Tysheka Barnett v. B.F. Nashville, Inc. DBA Wendy's Of Nashville ( 2017 )


Menu:
  •                                                                                           05/30/2017
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
    AT NASHVILLE
    January 18, 2017 Session
    TYSHEKA BARNETT v. B.F. NASHVILLE, INC. DBA WENDY’S OF
    NASHVILLE
    Appeal from the Circuit Court for Davidson County
    No. 14C3213      Joseph P. Binkley, Jr., Judge
    No. M2016-00762-COA-R3-CV
    Tysheka Barnett brought this action solely against her employer, B.F. Nashville, Inc., dba
    Wendy’s of Nashville, alleging that Wendy’s general manager, William Rogers, sexually
    harrassed her during her employment at a Wendy’s restaurant. After a four-day bench
    trial, the court found that plaintiff had not met her burden of proof to show that the sexual
    conduct between her and Rogers was unwanted, and, therefore, she was unable to show
    harassment. On appeal, plaintiff primarily argues that the evidence preponderates against
    the trial court’s determination that the sexual interaction in question was not unwelcomed
    by plaintiff. This ruling was driven and determined in large part by the trial court’s
    evaluation of the credibility, including demeanor, of the various witnesses. Plaintiff
    appeals. We affirm.
    Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Circuit Court
    Affirmed; Case Remanded
    CHARLES D. SUSANO, JR., J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which ANDY D.
    BENNETT and W. NEAL MCBRAYER, JJ., joined.
    Stephen Crofford and Mary Parker, Nashville, Tennessee, for the appellant, Tysheka
    Barnett.
    Richard C. Mangelsdorf, Jr. and Brian F. Walthart, Nashville, Tennessee, for the
    appellee, B.F. Nashville, Inc.
    OPINION
    I.
    Plaintiff began working at Wendy’s restaurant on Jefferson Street in Nashville in
    late September of 2013. She was a freshman at Tennessee State University. The
    Wendy’s, located near the TSU campus, was referred to by the parties as the “TSU
    Wendy’s.” Plaintiff testified that she was getting lunch there one day when the general
    manager, Rogers, asked her if she wanted a job. Rogers denied this; he testified that
    plaintiff “came down there numerous times, filling out application[s], two or three of
    them, and I finally interviewed her and gave her a job.”
    Plaintiff alleged that manager Rogers began making sexual advances to her on the
    first day of her employment. She testified that Rogers “was saying he wants me like he
    wanted me like maybe as his girlfriend or he wanted to have sex with me or do sexual
    activity with me.” Plaintiff stated that his conduct got progressively more aggressive
    over the first several months, and that he made graphic sexual comments to her and
    groped her on “several different occasions.” By December 2013, according to plaintiff’s
    testimony, Rogers was threatening to cut her working hours if she continued to refuse sex
    with him. When she was asked why she continued to work at the TSU Wendy’s, plaintiff
    said that she was unable to find another job because she was then on probation for simple
    possession of marijuana.
    Rogers flatly denied the allegations of sexual harassment. He testified that
    plaintiff “was a real touchy person. She hugged and kissed, stuff on everybody.” He also
    said that plaintiff regularly called him on his cell phone when neither of them was at
    work. In late January or early February of 2014, plaintiff and Rogers met at a hotel room
    and had sex. She testified that she felt compelled to do it because he was beginning to
    carry out his threat of cutting her hours; those hours declined in mid-December. He
    testified that it was purely a sex-for-money exchange, and that they had negotiated the
    price a couple of nights before. Rogers said plaintiff wanted $400 and they agreed on
    that price, but at the hotel room he only had $260, which he paid her upfront. Plaintiff
    admitted that Rogers gave her $260 in the hotel room. She testified at one point that the
    money was to help her catch up on her overdue bills and to make up for lost hours, and
    also testified that the money was a “gift.”
    Plaintiff continued to work at the TSU Wendy’s for the first half of 2014. Her
    hours remained steady until the end of June, when they began to decrease. Plaintiff
    testified that Rogers cut her hours because she refused his sexual advances after the hotel
    encounter. Many of the other witnesses testified that plaintiff got fewer hours because
    she was then working a second job that required her to leave the TSU Wendy’s early.
    -2-
    The testimony of these witnesses, which included co-workers and assistant managers,
    will be discussed later in greater detail.
    On July 27, 2014, plaintiff reported to work early, before the restaurant opened,
    and surreptitiously recorded an interaction between her and Rogers on her cell phone.
    The recording is a videotape file, but only audio is available during the pertinent times.
    This is because the phone’s video camera was apparently covered up and the file shows
    only a black screen for most of the recording. On the recording, plaintiff is heard to say,
    “boy, if you don’t get your hands out of my damn pants” and “so you really not gonna
    take your hands out of my pants, huh?” Rogers then asks plaintiff to go to the ladies’
    bathroom and strip for him for $40. According to Rogers, she did, and he paid her $20.
    According to plaintiff, she refused. The recording is barely audible at points, and
    difficult to understand throughout. The trial court found that “Rogers said she said . . .
    that she would strip for $40, and I think the tape said that, said, ‘Yeah, I’ll do that.’ ” The
    evidence does not preponderate against this finding. On the recording, it sounds like
    plaintiff said “I’ll strip for you . . . I’ll strip for them forty.”
    Nine days later, on August 5, 2014, plaintiff filed this action against BF Nashville,
    Inc. (employer), the owner of the TSU Wendy’s. She alleged employer was vicariously
    liable under the respondeat superior doctrine for Rogers’ alleged sexual harassment of
    her, said conduct being in violation of the Tennessee Human Rights Act (THRA), Tenn.
    Code Ann. § 4-21-101 et seq. (2015). Three of employer’s executive-level managers
    testified: district manager Bobby Moss, human resources manager Dale Bruner, and
    director of operations Charles Pastors. All three testified that the first time they heard of
    the harassment allegation was upon receipt of the notice of the lawsuit.
    On August 7, 2014, two days after the complaint was filed, all three executives
    traveled to the TSU Wendy’s and conducted an investigation comprised of employee
    interviews. They took the statements of some fifteen employees, recording their answers
    to seven pertinent questions on a written sheet, allowing employees to write their own
    statements, and having the employees sign the statements. The executives began with
    William Rogers, who initially denied the allegation of harassment, saying “none of it’s
    true.” The investigation did not develop any corroborating evidence suggesting any other
    employee’s awareness or perception of sexual harassment of anyone by Rogers. At the
    end of the first day of the investigation, Rogers came forward to human resources
    manager Bruner and district manager Moss, and told them about the incident in the
    ladies’ bathroom, saying that he followed plaintiff in there and she dropped her pants in
    return for money. They asked him to put his statement in writing, which he did. Then
    they took his restaurant keys, and asked him to leave. He never returned to the restaurant
    in an employment capacity.
    -3-
    Employer officially fired Rogers several days later. It is not entirely clear from
    the record when Rogers became aware of the tape recording. It appears, however, that it
    was at this meeting when Bruner and Pastors told him they were terminating his
    employment. After Rogers learned he was fired, he told the executives that he and
    plaintiff had met at a hotel room and had sex, saying it was consensual and that he had
    paid her money.
    The case proceeded to a bench trial, which was conducted on January 11 through
    14, 2016. The court heard closing arguments and delivered its opinion from the bench on
    January 27, 2016. The trial court held that plaintiff failed to meet her burden of proof to
    demonstrate that the sexual contact between her and Rogers was unwanted. The court
    concluded, therefore, that no harassment had been demonstrated. Additionally, and
    alternatively, the trial court found that employer established its affirmative defense by
    showing that “if, in fact, it was unwelcomed conduct, and I find that it was not
    unwelcomed, that the employer exercised reasonable care to prevent and correct properly
    any sexual harassing behavior.” The court further stated, “the record is abundantly clear
    that the plaintiff had no desire to take advantage of the preventive or corrective
    opportunities provided by the employer to report sexual harassment,” and, “I found
    there’s no harm, but if there was harm, I find that [plaintiff] unreasonably failed to
    otherwise avoid the harm and, in fact, invited the sexual contact.” Plaintiff timely filed a
    notice of appeal.
    II.
    Plaintiff raises the following issues, as paraphrased by us:
    1. Whether the trial court complied with Tenn. R. Civ. P.
    52.01, which requires that the court “shall find the facts
    specially and shall state separately its conclusions of law and
    direct the entry of the appropriate judgment,” when it
    delivered its seven-hour, 185-page oral opinion from the
    bench.
    2. Whether the evidence preponderates against the trial
    court’s finding that plaintiff failed to carry her burden of
    proving that the sexual interactions between plaintiff and
    Rogers were unwelcomed.
    3. Whether the trial court erred in admitting Charles Pastors’
    testimony regarding certain specific instances of plaintiff’s
    -4-
    conduct related to him by other Wendy’s employees, said
    testimony being offered under Tenn. R. Evid. 405(b).
    4. Whether the trial court erred in holding that employer was
    entitled to present its affirmative defense that it took
    reasonable measures to prevent and correct discriminatory
    conduct, and that plaintiff unreasonably failed to take
    advantage of these preventative and corrective measures.
    5. Whether the trial court erred in granting employer’s
    motions in limine to exclude evidence of a prior sexual
    harassment lawsuit filed against employer that did not involve
    the TSU Wendy’s or any of its employees, and to exclude
    evidence of Rogers’ prior consensual sexual relationship with
    another subordinate employee.
    III.
    In this non-jury case, our standard of review is de novo upon the record of the
    proceedings below; however, the record comes to us with a presumption of correctness as
    to the trial court’s factual determinations, a presumption we must honor unless the
    evidence preponderates otherwise. Tenn. R. App. P. 13(d); Wright v. City of Knoxville,
    
    898 S.W.2d 177
    , 181 (Tenn. 1995). There is no presumption of correctness as to the trial
    court’s legal conclusions. Kendrick v. Shoemake, 
    90 S.W.3d 566
    , 569 (Tenn. 2002);
    Campbell v. Florida Steel Corp., 
    919 S.W.2d 26
    , 35 (Tenn. 1996).
    IV.
    A.
    Plaintiff argues that the trial court did not comply with Tenn. R. Civ. P. 52.01,
    which requires, in pertinent part, as follows:
    In all actions tried upon the facts without a jury, the court
    shall find the facts specially and shall state separately its
    conclusions of law and direct the entry of the appropriate
    judgment. . . . If an opinion or memorandum of decision is
    filed, it will be sufficient if the findings of fact and
    conclusions of law appear therein.
    -5-
    The trial court’s final judgment dismissing the action with prejudice stated as follows in
    pertinent part:
    The Court issued an oral ruling from the bench. . . . This
    Court expressly adopts by reference, and incorporates by
    reference, all of . . . the Court’s findings of fact and
    conclusions of law contained in Exhibit A. However, to
    summarize, after reviewing all of the evidence, authority, and
    argument submitted by the parties, this Court finds that
    Plaintiff Barnett failed to meet her burden of proof to show
    that she suffered any sexual harassment as defined by law, or
    other violation under the Tennessee Human Rights Act.
    Furthermore, even assuming that Plaintiff did suffer some
    form of sexual harassment/discrimination while employed by
    the Defendant, this Court finds that Defendant B.F. Nashville,
    Inc. has fulfilled its burden of proof and proved all of the
    elements of the affirmative defense set forth in Parker v.
    Warren County Util. Dist., 
    2 S.W.3d 170
    , 176 (Tenn. 1999).
    For these reasons the Plaintiff’s complaint is hereby
    dismissed with prejudice.
    In its oral opinion, the trial court reviewed the testimony of all eleven witnesses
    and many of the trial exhibits, making numerous specific findings regarding the
    credibility of the various witnesses. The court was very thorough. Its transcribed opinion
    is 185 pages long. The time stamps on the transcript show that the trial court began
    delivering its opinion at 3:00pm and concluded at 10:09pm. We find no merit to
    plaintiff’s argument that the trial court failed to comply with Rule 52.01.
    B.
    The THRA provides that “[i]t is a discriminatory practice for an employer to: (1)
    Fail or refuse to hire or discharge any person or otherwise to discriminate against an
    individual with respect to compensation, terms, conditions or privileges of employment
    because of such individual’s race, creed, color, religion, sex, age or national origin.”
    Tenn. Code Ann. § 4-21-401(a) (2015). It is well established that the THRA bars sexual
    harassment in the workplace, 
    Campbell, 919 S.W.2d at 31
    , as does the similarly-worded
    Title VII of the Federal Civil Rights Act. Id; Parker v. Warren Cnty. Util. Dist., 
    2 S.W.3d 170
    , 172 (Tenn. 1999); Allen v. McPhee, 
    240 S.W.3d 803
    , 812 (Tenn. 2007),
    abrogated on other grounds by Gossett v. Tractor Supply Co., 
    320 S.W.3d 777
    (Tenn.
    2010).
    -6-
    In Gordon v. W.E. Stephens Mfg. Co., No. M2007-01126-COA-R3-CV, 
    2008 WL 4254584
    , at *6 (Tenn. Ct. App., filed Sept. 16, 2008), we observed that “[w]hile
    there can be no uniform definition of sexual harassment, it can include unwelcome sexual
    advances, requests for sexual favors, or any unwelcome conduct, whether verbal or
    physical, which would not likely take place but for the plaintiff’s gender.” Id. (citing
    
    Campbell, 919 S.W.2d at 31
    (emphasis added)).
    Plaintiff argues that the evidence preponderates against the trial court’s conclusion
    that the sexual contact between her and Rogers was not unwelcomed. As might be
    expected, her testimony is diametrically opposed, in many regards, to that of Rogers.
    Rogers’ testimony was successfully impeached on several occasions, and he admitted
    having lied more than once in an attempt to save his job. The trial court also heard the
    testimony of two of plaintiff’s co-workers, Cameo Owens and Sidney Robinson, and
    generally credited that testimony. Two assistant managers, Marjorie Ann Martin and
    Rashleigh Braithwaite, also testified.
    Plaintiff testified that Rogers harassed her “constantly, the whole time I was there
    from the first day[.]” She said that the harassment occurred almost every day that she
    worked at the TSU Wendy’s. The trial court noted that no other witness corroborated this
    allegation. Plaintiff answered “correct” when she was asked, “it’s your testimony . . . that
    you were being harassed by your manager at work but no one else in the restaurant even
    knew about it except you and him; is that right?” Plaintiff further testified as follows:
    Q. Okay. And the truth of the matter is, ma’am, with all due
    respect, you were in close proximity to all these co-workers,
    sometimes as many as 12 other people working with you on a
    shift for six hours at a time?
    *      *         *
    A. Yeah. They’re just people, people I don’t know. . . . I’m
    not going to tell them my personal information because that’s
    just like walking up to a total stranger.
    Q. And during these six-hour shifts, you would sometimes
    even bump into other people because you’re just working in
    such close quarters; right?
    A. I guess you could say. I mean, if there’s 12 people
    working a compact area, I’m pretty sure.
    -7-
    Plaintiff said that the reason no one else at the restaurant observed any harassing behavior
    is that Rogers would call her in early when no one else was working “and get me alone
    when there’s no cameras.”
    Co-worker Owens’ testimony contradicted this statement. She testified that
    plaintiff’s usual morning shift began at 10:00 or 10:30am. Owens’ normal shift started at
    7:00am, and did not fluctuate. Owens testified that plaintiff was never already at the
    Wendy’s when Owens got there. She also said that she never discovered that plaintiff
    had been in the store alone with Rogers when Owens reported to work at 7:00.
    Owens testified that she never saw anything that she considered sexual harassment
    at the TSU Wendy’s, nor did she ever hear anyone complain about such harassment. In
    response to a question of whether plaintiff ever did “anything sexually suggestive” to her,
    she stated that while they were working together, plaintiff “would touch me and say I
    want you, or I like you.” Owens testified that plaintiff did not “seem like the kind of
    person that was hesitant to share personal details.” She said that plaintiff told her about
    the hotel incident while they were at work, stating:
    A: She said promise you ain’t gonna tell nobody. . . . I said
    ain’t gonna tell, Tysheka. She said, okay, I’m fixin’ to tell
    you, and then she said she had sex with Mr. [Rogers].
    *      *         *
    Q. Okay. Tell me the details that she gave you about the
    sexual contact.
    A. She said she had sex with Mr. [Rogers] in a room for
    $500.
    Q. Okay. Did she seem upset or sad when she told you this?
    A. No, sir.
    Q. Can you describe for the Court [plaintiff’s] demeanor
    when she told you this?
    A. She told me like she was all right with it, like she was
    confident, like she didn’t have no problems. She was just ‒
    she needed some money to take care of a bill or her car.
    -8-
    When plaintiff was asked if she ever told Owens that she had sex with Rogers for
    money, she responded, “I absolutely do not remember . . . I mean, it’s possible it could
    have happened.” The trial court specifically found Owens’ testimony to be credible.
    Sidney Robinson, another co-worker who started working there her junior year in
    high school and was no longer working there at time of trial, testified that she was never
    harassed at the TSU Wendy’s. She said she felt like she would be protected if that had
    happened, because of the “good managers that we have” that “followed the [sexual
    harassment] policy.” Robinson never saw Rogers interact inappropriately with plaintiff
    or anyone else. She also stated that she was unaware of “any discussion or rumor”
    among the employees that sexual harassment was occurring at the restaurant. When she
    was asked, “in the restaurant where Mr. Rogers was the boss, did you see any evidence in
    the restaurant of a hostile environment for women?” she replied “no.” Robinson initially
    testified that she overheard plaintiff “on the line bragging about” selling her body for
    cash. She later retreated from this statement, recanting that she had heard plaintiff say
    she sold her body “for cash” and testifying that plaintiff “does certain things . . . trying to
    hit on somebody in a . . . blurred way.” The trial court specifically credited Robinson’s
    testimony.
    Marjorie Ann Martin, an assistant manager, also testified. She was unaware of
    any sexual harassment complaint that any Wendy’s employee had made prior to this
    lawsuit. She testified that Rogers was a good manager who took care of his employees,
    that she never witnessed or heard of any harassment by Rogers, and that she was shocked
    when she heard of plaintiff’s allegation. Martin worked the night shift with plaintiff for a
    fairly brief time. She testified as follows about her interaction with plaintiff:
    Q. Did [plaintiff] have any problem with sharing personal
    information with you at the workplace?
    A. No, sir, she did not.
    Q. Did she have any problem sharing information with you
    about her personal relationships?
    A. No, sir, she did not.
    Q. Did she seem hesitant to talk about private matters such as
    her relationships with men?
    A. Let’s just say she talked about it a lot.
    -9-
    Q. Well, why don’t you explain what you mean by that?
    A. Okay. [Plaintiff] had this tendency to – let’s just say,
    sexual harassment from Mr. William Rogers may be an
    extreme. It might be sexual harassment ‒ sexual harassment
    from [plaintiff].
    Q. What do you mean?
    A. [Plaintiff] would say things to me and to other employees
    which made me have to stop her from saying because it got
    too offensive.
    Assistant manager Martin also related to the trial court an incident where plaintiff
    described “an idea” to sue another manager at an Arby’s restaurant where she also
    worked for racial harassment:
    A. [Plaintiff] bragged about how she had the boss wrapped
    around her finger. She could get her way from him ‒ get her
    way from him is what she said. [Plaintiff] started to work
    nights with me. She kept saying how bad she needed money.
    She told me she came up with this idea. She said the manager
    at Arby’s was mistreating her. She said the manager was
    white and thought she was racially harassing her. I told her ‒
    told her to talk to the manager and the GM. I also told her to
    file a lawsuit based on something that was ‒ that’s not there is
    wrong. She also said she was arrested for possession of a
    pound of Mary Jane.
    The trial court found Martin’s testimony to be credible.
    In late January or early February ‒ neither was sure of the date ‒ plaintiff and
    Rogers met at a hotel and had sex. Plaintiff adamantly denied that it was a money-for-
    sex exchange. She testified, “[t]he money he gave me was a gift. Since he cut my hours
    and as a result of him cutting my hours, like I said before, he would help me get caught
    up on my expenses.” On cross-examination, plaintiff admitted that she testified in her
    deposition as follows:
    Q. Okay. Page 116. I’d like you to look, ma’am, here at line
    5. Question: “You said he gave you money. Did he give you
    some money as a gift?” Answer: “I mean, he gave me some
    - 10 -
    money.” “How much money did he give you?” “He gave
    me, I believe it was, like, 400. And then he told me that one
    day when I come to work, don’t clock out, that he would pay
    me on the clock.” Is that what he told you?
    A. Yes, sir.
    *      *          *
    Q. Question: “Did he pay you to have sex with him?” Why
    don’t you read the Court your answer, please?
    A. I mean, he gave me some cash. He paid me.
    Q. You said, “Yes, he paid me.” Correct?
    A. I mean, it says, “Yes, he paid me.” But from my
    understanding, he did not give me any cash for sex.
    Rogers, for his part, testified that plaintiff regularly called him on his cell phone
    when neither of them was at work, they talked frequently, and they agreed on a price
    before they went to the hotel. Although plaintiff wanted $400 and they agreed on that
    amount, he only had $260 on the date they met, so they settled on that price. Rogers
    testified, “I never sexually harassed her. I paid her for her services, and that was it.” The
    trial court found as follows:
    [Plaintiff] testified she did not have sex with William Rogers
    for money in a motel. I understand what you mean by that,
    saying she wasn’t being a prostitute, but she was ‒ had sex
    because she needed the money. I mean, I get the distinction
    there in her mind, I get what she is talking about, but it leads
    me to the conclusion that it was not unwelcomed sexual
    contact, it was welcomed.
    The trial court also found it credible that plaintiff, “after having sex with William Rogers
    . . . at the hotel, motel, that she felt disgusted with herself for having done that,” stating,
    “I do think that following that encounter with a man the age of her father who’s way
    overweight, not clean, smelled, that she was disgusted.”
    Plaintiff testified that she felt compelled to give in to Rogers’ sexual advances
    because he threatened to cut her working hours, and in fact did so when she refused him.
    - 11 -
    Rogers denied ever manipulating her hours, either as a threat or a reward. The parties
    presented detailed records of the hours plaintiff worked at the TSU Wendy’s, from late
    September 2013 until the week ending August 10, 2014. Her hours fluctuated somewhat
    each week, but mostly stayed between 25 and 35 hours per week. They dropped for two
    weeks in mid-December. For the week ending December 15, 2013, she worked 14.93
    hours, and the week ending December 22, only 5.63 hours. Many of the Wendy’s
    employees testified that after TSU’s final exam period ended and Christmas break began,
    it was a very slow time for the restaurant and everyone had their hours cut for that reason.
    This potentially explains the drop in hours for the second week, because TSU’s
    commencement was on December 14. There was no explanation provided for why
    plaintiff got fewer hours for the week ending December 15. However, in plaintiff’s
    answer to interrogatories asking her to list each alleged instance of retaliation by having
    hours cut, she did not include the dates in December in her response, citing only her drop
    in hours that occurred in mid-2014. Employer cross-examined her on this omission,
    asking, “could you show the Court if there is anywhere in your interrogatory responses
    where you allege that your hours were cut in December of 2014?” [sic: 2013] Plaintiff’s
    counsel replied, “we will stipulate there is not.” The record further shows that plaintiff
    also worked at Arby’s from September 2013 until April 2014, and that she worked 30.28
    hours at Arby’s during the week ending December 22, 2013.
    Plaintiff’s hours generally returned to normal, both before and after the hotel
    incident, until the end of June 2014. They declined significantly in July; she worked
    around seven hours per week that month. Plaintiff testified that Rogers cut her hours in
    retaliation for her refusal to have sex with him again. Numerous other witnesses,
    including co-workers Owens and Robinson, assistant managers Martin and Braithwaite,
    and Rogers, testified that the reason plaintiff got fewer hours was that she was then
    working a second job in Smyrna that required her to leave the TSU Wendy’s earlier than
    before. Additionally, it was undisputed that plaintiff was also picking up hours on an
    “as-needed” basis from another Wendy’s store located on Charlotte Pike in Nashville.
    Robinson testified as follows:
    Q. What did ‒ and what did she say to you about the second
    job?
    A. . . . I asked her, well, why don’t I see you because I had
    just came back from ‒ from school, just came back to
    Wendy’s. She said, well, I have another job so I’m not there
    as much.
    *      *         *
    - 12 -
    Q. Did [plaintiff] ever tell you why she thought her hours
    were being reduced at the TSU Wendy’s?
    A. I asked her why I don’t work with her a lot, and she told
    me that she had a second job.
    The trial court found as follows regarding plaintiff’s work hours:
    I find that her hours were cut at TSU Wendy’s because she
    had a second job and she had to get out of there early in order
    to get to Smyrna to be involved in her second job. It had
    nothing to do with failure to give sexual favors. It had
    everything to do with the fact she had to be at another job.
    This conclusion was based largely on the trial court’s observation of the various
    witnesses and assessment of their credibility. The evidence does not preponderate
    against the trial court’s findings of fact supporting its ultimate conclusion on this point.
    Plaintiff recorded her interaction with Rogers on July 27, 2014, which happened
    before the restaurant opened. As already noted, Rogers asks plaintiff to go to the ladies’
    rest room and strip for him for $40. Plaintiff testified, “he gave me nothing, and I did not
    strip for him.” Rogers testified, “I told her, ‘as a matter of fact, you can strip for me right
    now for $40,” and she said, ‘okay,’ ” and “I ended up giving her $20.” The trial court
    correctly noted that it sounds like plaintiff agreed with the suggestion on the recording.
    Plaintiff did not deny her agreement on cross-examination. She testified:
    Q. And the truth is you agreed to go to the bathroom with him
    for $40 because you were trying to trap him for a lawsuit; is
    that right?
    A. No. He trapped himself. He knew for a fact he wasn’t
    supposed to fraternize or do anything with your coworkers,
    and he did not once, twice.
    Q. Well, explain to the Court then why you said you would
    go to the bathroom and strip for him for $40, what was in
    your mind?
    A. It would ‒ it wouldn’t have been trapping him. I mean,
    this is a lawsuit. You need evidence. You need facts. You
    need facts. If I would have came to my lawyer with nothing,
    - 13 -
    it would have been my case against his; he say versus she say.
    Don’t you believe you need the facts to prove the case?
    Rogers testified to the effect that plaintiff set him up to get the recording, stating in
    pertinent part:
    Q. The conduct between you and [plaintiff], that you weren’t
    surprised by the tape recording?
    A. I mean, I was surprised that she made the tape recording,
    yes.
    Q. But the fact that you all were talking in that manner, was
    not ‒
    A. No. I was on the phone with her all the time.
    Q. That wasn’t inconsistent with the way you talked in the
    store?
    A. No. Because we never really ‒ she never really worked in
    the morning time like that to even get ‒ to even play with her
    like that. She come in at 10 o’clock. It was already four
    people there when she get there.
    Q. When you were alone in the store with her ‒
    A. Right.
    Q. ‒ was that consistent with the way you talked?
    A. No, sir. Just that day.
    *       *        *
    Q. Didn’t you earlier say that that tape recording was
    consistent with the way y’all talked ‒
    A. Yes, on the phone and stuff, not ‒ not in the store.
    - 14 -
    Q. Okay. So in the store ‒ you never used any language like
    that except that one day?
    A. That I ‒ that I recall, yes, sir. Because she came in talking
    about sex and stuff. Then she started to record. She had been
    there over an hour when she started recording. An hour and a
    half she just started playing and talking nasty, and then she
    hit the recorder.
    (Emphasis added.)
    Regarding what did or did not happen in the ladies’ rest room, the trial court
    found, “I can’t decide who is telling the truth on that” and “the evidence is equally
    balanced on that issue.” As a consequent of its indecision on this point, the court held
    that “plaintiff has failed to carry her burden of proof on that.”
    Ultimately, as already stated, the trial court found that plaintiff did not prove that
    the sexual interaction between her and Rogers was unwanted.1 This decision was
    inescapably dependent on the trial court’s observation and assessment of the demeanor
    and credibility of the various witnesses. The trial court made numerous specific findings
    of credibility. It is a fundamental principle of appellate jurisprudence that “[w]hen a trial
    court has seen and heard witnesses, especially where issues of credibility and weight of
    oral testimony are involved, considerable deference must be accorded to the trial court’s
    factual findings.” Collins v. Howmet Corp., 
    970 S.W.2d 941
    , 943 (Tenn. 1998). Put
    another way, “trial courts are best situated to evaluate witness credibility, and appellate
    courts will not re-evaluate a trial judge’s assessment of witness credibility absent clear
    and convincing evidence to the contrary.” In re Joseph F., 
    492 S.W.3d 690
    , 702 (Tenn.
    Ct. App. 2016), quoting Wells v. Tenn. Bd. of Regents, 
    9 S.W.3d 779
    , 783 (Tenn. 1999)
    (internal quotation marks omitted). We affirm the trial court’s ruling that plaintiff failed
    to prove that Rogers harassed her, because the interaction between the two was not
    unwelcomed.
    1
    Plaintiff asserts, in an argument raised for the first time in her appellate reply brief, that the trial
    court did not apply the correct legal standard because it referred at times to an issue of whether the
    conduct was “consensual,” as opposed to “wanted” or “welcomed.” The trial court did use the term
    “consensual” occasionally in the course of delivering its long oral opinion, but often in the context of
    what Rogers testified to, or how he described what happened. Plaintiff argues that the trial court’s ruling
    makes it difficult “to know whether [it] understood the correct standard to apply for determining sexual
    harassment, which is based upon welcome and unwelcome behavior.” But in delivering its opinion, the
    trial court expressly stated, no fewer than seven separate times, its finding that the conduct was either
    “welcomed” or “not unwelcomed.” We find this argument is without merit.
    - 15 -
    C.
    An employer is strictly liable for sexual harassment perpetrated by its managerial
    employee under respondeat superior if a tangible employment action has been taken
    against the plaintiff. 
    Parker, 2 S.W.3d at 176
    ; Pa. State Police v. Suders, 
    542 U.S. 129
    ,
    137 (2004). In Allen v. 
    McPhee, 240 S.W.3d at 812-13
    , the Tennessee Supreme Court
    restated and explained the concept of “tangible employment action,” and the affirmative
    defense available if such an action has not been taken, as follows:
    The United States Supreme Court developed the modern
    framework for determining an employer’s liability for hostile
    work environment sexual harassment in the companion cases
    of Faragher v. City of Boca Raton, 
    524 U.S. 775
    , 
    118 S. Ct. 2275
    , 
    141 L. Ed. 2d 662
    (1998), and Burlington Industries,
    Inc. v. Ellerth, 
    524 U.S. 742
    , 
    118 S. Ct. 2257
    , 
    141 L. Ed. 2d 633
    (1998). Those cases held that “[a]n employer is subject
    to vicarious liability to a victimized employee for an
    actionable hostile environment created by a supervisor with
    immediate (or successively higher) authority over the
    employee.” 
    Faragher, 524 U.S. at 807
    , 
    118 S. Ct. 2275
    ;
    
    Ellerth, 524 U.S. at 765
    , 
    118 S. Ct. 2257
    . There is, however,
    an important exception to the rule of vicarious liability:
    When no tangible employment action is taken, a
    defending employer may raise an affirmative
    defense to liability or damages, subject to proof
    by a preponderance of the evidence. . . . The
    defense comprises two necessary elements: (a)
    that the employer exercised reasonable care to
    prevent and correct promptly any sexually
    harassing behavior, and (b) that the plaintiff
    employee unreasonably failed to take advantage
    of any preventive or corrective opportunities
    provided by the employer or to avoid harm
    otherwise.
    
    Faragher, 524 U.S. at 807
    , 
    118 S. Ct. 2275
    ; 
    Ellerth, 524 U.S. at 765
    , 
    118 S. Ct. 2257
    . In accordance with the policy of
    maintaining the continuity of the THRA and Title VII, we
    have since adopted the vicarious liability rule and the
    Faragher/Ellerth defense. 
    Parker, 2 S.W.3d at 176
    . When
    - 16 -
    the harassing supervisor has not taken or instigated a tangible
    employment action against the employee, such as a
    termination, failure to promote, demotion, or undesirable
    reassignment, the employer may raise an affirmative defense
    to liability. Id.; 
    Faragher, 524 U.S. at 808
    , 
    118 S. Ct. 2275
    ;
    
    Ellerth, 524 U.S. at 765
    –66, 
    118 S. Ct. 2257
    . The affirmative
    defense requires the employer to establish: 1) that it took
    reasonable measures to prevent and correct discriminatory
    conduct; and 2) that the employee unreasonably failed to take
    advantage of these preventive and corrective measures.
    In the case at bar, plaintiff alleged that Rogers instigated a tangible employment
    action against her by threatening to cut her hours, and carrying out that threat. As already
    discussed in this opinion, the trial court found the facts on this point to be adverse to
    plaintiff. On this point, plaintiff cited and relied upon the following proposition
    established in the case of Jin v. Metro. Life Ins. Co., 
    310 F.3d 84
    , 94 (2d Cir. 2002):
    Requiring an employee to engage in unwanted sex acts is one
    of the most pernicious and oppressive forms of sexual
    harassment that can occur in the workplace. The Supreme
    Court has labeled such conduct “appalling” and “especially
    egregious.” Harris v. Forklift Systems, Inc., 
    510 U.S. 17
    , 22,
    
    114 S. Ct. 367
    , 
    126 L. Ed. 2d 295
    (1993). It is hardly
    surprising that this type of conduct ‒ a classic quid pro quo
    for which courts have traditionally held employers liable ‒
    fits squarely within the definition of “tangible employment
    action” that the Supreme Court announced in Faragher and
    Ellerth.
    (Emphasis added). Plaintiff also relies on Holly D. v. Cal. Instit. of Tech., 
    339 F.3d 1158
    , 1173 (9th Cir. 2003), wherein the Court stated:
    Like the Third Circuit, we fully agree with Jin. We join the
    Second Circuit in holding that, in addition to those acts
    explicitly mentioned in Ellerth, a “tangible employment
    action” occurs when a supervisor extorts sexual favors from
    an employee by conditioning her continued employment on
    her participation in unwelcome sexual acts.        Thus, a
    Faragher/Ellerth affirmative defense is not available to the
    employer, whether the supervisor who abuses his
    supervisorial authority succeeds in coercing an employee to
    - 17 -
    engage in sexual acts by threats of discharge, or fails in his
    efforts to coerce the employee and then actually discharges
    her on account of her refusal to submit to his demands. Either
    way, the abuse of supervisorial authority results in a “tangible
    employment action” that causes significant injury to the
    employee involved.
    (Emphasis added).
    In a pretrial ruling on employer’s motion in limine, the trial court stated it
    “interprets this motion as a request for the Court to reject the holding set forth in Jin” and
    granted the motion. Upon a request for reconsideration of this ruling, the trial court said,
    “I know there’s a split in the circuits on that issue.” As plaintiff correctly points out,
    there is no split of authority among the circuits of the U.S. Court of Appeals. At least
    three federal circuits follow Jin. 
    Jin, 310 F.3d at 94
    ; Holly 
    D., 339 F.3d at 1171-73
    ;
    Suders v. Easton, 
    325 F.3d 432
    , 458-59 (3rd Cir. 2003), reversed on other grounds by
    Pa. State Police, 
    542 U.S. 129
    (2004). Some federal district courts have criticized and
    declined to follow Jin. See, e.g., Santiero v. Denny’s Restaurant Store, 
    786 F. Supp. 2d 1228
    , 1235 (S.D. Tex. 2011); Speaks v. City of Lakeland, 
    315 F. Supp. 2d 1217
    , 1225-26
    (M.D. Fla. 2004); Doe v. Lansal, Inc., No. 08 CV 5983, 
    2009 WL 5166224
    , at *4-6
    (N.D. Ill. 2009). In this case, the trial court stated that it “adopts the holding and
    reasoning in the case of Jane Doe v. Lansal, Inc.”
    On appeal, plaintiff argues that the trial court erred as a matter of law in this
    ruling, and urges that we adopt Jin and Holly D. as applicable in Tennessee. This
    question, however, is moot in this case, given the trial court’s factual findings. Even
    assuming that Jin applies in Tennessee, which we do not decide, plaintiff could not
    prevail, because she could not establish the factual predicates to liability as discussed in
    Jin and Holly D. In other words, she was unable to show that Rogers “require[ed] [her]
    to engage in unwanted sex acts,” 
    Jin, 310 F.3d at 94
    , or that he “condition[ed] her
    continued employment on her participation in unwelcome sexual acts.” Holly 
    D., 339 F.3d at 1173
    . Under these circumstances, we decline to issue an advisory opinion on
    whether Jin and Holly D. should be adopted and followed in Tennessee. See State v.
    Brown & Williamson Tobacco Corp. 
    18 S.W.3d 186
    , 192 (Tenn. 2000) (observing “the
    established rule that courts are not to render advisory opinions”).
    In its alternative ruling, the trial court held that employer met its burden to
    establish its affirmative defense by proving that it “exercised reasonable care to prevent
    and correct promptly any sexually harassing behavior, and . . . that the plaintiff employee
    unreasonably failed to take advantage of any preventive or corrective opportunities
    provided by the employer or to avoid harm otherwise.” 
    Allen, 240 S.W.3d at 813
    .
    - 18 -
    Because plaintiff failed to establish her case of sexual harassment by showing the alleged
    conduct was unwanted, there is no liability ‒ direct or vicarious ‒ and therefore the
    affirmative defense issue is largely moot as well. As an alternative holding, however, we
    affirm the trial court’s ruling that employer established its affirmative defense, and will
    briefly summarize the evidence supporting it.
    Employer provided extensive evidence of its sexual harassment policy and how it
    was communicated to its employees and enforced. It is contained in the employee
    handbook, which is given to all new employees. Although plaintiff testified she had
    never seen it, she signed a form on the back page of a handbook acknowledging that she
    received a copy of the employee handbook and “reviewed the policies and procedures
    contained therein.” There were several printed posters outlining the policy forbidding
    sexual harassment and the means for employees to report it at the TSU Wendy’s
    restaurant. The sexual harassment policy, and the means for reporting violations of it,
    were readily available to plaintiff. The testimony of the three executive-level managers,
    who testified that the first time they became aware of plaintiff’s allegation was their
    receipt of the notice of her lawsuit, is undisputed. District manager Bobby Moss testified
    that he was in the store several times a week, that he knew plaintiff and had spoken with
    her. He testified that he was often available to hear potential complaints of sexual
    harassment. The trial court found that there were “many opportunities to report sexual
    harassment if it was going on.” The evidence does not preponderate against this finding.
    Although plaintiff testified that she did not know that Moss was the district manager —
    and, hence, above general manager Rogers — her testimony was contradicted by that of
    numerous co-workers, and her own deposition testimony. The trial court found, “I think
    the company followed their anti-sexual harassment policy as best they could with no
    report being made.”
    Employer initiated a prompt and serious investigation almost immediately after it
    learned of plaintiff’s complaint. The employee interviews yielded no corroborating
    evidence suggesting that any other employee had witnessed or was aware of any
    harassing behavior by Rogers. When Rogers came forward and told them his version of
    what happened in the ladies’ rest room, employer effectively ended his employment on
    the spot, taking his keys and telling him not to return in an official capacity. When
    plaintiff requested a transfer to the Charlotte Pike Wendy’s, employer complied with the
    request, and plaintiff continued to work there until her voluntary resignation. In
    summary, the evidence does not preponderate against the trial court’s alternative ruling
    that employer established its affirmative defense.
    - 19 -
    D.
    The trial court allowed director of operations Charles Pastors to review and read
    some of the other employee’s statements made during the investigatory interview. These
    statements, made in the course of direct examination, were generally unfavorable to
    plaintiff and/or her position in the harassment lawsuit. Plaintiff objected, and insists on
    appeal that the court erred in allowing these hearsay statements into evidence. Employer
    does not dispute that the trial court erred in admitting the challenged testimony. It argues
    that it was harmless error, citing our observation in Citadel Investments, Inc. v. White
    Fox, Inc., No. M2003-00741-COA-R3-CV, 
    2005 WL 1183084
    , at *11 (Tenn. Ct. App.,
    filed May 17, 2005):
    The erroneous exclusion, or admission, of evidence in a
    bench trial does not, standing alone, justify a reversal of the
    trial court’s judgment. Whether or not a trial court’s decision
    on the exclusion or admission of evidence was erroneous is
    only one of the questions to be determined on appeal. An
    essential inquiry is whether an error requires reversal.
    Blackburn v. Murphy, 737 S.W .2d 529, 533 (Tenn. 1987);
    White v. Vanderbilt University, 
    21 S.W.3d 215
    , 223 (Tenn.
    Ct. App. 1999). A judgment should be set aside only if, after
    considering the entire record, an error involving a substantial
    right more probably than not affected the outcome of the trial
    or would result in prejudice to the judicial process. Tenn. R.
    App. P. 36(b); 
    Blackburn, 737 S.W.2d at 533-34
    ; Scott v.
    Jones Bros. Constr., 
    960 S.W.2d 589
    , 593 (Tenn. Ct. App.
    1997); Pankow v. Mitchell, 
    737 S.W.2d 293
    , 297 (Tenn. Ct.
    App. 1987). The burden to show prejudice, that the excluded
    or admitted evidence affected the judgment, is on the
    complaining party. Coakley v. Daniels, 840 S .W.2d 367,
    371 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1992); Bishop v. R.E.B. Equipment
    Serv., Inc., 
    735 S.W.2d 449
    , 451 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1987).
    Employer relies upon the principle that “[i]f the reviewing court determines . . .
    that the fact the inadmissible evidence was submitted to establish is clearly established by
    other evidence in the case that is competent and properly admitted, the court ordinarily
    should hold the error harmless.” In re Estate of Smallman, 
    398 S.W.3d 134
    , 153 (Tenn.
    2013). Employer argues that “[e]ven assuming all of the evidence addressed by
    [plaintiff] was admitted erroneously, the facts the evidence was submitted to establish
    were clearly established by properly admitted evidence.” This is mostly true. Pastors
    was allowed to relate statements made by assistant manager Martin and co-worker
    - 20 -
    Robinson. Both of these witnesses testified at trial. Their testimony included the
    statements at issue, and they were subject to cross-examination on these statements.
    Pastors read only a single statement of a co-worker who did not testify, Yolanda Lewis,
    who told the interviewers that plaintiff “had a mouth on her, and that she would come
    banging on the door and wanting her check and yelling at Ms. [Martin] to open the door
    and cussing at her and telling her to give her her goddamn check.” This single statement,
    while erroneously admitted, is hardly relevant or significant in the overall context of
    plaintiff’s case. The trial court mentioned it in a single sentence in the course of
    delivering its 185-page opinion, but did not attach any significance or finding of
    credibility to it. We do not find that this error more probably than not affected the
    outcome of the bench trial, or resulted in prejudice to the judicial process.
    The trial court also made a passing reference to Robinson’s statement, reiterated
    by Pastors, that Robinson had heard plaintiff say she “sold her body for cash.” As
    previously stated, Robinson recanted that statement on cross-examination. In reviewing
    Robinson’s testimony, the trial court stated,
    She met plaintiff when she was in the eighth grade.
    [Plaintiff] bragged to Ms. Robinson about selling her body for
    cash while they were working on the line at TSU Wendy’s.
    Ms. Robinson overheard [plaintiff] telling another employee
    that statement. And I find all that to be credible testimony.
    While we have no quarrel with the trial court’s assessment of Robinson’s credibility, the
    evidence preponderates against a finding that Robinson heard plaintiff saying she sold her
    body for cash, because Robinson herself recanted it, clarifying that it was not as much
    what plaintiff said as “the way she said it.” Setting aside Robinson’s recanted statement,
    the evidence viewed in its entirety does not preponderate against the trial court’s findings
    and judgment.
    E.
    Plaintiff argues that the trial court erred in granting employer’s motions in limine
    to exclude evidence of a prior sexual harassment lawsuit filed against employer that did
    not involve the TSU Wendy’s or any of its employees, and to exclude evidence of
    Rogers’ prior consensual sexual relationship with another subordinate employee. As
    regards these issues, plaintiff states in her brief:
    It is Plaintiff’s position that the issues raised in this section
    are error, although for purposes of this appeal they are, in all
    likelihood, harmless error. In the event of remand, however,
    - 21 -
    Plaintiff would appreciate this Court’s guidance for a
    subsequent trial court hearing.
    Regarding the previous lawsuit, evidence was presented to the court notwithstanding its
    ruling on the motion in limine. The trial court stated the following:
    Trial Exhibit 33 is the complaint in the [prior] case versus
    B.F. Nashville that has now been marked as a substantive
    exhibit, and I have looked at it and given it the consideration
    that I’ve stated. It’s the fact that another complaint occurred
    of sexual harassment, and only the second lawsuit for sexual
    harassment in the 16 plus years that Wendy’s B.F. Nashville
    has been in existence, and I find that to be a very good record
    on lack of sexual harassment in the workplace. And, again, it
    . . . shows their sexual harassment policy is working.
    Plaintiff insisted on presenting evidence of the prior lawsuit, and employer responded
    with undisputed testimony that it, a company owning and operating 62 Wendy’s
    restaurants and employing between 1,500 and 1,600 people at the time of trial, had only
    one other sexual harassment lawsuit filed against it in sixteen years. The fact that the
    trial court stated that the prior complaint “has now been marked as a substantive exhibit”
    suggests that the trial court may have in effect reversed itself on the ruling on the motion
    in limine plaintiff now argues is error. If there was error in the court’s handling of this
    issue, it was harmless.
    Similarly to the prior lawsuit issue, the issue of the admissibility and effect of
    manager Rogers’ prior romantic/sexual relationship with a subordinate can fairly be said
    to have been tried by implied consent. The trial court allowed and considered extensive
    evidence of this relationship. Rogers had a consensual relationship with a subordinate
    employee that resulted in the two parenting a child. The trial court credited evidence
    presented by employer that it was unaware of Rogers’ violation of its anti-fraternization
    policy until after one or both of the employees no longer worked for employer. We find
    no error in the trial court’s handling of this issue.
    Employer argues that this appeal is frivolous. We do not find it to be a frivolous
    appeal.
    - 22 -
    V.
    The judgment of the trial court is affirmed. Costs on appeal are assessed to the
    appellant, Tysheka Barnett. The case is remanded for collection of costs below, in
    accordance with applicable law.
    _______________________________
    CHARLES D. SUSANO, JR., JUDGE
    - 23 -