dr. W ilson's C om parative A sia class - Diana Oo, Richard Kernea, Jeanine
    Griffey, an d K aylen e Bro oks.
    -3-
    toward her during the remainder of the semester and treated her just as he treated the other students
    in the class.
    Based upon Ms. Oo's allegations, UTC subsequently filed disciplinary charges against Dr.
    Wilson. Dr. Wilson requested that the charges be heard in accordance with the contested case
    provisions of the Tennessee Uniform Administrative Procedures Act as set forth at T.C.A. 4-5-301,
    et seq. By a letter to Dr. Wilson from UTC Chancellor Bill Stacy, Dr. Wilson was charged with:
    1. Persistent refusal to comply with University policies.
    2. Serious violation of the University's standard of professional responsibility in
    personal relations with students.
    Specifically, the letter from Chancellor Stacy recites Ms. Oo's allegations with respect to the
    typing incident and the subsequent parking lot confrontation. The letter also makes reference to a
    charge of sexual harassment brought against Dr. Wilson in 1995 by another student, Rebecca
    Thompson, and directives prompted by those charges which were addressed to Dr. Wilson in a letter
    dated July 24, 1996, from Dr.Charles Summerlin who was Acting Provost and Vice Chancellor for
    Academic Affairs at the time. In that letter, Dr. Wilson was specifically instructed to, among other
    things, "stop inviting students to his home." and, as stated by Chancellor Stacy, "In general, Dr.
    Wilson was clearly placed on notice that he must not engage in any action constituting sexual
    harassment of a student."
    On May 16, 1999, a hearing on the charges against Dr. Wilson was conducted before the
    UTC Administrative Judge who entered an order on September 16, 1999, finding Dr. Wilson guilty
    of persistent refusal to comply with UTC policies and of violating UTC's standard of professional
    responsibility in his personal relations with students. As a result of her findings, the Administrative
    Judge terminated Dr. Wilson's employment as a tenured member of the UTC faculty.
    On November 30, 1999, Dr. Wilson appealed to the UTC Chancellor; however, that appeal
    was denied on December 15, 1999. In addition, on November 24, 1999, Dr. Wilson filed a petition
    for review in the Chancery Court for Davidson County. The Chancery Court heard oral argument
    in the case on August 4, 2000, and on September 13, 2000, it issued its memorandum opinion
    affirming the order of the UTC Administrative Judge. Thereafter, on October 12, 2000, Dr. Wilson
    filed his notice of appeal to this Court.
    Judicial review of the decision of an administrative agency such as UTC is not a de novo
    review and review is limited to the record before the agency. See Metropolitan Government v.
    Shacklett, 
    554 SW2d 601
     (Tenn. 1977). T.C.A. 4-5-322(h), which governs the courts' review of
    agency decisions, states as follows:
    (h) The court may affirm the decision of the agency or remand the case for further
    proceedings. The court may reverse or modify the decision if the rights of the
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    petitioner have been prejudiced because the administrative findings, inferences,
    conclusions or decisions are:
    (1) In violation of constitutional or statutory provisions;
    (2) In excess of the statutory authority of the agency;
    (3) Made upon unlawful procedure;
    (4) Arbitrary or capricious or characterized by abuse of discretion or clearly
    unwarranted exercise of discretion; or
    (5) Unsupported by evidence which is both substantial and material in the light
    of the entire record.
    In determining the substantiality of evidence, the court shall take into account
    whatever in the record fairly detracts from its weight, but the court shall not
    substitute its judgment for that of the agency as to the weight of the evidence on
    questions of fact.
    Our review of a trial court's decision with respect to agency findings is essentially a
    determination of whether the trial court correctly applied the standard of review set forth at T.C.A.
    4-5-322(h). See Papachristou v. University of Tennessee, 
    29 SW3d 487
     (Tenn. Ct. App. 2000).
    The specific charges of which Dr. Wilson was found guilty in this case are, as previously
    stated, "persistent refusal to comply with University policies" and "serious violation of the
    University's standard of professional responsibility in personal relations with students" both of which
    are set forth as adequate causes for termination of a tenured faculty member at Section 3.8.5 of the
    UTC Faculty Handbook. The record shows that both of these charges derive from Dr. Wilson's
    alleged violation of UTC's policy against sexual harassment.
    The Administrative Judge's finding, and UTC's contention, that Dr. Wilson persistently
    refused to comply with UTC policy appear to be based upon a determination that Dr. Wilson has
    once again violated UTC's policy against sexual harassment after being found guilty of violating
    the same policy based upon the charges brought against him in 1995. The Administrative Judge also
    notes that Dr. Wilson failed to abide by Dr. Summerlin's directive that he not invite students into his
    home as set forth in the July 24, 1996, letter he wrote to Dr. Wilson in consequence of the 1995
    charges. In her order the UTC Administrative Judge notes that the 1995 charges were based upon
    an incident that occurred when a student went to Dr. Wilson's home to study for a make-up exam.
    Although the record does not show that Ms. Oo ever entered Dr. Wilson's actual living quarters or
    that she was invited to do so, the Administrative Judge determined that a reasonable interpretation
    of Dr. Summerlin's directive is that Dr.Wilson not invite students to any area of the house which he
    owned and controlled and in which his own apartment was located. The Administrative Judge states
    in her order that the directives in the Summerlin letter "were an appropriate response under the
    circumstances, and were designed to prevent further sexual harassment. Wilson ignored
    Summerlin's directives and engaged in behavior which led to the current charges. Wilson has,
    therefore, exhibited a persistent refusal to comply with University policies."
    -5-
    While we do not dispute that the directives set forth in the letter from Dr. Summerlin were,
    as the Administrative Judge states,"an appropriate response under the circumstances and were
    designed to prevent further sexual harassment", we do not agree that these directives reflect UTC
    policy or that Dr. Wilson's failure to abide by any of these directives in itself constitutes a refusal
    to comply with UTC policy. Recognition of Dr. Summerlin's directives as UTC policy would serve
    to subvert the powers of the University of Tennessee's Board of Trustees which is vested with "full
    and complete control" of the organization and administration of UTC and is designated as the body
    which shall establish policies concerning the general operation of UTC. See UTC Faculty Handbook
    Section 1.2.3.2. which sets forth Article 1 Section 1 of the bylaws of the University of Tennessee.
    We also note the statement of counsel for UTC at the hearing before the Administrative Judge that
    the letter from Dr. Summerlin "is not a policy; it is a warning letter." Therefore, a determination of
    whether Dr. Wilson failed to abide by the directive that he not invite students into his home is not
    relevant to the question of whether he persistently refused to comply with UTC policy. The UTC
    policy at issue in this case is the policy against sexual harassment and, accordingly, the question
    which must be addressed in this case is whether Dr. Wilson's conduct toward Ms. Oo constituted a
    violation of that policy.
    Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 prohibits employment discrimination on the basis
    of sex. See 42 U.S.C. 2000e-2(a)(1). Furthermore, the United States Supreme Court has recognized
    that the sexual harassment of a subordinate by a supervisor in an employment situation constitutes
    unlawful discrimination under Title VII. See Meritor Savings Bank, FSB v Vinson, 
    477 U.S. 57
    , 
    106 S. Ct. 2399
    , 
    91 L.Ed.2d 49
     (1986). Federal regulations set forth at 29 C.F.R. 1604.11(a) provide the
    following guidelines defining hostile environment sexual harassment, as appears to be alleged in the
    present case, in an employment setting:
    Unwelcome sexual advances, requests for sexual favors, and other verbal or
    physical conduct of a sexual nature constitutes sexual harassment when ... (3) such
    conduct has the purpose or effect of unreasonably interfering with an individual's
    work performance or creating an intimidating, hostile, or offensive working
    environment.
    Title IX of the Educational Amendments of 1972, 20 U.S.C. 1681 provides that "[n]o person
    in the United States shall, on the basis of sex, be excluded from participation in, be denied the
    benefits of, or be subjected to discrimination under any education program or activity receiving
    Federal financial assistance..." The Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals has acknowledged that the
    elements required to state a hostile environment sexual harassment claim under Title VII apply
    equally under Title IX. See Doe v. Claiborne County,Tenn., 
    103 F.3d 495
     (6th Cir. 1996).
    In her order, the Administrative Judge acknowledges that under Title VII sexual harassment
    case law "for there to be liability for hostile environment sexual harassment, 'conduct must be severe
    or pervasive enough to create an environment that a reasonable person would find hostile or abusive,
    and the victim must subjectively regard that environment as abusive.'" Citing Black v. Zaring
    -6-
    Homes, Inc., 
    104 F.3d 822
    , 826 (6th Cir. 1997). Under the facts presented in the case before us we
    do not deem that the conduct attributed to Dr. Wilson by Ms. Oo was sufficiently pervasive or severe
    to sustain a cause of action for sexual harassment under this standard. The encounter between Dr.
    Wilson and Ms. Oo out of which this case arose occurred in 1998 and is, therefore, too remote, in
    our view, from the 1995 incident of sexual harassment to be considered pervasive on that basis.
    Also, other than the1995 incident and the current charge, the record reveals no other allegations that
    Dr. Wilson engaged in sexual harassment while employed at UTC. Although in McClellan v. Board
    of Regents of the State University, 
    921 SW2d 684
     (Tenn. 1996), the Tennessee Supreme Court
    recognized that a single incident of sufficient severity may be actionable as sexual harassment, we
    do not find that Dr. Wilson's actions towards Ms. Oo were of such severity. In this regard we are
    guided by the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals case of Burnett v. Tyco Corporation, 
    203 F.3d 980
    (6th Cir. 2000) where the Court found that allegations by a female employee that the defendant
    employer's personnel manager had placed a pack of cigarettes containing a lighter inside her tank
    top and brassiere and had, on two separate occasions, made sexually offensive remarks to her were
    insufficient to create a genuine issue of material fact as to whether the conduct was sufficiently
    severe to support a finding of hostile working environment under Title VII.
    UTC and the Administrative Judge assert that, even if Dr. Wilson's conduct is not such as
    would impose liability on UTC under Title VII's sufficiently 'severe or pervasive' standard, the law
    permits an employer to take prompt effective action before an employee's conduct persists to the
    point where the employer is subject to liability. UTC cites the following cases in support of this
    proposition: Chalmers v. Quaker Oats Co., 
    61 F.3d 1340
     (7th Cir. 1995); Howard v. Department
    of Air Force, 
    877 F.2d 952
     (Fed. Cir. 1989) and Carosella v. United States Postal Service, 
    816 F.2d 638
     (Fed. Cir. 1987).2 Additionally, UTC cites Gebser v. Lago Vista Independent School Dist., 
    524 U.S. 274
    , 
    118 S. Ct. 1989
    , 141 L Ed.2d 277 (1998) for the proposition that it is not only permitted
    to take such action, but is obligated to do so if it has received actual notice of sexual harassment by
    a teacher and it intends to establish a defense to liability under Title IX.
    UTC's policy on sexual harassment is set forth at Section 4.2.2. of the UTC Faculty
    Handbook as follows:
    4.2.2. Sexual Harassment Policy
    The University of Tennessee at Chattanooga recognizes that harassment
    in the University on the basis of sex is a violation of Section 703 of Title VII. For
    this reason, the University is adding this statement and the following guidelines
    to the Faculty Handbook, the University Personnel Policy Manual and the Student
    Handbook.
    2
    In her order of September 16, 19 99, the A dm inistrative Judge also cites Hubrig v. Lockheed Martin Energy
    Sys., Inc.,an unrep orted opinion of this Court filed in Knoxville, on May 4, 1998. The Hu brig case is designated "
    Permission to Appeal Denied, Concurring in Results Only." Amendm ent to Rule 4 of the Rules of the Tennessee
    Supreme Court, which became effective November 1, 1999, and which is applicable to intermediate appellate court
    decisions rend ered prior to that d ate, pro vides that cases so d esignated h ave no p reced ential v alue.
    -7-
    Sexual advances by any UTC employee (faculty or staff member) toward
    another employee or student which become a condition of employment or affect
    the academic relationship constitute an unlawful practice. Unsolicited or
    unwelcome physical or verbal behavior of a sexual nature which has the purpose
    of creating an atmosphere of intimidation is a violation of TitleVII.
    In the case of such harassment, an employee or student has the right to
    pursue the EEO grievance procedure for redress. The affirmative action officer
    should be contacted for this procedure.
    Guidelines: Sexual harassment in the workplace has long been recognized
    by the EEOC as violation of Section 703 of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of
    1964, as amended. Sexual harassment in the workplace is gender-based
    discrimination which violates Title VII and constitutes an unlawful employment
    practice. Additional cases involving issues of sexual harassment are being
    litigated now both by EEOC and private parties.
    The question of whether a particular action or incident establishes a purely
    personal, non-employment related relationship requires a factual determination.
    In making such a determination, the case record as a whole, as well as the totality
    of the circumstances, such as the nature of the sexual advances and the context in
    which the alleged incidents occurred, will be examined. The determination of the
    legality of a particular action will be made from the facts, on a case by case basis,
    because the same behavior may constitute sexual harassment in one context but
    not in another.
    Sexual harassment, like racial harassment, generates a psychologically
    harmful atmosphere. Employees and students are guaranteed a working and
    learning environment free of discriminatory intimidation, whether racial or sexual.
    Therefore, UTC has an affirmative duty to maintain an atmosphere free of sexual
    harassment and intimidation. The best way to achieve such an environment is to
    prevent sexual harassment from occurring at all, by utilizing all possible methods
    to alert the employees and students to the problem and to stress that sexual
    harassment, in any form, will not be tolerated.
    We do not dispute UTC's right to take remedial action before an employee's conduct
    continues to the point where UTC is subject to liability and we agree that, for the purpose of taking
    such action, UTC is not bound by case law defining what constitutes sexual harassment under Title
    VII. However, we are compelled to note that throughout it's stated policy on sexual harassment as
    set forth above, UTC refers to sexual harassment as being a violation of Title VII. If, for the
    purposes of remedial action, UTC decides to adopt a more stringent policy than is required to
    establish liability under Title VII case law, an employee, like Dr. Wilson, who is charged with
    violation of such policy must be sufficiently apprised of the stringency of UTC's stance and must
    be alerted to the perimeter of the policy to which he is subject. See Chalmers, 
    ibid.
     Our review of
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    the record in this case does not convince us that Dr. Wilson was provided with adequate information
    from which he could have inferred that his behavior toward Ms. Oo would violate UTC's policy
    against sexual harassment. Although we recognize the previous charge of sexual harassment brought
    against Dr. Wilson in 1995 as well the letter written to him by Dr. Summerlin in consequence of
    those charges, we do not find that either the circumstances of the prior incident or the contents of
    Dr. Summerlin's letter would have served to place Dr. Wilson on notice that UTC would consider
    the conduct of which he is currently accused to be a violation of its policy against sexual harassment.
    With respect to the charge of sexual harassment brought against Dr. Wilson in 1995, the
    record shows that this charge was based on allegations that Dr. Wilson kissed and hugged a female
    student and that he refused to give her an A in his course after she resisted his advances. The fact
    that UTC deemed such overtly sexual behavior coupled with the element of quid pro quo to
    constitute sexual harassment would not have been sufficient to alert Dr. Wilson that UTC's definition
    of sexual harassment might encompass the conduct of which he is accused in the present case. In
    contrast with the 1995 incident, Ms. Oo's own testimony makes evident the ambiguous nature of Dr.
    Wilson's actions in the present matter. Although, as set forth above, Ms. Oo attests that when Dr.
    Wilson touched her ankle she decided this was inappropriate, she also testifies that, thereafter, she
    agreed to return to do more typing because she "was still unsure if what he had done was actually
    inappropriate" and that she told her friend, Ms. Maurya, that she thought Dr. Wilson's conduct was
    "strange" but that she "wasn't sure if he intended it to be inappropriate."
    The letter written to Dr. Wilson from Dr. Summerlin as a result of the 1995 charge instructs
    him to discontinue certain practices "because they have the potential for compromising professional
    relationships between faculty and students." The letter does not state that UTC considers any of the
    designated practices to be conduct amounting to sexual harassment but only that such practices are
    "ill advised and contribute substantially to concerns about the environment you are fostering with
    respect to students." We find nothing in this letter which would have placed Dr. Wilson on notice
    that UTC would consider his behavior toward Ms. Oo in the present case to be sexual harassment.
    Finally, a review of the behavior complained of in each of the four cases cited by UTC in
    support of its right to take prompt remedial action accentuates the relatively innocuous nature of Dr.
    Wilson's conduct toward Ms. Oo in the present case. In Chalmers v. Quaker Oats Co., 
    61 F.3d 1340
    (7th Cir. 1995) a company officer was discharged for kissing a female employee without invitation.
    In Howard v. Department of the Air Force, 
    877 F.2d 952
     (Fed. Cir. 1989) an employee was
    discharged for, among other things, suggesting to a female co-worker that they "make wild love all
    afternoon" and for grabbing and kissing another female employee and asking her about her breast
    size and sex drive. Carosella v. United States Postal Service, 
    816 F.2d 638
     (Fed. Cir. 1989)
    involved a supervisor who was discharged for, among other things, putting his arm around a female
    employee and asking her out for a date and for kissing another female employee on several occasions
    and offering to have her clocked in so that she could be paid to go out with him. And Gebser v.
    Lago Vista Independent School Dist., 
    524 U.S. 274
    , 
    118 S.Ct. 1989
    , 
    141 L.Ed.2d 277
     (1998)
    involved a high school teacher whose employment was terminated when it was discovered that he
    was engaging in sexual intercourse with one of his female students.
    -9-
    It is our conclusion that the sexual harassment policy of UTC as set forth in its Faculty
    Handbook did not sufficiently apprise Dr. Wilson that UTC might consider the conduct attributed
    to him in this matter to be sexual harassment. Nor do we find that UTC supplemented such policy
    as set forth in the Handbook or that Dr. Wilson's conduct was of such gravity that he should have
    otherwise known that it would violate UTC's policy against sexual harassment. Accordingly, we
    find that the Administrative Judge's decision to terminate Dr. Wilson's employment based on
    findings that he persistently refused to comply with UTC policy and seriously violated UTC's
    standard of professional responsibility in personal relations with students was arbitrary and,
    therefore, we conclude that the Chancery Court erred in affirming the opinion of the Administrative
    Judge.
    For the foregoing reasons we reverse the judgment of the Chancery Court and remand for
    such further proceedings, if any as may be necessary, and collection of costs below which are, as are
    costs of appeal, adjudged against the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga.
    _________________________________________
    HOUSTON M. GODDARD, PRESIDING JUDGE
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