Ford v. Revlon, Inc.
153 Ariz. 38 (1987)
Legal Analysis
Legal analysis from Dean's Law Dictionary will be displayed here.
Nature Of The Case
This section contains the nature of the case and procedural background.
Facts
Ford (P) worked for Revlon and in ten years of employment worked her way up from a secretary, junior buyer, to buyer. In October 1979, Kevin Braun was hired as the new manager of purchasing and invited P to dinner to discuss business. At the end of dinner, Braun told P that she was not going anywhere as she was to sleep with him that night. P rejected the advances and Braun threatened retaliation. P did not report the dinner. During a company picnic in May 1980, P was followed by Braun and assaulted by him with unwanted touching of a sexual nature. P began to report the incidents to management and had extensive contact with her chain of command. No action had been taken over a six-month period, and Braun was continuing his harassment with phone calls and threats. P developed high blood pressure and a nervous tick and chest pains along with rapid breathing. By February 21, 1981, P submitted a written request for transfer and the next day was placed on probation for poor work performance. Braun was eventually issued a letter of censure by D. In October 1981, P attempted suicide. D terminated Braun. P then sued Braun and D. The jury found Braun liable for assault and battery but not liable for intentional infliction of emotional distress. The jury found D liable to intentional infliction of emotional distress. D appealed. The court of appeals reversed.
Issues
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Holding & Decision
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