Four white police officers sued the City of Markham, a Chicago suburb, charging racial and age discrimination in violation of 42 U.S.C. § 1981 and the Age Discrimination in Employment Act, respectively, and they now appeal from the grant of summary judgment for the defendant and the resulting dismissal of their suit. Unlike most “reverse discrimination” suits, this one does not arise out of efforts to redress historic injustices or mitigate racial tensions; it charges naked discrimination by a municipal government that is controlled by blacks, who are a majority of the local population. The mayor is black, as is a majority of the city council, over which he presides, and as are all the members of the board of fire and police commissioners, whom he appoints.
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Construed as favorably to the plaintiffs as the record permits, which is the proper standard when evaluating the grant of summary judgment in favor of the defendant, the facts are as follows. During a period stretching from 1993 to sometime after this suit was filed in 1997, the mayor and other black officials made repeated racist and “ageist” comments to or about the plaintiffs, such as that the city needed “to get rid of all the old white police officers” and — to one of the plaintiffs — “when are you going to quit so we can bring these young black men up?”; “it is the blacks’ turn to self-govern in Markham, and if you are white, get out”; “it is our turn; you are the minority now; you lost, you might as well move out; we don’t owe you nothing.” Once when the mayor said at a city council meeting, “they are not worth anything” (referring to the three plaintiffs, all but Barron, who hold supervisory positions in the police department), one council member asked him, “Are you saying this because they are white, Mr. Mayor?” He replied, “Maybe I am.” There were a number of such comments, and the defendant’s argument that only the four comments listed in the complaint, before pretrial discovery brought others to light, could be considered in deciding whether to grant summary judgment is frivolous. The defendant does not argue, however — which would also be frivolous — • that the City of Markham is not legally responsible for the discriminatory actions of the mayor, city council, and board of fire and police commissioners; for they
are
the city government. See, e.g.,
McMillian v. Monroe County,
Hunt and Clayton presented evidence that they were denied raises in 1996 and 1997 on account of their race and age; Barron that he was denied a temporary promotion to sergeant for similar reasons; and Gordon that he was constructively discharged when he quit after being told by the chief of police that he would never perform up to the mayor’s expectations. The district court rejected Hunt and Clayton’s claim on two grounds: that none of the derogatory comments was contemporaneous with the action of the city council in denying Hunt and Clayton raises or was shown to have influenced the council’s action, and that the two were denied raises because of the city’s parlous financial situation, as were all other nonunion employees of the city. The defendant adds a third ground — that the denial of a raise is not an adverse employment action for which relief can be granted in a federal suit.
The district court overread language in a number of our cases to the effect that “stray remarks” of a derogatory character are not evidence of actionable discrimination. E.g,
Cullen v. Olin Corp.,
There was also, it is true, evidence that the city could not afford raises not required by its union contracts; and Hunt and Clayton (also Gordon), being supervisors, were not covered by such a contract. Yet they did receive a raise in 1998 — after this suit was filed — even though the city’s financial situation had not improved. And they presented evidence that some black supervisors received not only raises, but also tuition reimbursements and free use of city cars, which they did not, during the years in which they were denied raises.
The evidence that we have summarized created a triable issue of whether, but for the plaintiffs’ race, they would have received raises or perks, or both, in 1996 and 1997. But this brings into view the third ground for the grant of summary judgment against Hunt and Clayton — that the denial of a raise (and we suppose
a fortiori
the denial of perks) is not an “adverse employment action.” This term is found in innumerable cases interpreting the federal employment discrimination statutes, such as the Age Discrimination in Employment Act, 29 U.S.C. §§ 621
et seq.,
the Americans with Disabilities Act, 42 U.S.C. §§ 12101
et seq.,
and Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 42 U.S.C. §§ 2000e
et seq.
See, e.g.,
Conley v. Village of Bedford Park,
The idea behind requiring proof of an adverse employment action is simply that a statute which forbids
employment
discrimination is not intended to reach every bigoted act or gesture that a worker might encounter in the workplace. E.g.,
Faragher v. City of Boca Raton,
The defendant’s best case on the meaning of adverse employment action is
Miller v. American Family Mutual Ins. Co.,
A bonus, too, is an incident of the employment relation, rather than something unrelated to it, something only adventitiously connected with the workplace. But the denial of a bonus is inherently ambiguous, as well as less damaging to the employee because he didn’t count (or at least should not have counted) on it. Problems of proof and the principle
de minimis non curat lex
combine to place such denials beyond the reach of the employment discrimination statutes, or so at least orn-eases hold. The denial of a raise is more likely to reflect invidious motivation than the denial of a bonus, after alternative explanations based on the worker’s performance or the employer’s financial situation are excluded — and there is evidence here, as we have seen, that may exclude them. We conclude that the “bonus” rule of
Miller
does not extend to raises. See also
Gupta v. Florida Bd. of Regents,
As for plaintiff Barron, the defendant points out that he flunked the test for sergeant the only three times that he took it. This would be dispositive if he were seeking a permanent promotion to sergeant, but he is not; he is seeking a temporary promotion, with the raise that would come automatically with it. The denial of a promotion is an adverse employment action, see, e.g.,
Burlington Industries, Inc. v. Ellerth, supra,
A temporary promotion does not require passing the sergeant’s test — or anything else. The city gave such a promotion to a black patrolman after he was released from prison for having, while a police officer, violated the civil rights of a resident of Markham. It is a triable issue whether Barron’s “offense” of failing the sergeant’s test three times was worse, and if it is not, an inference of racial discrimination from the derogatory comments that litter the record would not be unreasonable.
That leaves only the question whether Gordon was constructively discharged. The term “constructive discharge” refers to the situation in which an employer, without firing an employee, makes his working conditions so miserable that it drives him to quit. See, e.g.,
Tutman v. WBBM-TV, Inc./CBS, Inc.,
REVERSED.
