Trent L. Chapin was employed by the Bob Rohrman Auto Group as a car salesman. Following his termination at one Rohrman-owned dealership, Chapin filed a complaint with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, alleging that the manager discriminated against white Christians in favor of Pakistani Muslims. His new employer, a second Rohrmanowned dealership, heard about this and threatened to fire Chapin unless the complaint was withdrawn. After this threat was made, Chapin left work and never returned, despite Fort-Rohr Motors, Inc.’s (“Fort-Rohr”) repeated efforts to have him return.
Chapin sued both dealerships, alleging discrimination because of his race and retaliation under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. After a jury trial, the jury returned a favorable verdict on Chapin’s retaliation claim. Fort-Rohr appeals, arguing that it was entitled to judgment as a matter of law because Chapin failed to show that ForWRohr actually or construe *675 tively discharged Chapin in retaliation for his complaint. We agree that Fort-Rohr was entitled to judgment as a matter of law because Chapin did not produce sufficient evidence to support an actual or constructive discharge. Therefore, we reverse the judgment of the district court.
I. BACKGROUND
Bob Rohrman owns multiple car dealerships in Indiana and Illinois, including several in the Fort Wayne, Indiana area. One of these is Mid-States Motors, Inc. (“Mid-States”), and another is ForMEtohr Motors, Inc. (“Fort-Rohr”). 1 The two dealerships are separate corporations with separate management and employees.
Chapin had been employed at various Rohrman-owned dealerships in his many years as a salesman, working specifically for Larry Kruse on and off at various dealerships beginning in the early 1990s. At some point, Chapin left Indiana and spent a few years elsewhere, returning to the Fort Wayne area in the spring of 2004. Again, as he had done many times in the past, Kruse offered him a position in the spring of 2004 as a used car sales manager at Mid-States. Nadeem Baig, a Pakistani Muslim, became General Manager of the Mid-States dealership in April 2004, taking over this position from Kruse. On April 30, 2004, Baig called Chapin into a meeting and terminated Chapin’s employment. During trial, Baig testified that as a new manager, he made the decision to replace Chapin because Chapin failed to be available, to train the sales force, and had failures in production. Chapin claimed he was terminated because he was a white Christian and Baig wished to replace the current employees with Pakistani Muslims.
In June 2004, Rohrman opened its FortRohr dealership under the management of Kruse, who recruited and hired Chapin to work as a used car sales manager. Chapin worked without incident from July 2004 until February 2005. On February 10, 2005, Chapin filed a charge of discrimination with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (“EEOC”), alleging that the Mid-States dealership had discriminated against him on the basis of his race. Chapin alleged that Baig was systematically replacing white Christians with Pakistani Muslims. Mid-States’s management informed Kruse about Chapin’s EEOC complaint.
Kruse asked Chapin to meet with him on February 28, 2005. Also present at this meeting were Sales Manager Shane Housholder and Human Resources Manager Luke Luther. Chapin surreptitiously brought a tape recorder to this meeting and secretly recorded it. During this meeting, which only lasted a minute, Kruse raised his voice and was very upset. The recorded conversation, in transcript form, went as follows:
KRUSE: I need to ask you, what is your mentality in filing the EEOC claim against Bob Rohrman?
CHAPIN: What do you mean?
KRUSE: What do I mean?
CHAPIN: It is actually against Na-deem, is that correct?
KRUSE: Who does Nadeem work for?
CHAPIN: Rohrman.
KRUSE: Who do you work for?
CHAPIN: Rohrman.
KRUSE: What the hell is your mentality? Did you have a brain fart or what?
*676 CHAPIN: I suppose. I didn’t think that—
KRUSE: Do you want to work here?
CHAPIN: Yes, I do.
KRUSE: If I wanted to work here on the floor, I wouldn’t file suit against him.
CHAPIN: I think that I was misfairly treated down there.
KRUSE: It had nothing to do — he brought his own people in. It had nothing to do with anything with you. If you want to file a claim, you need to work somewhere else, because you are not performing here. I can let you go for nonperformance.
CHAPIN: No, I want to work here.
KRUSE: Then you need to fucking reverse the claim right away, and it needs to be done today.
CHAPIN: Okay. I have to go down there.
KRUSE: Go do it right now. You aren’t going to work here until you get it reversed. Period.
CHAPIN: Okay.
KRUSE: You decide if you are working here or not.
CHAPIN: All right. I am going to do it. I want to work here.
KRUSE: Go get it handled.
Following this conversation, Chapin did not withdraw his EEOC complaint, and he did not return to work. Kruse testified that he made multiple calls attempting to reach Chapin after this meeting. A woman who lived with Chapin also testified that she had taken a message from Kruse wishing to speak to Chapin, and that she had delivered the message. Chapin denied receiving any phone calls or messages. He stated that he called FortRohr to send him his February commission check but that Fort>-Rohr refused to mail it until he came in for a meeting.
On March 4, 2005, Chapin met again with Kruse, Housholder and Luther, and again, secretly taped the meeting. As compared to the first tape-recording, this tape-recording was considerably less clear and the transcript is not verbatim. A transcribed version of the relevant parts of the conversation states:
KRUSE: What is going on?
CHAPIN: You told me, don’t come back unless I reversed it. That is your exact words. You made it very clear.
KRUSE: I didn’t tell you that.
CHAPIN: Yes, you did. You said, until I can clear that, I didn’t have a job.
KRUSE: —I didn’t fire you, if that is what—
CHAPIN: I took it as me being fired. You said I didn’t have a job.
KRUSE: I didn’t fire you.
KRUSE: I suggest that you go get dressed and report back to work.
CHAPIN: I was under the impression that you didn’t want me up here.
KRUSE: That is not the — .
CHAPIN: That was the total impression. You said I was going to get fired for production.
KRUSE: I didn’t say anything about getting fired.
CHAPIN: You said, “I could fire you.”
KRUSE: I said I could fire you. I didn’t say I was firing you.
KRUSE: So, my question is, do you want to work here?
CHAPIN: Ido. I need a little time off.
KRUSE: Time off?
*677 CHAPIN: I am in the middle of a painting project, and I want to get it done.
Following this conversation, Fort-Rohr sent several letters to Chapin. One dated March 8, 2005 states that “you clearly understood that you are still employed with us and expected to be at work” and that “you would be able to return to work.” Another letter dated March 14, 2005 states that “[djespite numerous attempts to contact you by mail as well as by phone, we have failed to receive any response from you regarding your intentions to continue your employment with us.” Chapin also acknowledges receiving a letter dated March 18, 2005 from Luther indicating that he still had a position at FortARohr. Chapin never formally resigned his position or returned to work.
Chapin filed this lawsuit, alleging racial discrimination and retaliation in violation of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 42 U.S.C. § 2000e, et seq., and a jury returned a verdict in favor of Mid-States on Chapin’s reverse discrimination claim. It also found for Chapin on his retaliation claim, awarding him $100,000 in compensatory damages and $1,000,000 in punitive damages. After the trial, the district court denied Forb-Rohr’s motion for judgment as a matter of law, and Fort-Rohr appealed.
II. ANALYSIS
We review de novo the district court’s denial of a motion for judgment as a matter of law under Rule 50(b). Fed.R.Civ.P. 50(b);
Tate v. Executive Mgmt. Servs., Inc.,
At trial, Chapin presented two alternatives to the jury as to how Fort-Rohr retaliated against him for filing his EEOC complaint — that Fort-Rohr either actually or constructively terminated his employment. The jury was instructed that Chapin could succeed on his claim only if he proved by a preponderance of the evidence that FortARohr “either directly or constructively discharged him for filing a charge of discrimination.” Fort-Rohr argues that it was entitled to judgment as a matter of law because Chapin did not establish that ForARohr actually or constructively discharged Chapin in retaliation for making his EEOC complaint of discrimination. Title VII prohibits an employer from taking an adverse employment action against an employee simply because he has filed an unfair employment charge. 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-3(a);
Burlington Northern & Santa Fe Ry. Co. v. White,
A. Chapin Was Not Actually Terminated
The parties agree that Chapin engaged in a protected activity because he filed a charge of discrimination with the EEOC.
See
42 U.S.C. § 2000e-3(a). The primary issue in this appeal is whether any
*678
adverse employment action was taken against Chapin because of his complaint. “The antiretaliation provision protects an individual not from all retaliation, but from retaliation that produces an injury or harm.”
Burlington Northern,
As an initial matter, Chapin claims he was actually fired on February 28, 2005, and that this firing establishes an adverse action. The quintessential example of an adverse action is a tangible employment action, such as the termination of the employment relationship.
See Burlington Indus., Inc. v. Ellerth,
The sequence of events was as follows: Kruse became aware that Chapin filed an EEOC charge, and he asked Chapin to meet with him. During this short, heated meeting, Kruse asked him why he would file an EEOC claim and then stated that if Chapin wanted to work on the floor, he would need to withdraw the claim. Chapin responded by saying that he did want to work there and he would withdraw his claim. Chapin left work that day, but did not withdraw his claim.
Chapin claims that he was automatically terminated as soon as he left work on February 28 because the withdrawal of the EEOC claim was a precondition to him keeping his job. However, the actions of Fort-Rohr when Chapin did not return to work, show that an automatic termination never occurred. Kruse and Fort-Rohr did not consider Chapin to be fired and Kruse actively and continually encouraged Chapin to return to work. Most importantly, Chapin himself testified that his understanding from the February 28 meeting was that “I assumed Kruse would fire me if I didn’t reverse the claim, which I did not,” and not that he was terminated at the meeting itself. Furthermore, Chapin returned to FortARohr on March 4, 2005 to pick up his commission check because Fort-Rohr refused to mail it to him without having him come in for a meeting. During this meeting, Chapin acknowledged that he was still employed by FortARohr and claimed to want to return to work once he was done with a painting project. Kruse never fired Chapin, and so an actual termination from ForfARohr cannot be the basis of Chapin’s retaliation claim. Based on the record and evidence produced at trial, no rational juror could have found *679 that Kruse actually fired Chapin on February 28.
B. No Constructive Discharge
In the alternative, Chapin claimed that he was constructively discharged from his employment, and that this constructive discharge provides the basis of his retaliation claim. A constructive discharge constitutes an adverse employment action.
Pa. State Police v. Sutlers,
In the first form, an employee resigns due to alleged discriminatory harassment. Such cases require a plaintiff to show working conditions even more egregious than that required for a hostile work environment claim because employees are generally expected to remain employed while seeking redress,
Roby,
The second form of constructive discharge we have recognized occurs “[w]hen an employer acts in a manner so as to have communicated to a reasonable employee that she will be terminated.... ”
Univ. of Chi. Hosps.,
In
EEOC v. University of Chicago Hospitals,
we ruled that a claim of constructive discharge could move forward to trial where an employee, Victoria Leyva, arrived at work to find her belongings packed and her office being used as storage.
Here, even construing all the evidence in Chapin’s favor, no reasonable employee standing in Chapin’s shoes would believe that had he not resigned, he would have been immediately fired. Unlike in
University of Chicago Hospitals,
there is nothing to indicate that a firing here was an imminent and inevitable event. This is not a situation where the “handwriting was on the wall” and the plaintiff quit “just ahead of fall of the axe.”
Lindale v. Tokheim Corp.,
In fact, Chapin never formally resigned and indeed just never returned to work. If Chapin had returned to work, without having withdrawn the EEOC charge, perhaps Kruse would have fired him. Or, his supervisors or coworkers may have constantly harassed him to the point where his safety was at risk.
See Boumehdi,
To find that one singular threat, followed by multiple reassurances that the employee has retained his job, was a constructive discharge is to lower the threshold of the “intolerable” workplace so far as to be unrecognizable. A reasonable person in Chapin’s position would not have felt that he had no choice but to resign. No rational jury could have concluded that Fort-Rohr constructively discharged Chapin. Because there was no adverse action under either of the theories Chapin presented to the jury, Chapin’s retaliation claim under Title VII fails and we reverse the district court’s denial of FortARohr’s motion for judgment as a matter of law. 2
III. CONCLUSION
We Reverse the jury verdict and Remand the case to the district court to enter judgment as a matter of law for Fort-Rohr Motors, Inc. Because we reverse the jury verdict, we do not reach the remaining issues in the appeal.
Notes
. Although the parties refer to Mid-States as "Acura” and Fort-Rohr as "Toyota” in their briefs, we will refer to them by their legal names, Mid-States and Fort-Rohr, when it is necessary to distinguish between the two.
. We briefly note that we do not foreclose the possibility that a plaintiff could argue that a singular threat of termination had the impact of dissuading a reasonable worker from supporting a discrimination complaint, which might act as the necessary adverse action underlying his retaliation claim.
See, e.g., Pantoja v. Am. NTN Bearing Mfg.,
