Jay Preston, a dentist, charges that the Wisconsin Health Fund, his former employer, discriminated against him on account of his sex in violation of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 42 U.S.C. §§ 2000e et seq., when they replaced him as director of the Fund’s dental clinic with Linda Hamilton (not to be confused with the female lead in the first two Terminator movies). Preston further argues that in procuring this substitution, Bruce Trojak, the Fund’s chief executive officer, *541 conspired with Hamilton to destroy Preston’s contractual relationship with the Fund, in violation of Wisconsin’s common law of tortious interference with contract. The district court granted summary judgment for the defendants.
The Fund is a teamsters health and welfare fund that provides health services directly in clinics that it owns, as well as indirectly by paying for medical or dental treatment that its participants obtain outside the Fund’s clinics. The Fund had been hemorrhaging money for many years when Trojak became its chief executive officer in 1998. The dental clinic alone, under Preston, its long-time director, lost $1 million the following year. Preston presented ideas for stemming the flow to Trojak in a well-written business plan (Preston has an M.B.A. as well as a dental degree), despite which Trojak fired him and replaced him with Hamilton, a much younger dentist who had no apparent credentials for the job except eagerness for it. Trojak testified at his deposition that Preston’s ideas were too few and too late and that he was impressed by Hamilton’s “can do” attitude. This may be true but it may also be true, as Preston claims, that Trojak favored Hamilton for personal reasons. There were rumors, although unsubstantiated, that they were having an affair. They frequently dined together and sometimes after dinner would repair to his apartment for — according to their not terribly credible deposition testimony — platonic sessions solely devoted to disinterested discussion of the future of the dental clinic, though Hamilton did acknowledge indicating at these sessions her desire to be promoted to dental director.
Trojak is no longer with the Fund, and Hamilton is no longer the dental director. But the circumstances of their departures are obscure, and both are represented in this lawsuit by the Fund’s law firm.
A male executive’s romantically motivated favoritism toward a female subordinate is not sex discrimination even when it disadvantages a male competitor of the woman. Such favoritism is not based on a belief that women are better workers, or otherwise deserve to be treated better, than men; indeed, it is entirely consistent with the opposite opinion. The effect on the composition of the workplace is likely to be nil, especially since the disadvantaged competitor is as likely to be another woman as a man — were Preston a woman, Trojak would still have fired her to make way-for Hamilton unless Trojak was romantically entangled with both of them. Neither in purpose nor in consequence can favoritism resulting from a personal relationship be equated to sex discrimination.
Schobert v. Illinois Dept. of Transportation,
Preston tries to , bolster his case by pointing to the fact that Trojak gave large raises to several women and by noting that there was even talk in the workplace of “Bruce and his harem.” But he provides no details that would enable a trier of fact to infer that the raises were motivated by the recipients’ sex. All we know is the amount of the raises, the number of recipients, and the sex ratio of the recipients — = five women to two men. To infer discrimination we would need to know more. We would need to know the sex composition of the Fund’s workforce, whether there were men who had jobs comparable to those of the five women but didn’t get similar raises, and whether the raises were due to the women’s being promoted to new jobs and if so whether men had a fair opportunity to compete for those promotions. There are *542 some answers in the record but Preston makes nothing of them. He insists that the bare fact that more women than men got large raises, together with the favoritism shown Linda Hamilton, is enough to get him to a jury.
One reason it is not enough is that the courts take a realistic view of the circumstances in which an inference that men are discriminating in favor of rather than against women is plausible.
Phelan v. City of Chicago,
There may be other situations as well in which it is plausible to expect that men might discriminate against men and in favor of women; the list is not a closed one. See
Phelan v. City of Chicago, supra,
Let us move on to the tort claim. Preston’s lawyer suggested at argument that by joining it to a Title VII claim he had the defendants in a fork. If we thought that Trojak advanced Hamilton for purely romantic reasons, this would, he conceded, undermine his Title VII claim for the reason that we have just explained. But he insisted that it would make his tortious-interference case by showing that Trojak and Hamilton had ruptured Preston’s contractual relationship with the Fund without justification.
In the typical tortious-interference case,
A
has a contract with B — for example, to sing in an opera produced by B — and
C
comes along and induces
A
to break her
*543
contract and sing for C’s opera company instead.
B
can sue
A
for breach of contract, but
B
can also sue
C
in tort for inducing the breach.
IDS Life Ins. Co. v. SunAmerica Life Ins. Co.,
Granted, what was a promotion for Hamilton was not a lost promotion for Preston; it was the loss of his job.' But he was an employee at will. That means the Fund didn’t want him to have a right to sue it for breach of contract if it fired him. Not that there can never be a suit for tortious interference with contract by an employee at will. Employment at will is a contractual relationship, albeit one with no definite duration; if for example some competing dental clinic had slandered Preston -to the Fund in order to - get him fired in the hope of- being able to ’hire him for itself at a lower wage, he would have a solid claim against the clinic for tortious interference.
Mendelson v. Blatz Brewing Co.,
The cases do not rule out all possibility of an at-will employee’s bringing a suit for tortious interference against a corporate officer, such as Trojak.
Mendelson
and
Mackenzie
were such cases; see also
Lorenz v. Dreske,
Preston has made no effort to satisfy either requirement: With the dental clinic that he had long managed operating at a large deficit, as was the Fund as a whole, the trustees undoubtedly expected their new CEO to wield the axe. There is no evidence that they regretted Preston’s discharge or Hamilton’s replacing him or made any effort to reemploy Preston' — a natural step to have taken had they thought it a mistake (or worse) to fire him. They ratified Preston’s discharge. There is also no evidence that Trojak and Hamilton defamed or defrauded Preston or otherwise committed an independent tort against him (that is, a tort different from the tort of intentional interference with a contract) in procuring his discharge and replacement by Hamilton. A jury would be speculating if it found that Trojak would not have appointed Hamilton to head the dental clinic had he not had romantic feelings toward her. Trojak and Hamilton may not have been acting solely in the interests of the Fund, but that is too demanding a test.
Affirmed.
