Walter E. PILDITCH, Plaintiff-Appellee,
v.
BOARD OF EDUCATION OF the CITY OF CHICAGO, a Body Corporate
and Politic; Fitz Barclay, Jr., Marty Gool, Esther
Morgan-Watts, Calvin L. Pearce, and Willia Robinson, as
Mеmbers of the Morgan Park High School Local School Council;
Grady C. Jordan, as District Superintendent, High School
District 11, Chicago Board of Education, Defendants-Appellants.
Nos. 92-3932, 92-4050.
United States Court of Appeals,
Seventh Circuit.
Argued May 13, 1993.
Decided Aug. 27, 1993.
Rehearing and Suggestion for Rehearing In Banc
Denied Sept. 21, 1993.
Robert A. Berghoff (argued), Christopher J. Berghoff, Chicago, IL, for plaintiff-appellee.
Ronald S. Samuels (argued), Samuels & Associates, Chicago, IL, for defendants-appellants.
Iris E. Sholder, Karen Gatsis Anderson, Miguel A. Rodriguez, City of Chicago Bd. of Educ., Chicago, IL, for Grady C. Jordan in No. 92-4050.
Before CUMMINGS, POSNER and EASTERBROOK, Circuit Judges.
CUMMINGS, Circuit Judge.
In an effort to give parents and local citizens more control over the public school system, the Illinois Legislature in 1989 passed an education reform measure that created local councils in each school district and invested them with the power to hire and fire principals. 105 ILCS 5/34-2.2. Principals accustomed to job security were stripped of tenure and made to serve under four-year renewable contracts. One casualty of the new system, Walter E. Pilditch, brought this reverse discrimination suit claiming that the only reason he was fired from his position as principal of Morgan Park High School in Chicago was his race; Pilditch is white. He sued five of the ten elected members of the local school council, all minorities, who did not vote to renew his contract when it expired on June 30, 1990, along with the Chicago Board of Education and the district superintendent who chose Pilditch's replacement when the local council could not agree on a candidate.
Plaintiff requested damages based on lost wages and pension benefits under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 42 U.S.C. Sec. 2000e-2(a)(1), and 42 U.S.C. Secs. 1981 and 1983. Originally Pilditch also sought reinstatement at Morgan Park, but by the time the case was tried before an advisory jury, he had landed a position at another Chicago school; he is now principal at Curie High. The trial judge dismissed the Board of Education frоm the suit as a matter of law and the jury found that the plaintiff had failed to prove his case against the superintendent, Grady C. Jordan, and Esther Morgan-Watts, a local council member who had voted to oust him. But the jury rendered a verdict in Pilditch's favor on all counts against three council members--Marty Gool, Calvin L. Pearce and Willia Robinson--and he prevailed against a fourth council member, the Rev. Fitz Barclay, Jr., on the Title VII claim. The jury awarded Pilditch $62,085.03 in compensatory damages and levied punitive damages in various small amounts ($1,000 to $3,000) against the four defendants deemed to have violated the principal's civil rights. Judge Hart decided that the jury's verdict was merely advisory because the right to a jury trial in such cases hinges on the Civil Rights Act of 1991, which was passed by Congress after the local council voted to fire Pilditch but before his suit came to trial. Based on our decisions in Banas v. American Airlines,
We review the district court's findings of facts for clear error and its findings of law de novo. Anderson v. City of Bessemer City, N.C.,
In the absence of direct evidence, a plaintiff in Title VII, Sec. 1981 and Sec. 1983 actions must abide by the complicated formula first set out in McDonnell Douglas Corp. v. Green,
We аgree with the district court that Pilditch was able to establish a prima facie case of reverse discrimination. Under McDonnell Douglas, a prima facie case is made out by showing that the plaintiff is a member of a racial minority group, that he applied for and was qualified for a job for which the employer was seeking applicants, that he was rejected, and that afterward the position remаined open to others with the complainant's qualifications.
Pilditch was fired and then not hired for his old position; he was certainly qualified for the job he held for six years--the state certified him, as well as his two main competitors, as such; and his replacement was black. The only tricky element is whether Pilditch was meeting his employer's legitimate expectations. Obviously he was not in the subjective sense since only half of the local council voted to renew his contract. But this alone cannot derail the plaintiff's case at this stage, because anytime an employer fired or demoted someone (as in every Title VII case of this kind), it would prove that the employee was not meeting expectations; the requirement, then, would be meaningless. The more relevant question is whether the employee is able to put on objective evidence that he is sufficiently competent to satisfy the legitimate еxpectations of an employer. In this case Pilditch was able to do so if only by showing that he had been hired as a principal at another school. Pilditch, then, was able to put forth a prima facie case of discrimination. After all, "the burden of establishing a prima face case of disparate treatment is not onerous." Burdine,
The focus thus shifts to the defendants to offer a nondiscriminatory reason for their actions. Burdine,
Having offered these apparently legitimate reasons, the McDonnell Douglаs formula disappears, Hicks, --- U.S. at ----,
Pearce did say that the school should have a stronger black male presence. The testimony on this point was as follows:
Q: And did he, during the course of his conversation with you, make any mention of race?
A: Yes.
Q: What particulаrly did he say and where was he when he said it?
A: Yes. He, in the library he wanted to know where the collections were on African-American studies and why weren't they prominently displayed in the front. And I showed then the collections and the library order and then the other displays. There were advertisements at the time from the black college fair. And then, in the hallway, he was looking around, and he said that he felt that the school needed a black male presence.
Q: Were those his words?
A: Yes.
Q: Did he enlarge upon that statement?
A: No. We got into a discussion on the problems in attracting African-American males into the teaching profession.
(Plaintiff's app. at 34.) By its own terms, Pearce's statement about the necessity of a stronger black male presence led to a discussion about the lack of black teachers, not black principals. In any event, there is no suggestion in the record that Pearce translated this general concern about black role models into a specific decision to oppose Pilditch because of his race. One could imagine other isolated statements that, coupled with action, might give rise to an inference of discrimination. If, for example, Pearce had made statements to the effect that he disliked or distrusted whites in general and could not judge them fairly, it might be possible to assume that his decision about Pilditch was spurred by racial concerns. But merely lamenting the absence of black male teachers as role models in schools with large black populations--a widely held view, by the way--in a discussion that did not involve Pilditch at all cannot be taken as proof of discriminatory intent without some other supporting evidence.
Finally, Willia Rоbinson let out a "whoop" and said "We did it, girl" as she entered the women's bathroom five to ten minutes after the vote. One witness testified that "as the door closed, there was all kinds of ruckus, laughter, and silliness" (plaintiff's app. at 39). Like Calvin Pearce's smile during the voting, Robinson's statement may suggest that she was elated by the fact of Pilditch's ouster, but it does not convey any reliable information about why she voted the way she did. A joyful whoop at the firing of a principal suggests dislike of the principal, it is true, but all dislike is not based on race.
Recall that the local council system was part of an educational reform package designed to give parents and community members more control over the schools. By putting the power to hire and fire principals in the hands of non-professionals, the Legislature must have realized thаt local councils would make changes for changes' sake as a way of exerting their newfound authority, even if there were not glaring deficiencies in a principal's leadership. The only way to conclude based on this paltry record that the plaintiff was discriminated against because he was white is to make the illogical and insupportable assumption that every time a black council mеmber votes against a white candidate, the decision is motivated by race. This is impermissible. Ustrak,
At oral argument we pressed counsel for Pilditch to spell out what specific evidencе in the record showed that the defendants intentionally discriminated against his client. To our repeated entreaties, he could only respond that we must look at the totality of the circumstances. We have. Because there is no proof of discrimination, the district court's judgments against the four defendants are reversed.
Notes
McDonald v. Santa Fe Trail Transp. Co.,
Under Price Waterhouse v. Hopkins,
