ABDULLAH ENNIN, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. CNH INDUSTRIAL AMERICA, LLC, Defendant-Appellee.
No. 17-2270
United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit
ARGUED NOVEMBER 30, 2017 — DECIDED DECEMBER 27, 2017
Before EASTERBROOK and MANION, Circuit Judges, and LEE, District Judge.
Appeal from the United States District Court for the Southern District of Indiana, Indianapolis Division. No. 1:15-cv-01359 — Richard L. Young, Judge.
We agree with the district court in all respects. First, we conclude that by not filing a surreply brief in the district court, Ennin waived the admissibility of certain evidence that CNH attacked as inadmissible. Ennin had introduced the evidence in an attempt to show that CNH terminated him on a later date than it claimed, that is, after it knew that Ennin had been disabled and taken FMLA leave. Without the evidence, the record is undisputed that CNH terminated Ennin‘s employment before it had knowledge of the alleged disability or his FMLA leave. Second, nothing in the record supports Ennin‘s argument that CNH‘s stated reasons for terminating his employment were pretext for any sort of discrimination. Third, CNH did not interfere with Ennin‘s right to take FMLA leave. And finally, Ennin‘s federal conspiracy and state law negligent-supervision claims necessarily fail because they are derivative of underlying violations of federally protected rights. Without any underlying violations, Ennin cannot sustain these claims. Therefore, we affirm the judgment below.
I. Background
Ennin, who was born in Ghana and is a naturalized American citizen, began working for CNH Industrial America on January 3, 2012. CNH “designs, produces and sells agricultural and construction equipment, trucks, commercial vehi-
After working at CNH with no incident for more than two years, Ennin received a written warning for misconduct in May 2014. He had gotten into a verbal altercation with another supervisor over the volume of a radio playing in the break room. According to the warning, Ennin‘s inappropriate behavior was witnessed by two of his own hourly employees. Ennin was warned that his behavior was not acceptable because, as a supervisor, he had to set a better example for his subordinates. Both Ennin and Lewis signed the written warning.
Ennin ran into more trouble a few months later. He was on his way to work on November 17, 2014, when his car broke down. At 1:43 PM, 17 minutes before his shift was to begin, Ennin notified Lewis that he would be late to work. Ennin then called his hourly employee Gonzalo Chavez—the lead hourly employee on his shift—to ask for help. Chavez had already clocked in, but he left CNH‘s facility at 2:00 PM and went to help Ennin. It turned out that Ennin‘s car had run out of gas, so Chavez brought Ennin some gas and then both returned to CNH at 2:46 PM. Upon their arrival, Ennin permitted Chavez to follow him through the supervisor‘s entrance
Once the events of November 17 were reported to Human Resources, Ennin was called in for a November 19 meeting with Lewis, Lincoln, and HR manager Stacy Darlin. They asked Ennin why he had permitted Chavez to enter the facility without swiping his own badge; Ennin responded that everyone does it and he had done it many times previously without being reprimanded. With respect to the timesheet issue, Ennin claimed that he didn‘t know Chavez was at work when he called, but Chavez had already told HR that he did tell Ennin he had already clocked in. In the end Lewis, Lincoln, and Darlin told Ennin that his actions were unacceptable, but didn‘t inform him of a final decision. Nevertheless, Ennin thought after the meeting that he was certain to be fired.
Darlin, Lewis, and Lincoln say they met separately shortly after their November 19 meeting with Ennin and determined that Ennin should be fired for his multiple violations of company policy. According to them, they decided to let Ennin know the next day. But later in the afternoon on November 19, Ennin texted Lewis and asked to go home because his hemorrhoids were acting up. Lewis agreed. But Ennin did not come to work on November 20. Instead, he called his doctor and scheduled a previously planned hemorrhoidectomy for November 21. Ennin requested and received leave from CNH‘s third-party administrator, Prudential, and said that he would return to work by January 1.
Ennin sued CNH, arguing that he was fired because of his race, national origin, disability (related to the hemorrhoidectomy), and decision to take FMLA leave. On summary judgment, Ennin attempted to introduce evidence to show that CNH did not decide to terminate his employment until December 1. Establishing that later termination date would have allowed Ennin to argue that the decision-makers knew when they fired him that he had had surgery and that he had taken FMLA leave. However, CNH argued in its reply brief that Ennin‘s evidence was hearsay and unauthenticated. Ennin never filed a surreply brief, even though the local rules of the Southern District of Indiana permitted him to do so as of right to respond to evidentiary objections. As a result, the district
II. Analysis
A. Exclusion of Ennin‘s Proffered Evidence
As a threshold matter, we must resolve the dispute over Ennin‘s proffered evidence. Ennin claims that the evidence he submitted—particularly emails and texts involving the decision-makers at CNH—proves that CNH did not make its decision to fire him until December 1. If we were to consider the evidence and agree that it creates a genuine issue of fact, that would at least somewhat bolster Ennin‘s disability discrimination and FMLA retaliation claims. So we must determine whether the district court properly excluded the evidence.
The district court treated CNH‘s evidentiary objections as unopposed because Ennin failed to file a surreply brief to respond to them. Failure to respond to an argument generally results in waiver, and failure to present an argument to the district court usually means we will not address it on appeal. Bonte v. U.S. Bank, N.A., 624 F.3d 461, 466 (7th Cir. 2010) (failure to respond in the district court); Allen v. City of Chicago, 865 F.3d 936, 943 (7th Cir. 2017) (arguments presented for the first time on appeal are waived). Nevertheless, we have held that “a party need not seek leave to file a sur-reply in order to preserve an argument for purposes of appeal,” Costello v. Grundon, 651 F.3d 614, 635 (7th Cir. 2011). The question here, which we have not yet answered, is whether a party must file a surreply to preserve an argument when such a brief is permitted as of right by the district court‘s local rules.
Smith is best understood as having followed the rule of Costello that a party need not seek leave of court to file a surreply just to preserve an issue for appeal. After all, Smith came to us from the Northern District of Illinois, where the local rules say nothing about surreply briefs. But this case is from the Southern District of Indiana, which expressly permits surreply briefs to be filed as of right in this situation—to respond to evidentiary objections made in a reply brief. Id. (citing S.D. Ind. L.R. 56-1(d)). So, unlike the non-movant in Smith, Ennin did have “a meaningful opportunity to be heard on the evidentiary issue in the district court.” He just chose not to take advantage of it. That is the very essence of waiver.
“In an adversary system, in which by its nature judges are heavily dependent on the lawyers to establish the facts upon which decision will be based, the failure to reply to an adversary‘s point can have serious consequences.” Hardy v. City Optical Inc., 39 F.3d 765, 771 (7th Cir. 1994). For Ennin, those consequences include forfeiting the use of evidence that he maintains might bolster some of his claims. By not presenting his arguments to the district court, he let CNH‘s objections to the evidence stand unopposed. The district court was not required to make Ennin‘s arguments for him, and we will not permit him to raise them for the first time on appeal. Therefore, we affirm the district court‘s decision to exclude the evidence.
B. Summary Judgment Motion
Moving to the merits, the question on review from a grant of summary judgment is whether the undisputed facts in the record merit judgment in favor of CNH on Ennin‘s various claims. We review the district court‘s legal conclusions de novo. Chicago Reg‘l Council of Carpenters Pension Fund v. Schal Bovis, Inc., 826 F.3d 397, 402 (7th Cir. 2016).
Ennin has failed to point to any admissible evidence that CNH didn‘t fire him because of the November 17 incident with Chavez. The record does not even raise suspicion of racial discrimination. Although Ennin points to white employees whom he says were similarly situated to him and not fired, the district court correctly rejected the comparators because they were hourly employees and had not been previously disciplined. Ennin v. CNH Indus. Am., LLC, No. 1:15-cv-01359, 2017 WL 2225203, at *5 n.5 (S.D. Ind. May 22, 2017). The second reason is particularly salient, as we recently held that “[a]n employee who does not have a similar disciplinary history and performance record as the plaintiff is not similarly situated.” Simpson v. Franciscan All., Inc., 827 F.3d 656, 662 (7th Cir. 2016). Without any appropriate comparators or any other indicators of racial bias, Ennin is left with mere conjecture and speculation to support his race and national origin discrimi-
Ennin‘s disability discrimination, failure to accommodate under the
Finally, because we have concluded that Ennin‘s federal employment rights were not violated, his remaining claims
III. Conclusion
Abdullah Ennin failed to present any admissible evidence to counter his employer‘s legitimate, nondiscriminatory reasons for firing him. He rendered inadmissible some evidence that might have been helpful to him by failing to defend its admissibility before the district court, so we are left with nothing but speculation to support his claims. Because that is not enough to survive summary judgment, we affirm the judgment of the district court.
AFFIRMED
