This аppeal invites us to reconsider our divided decision in
Doe v. St. Joseph’s Hosp. of Fort Wayne,
I. History
The plaintiff in this case is an Egyptian-born Muslim and a physician. He became affiliated with and was granted staff privileges as an anesthesiologist at Skokie Valley Hospital in 1974. Two years later Mohammed Faoud Abd-Allah changed his name to Mark Alexander in what he testifies was an attempt to gain greater acceptance among the patients and staff at the hospital. In 1987, Skokie Valley Hospital merged with Rush-Presbyterian Hоspital, and from then *489 on it became known as Rush North Shore Medical Center (Rush North Shore).
After the merger, Dr. Alexander continued to have staff privileges as an anesthesiologist at Rush North Shore. As a condition of his privileges, Dr. Alexander was required to spend a specified amount of time per week “on call” to the hospital’s emergency room. Rush North Shore’s on-call policy, adopted in November 1985, requires a physician on call to be reachable by pager or by phone, to call the hospital within twenty minutes of being paged, to remain within forty-five minutes potential travel time to the hospital, and to come to the hospital if requested to do so by the emergency room physician on duty.
At 6:00 P.M. on February 20, 1988, a patient who had suffered a head injury rendering her comatose was brought into the Rush North Shore emergency room. The patient suffered from internal cranial bleeding and had vomited earlier, but shе was breathing on her own. Shortly after her arrival at the emergency room, the patient vomited again. Dr. Patricia Bitter, the emergency room physician on duty, attempted several intuba-tions (both through the mouth and with a fi-beroptic scope through the nose) to prevent potential aspiration, but her attempts were unsuccessful. Dr. Bitter paged two on-call surgeons who could perform a tracheostomy (a surgical procedure for creating an airway through the throat). While awaiting the surgeons’ responses, Dr. Bitter phoned Dr. Alexander for help.
Dr. Bitter claims that she asked Dr. Alexander to come in and assist with intubating the emergency room patient, but that he refused to report to the hospital. Dr. Alexander, on the other hand, maintains that Dr. Bitter never actually requested his presence. He contends that after Dr. Bitter called him and explained the situation, he informed her that in light of the bleeding and swelling in the patient’s throat caused by her failed intu-bation attempts, any further efforts to intu-bate could prove fatal. Dr. Alexander states that he told Dr. Bitter that the patient was in need of a tracheostomy, a procedure that, as an anesthesiologist, he was not qualified to perform. He claims that he told Dr. Bitter he would remain available to come into the hospital if his particular skills were needed, but that she left him waiting on hold and never asked him to come in.
Aftér spеaking with Dr. Alexander, Dr. Bitter immediately received a call from Dr. Upendranath Nimmigadda, a surgeon whom she had paged earlier. Dr. Nimmigadda came into the hospital and performed a tra-cheostomy on the patient. Dr. Bitter told Dr. Nimmigadda that Dr. Alexander had refused to assist her after apprising her that Rush North Shore did not possess a suitable fiberoptic laryngoscope for nasal intubation.
Meanwhile, Dr. Alexander called the emergency room again and was put in touch with Jake Strykowski, a respiratory therapist at the hospital. Dr. Alexander asked if the emergency room patient “really needed” his help. Strykowski claims that he told Dr. Alexander that the patient was becoming increasingly unresponsive and that they had contacted Dr. Alexander because of their inability to intubate, but that Dr. Alexander claimed he did not have experience with Rush North Shore’s flexible fiberoptic equipment. Strykowski states that he informеd Dr. Alexander that the hospital did have the equipment that he was accustomed to, but that by that time Dr. Nimmigadda had been secured and the situation was under control.
The next day, Dr. Bitter filed a complaint concerning the incident. The hospital investigated her allegations, gathering the statements of Strykowski and Drs. Bitter, Alexander, and Nimmigadda. After consideration and deliberation by several panels of the hospital’s hierarchical internal review structure, the board оf trustees informed Dr. Alexander by letter that his staff privileges had been revoked for violation of the hospital’s on-call policy.
Dr. Alexander filed a charge with the Illinois Department of Human Rights and with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, alleging that Rush North Shore had revoked his staff privileges not because he had violated the hospital’s on-call policy, but because of his religion and national origin. Both the IDHR and the EEOC investigated and dismissed Dr. Alexander’s charge, finding no еvidence of discrimination.
*490 Thereafter he filed suit in the Northern District of Illinois, claiming that Rush North Shore’s revocation of his privileges constituted unlawful discrimination in violation of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, Title VII, 42 U.S.C. § 2000e et seq. After discovery, Rush North Shore moved for summary judgment on two grounds: (1) that Dr. Alexander was precluded from bringing a Title VII action against the hospital because the undisputed facts in the record demonstrated that he was an independent contractor, rather than an employee of the hospital; and (2) that Dr. Alexander could put forth no evidence demonstrating that Rush North Shore’s proffered reason for the revocation of his privileges — i.e., its belief that Dr. Alexander engaged in serious misconduct but had failed to acknowledge his wrongdoing or to provide any assurance that the conduct would not recur — was a pretext for unlawful discrimination.
In an effort to demonstrate that Rush North Shore’s articulated reason for his privilege revocation was pretextual, Dr. Alexander offered evidence attempting to show (1) that various Rush North Shore personnel had on several occasions in the past made derogatory remarks concerning his religion and ethnicity; (2) that he had engaged in no wrongdoing on the night in question; and (3) that Rush North Shore had imposed much less serious sanctions on four other physicians, Drs. Britt, Taxman, Abrams, and Friedman, who had violated the on-call policy in the past but who were not Egyptian or Muslim.
In ruling on the motion for summary judgment,
Alexander v. Rush North Shore Medical Center,
Aftеr a trial, the district court determined that Dr. Alexander had failed to prove by a preponderance of the evidence that Drs. Friedman and Abrams had engaged in misconduct as serious as his own but had nonetheless been treated more favorably, nor that there was a nexus between any past derogatory remarks concerning Dr. Alexander’s religion or ethnicity and the board’s decision to revoke his privileges. Thus, the district court found that Dr. Alexander had failed tо demonstrate pretext, and it entered final judgment in favor of Rush North Shore. Dr. Alexander appeals both the entry of partial summary judgment and the district court’s final judgment after trial.
II. Analysis
In deciding this appeal, we need turn no further than to the district court’s ruling on Rush North Shore’s motion for summary judgment, citing
Doe v. St. Joseph’s Hospital,
that Dr. Alexander could maintain a Title VII action against Rush North Shore even absent a demonstration of an employment relationship between himself and the hospital. We exercise plenary review over a district court’s decision concerning summary judgment, drawing our own' conclusions of law and fact from the record before us,
Thiele v. Norfolk & Western Ry. Co.,
*491 In Doe, St. Joseph’s Hospital revoked a physician’s staff рrivileges as a disciplinary measure after the hospital’s internal review board ruled against her in proceedings concerning a complaint filed by another physician. After the appropriate administrative filings proved unsuccessful, Doe (the aggrieved physician) filed an action in district court alleging, among other things, that the hospital’s revocation of her privileges constituted unlawful racial discrimination in violation of Title VII. The district court, however, dismissed Doe’s suit at the pleading stage because she did not contend that she was an employee of the hospital.
On appeal, in a divided decision, we held that the dismissal was unwarranted because it was unnecessary for Doe to allege an employment relationship with the hospital in order to maintain a discrimination suit against it.
Doe,
to fail or refuse to hire or to discharge any individual, or otherwise tо discriminate against any individual with respect to his compensation, terms, conditions, or privileges of employment, because of such individual’s race, color, religion, sex, or national origin.
42 U.S.C. § 2000e-2(a)(1). The
Doe
majority opined that because this section expressly applies to “any individual” rather than to “any employee,” interpretively restricting the Act’s protection to only former, present, and potential employees would be inconsistent with our charge to construe Title VII “liberally so as to further the goals and purposes of eliminating discrimination in employment.”
Id.
at 422 (quoting
Unger v. Consolidated Foods Corp.,
The partial dissent argued that it was impossible for the hospital to have interfered with Doe’s employment opportunities because, under the common law meaning of “employee,” Doe was not employed by her patients any more than she was employed by the hospital.
Doe,
Doe’s conceptual underpinnings, however, can no longer hold fast after our more recent decisions in
Knight v. United Farm Bureau Mut. Ins. Co.,
and
Ost v. West Suburban Travelers Limousine, Inc.
The
Knight
case concerned an insurance agent who brought a Title VII sex discrimination action against the insurance company with which she was affiliated.
Application of this rule in Doe — where the plaintiff conceded that she was not an employеe of the hospital and, thus, was an independent contractor — would have effected precisely the opposite result from that reached in Doe’s majority opinion.
On the other hand, it could be argued that a physician who enjoys hospital staff privileges does, under certain factual situations, share an indirect employer-employee relationship with the hospital sufficient to invoke Title VII protection.
Cf. Shrock v. Altru Nurses Registry,
Dr. Alexander’s claim, however, is untenable in light of our employee/independent contractor analysis in
Ost.
There, we applied a common law test, which “involves the application of the general principles of agency to the facts,”
Knight,
(1) the extent of the employer’s control and supervision over the worker, including directions on scheduling and performance of work, (2) the kind of occupation and nature of skill required, including whether skills are obtained in the workplace, (3) responsibility for the costs of operation, such as equipment, supplies, fees, licenses, workplace, and maintenance of operations, (4) method and form of payment and benefits, and (5) length of job commitment and/or expectations.
Ost,
Looking to these five criteria, paying special attention to potential employer control over the manner in which work is accomplished, one finds that the business relationship between Dr. Alexander and Rush North Shore is strikingly similar to that shared by Ost and West Suburban Travelers Limousine. In
Ost,
West Suburban drivers were skilled in more mundane ways, but they owned their own limousines; they were responsible for paying their own insurance premiums, license fees, and employment taxes; they collected their own fees directly from customers and never received paychecks from West Suburban; they were able to work on those days that they preferred; they could choose the routes by which they would reach desired destinations; and they were allowed to work for other dispatching services if they wished to do so.
Similarly, Dr. Alexander did not supply his own equipment or assistants, but he did possess significant specialized skills; he listed his employer on income tax returns as Central Anesthesiologists, Ltd., his personal wholly-owned professional corporаtion that was responsible for paying his malpractice insurance premiums, employment' benefits, and income and social security taxes; he was responsible for billing his patients and he collected his fees directly from them; he never received any compensation, paid vacation, private office space, or any other paid benefits from Rush North Shore; he had the authority to exercise his own independent discretion conсerning the care he delivered to his patients based on his professional judgment as to what was in their best interests; he was not required to admit his patients to Rush North Shore; and he was free to associate himself with other hospitals if he wished to do so. As in Ost, it seems clear that the manner in which Dr. Alexander rendered services to his patients was primarily within his sole control.
Dr. Alexander argues that he was, in fact, an employee of Rush North Shore because he was requirеd to spend a specified amount of time per week “on call” and because, by virtue of the nature of being an anesthesiologist, most of his operating room patients were assigned to him on a daily basis by the anesthesiology section head. Yet, Ost submitted similar evidence, noting that West Suburban determined its drivers’ starting times, required them to call in when they signed off duty, assigned the drivers’ morning passengers, required that the drivers’ vehicles be made available during certain times, set thе rates the drivers charged, and determined which drivers would receive which customers.
Ost,
*494 We aré aware that at trial, the district court — relying on Doe — permitted neither Dr. Alexander nor Rush North Shore to introduce evidence of Dr. Alexander’s “employment status.” This fact, however, does not require us to remand this case to the district court for a determination of whether Dr. Alexander was an employee of the hospital or an independent contractor. At the summary judgment stage, both parties had the opportunity to fully address this issue. Thus, we can appropriately rely upon that record, as well as the uncontested facts in the Pretrial Order, 3 to conclusively determine that Dr. Alexander was an independent contractor.
Given that Doe’s holding is inconsistent with Knight and Ost, Dr. Alexander’s status as an independent contractor precludes him from bringing a Title VII action against the hospital, and thus the entry of summary judgment against Dr. Alexander would have been appropriate. The ultimate disposition at trial provided a correct result and the judgment of the district court in favor of Rush North Shore is AFFIRMED.
Notes
This oрinion was circulated among all judges of this court in active service pursuant to Circuit Rule 40(f) because it overrules
Doe v. St. Joseph’s Hosp. of Fort Wayne,
. The Supreme Court recently authorized applying a similar control-oriented agency test to determine whether an individual is an employee under the Employee Retirement and Income Security Act ("ERISA”), a statutory codification that defines "employee” at 29 U.S.C. § 1002(6) in the same circular manner as does Title VII at 42 U.S.C. § 2000e(f).
Nationwide Mut. Ins. Co. v. Darden,
In determining whether a hired party is an employee under the general common law of agency, we consider the hiring party’s right to control the manner and means by which the product is accomplished. Among the other factors .relevant to this inquiry are the skill required; the source of the instrumentalities and tools; the location of the work; the duration of the relationship between the parties; whether the hiring party has the right to assign additional projects to the hired party; the extent of the hired party's discretion over when and how long to work; the method of payment; the hired party's role in hiring and paying assistants; whether the work is part of the regular business of the hiring party; whether the hiring party is in business; the provision of employee benefits; and the tax treatment of the hired party.
Id,
(quoting
Community for Creative Non-Violence v. Reid,
. We come to the conclusion that Dr. Alexander is an independent contractor because he is also not an employee of his patients, just as an insurance agent or a limousine driver is not an employee of her customers. It is important to note that our ruling today is limited to overturning
Doe’s
holding that a physician may bring a Title VII actiоn against a hospital even though he is an independent contractor and not an employee. We have no occasion to go further and determine if a Title VII plaintiff must always demonstrate that he is an employee
of the defendant employer.
Thus, we continue to leave open the question that went unanswered in
Shrock,
. Moreover, we examined the contested facts from the Pretrial Order (relevant to determining the employee/independent contractor issue, see Pretrial Order, p. C-4 ¶ 35), in the light most favorable to Dr. Alexander. In that regard, we *495 determined that Dr. Alexander was an independent contractor even though he did not supply his own equipment or assistants, he was required to spend a certain amount of time “on call,” and he was assigned most of his operating room patients by the hospital's anesthesiology section head on a daily basis.
