Eleven months after she filed a suit charging her employer with sex discrimination, Mary Ann Hetreed was fired. She believes that the discharge was an act of retaliation for the suit and asked the district court to reinstate her pending the outcome of the main claim. Allstate, her former employer, agrees that the suit is causally related to the discharge but offers a reason other than retaliation: during discovery Hetreed revealed that she had used her position to obtain information about Allstate’s defense of the suit and, when questioned, lied about what she had done. Hetreed was a senior manager in Allstate’s audit department with supervisory authority over a staff of 40, and Allstate contends that it could not tolerate the continued presence of a deceitful auditor. Hetreed’s motion for a preliminary injunction that would oblige Allstate to reinstate her was denied, leading to this interlocutory appeal.
Allstate proceeded in two stages, as did Hetreed’s motion. In February 1997 Allstate suspended her, with pay, during an investigation of her actions and statements. She sought an injunction against the suspension, which the district court denied on March 7, 1997, remarking in the course of the hearing • that continuation of her pay made it hard to see how the suspension could cause irreparable harm. Later that day Allstate fired Hetreed, who immediately filed a motion asking the district judge to hold Allstate in contempt of court. Because the judge had denied Hetreed’s motion, there was no outstanding order that Allstate could have disobeyed; a judge’s oral remarks during a hearing are not injunctions.
Bates v. Johnson,
Hetreed displayed poor judgment in using her position as an audit manager to obtain information of personal value. Her reply that she was entitled to investigate to learn whether Allstate deployed its money wisely in defense of the suit she filed could only have reduced Alstate’s confidence in her ability to perform an auditor’s job dispassionately. Lack of candor when questioned about the disclosure of information outside the firm is a further strike against an auditor, and especially against an audit manager. Another employer might have placed He-treed on medical leave instead of firing her; she tells us that the events leading to the sex-discrimination suit, coupled with the stress of litigation, have left her depressed. But she did not ask for leave, the civil rights laws do not require firms to be humane, see
Pollard v. Rea Magnet Wire Co.,
Likewise, the district court was entitled to conclude that Hetreed has not established irreparable injury. Loss of income caused by discharge from a job can be redressed by damages (plus prejudgment interest) at the conclusion of the case. Loss of face and reputation likewise may be palliated by a favorable decision at the end of the case as effectively as by interlocutory relief— which, although it comes sooner, is tentative and therefore does less to rehabilitate a reputation.
Sampson v. Murray,
One final matter. Allstate’s request for sanctions under Fed. R.App. P. 38 is denied. Hetreed’s appeal is weak but not frivolous. See
Mars Steel Corp. v. Continental Bank N.A.,
Affirmed.
