ORDER
Joycinth Jones, proceeding pro se, appeals the grant of summary judgment in favor of A.W. Holdings LLC (referred to as “AWS” by both parties) dismissing her claims that the company fired her because she is black and also because she complained about a supervisor’s racial bias. The district court rejected her Title VII claim because she was an independent contractor and not an employee of AWS. The court rejected her discrimination and retaliation claims under 42 U.S.C. § 1981 because she failed to show that she was fired because of her race or in retaliation for complaining about workplace racial discrimination. We affirm the judgment.
The following events are recounted in the light most favorable to Jones, though the facts are largely undisputed. See Hanners v. Trent,
Jones began working for AWS without a written employment contract with the expectation that the company would pass along client referrals and forward her ré-sumé to case managers to generate additional referrals; she would receive a percentage of the money Medicaid provided for each client’s behavioral services. Ac
Soon after Jones started at AWS, problems arose regarding her referrals and clinical paperwork. By the summer of 2007, Jones had completed an orientation with AWS and received three or four referrals, but she thought she should be receiving more and asked Titus to send her résumé to case managers throughout Indiana. Instead of doing so, he sent her an outdated, “jumbled” list of case managers to contact herself. She says that Titus’s supervisor “expressed surprise” that Titus gave her this list and promised to send an updated one, but never did. In midsummer Jones also began asking Titus for access to the company’s intranet, which a fellow clinician told her posted AWS’s standard clinical forms, including forms for creating behavioral plans and monthly progress notes. Jones explains that although Titus told her to use her own forms, she wanted to compare hers to the company standards. She claims that when she persisted in requesting access to these forms, Titus inexplicitly threatened to fire her, but his supervisor intervened and forestalled any action from being taken.
In September 2007 Jones finally signed an “independent contractor agreement” with AWS. In this agreement Jones agreed that she would “not be considered an employee of AWS,” and the company agreed not to “exercise control or discretion over the manner or methods” in which she provided services. Either party could terminate the agreement without penalty upon 30 days’ notice. Consistent with this agreement, AWS reported Jones’s income on IRS Form 1099 as “nonemployee compensation,” and there were no withhold-ings from her pay for benefits or taxes.
Shortly after signing this agreement, Jones began working under the supervision of psychologist Scott Salon. Dr. Salon told her that her paperwork was unacceptable and gave her the name of another clinician whose forms she could look at as examples. Three months later Jones complained to Titus that Dr. Salon was disrespectful and that she suspected he had a hostile attitude toward her because she is a minority. Around this same time, Jones received sample forms from the clinician Dr. Salon had recommended. She claims that the clinician told her that the company’s normal practice is to provide these forms to clinicians right after they are hired. Titus also eventually sent her the sample clinical forms.
Two months after complaining about Dr. Salon (and about a year after she started as a clinician at AWS) Jones received a termination letter from Titus. The letter did not explain why she was being fired but simply informed her that in accordance with the independent contractor agreement, she had 30 days to notify her clients of her termination. Jones completed her last 30 days at AWS without incident.
Jones then sued AWS under Title VII and § 1981, claiming that the company had treated her — the only black behavioral clinician out of six — differently than similarly situated coworkers, all of whom were promptly given written employment contracts and copies of the company’s stan- • dard clinical forms. She contended that she was terminated because of her race and also in retaliation for her complaint about Dr. Salon. Finally, she claimed she was fired because she is Jamaican; she later abandoned this claim after AWS pointed out that national-origin discrimination is not actionable under § 1981.
AWS moved for summary judgment, explaining that Jones’s contract was terminated for two legitimate, nondiscriminato
On appeal Jones challenges the district court’s decision that she was an independent contractor. She argues that the court relied too heavily on the terms of the independent contractor agreement. She notes, among other things, that she worked for five months without a contract and that AWS exerted “extreme control” over her job performance by requiring her to work with Dr. Salon and complete “regimented and demanding training.”
To determine whether Jones was an employee or an independent contractor, we apply the general principles of agency, looking to several factors, the most important of which is the employer’s right to control the agent’s actions. See Worth v. Tyer,
Although her independent-contractor status defeats her Title VII claim, Jones may still proceed on her claims of discrimination and retaliation under § 1981, which is not limited to employees. See Taylor,
This evidence is insufficient to establish a triable § 1981 claim under the direct method of proof because it does not point directly to any discriminatory reason for her discharge. See Dass v. Chi. Bd. of Educ.,
Jones does identify a potential problem with Titus’s explanation for her discharge: AWS did not submit Titus’s affidavit until it filed its reply brief on summary judgment. We have questioned the credibility of an explanation submitted at so late a stage in the litigation if it conflicts with an explanation provided earlier. See Zaccagnini v. Charles Levy Circulating Co.,
Jones also challenges the district court’s conclusion that she failed to prove retaliation under the direct method of proof. She reiterates her argument that she was fired “on the heels” of her complaint about Dr. Salon. But the termination came two months after her complaint, and we have repeatedly stated that a two-month gap between protected activity and an adverse job action is too long to support a claim of retaliation absent other evidence. See Turner v. The Saloon, Ltd.,
Finally, Jones indicated in her notice of appeal that she challenges the denial of her postjudgment motion for relief. But she never squarely addressed this issue in her brief. Moreover, the post-judgment motion was based on a claim of “new” evidence: That AWS employed her in a second job as a direct-care worker, replaced her with a white clinician, and reassured her that her untimely paperwork would not be a problem. The district court properly concluded that neither Rule 59(e) nor Rule 60(b) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure allows for postjudgment relief based on evidence that could have been presented before judgment was entered. See Obriecht v. Raemisch,
AFFIRMED.
