The plaintiff, Evelyn Benders, alleges that she was fired in April 2004 in retaliation for fifing an age and race discrimination claim with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) and for threatening to report a dispute about her employment status to the IRS. The defendant law firm, Bellows and Bellows, P.C. (B & B), 1 maintains that it terminated *760 Benders’ employment in May 2003, well before she engaged in any protected activities. The twist in this case is that B & B’s decision to fire Benders was communicated to her in rather uncertain terms by the firm’s owner and president, Joel Bellows, who, despite his marriage to Laurel Bellows (the other “B” of B & B), had а romantic relationship with Benders during the first several years of her employment.
Notwithstanding these and other complexities, the district court found, as a matter of law, that B & B fired Benders on the earlier date. Consequently, the court granted B & B’s motion for summary judgment on all three counts in the complaint.
Benders v. Bellows and Bellows,
No. 04 C 7326,
As we must, we accept Ms. Benders’ allegations as true at this stage of the proceedings. As so viewed, the facts are that B & B hired Benders, an African-American woman now in her fifties, as a legal secretary in 1996 and promoted her to the position of office administrator about a year later. In that position, Benders took charge of the firm’s computer system, invoicing, and personnel matters, including the hiring, firing, and training of employees. Benders, during all this time, did not have an employment contract with B &B.
Shortly after starting at the firm, Benders and Mr. Bellows began a romantic relationship, which ended about 5 years later. From time to time during this period, Mr. Bellows helped Benders financially, issuing her checks, drawn on the firm, to purchase various personal items. B & B maintained a record of the monies given to Benders, which she considered gifts, not lоans or income. B & B, on the other hand, claims that these monies were not gifts. It issued 1099 IRS forms to Benders for 2002 and 2003 reflecting that these payments were income.
In May 2003, Mr. Bellows had a private conversation with Benders in which he told her that his wife and another principal of the firm, Nick Iavarone, were “campaigning to get [Benders] out” and that she should begin to look for other employment. Benders alleges that Mr. Bellows assured her that she would remain employed with the firm until she found “the right job.” Benders suspected that the real reason for her future departure was that B & B did not want an older black woman around after it moved into its new offices. According to the firm, however, the decision to fire Benders was made because Mrs. Bellows did not believe Benders was competent as office administrator. B & B maintains that Mr. Bellows offered to keep Benders on the payroll as an act of generosity until she found another job.
Benders claims that, a few weeks later, Mr. Bellows told her that the firm had hired a “moving consultant,” who would “share some of the responsibilities” with Benders, but that “no one would be the wiser.” In July 2003, Cinthia LeGrand, a white woman approximately 10 years younger than Benders, began her employment at B & B. After LeGrand’s arrival, Benders’ duties at the firm generally diminished. According to Benders, however, at times, her responsibilities would “come back,” causing her to question her role at *761 B & B. B & B concedes that it never stripped Benders of her title as office administrator, nor did it ever reduce her then-current salary until her last day at the firm, about 9 months after LeGrand started.
In December 2003, Mr. Bellows approached Benders and proposed that, instead of making a contribution to the firm’s 401(k) plan on her bеhalf for 2003, he would assume responsibility for a civil judgment entered against Benders regarding her student loans. Mr. Bellows allegedly explained to Benders that, to effectuate this arrangement, he would have to reclassify her as an independent contractor for the last few weeks of 2003. Benders admits that she agreed to forego the payment, but only on the condition that she be returned to employee status by mid-January 2004. From that point on, however, Benders’ paychecks bore the notation, “independent contractor.” Despite the change in status, B & B concedes that it continued to deduct federal taxes from Benders’ paycheck.
In February 2004, in response to her complaints, Mr. Bellows told Benders that he was going to put her back on the payroll long enough for her to collect unemployment, for approximately 5 weeks, and then she would have to leave the firm. But Benders’ paychecks remained the same. Benders was never asked to sign an independent contractor agreement, which she knew to be the firm’s practice.
Later that month, Benders filed a claim with the Illinois EEOC, alleging raсe and age discrimination in connection with her apparent demotion and B & B’s hiring of LeGrand. Her charge appended e-mails written by Mr. Bellows. One of the emails referred to Benders as “Seabiscuit” who “should have been put down” long ago. In another e-mail, Mr. Bellows said that African-American members of his staff were making Benders’ employment situation “a racial thing.” After Benders filed the charge, she claims that Mr. Bellows became increasingly hostile towards her and made her working conditions difficult. According to B & B, however, it was Benders who caused problems. Thе firm claims that she became disruptive and insubordinate, did not actively seek other employment, deliberately caused problems for LeGrand, and did not perform certain duties.
On April 12, 2004, B & B filed its position statement with the EEOC. Benders alleges that, 3 days later, Mr. Bellows approached her and told her that because she had filed an “awful EEOC charge,” he would not consider paying her severance. B & B denies that Mr. Bellows made any such statement.
On April 14, 2004, after receiving another “independent contractor” paycheck, Benders reminded Mr. Bellows that she planned to refinance her home and needеd her pay stub to reflect her current status as an employee. Mr. Bellows replied in an e-mail that he “had thought that [Benders] [was] being paid as an employee until recently” and promised to issue her a corrected check. He changed his mind, however, because Mrs. Bellows would not allow it. Four days later, Benders sent Mr. Bellows an e-mail telling him that she intended to file a formal complaint with the IRS, requesting that the agency make a determination of her employment status. 3
Finally, on April 20, 2004, Mr. Bellows told Benders to leave the firm. According to B & B, Benders was asked to leave because a day earlier she had become hostile with Mrs. Bellows. Mrs. Bellows subsequently told her husband that she would *762 not come to the office until Benders was fired. B & B claims that Mr. Bellows told Benders she was “causing too much of a distraction.” Benders denies ever having an altercation with Mrs. Bellows and maintains she was accused of “causing too many problems” at the firm. Benders filed a retaliatory discharge claim with the EEOC and subsequently received a right-to-sue letter.
In November 2004, Benders filed this suit in district court, alleging three counts: (1) a claim of retaliation for filing an EEOC charge under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 42 U.S.C. § 2000e et seq.; (2) a claim of interference with the attainment of a benefit under § 510 of the Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA), 29 U.S.C. § 1140 et seq.; and (3) a claim of retaliatory discharge under Illinois common law. B & B eventually moved for summary judgment and, as we noted, the district court granted the motion.
We review a grant of summary judgment
de novo. Perez v. Illinois,
We first examine whether the district court correctly found as a matter of law that B & B decided to fire Benders in May 2003. As we stated earlier, this determination was central to the court’s decision to dismiss all three claims.
The district court held that no reasonable trier of fact could find other than that B & B decided to terminate Benders’ employment in 2003 primarily based on the following “undisputed” facts: (1) in May 2003, Mr. Bellows told Benders that her employment was being “terminated” and that she should begin looking for another job; (2) Benders’ replacement, LeGrand, was hired shortly thereafter; and (3) Benders stated that her job had been “eliminated” in a January 2004 EEOC questionnaire. We disagree with this conclusion.
First, Benders did not concede that her employment was “terminated” in May 2003. The record shows that she admitted to the language Mr. Bellows used, but not to the fact that her employment had actually been terminated. Her response to a proposed finding of fact is illustrative: “Contested that the Firm decided to ‘terminate’ Benders in 2003. Benders was only told that she should begin looking for another job, not that she was terminated.” (Emphasis added.) On the contrary, Benders testified that, while she may have been demoted in 2003, she was actually fired on April 20, 2004, 2 months after she filed a claim with the EEOC and 2 days after threatening to report certain conduct to the IRS. Thus, the fact that Benders’ employment was “terminated” in May 2003 was far from undisputed.
Second, Benders did not admit that she was “replaced” by LeGrand in June 2003. Benders agreed that LeGrand was hired by the firm in June 2003 and that she took over some of Benders’ responsibilities. However, Benders also testified that she continued working at the firm until April 2004 doing many of her usual duties, and it was unclear what her role was. Benders’ response to a proposed finding of fact is helpful: “Contested. Benders stated that [m]y role diminished. But it still became — it was still fuzzy because at times it would come back ... [s]o it never really stopped.” Again, the fact that Benders *763 had been replaced in the summer of 2003 was disputed.
Third, Benders’ statements in the EEOC questionnaire are more complex than B & B acknowledges. Benders admitted writing “Demotion; Job elimination” in the space asking for “issues.” However, she also wrote, “TOLD to look for employment.” These statements are not inconsistent with her understanding that, while her role had diminished somewhat, and she may have been demoted, B & B did not decide to fire her until April 2004. The attempt here to justify summary judgment on “undisputed” facts is not convincing.
Academic tenure cases likewise do not support a resolution of this dispute on summary judgment. In cases such as
Delaware State College v. Ricks,
We think that the
Ricks
line of cases is distinguishable. First, in those cases, the decision to deny tenure was made after a designated number of years, by a specific committee, with the employee’s knowledge, and usually according to procedures outlined in a faculty handbook.
See, e.g., Lever,
We conclude that the record paints an indeterminate picture of the significance of the May 2003 conversation. Whether Benders was fired on that date is a mаterial issue of fact to be decided by a jury. *764 Thus, it was error to grant summary judgment on that basis. We now turn to an individual assessment of Benders’ three claims.
Benders’ first count alleges a claim of retaliation under Title VII for filing an EEOC charge.
See
42 U.S.C. § 2000e-3(a). A plaintiff can establish a
prima facie
case of unlawful retaliation via the direct or the indirect method of proof.
Stone v. City of Indianapolis Pub. Utils. Div.,
B & B argues that Benders cannot establish causation as a matter of law pursuant to
Clark County School District v. Breeden,
B
&
B nevertheless asserts that Benders brought forth no direct or circumstantial evidence of causation. We disagree. Benders testified that on April 15, 2004, just 3 days after B & B filed its response with the EEOC, Mr. Bellows approached her and referred to the “awful EEOC charge” that she filed 2 months earlier. Benders was fired 5 days after that, before she found other employment, raising an inference that she was fired in retaliation for filing the charge.
See Culver v. Gorman & Co.,
Because Benders presented evidence establishing a
prima facie
case of retaliation, her Title VII claim must be tried unless B & B presents unrebutted evidence that Benders would have been fired absent her allegations of discrimination.
Stone,
B & B advances several noninvidious reasons for terminating Benders: she failed to perform certain duties; she was disruptive and insubordinate; and she got into a hostile altercation with Mrs. Bellows. B & B produced e-mails allegedly-evidencing Benders’ poor performance. Rather than demonstrating Benders’ incompetence, however, the e-mails show a general environment of distrust and dysfunction at the firm, where many employees—including Benders herself—were confused about her role and responsibilities. B & B also offered affidavits from employees vеrifying Benders’ purported insubordination. However, Benders’ testimony disputes the credibility of these affidavits and maintains that it was Mr. Bellows who made her working conditions difficult after she filed the EEOC charge. Finally, B & B offered affidavits confirming the alleged confrontation between Mrs. Bellows and Benders. Again, Benders testified that she recalled no such altercation. Whether this confrontation took place and whether Benders underperformed in her duties are factual questions bearing on the issue of pretext. Thus, summary judgment is inappropriate on Benders’ first claim.
Benders’ sеcond count alleges a claim of interference with the attainment of a benefit under § 510 of ERISA. That section states:
It shall be unlawful for any person to discharge, fine, suspend, expel, discipline, or discriminate against a participant or beneficiary for exercising any right to which he is entitled under the provisions of an employee benefit plan, ... or for the purpose of interfering with the attainment of any right to which such participant may become entitled under the plan....
29 U.S.C. § 1140. Section 510 protects the employment relationship giving rise to an individual’s pension rights.
McGath v. Auto-Body N. Shore, Inc.,
Benders maintains that B & B violated § 510 in two ways: (1) by reclassifying her as an independent contractor in December 2003 and refusing to reinstate her as an employee to avoid making a contribution to her 401(k) account; and (2) by terminating her employment in April 2004 because of her disagreement with her status as an independent contractor and her attempts to regain her status as an employee. Contrary to the district court’s conclusion, this issue does not directly depend on when Benders was fired. As Mr. Bellows acknowledged in his affidavit, whatever B & B decided in May, Benders would have been a “qualifying employee”'—and thus eligible for the December 2003 contribution—if not for her change in status. B & B cannot reasonably dispute this fact because it argues that Benders knowingly accepted payment of a default judgment instead of a contribution to her 401 (k) account. For such a quid pro quo to have occurred, Benders must have been entitled to the benefit to begin with. The issue boils down to whether Benders consented to the arrangement, thus negating the “specific intent” necessary to find B & B liable.
B & B first argues that there is no direct or circumstantial evidence that it intended to deprive Benders of a benefit. Again, B & B’s argument is that Benders *766 agreed to forego the 401(k) contribution in exchange for payment of her student loan judgment. However, Benders refuted this argument by testifying that she only agreed to remain an independent contractor for a few weeks, not indefinitely. As evidence, Benders produced e-mails in which she accused Mr. Bellows of reneging on his promise, to which Mr. Bellows responded that he would reinstate her as an employee. Indeed, in his affidavit, Mr. Bellows admitted to twice agreeing to restore Benders’ status but later changing his mind. Furthermore, Benders ultimately was told to leave the firm 2 days after informing Mr. Bellows of her intent to file a claim with the IRS regarding her status. Thus, Benders offered some evidence that B & B intended to interfere with her attainment of a benefit when, despite her complaints, Mr. Bellows broke his promise and dismissed her.
B & B also maintains that it did not have the requisite intent to violate § 510 because it had no economic incentive to take the allegedly adverse action.
See Little v. Cox’s Supermarkets,
Finally, given the reality of the sticky situation at B & B—where amour was hot and heavy in the air—it’s more than a bit unrealistic to think that the firm shoved Benders out the door so it could save a few bucks by dodging a 401(k) contribution to a pension plan. Summary judgment was properly granted to B & B on Benders’ ERISA claim.
Benders’ third and final count alleges a claim of retaliatory discharge under Illinois common law in connection with her threat to notify the IRS of her employment status situation. As an exceptiоn to the at-will employment rule, a retaliatory discharge claim may succeed if an employee shows: (1) that she was discharged (2) in retaliation for her activities (3) in contravention of a clearly mandated public policy.
McGrath v. CCC Info. Servs., Inc.,
B & B argues that the Illinois appellate court’s decision in
McGrath
supports its position that Benders’ dispute with the
*767
firm was purely private. There, the court rejected the employee’s claim that violations of the state’s Wage Payment and Collection Act formed the predicate for a retaliatory discharge suit.
McGrath,
B
&
B also maintains that because Benders did not susрect tax fraud
per se
at the time she threatened to report the matter to the IRS, her claim is barred. We disagree. Illinois courts frame the inquiry as whether only private interests are “at stake,” focusing on the employer’s allegedly wrongful conduct.
See, e.g., Palmateer,
Now that we have concluded that the district court erred in awarding summary judgment on two of the three counts in Benders’ initial suit (Benders I), we turn to her second case, filed pro se (Benders II), where she alleges sex discrimination in violation of Title VII. Benders first tried to advance this claim in 2005, when she moved to file a third amended complaint to her original action. The district court denied that motion as untimely. Benders then filed a new complaint, raising the same sex discrimination claim, which the district court dismissed for failure to state a claim. 5
Our review is
de novo. DeWalt v. Carter,
Title VII provides that “[i]t shall be an unlawful employment practice for an employer ... to discriminate against any
*768
individual ... because of such individual’s ... seat.]” 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-2(a)(l). Benders’ complaint alleges that she was fired because Mr. Bellows did not want his wife to learn about their affair. Essentially, Benders complains of being discriminated against not because of her sex, but because of her consensual sexual relationship with Mr. Bellows.
6
We agree that these allegations are insufficient to support a cause of action for sex discrimination.
See Kahn v. Objective Solutions, Int’l,
Nor are the alleged facts sufficient to state a claim of sexual harassment based on a hostile work environment. A plaintiff claiming a hostile work environment must establish the following elements: (1) she was subject to unwelcome sexual harassment; (2) the harassment was based on sex; (3) the harassment had the effect of unreasonably interfering with her work performance in creating an intimidating, hostile, or offensive working environment that seriously affected her psychological well-being; and (4) there is a basis for employer liability.
Robinson v. Sappington,
In her complaint, Benders does not allege that Mr. Bellows’ initial sexual advances toward her had a negative effect on her work performance. Rather, she admits that she performed well, was promoted, and received pay raises during their 5-year affair. Benders also concedes that the break-up was “amicable” and that thereafter she and Mr. Bellows became “friends.” Her accusations concerning a hostile work environment consist of conclu-sory statements pertaining to nonsexual conduct by Mr. Bellows a year later, after he told her to find another job. Benders alleges that Mr. Bellows’ motivation behind getting her to leave was to hide their romantic relationship from his wife. Thus, we see again that Benders’ complaint centers not around her sex, but her consensual sexual relationship with Mr. Bellows. This, as we discussed, is an insufficient basis for a Title VII claim.
For these reasons, we Affirm the grant of summary judgment to B & B on the ERISA count in case 06-1487 but Reverse the grant of summary judgment on the other two claims in that case and Remand for further proceеdings consistent with this opinion. Finally, because we agree that Benders’ second complaint fails to state a claim, we Affirm the judgment of dismissal in Benders II, case 06-2716.
Notes
. According to an Internet directory, Lawyers.com, Bellows and Bellows, P.C. is a "Boutique Chicago law firm concentrating in *760 corporate and employment law, including litigation, negotiating and counseling.”
. The "case” we refer to here (06-1487) is Benders’ three-count claim in which she is represented by counsel. We will discuss Benders’ pro se appeal from the district court’s dismissal of her related sex discrimination case (06-2716) separately, at the end of this opinion.
. Benders ultimately did file a complaint with the IRS in July 2004.
. B & B also argued that Benders did not demonstrate that the firm’s proffered reasons for firing her were pretext. However, as we discussed in the context of her Title VII claim, Benders adequately rebutted B & B’s evidence on this issue.
. Of course, the claim in Benders II was also dismissable as violative of the rule against splitting causes of actions—all of Benders’ claims against B & B growing out of her employment there should have been in a single suit. That point was not pressed by B & B in the district court, so we won’t consider it here. That’s no-harm, no-foul for B & B here because, as we will conclude, the claim in Benders II will not be coming back alive.
. Benders now argues that the sex was not consensual, but this statement is inconsistent with her complaint.
. The same standards for proving intentional discrimination apply to Title VII and § 1983 equal protection claims.
Williams v. Seniff,
