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Ray Haynes v. Indiana University
902 F.3d 724
7th Cir.
2018
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Background

  • Haynes, a Black assistant professor at Indiana University hired on a six-year probationary contract, was denied tenure after multi-tier faculty review (department, school, university committees). 27 faculty members voted; majority found his research not "excellent" and teaching "unsatisfactory."
  • Haynes submitted a dossier with letters from six external reviewers; most were positive but one reviewer, Patricia Hardré, criticized research rigor and referenced his race in a mixed context.
  • Haynes pursued internal appeals, filed an EEOC complaint, then sued under 42 U.S.C. § 1981 and Title VII seeking injunctive relief and damages; the district court granted summary judgment to the University.
  • The district court excluded three expert submissions (Perna declaration/report and Greenwald report) under Rule 702/Daubert and denied late supplementation of expert reports.
  • The Seventh Circuit affirmed: Title VII claim dismissed as time-barred (untimely EEOC filing), damages barred by sovereign immunity, and the remaining § 1981 injunctive claim failed on the merits for lack of evidence of intentional race-based discrimination.

Issues

Issue Plaintiff's Argument Defendant's Argument Held
Timeliness of Title VII claim Haynes argued equitable tolling should excuse late EEOC filing University argued EEOC complaint filed after 300-day deadline Title VII claim barred; Haynes knew of claim earlier and waited too long
Damages under § 1981 against state actors Haynes sought monetary relief from University and administrators University invoked sovereign immunity for state and state-actor defendants Damages barred by sovereign immunity; only injunctive relief against officials in official capacity survives
Admissibility/supplementation of expert reports (Rule 702/Daubert) Perna and Greenwald would show improper process and implicit bias; sought to supplement late University moved to strike; court cited lack of specialized reliable methodology and lateness Exclusion affirmed: Perna lacked discipline-specific expertise; Greenwald irrelevant to § 1981 (requires intentional discrimination); supplementation properly denied
Merits: intentional discrimination in tenure decision Haynes pointed to allegedly irregular review, positive prior evaluations, lack of Black male tenured hires, and Hardré’s comments University relied on detailed multi-layer negative evaluations and absence of evidence of race-motivated decision Judgment affirmed: no admissible evidence that race caused tenure denial; academic judgments not second-guessed

Key Cases Cited

  • Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharm., 509 U.S. 579 (expert testimony admissibility)
  • Ortiz v. Werner Enters., Inc., 834 F.3d 760 (causation standard for discriminatory discharge/adverse action)
  • Sun v. Bd. of Trs. of Univ. of Ill., 473 F.3d 799 (courts defer on academic tenure judgments)
  • Hentosh v. Herman M. Finch Univ. of Health Scis./The Chi. Med. Sch., 167 F.3d 1170 (equitable tolling standards for EEOC filing)
  • Omosegbon v. Wells, 335 F.3d 668 (sovereign immunity bars damages for employment-contract injuries against state officials)
  • St. Mary’s Honor Ctr. v. Hicks, 509 U.S. 502 (plaintiff must prove discrimination was the real reason for adverse action)
  • Manley v. Law, 889 F.3d 885 (standard of review for summary judgment in Seventh Circuit)
Read the full case

Case Details

Case Name: Ray Haynes v. Indiana University
Court Name: Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
Date Published: Sep 4, 2018
Citation: 902 F.3d 724
Docket Number: 17-2890
Court Abbreviation: 7th Cir.