Joan Steffes suffers from chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, a condition that restricts her breathing and, among other things, makes it dangerous for her to be exposed to certain chemicals. Despite her condition, Steffes worked in the warehouse of a chemical company, Stepan Company (Step-an), until she was bumped from that position by a senior union member. She and Stepan were unable to agree on a suitable substitute position for her, and ultimately Steffes was terminated.
Steffes filed two separate lawsuits, which we have consolidated on appeal. In the first, before Judge Leinenweber, Steffes alleged that Stepan discriminated against her on the basis of her sex and on the basis of her disability. Judge Leinenweber entered summary judgment for Stepan, and we affirm this decision. Steffes’s second suit alleged that Stepan unlawfully retaliated against her by informing Steffes’s subsequent employer of her lawsuit and medical restrictions. Judge Holderman dismissed the retaliation complaint for failing to state a claim. We affirm this decision as well, although not on the grounds relied upon by the district court.
I.
In the case before Judge Leinenweber, Steffes asserted claims of sex discrimination under Title VII and discrimination on the basis of disability under the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA). Steffes had been working for Stepan as a maintenance warehouseman for fourteen years when she was bumped from that position by a senior union *1072 member in November 1993. Because her disease made it dangerous for her to be exposed to chemicals, a position in the production areas of the plant was not a feasible reassignment. Stepan assigned Steffes temporarily to the lab sampling room, where she filled in for a vacationing employee. When further attempts to find a suitable position for Steffes failed, Stepan placed her on a leave of absence in December 1993 and ultimately terminated her employment in May 1996.
Prior to Steffes’s termination, a position opened up in the warehouse. Stepan offered Steffes the job on the condition that her doctor clarify the extent of her work restrictions. Stepan provided Steffes with a list of chemicals to which she might be exposed in the warehouse and asked that her physician, Dr. Glenda Flemister, certify that she could safely work around those chemicals. The company also asked that Steffes have her doctor comment on other potential exposures in the warehouse position, including gas and welding fumes, trips to different areas of the plant, and steam cleaning and repair work on certain equipment. Steffes responded with a letter from her doctor stating .that Steffes “can work in the store room where the accompanying list of chemical [sic] are in containers, and there will be no adverse respiratory effects, as these products will not be inhaled.” The doctor’s letter cleared Steffes to return to her employment in the store room, but it warned that Steffes “has had respiratory problems if she is exposed to chemical spills in which vaporization occurs.”
Stepan did not consider this to be an adequate response. As it explained in a subsequent letter to Steffes, “Apparently, Dr. Flemister is of the notion that the store room (maintenance warehouse) is a contained space, separate from the maintenance shop, and the store room (maintenance warehouse) only contains chemicals that are in sealed containers.” In fact, the chemicals were not always sealed; the warehouse was adjacent to areas where welding, spray painting, and other activities occurred that carried a risk of exposure; and vaporization spills could occur virtually anywhere in the plant. The company concluded that the doctor’s letter did not satisfactorily release Steffes from her medical restrictions and accordingly did not offer Steffes the warehouse position. Steffes did not attempt to get more comprehensive assurances from her physician in response to the company’s concerns.
The district court entered summary judgment for Stepan on two alternative grounds. First, the court held that Steffes had failed to show that she was a qualified individual with a disability, see 42 U.S.C. § 12111(8), because she had not demonstrated that her difficulty in breathing was severe enough to qualify as a disability. See 42 U.S.C. § 12102(2) (defining “disability”). Second, the court concluded that Steffes had caused a breakdown of the interactive accommodation process required under the ADA, see 29 C.F.R. § 1630.2(o)(3), by failing to respond adequately to Stepan’s conditional offer of a new position in the warehouse.
After reviewing the record, we agree with the district court that Steffes was responsible for the breakdown in the intei’active process, and we affirm on that basis. Stepan had a difficult time clarifying the nature and extent of Steffes’s medical restrictions. Steffes first informed the company about her chronic obstructive pulmonary disease only after she was bumped from her warehouse position. The note provided by her doctor stated that Steffes “has been ordered not to have exposure [to] chemicals,” and the company took this restriction seriously. A letter from her doctor the following month elaborated on the nature of Steffes’s medical condition and stated that “[s]he has been advised to avoid chemical exposure as well as to continue with bronchodilators and inhalant steroids.” Given the blanket nature of these restrictions, the obligation fell to Steffes to update or further clarify the kinds of work she could do and the level of chemical exposure, if any, she could tolerate.
See Beck v. University of Wisconsin Bd. of Regents, 75
F.3d 1130, 1136 (7th Cir.1996) (“Where the missing information is of the type that can only be provided by one of the parties, failure to provide the information may be the cause of the breakdown and the party withholding the information may be found to have obstructed the [interactive] process.”). Steffes failed to do this, as evidenced by the incompleteness of her re
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sponse to Stepan’s conditional job offer for the warehouse position. The doctor’s letter purportedly clearing Steffes to return to work not only failed to address the exposure issues legitimately raised by Stepan, but it also displayed a poor understanding of the physical layout of the plant and the various activities occurring in and around the warehouse. Steffes, who had worked in the warehouse for fourteen years, had it within her power to explain the nature of the job to her doctor and to obtain a more comprehensive release letter. Furthermore, even though Stepan decided not to rehire Steffes because her release was inadequate, the company asked Steffes to provide updates if her condition changed so that the company could continue to consider her for job openings. Steffes did not provide any further information to the company. Because Steffes failed to hold up her end of the interactive process by clarifying the extent of her medical restrictions, Stepan cannot be held liable for failing to provide reasonable accommodations.
See Beck,
Steffes also claimed that Stepan discriminated against her on the basis of sex, in violation of Title VII, see 42 U.S.C.2000e-2(a), by accommodating male workers with disabilities but refusing to accommodate her. According to Steffes, three men—John Marshall (who suffered from multiple sclerosis), Robert Kane (who had a back injury), and Richard Bright (who had a bad knee)—were each assigned positions in the lab sample room when their disabilities rendered them unable to continue in their previous positions. Each worked in the lab sample room for several years. In addition, a fourth man, Tommie Jones, suffered from epilepsy and was reassigned as a laborer after he could no longer perform his operator job.
Steffes argues that the company created positions for these men to accommodate their disabilities. Although an employer has no obligation under the ADA to create new positions for workers who become disabled,
see Weiler v. Household Fin. Corp.,
Thus, the evidence in the record does not show that any of these men were moved into positions created just for them. In addition, we agree with the district court that Steffes has failed to demonstrate that the men were similarly situated to her.
See Geier v. Medtronic, Inc.,
II.
While the action before Judge Leinenweber was pending, Steffes signed on with a temporary employment agency and began working for Dow Chemical (Dow). In the course of responding to an interrogatory from Stepan, Steffes informed the company that she had been placed in a warehouse position at Dow Chemical. Stepan’s human resources manager, Charles Worden, called Dow on the advice of Stepan’s attorneys to verify that Steffes was in fact employed there. According to the complaint, Worden told Dow about Steffes’s discrimination suit and medical restrictions. As a result of Wor *1074 den’s call, Dow told the employment agency to stop sending Steffes to work until her medical restrictions were clarified. Steffes did not work for about two weeks until Dow relented and allowed her to return.
Worden’s phone call to Dow prompted Steffes’s second action against Stepan, which alleges that the call constituted retaliation against her for filing her discrimination claims, in violation of both Title VII,
see
42' U.S.C. § 2000e-3(a), and the ADA,
see
42 U.S.C. § 12203. The elements of a retaliation claim are identical under both statutes. Steffes must demonstrate that she engaged in statutorily-protected activity, that an adverse employment action occurred, and that there exists a causal link between the protected activity and the adverse employment decision.
See Talando, v. KFC Nat’l Management Co.,
Judge Holderman dismissed the retaliation claim because he found Worden’s actions to be protected by an absolute privilege for attorney communications pertinent to litigation. The district court reasoned that, because Stepan’s attorneys directed Worden to make the call, Worden was the agent of the attorneys, just as a private detective or other investigator would be. Moreover, the call was pertinent to the litigation pending on Steffes’s ADA claim. Steffes’s claim that she was qualified to work at Stepan (with reasonable accommpdation) would gain support if she could show that Dow was willing to hire her for a similar position despite her medical condition.
Steffes, joined by the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC), which appears in the case as
amicus curiae,
argues that the district court erred by applying the Illinois absolute litigation privilege as a bar to her federal retaliation claim. In essence, the absolute litigation privilege affords immunity to attorneys (and other participants in the judicial process) from tort liability arising out of statements made in connection with litigation.
See Imbler v. Pachtman,
Illinois law recognizes an absolute litigation privilege which protects anything said or written in the course of a legal proceeding. The only qualification to this privilege is that the communication pertain to the litigation. This requirement is not applied strictly, and the communication need not be confined to the specific issues involved in the litigation.... The rationale for the privilege is to secure for attorneys as officers of the court the utmost freedom in representing clients. The absolute privilege is afforded even when malice is assumed to have- motivated the attorney. All doubts are to be resolved in favor of finding that the privilege applies. (Citations omitted.)
In applying this privilege to Steffes’s claims, the district court relied exclusively on Illinois cases and federal eases interpreting Illinois law. Steffes and the EEOC take this reliance on state law to mean that the district court applied the state privilege to defeat Steffes’s federal retaliation claim. Such a decision would indeed constitute error. A state absolute litigation privilege purporting to confer immunity from suit cannot defeat a federal cause of action.
See Kimes v. Stone,
It is not evident, however, that the district court applied state law in dismissing Steffes’s
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federal claim. The district court did not explicitly announce that it was applying state law, and it may in fact have been applying a federal privilege whose content is borrowed from state law. We confronted a similar situation in
Baravati v. Josephthal, Lyon & Ross,
There are serious problems, however, with recognizing such a federal privilege in this case. First, the common-law litigation privilege, traditionally understood, applies to attorneys, witnesses, judges, and other participants in judicial proceedings.
See Imbler,
Second, and more fundamentally, recognition of the litigation privilege sought by the appellees could interfere with the policies underlying the anti-retaliation provisions of Title VII and the ADA. Retaliatory acts come in infinite variety,
see Knox v. Indiana,
We hasten to add, however, that it will be the rare case in which conduct occurring within the scope of litigation constitutes retaliation prohibited by these statutes, In
McKenzie v. Illinois Department of Transportation,
[T]he primary reason for granting attorneys absolute immunity is that their unique function as advocates requires that they be able to present their client’s ease at trial without intimidation or harassment____ Conducting discovery under the rules of civil procedure falls within the unique duties of an advocate and such activities are conducted in the adversarial arena where opposing counsel and the trial court can quickly put the brakes on unethical or unlawful behavior.
Auriemma v. Montgomery,
The complaint alleges that Worden told Dow about- Steffes’s discrimination suit and about its view of her medical restrictions. Steffes claims that informing her current employer that she had filed a discrimination suit in itself constitutes retaliation.
See Veprinsky v. Fluor Daniel, Inc.,
There is language in
Auriemma
noting that judges are better able to supervise litigation tactics that proceed through the vehicle of the federal discovery rules, as opposed to those that proceed informally outside of the judicial process.
See Auriemma,
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Defendants in discrimination suits must have some leeway to investigate possible defenses without undue fear of being subjected to additional liability in retaliation suits.
Cf. McKenzie,
For these reasons, we affirm the decisions below.
