Wе hope this musty Title VII case is one of the last we will see in which events straddle the enactment of the Civil Rights
Linda Place began working at Abbott Laboratories in 1986 as a biology research associate. In a rather hackneyed development, she and her supervisor, Dr. Charles Harrington, got drunk at a company Christmas party in December 1990 and afterward found their way into the same hotel bed. 1 The details of this encounter are worth recalling.
The Christmas party, attended by assorted Abbott scientists, chemists, and technicians, was at the Princess restaurant in Libertyville, and the wine was flowing. After several hours, some of the revelers, including Place and Harrington, repaired to the apartment of fellow worker Peggy Connerty in Evanston. Place and Harrington drove together in Place’s Camaro because she had had too much to drink and Harrington was in “better shape.” More drinking followed at Connerty’s, but that apparently ended when the host passed out.
After the Connerty shindig broke up, Place and Harrington returned to the restaurant where Harrington had left his car. Harrington drove Place’s car because, as she testified, she “wasn’t capable of driving.” During this return trip, Harrington suggested they go to a hotel — instead of their separate ways — 'after they got to his car. Place said she had no desire to accept Harrington’s proposition but, rather inexplicably, she and Harrington then drove to а motel in their separate cars. A sexual encounter followed.
The Christmas party tryst mushroomed into a sexual affair that lasted around 6 months. Place could not recall the number of sexual encounters but did remember some of the locations, including behind a locked door in an Abbott lab, outside in a forest preserve, and in a condominium she owned with her husband (Place was married, as was Harrington).
Place testified that the relationship was coercive frоm start to finish and that she had sex with Harrington — over a 6-month period — only because he controlled her
During the spring following the Christmas party, Abbott promoted Place from a grade 13 to a grade 15 scientist and, as part of routine restructuring, transferred her to a different job where Harrington no longer was her supervisor, though she still regularly had to work with him.
In July 1991, after the affair ended, Place complained to Abbott that Harrington was sexually harassing her. Abbott investigated, warned Harrington, set up an arrangement where Harrington and Plаce could speak to each other only in the presence of a third party, and in October 1991 transferred both Harrington and Place to other jobs where they wouldn’t have to deal with each other. Though they retained their same titles, pay, and benefits, both considered the moves demotions. Place said she lost her supervisory responsibilities, her office, her telephone, and had to do boring laboratory bench work. Abbott denies that Place’s trаnsfer was a step down, noting that in her new position Place performed duties previously done by a grade 17 scientist and that she needed time to familiarize herself with her new research project.
Place claimed that because of the affair, the harassment, and the transfer, her emotional state deteriorated to the point where, in November 1991, she took a medical leave of absence. Financially, this was not too bad a deal bеcause she received her full salary for 6 months and lesser benefits for 6 weeks after that. But Abbott terminates the employment of anyone who fails to return to work from disability leave within one year (though long-term disability payments might continue thereafter), and in May 1992, when her 6 months of full-time disability benefits expired, Place’s psychologist cleared her to return to work. Abbott insisted, however, that she first undergo an independent medical examination and referred her to an outsidе psychologist, John Jochem. Fearing that she was being set up for failure, Place snapped on her tape recorder when the session with Jochem began. When he balked at being taped, Place walked out. Because Place refused to undergo the independent medical examination, Abbott refused to let her return to work. When Place failed to return to work within one year, Abbott terminated her as an employee.
Unable to find another sсience job, Place went to law school and now is a solo practitioner in Waukegan, where she has— apparently successfully — represented other former employees who have sued Abbott. She also filed her own ADA, ERISA, and Title VII claims against Abbott. The ADA and ERISA claims were knocked out on summary judgment, but the Title VII case went to trial.
Judge Coar was the finder of fact on Place’s sexual harassment claim (involving events that occurred prior to Novembеr 21, 1991) and a jury was the finder of fact on the retaliation claim (involving events that took place both before and after November 21, 1991). Judge Coar found that Place had not been sexually harassed, a decision that she does not appeal. A plaintiff whose underlying discrimination claim fails may still prevail on a claim that she was retaliated against for complaining about discrimination,
see Pryor v. Seyfarth, Shaw, Fairweather & Geraldson,
Place’s retaliation claim is founded on two events: first, her transfer in October 1991 to a different position at Abbott, and second, the comрany’s insistence in May 1992 that she undergo an independent medical examination, her refusal of which led to her dismissal in December 1992.
To understand Place’s retaliation claim, the jury obviously needed to hear about what happened before November 21, 1991.
See Hennessy v. Penril Datacomm Networks, Inc.,
The continuing violation theory allows a plaintiff to reach back to get relief for an act of discrimination that occurred outside the statute of limitations by linking it as one continuous act with a discriminatory act that took place within the limitations period.
See Miller v. American Family Mut. Ins. Co.,
Whether the theory may be applied to the situation at hand is unsettled.
Landgraf,
Applying the continuing violation theory to this situation would require the retaliatory nature of Place’s (pre-Novem-ber 1991) internal job transfer to be so subtle that she did not recognize it as retaliatory until the (post-November 1991) independent medical examination demand. The continuing violation scenario makes most sense in a sexual harassment case, where the first offensive comment or inappropriate touch may not alert the victim to the harassing quality of the conduct.
See Galloway v. General Motors Serv. Parts Operations,
Consequently, the district court erred in allowing the jury to consider Place’s October 1991 transfer for purposes of liability and damages. The jury’s retaliation decision should have been based only on the company’s demand in May 1992 that she undergo an independent medical examination, a demand that when defied led to Place’s termination.
Place argues, however, that this error was harmless. The jury answered “yes” to a special interrogatory that asked: “Was Abbott’s refusal to reinstate Place without an independent medical examination an act of retaliation?” Because the independent medical examination issue was properly within the jury’s bailiwick, and because the jury explicitly found the examination requirement retaliatory, Place believes that part of the verdict is valid. As a result, she says that at least the $389,656 she was awarded in back pay should stand, since that part of the award stemmed from her termination that resulted from her refusal to undergo an unrecorded independent mediсal examination.
We disagree, for two reasons. First, the jury’s finding of liability might have been improperly influenced by Place’s effort to prove that her transfer was retaliatory. As we mentioned earlier, the jury would have heard this evidence in any event. Because the jury was not instructed that this evidence could not be taken into account in determining liability and damages, however, what should have been outside the jury’s purview might have seeped into the jury’s decision regarding liability. We will never know whether the jury thought the job transfer was retaliatory because no interrogatory was given on that question, and we cannot speculate on whether the jury’s decision was rooted
Second, no reasonable jury could have found Abbott’s independent medical examination requirement retaliatory. We review
de novo
a trial court’s grant or denial of judgment as a matter of lаw under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 50.
Mathur v. Board of Trustees of S. Ill. Univ.,
The record does not support an inference that Abbott was retaliating for Place’s earlier complaints of sexual harassment by requiring hér to take an independent medical examination before returning to work from a long disability leave. Abbott required any employee who had been out on disability leave for at least 5 days to coordinate their return to work with the company’s health department. The company did not require an independent medical evaluation of every employee who wished to return to work from disability leave, but requiring such an examination was not unusual. Every year, several employees coming back from disability leave were first sent to independent medical evaluations that involved psychological evaluation, according to Brockton Weisenberger, at the time Abbott’s director of corporate employee health. Place introduced no evidence that similarly situated individuals were treated differently. She pointed to records indicating that one unidentified Abbott employee was allowed to continue to work despite refusing a psychological evaluation, but in that case the evaluation had been recommended after the employee had been voluntarily involved in Abbott’s employee assistance program. By contrast, Place had been out on disability leave and was required to undergo an independent medical examination by the company’s health department.
While working at Abbott, Place appears to have been a tempestuous, high-maintenance employee who did good scientific work but had regular run-ins with her supervisors and co-workers. When one of Place’s supervisors, Meta Franklin, made a decision Place didn’t like, Place angrily leaned forward and threatened: “You’ll pay for that.” Franklin also testified that on another occasion she saw Place threaten a co-worker, Ms. Connerty (the host, you’ll recall, of the post-Christmas party get-together), with whom she wasn’t getting along. Weisenberger said he was concerned that Place was so angry at the comрany that she might do harm if returned to the workplace. Even Place’s own psychologist, Katie Gienapp, who believed Place was ready to return to work and posed no danger, testified that she could understand why an employer might want a second opinion.
We do not hold, as Abbott suggests, that requiring an independent medical examination could never constitute an adverse employment action. For example, an employer that never required men, but always required women, to undergo independent medical examinations before returning to work from disability leave would almost certainly be discriminating. In this case, however, the evidence does not support the inference that Place was being singled out. There also is no evidence that the independent evaluation had been rigged against her or that Abbott played any role in Jochem’s refusal to let Place tape-record their session. Abbott had a discretionary policy to require independent medical examinations when its health department thought they were warranted. Place’s previous threats to other Abbott employees, the emotional problems that prompted her disability leave, and her continuing anger at the company all raised warning flags. In a business where the destruction of equipment and research records could do great damage, and in an era when disgruntled workers all too regularly take out their frustrations with a gun, Abbott’s desire to get a second opin
The question that remains is whether Place’s claim that her pre-November 1991 internal transfer constituted retaliation, which was erroneously considered by the jury the first time, must now be remanded to Judge Coar. We think not, again because for two reasons no reasonable finder of fact could find that the transfer was retaliatory.
First, whether the transfer constituted an adverse employment action is dubious. The fact that Place received the same pay and benefits and held the same title in her new position does not necessarily preclude her retaliation claim, for “adverse actions can come in many shapes and sizes.”
Knox v. Indiana,
Second, even if the new position was a step down, there is no evidence that the decision to move Place was retaliatory. The sequence of events was: (1) Place and Harrington have an affair, (2) Place moves to a new position where she still works with Harrington but he nо longer is her supervisor, (3) the relationship sours, (4) Harrington is a pain in the neck for Place to deal with and Place’s project suffers as a result, (5) Place complains that Harrington is sexually harassing her, (6) Abbott warns Harrington, (7) Abbott creates an arrangement where Place and Harrington may interact only in the presence of a third party, (8) the project still is suffering because of the Place-Harrington friction,
The judgment in favor of Ms. Place is REVERSED. The case is RemaNded to the District Court for the entry of judgment in favor of Abbott Laboratories.
Notes
. The district court found that the post-Christmas party rendezvous was consensual. At the risk of playing the Grinch, however, we note that office Christmas parties also seem to be fertile ground for unwanted sexual overtures that lead to Title VII complaints.
See, e.g., Marshall
v.
Cascade Utils.,
