Anonymous
Hi, I’m looking for case laws that indicate quid pro quo sexual harassment cases between a senior employer and a junior employee.
From India, Bengaluru
Dinesh Divekar
7863

Dear member,

Please provide us with more information about the case. Write details in chronological sequence. Please explain the meaning of "quid pro quo sexual harassment cases".

Thanks,

Dinesh Divekar

From India, Bangalore
Anonymous
Hi, thank you for your reply i'm just an intern on the case and I don't know the whole optics and facts but i have been asked to compile case laws related to quid pro quo Sexual Harassment at workplace.
So, a list of cases would be appreciable.
Quid pro quo is also a form of sexual harassment that occurs in the workplace. It happens when a manager or individual in a position of power offers or merely hints that they will give the employee job benefits in return for that employee's satisfaction with a sexual demand. It may include a raise, promotion, or another benefit.

From India, Bengaluru
Dinesh Divekar
7863

Dear member,

If the manager and the female subordinate make a trade-off involving a sexual favour, then should we call it "harassment?" Whether or not to gain the favour is a choice of the female employee. However, if she accepts the demands, then what happens further is either with her consent or out of her own volition, and it is not under duress.

The meaning of "harassment" is a feeling of intense annoyance caused by being tormented. However, when someone does it against one's will, then one gets tormented. Accepting the overtures and then calling it harassment is purely hypocritical.

Last year, the Indian women wrestlers protested for sexual harassment. They could not thwart the attempts at harassment, but later they came forward and demanded justice against their tormentor. Since this was not the case of "quid pro quo", these women validly claimed justice. This would not have been the case if they had accepted the favours and kept quiet.

As far as case laws of "quid pro quo sexual harassment" are concerned, it remains to be seen whether any company has readily published them. This is because no company wishes to air their dirty linen in public. Therefore, even if such cases have happened, the company administration will prefer to keep them confidential rather than "clean their breast."

Anyway, you can search the Internet and find out whether you can find any relevant material.

Thanks,

Dinesh Divekar

From India, Bangalore
saswatabanerjee
2384

If you are working for a law firm, I think your internal research teams should be able to answer this question better. Or your seniors will show you how to search for what you want.

Also, they will explain, you need full details of the case and not half-baked guesswork. The facts of the matter change the ruling given by the courts, so I am not sure how searching for generic cases helps.

But as Dinesh-ji said, it is not harassment if the 'victim' accepted the offer or hint and cooperated. but the matter can be considered as Sexual harassment if the victim refuses and the superior punishes her by denying promotion, removes from work, or puts her in a disadvantageous position by any other means.

Once sexual harassment happens, it is immaterial if the offer was made or not. It is an offence.
If the victim accepted the condition and got the benefits, then there is no case as there was no harassment as defined under the act or torts.

@Dinesh-ji, just wondering aloud - can the others (not offered the opportunity) file a compliant under sexual harassment for someone else getting the benefits?

From India, Mumbai
Dinesh Divekar
7863

Dear Mr Saswata Banerjee,

Your question is:

@Dinesh-ji, just wondering aloud - can the others (not offered the opportunity) file a complaint under sexual harassment for someone else getting the benefits?

This raises a question who are the "other" persons? Are they from the same company and if yes, then what material evidence do they have of the harassment? To gain professional favours from the authorities concerned, if the woman employee provides sexual favours, then where is the question of harassment? the other employee may come to know about this give-and-take but what evidence do they have to prove that the merit has been compromised? Providing sexual favours is rarest of rare. What about other favours like doing household work of the boss where the question of gender does not arise? How to prove that the boss has misused the authority?

For filing the criminal charges the victim comes forward and files a complaint. If nobody has come forward, then who is the victim? In certain crimes, the victim is injured extensively or in a state of shock and cannot file the complaint on one's own. In such cases, the victim needs assistance in filing the complaint. Even then also the police look for material evidence.

In India, roughly a quarter of the rape accused have been punished and the other three quarters were acquitted for want of evidence. Their acquittal did not mean the rape did not take place. The courts accepted that the rape took place but courts could not award the punishment for want of the evidence. If this is the state of the verdicts on the rape cases, then you can imagine how difficult it is to prove sexual harassment.

Thanks,

Dinesh Divekar

From India, Bangalore
raghunath_bv
156

Hi,
Thank you for your inquiry regarding case law related to quid pro quo sexual harassment cases between senior employers and junior employees. This is an important and complex legal issue that merits a thoughtful response.

As you are likely aware, quid pro quo sexual harassment occurs when an employer conditions the granting or withholding of a tangible job benefit on the employee's submission to unwelcome sexual conduct. This form of harassment is particularly egregious when the power dynamic involves a senior leader exploiting their authority over a subordinate. Such abuses of power can have devastating consequences for the victim's career, well-being, and sense of self.

In reviewing the relevant case law, a few key precedents come to mind. In the landmark Supreme Court decision Merit or Savings Bank v. Vinson (1986), the Court held that quid pro quo harassment is a form of sex discrimination prohibited under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act. This established that employers can be held liable for the discriminatory actions of supervisors who leverage their position to demand sexual favors.

Similarly, the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals in Kauffman v. Allied Signal, Inc. (1997) found that an employer can be strictly liable for quid pro quo harassment, regardless of whether the company had knowledge of the supervisor's misconduct. This ruling underscores the heightened duty of care organizations have to prevent abuse of authority within their ranks.

More recently, the Tenth Circuit in Kramer v. Wasatch County Sheriff's Office (2017) clarified that quid pro quo harassment need not involve a tangible employment action, as long as the harasser's conduct is sufficiently severe or pervasive to alter the terms and conditions of the victim's employment. This broadened the legal definition in a way that better captures the insidious nature of such abuses.

I would encourage you to review these and other relevant court decisions as you build your case. Additionally, you may find it helpful to consult legal scholars and practitioners who have delved deeply into the evolving jurisprudence surrounding supervisor-subordinate harassment. Their insights could prove invaluable.

Thanks

From India, Bangalore
saswatabanerjee
2384

If you copy from Chat GPT blindly, you will end up with such things

These are not cases under indian law and indian courts.
Since the OP is from Bengaluru, I doubt if the cases are of any relevance to his question.

From India, Mumbai
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