Pat Roger filed this diversity action claiming that his employer, Yellow Freight Systems, Inc. (“Yellow Freight”), discharged him in retaliation for exercising his rights under the Illinois Workers’ Compensation Act (“the Act”), Ill.Rev.Stat. ch. 48, ¶¶ 138.1-138.30 (1989). The district court granted Yellow Freight’s motion for summary judgment after concluding that Mr. Roger had not exercised his rights under the Act, nor established a causal connection between the alleged exercise of his rights and Yellow Freight’s decision to terminate him. Because we agree that there were no genuine issues for trial, we affirm.
I
BACKGROUND
Mr. Roger was an at-will employee of Yellow Freight, a trucking company in the business of freight transportation services. Mr. Roger’s job as a Safety Training Specialist consisted of touring the United States with a Safety Training Unit and presenting safety programs to various audiences. On October 31,1990, Mr. Roger injured his back when he fell off a tractor-trailer. Kenneth Thompson, Vice-President of Linehaul Safety, told Mr. Roger to file an incident report. A claims *148 examiner, Juanita Ball, then handled Mr. Roger’s claims for medical attention. 1 According to Mr. Roger, both Thompson and Ball were openly hostile to him after he was injured. Despite his injury, Mr. Roger continued working until June 6, 1991, when he could no longer perform his job duties because of his pain.
In November 1991, Yellow Freight requested Thompson’s assistance in reducing expenses because its parent company was experiencing economic difficulties. Yellow Freight reduced its work force by 1,400 employees between 1991 and 1992. Mr. Roger’s position survived this first wave of cost-cutting measures. In January 1992, however, the Safety Training Specialist position was eliminated on Thompson’s recommendation. In his affidavit, Thompson attributed the decision to eliminate Mr. Roger’s position to the high cost of operating and maintaining the Safety Training Unit, to the fact that the service it offered did not contribute directly to revenues and was aimed primarily at public relations, and to Yellow Freight’s desire to demonstrate its cost-cutting measures to customers who were experiencing rate increases. Only one month earlier, Thompson had submitted a favorable evaluation of the Safety Training Program, urging the company to retain it. Nevertheless, Thompson’s later recommendation, that the program be eliminated was adopted by the company.
On January 23, 1992, over one year after Mr. Roger was injured, he was laid off. After unsuccessfully attempting to relocate Mr. Roger to another position within the company, Yellow Freight terminated him due to “lack of work” on April 9, 1992. The Safety Training Unit was sold some time in 1992. One or two months after Mr. Roger was discharged, in May or June 1992, Mr. Roger filed two workers’ compensation claims, one in Illinois and one in Kansas. He also filed a complaint against Yellow Freight for retaliatory discharge. Mr. Roger acknowledged in his deposition, however, that he neither had discussed his intention to file a workers’ compensation claim nor had contemplated filing one prior to his discharge. The district court granted summary judgment in favor of Yellow Freight.
II
DISCUSSION
A. Standard of Review
This court’s review of a motion for summary judgment is de novo.
Pantoja v. Holland Motor Express, Inc.,
In determining the propriety of summary judgment, this court must review the record and draw all reasonable inferenc
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es in the light most favorable to the nonmov-ing party.
Anderson, 477
U.S. at 255,
B. Analysis
Generally, an at-will employee may be discharged for any reason or for no reason at all.
Kelsay v. Motorola, Inc., 74
Ill.2d 172,
The causality requirement calls for more than a sequential connection—the filing of a workers’ compensation claim followed by termination.
Marin v. American Meat Packing Co.,
Reviewing the record in the light most favorable to Mr. Roger, it is clear that the district court properly granted summary judgment for Yellow Freight because no reasonable jury could find that it discharged Mr. Roger to retaliate against him for exercising his workers’ compensation rights. Although Mr. Roger alleges in his amended complaint facts regarding Yellow Freight’s hostility toward him after he required medical coverage for his injury, he does not allege that Yellow Freight discharged him for those reasons. Instead, Mr. Roger states that he was discharged in retaliation for “filing a claim.” Paragraphs nine and ten of the amended complaint read as follows:
9. That the discharge of the Plaintiff was in retaliation for the Plaintiff filing a work-mens’ compensation claim against the Defendant.
10. That under Section 4 of the Work-mens’ Compensation Act of the State of Illinois, it is illegal for an employer to discharge an employee for exercising his rights under the Act by filing a claim seeking relief under the Act and said Section 4 establishes a clear mandated public policy of the State of Illinois.
Mr. Roger did not file any claim until after he was discharged; therefore, he cannot establish that Yellow Freight discharged him because he filed a claim. Mr. Roger urges us to overlook this defect: He meant to claim that Yellow Freight discharged him because it anticipated his filing of a workers’ compensation claim. Although his complaint was poorly drafted and included neither the relevant facts nor the proper legal basis for relief, he argues that the allegations are sufficiently related to his current claims to put the defendant on notice of the charges against it.
Hinthorn v. Roland’s of Bloomington, Inc.,
Even construing Mr. Roger’s complaint liberally, he cannot survive summary judgment because he has offered no evidence that Yellow Freight was aware of his intent to file a claim. Factual support that the employer was informed or in some way, found out about the plaintiff’s intent to pursue relief under the Act is essential to a retaliatory
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discharge action.
Horton v. Miller Chem. Co.,
Nevertheless, Mr. Roger urges this court to infer from circumstantial evidence that Yellow Freight discharged him in the belief that he would file a claim. He maintains that Yellow Freight had an unspoken policy that members of management do not file workers’ compensation claims and that Yellow Freight’s belief that Mr. Roger was preparing to challenge its policy angered the company. The inference Mr. Roger would have us draw from these facts is unwarranted. The fact that Mr. Roger allowed an entire year and a half to pass without filing a claim would lead Yellow Freight to believe exactly the opposite — that Mr. Roger was not going to file a claim. Moreover, if it is true that Yellow Freight had such an unspoken policy and that Mr. Roger was a management employee, Yellow Freight would have had even more reason to believe that Mr. Roger would not file a claim.
Mr. Roger’s complaint, generously construed, also alleges that Yellow Freight discharged him in retaliation for seeking medical benefits. Although such an action would be cognizable under Illinois state law.
Hinthorn,
Second, to establish that Thompson’s recommendation to eliminate the position must have been improperly motivated, Mr. Roger offers Thompson’s earlier letter of October 23, 1991, which praised Mr. Roger’s position and the Safety Training Program. However, the letter was clearly written before Thompson was told that he would have to recommend additional cost-cutting measures. In his affidavit, Thompson explained that Mr. Roger’s position survived the first set of layoffs, which occurred in November 1991. Thereafter, he recommended the elimination of Mr. Roger’s position. If anything, the letter establishes that Thompson was satisfied with Mr. Roger despite his injury.
Third, Mr. Roger submits that Yellow Freight’s failure to provide him with an alternative position in the company, despite its satisfaction with his job performance, establishes that Yellow Freight was motivated to terminate him because he sought medical attention.
2
Absent a duty to offer him an alternative position, the company’s failure to place him elsewhere is irrelevant to the issue whether Yellow Freight was improperly motivated in discharging him.
See Carter v. GC Elecs.,
Finally, Mr. Roger offers his own deposition testimony describing hostile encounters with Thompson and Bah regarding his medical bills as circumstantial evidence of Thompson’s motive in discharging him. Mr. Roger claims that both Thompson and Ball accused him of feigning his injury, and that Bah told him that, if he went through with his sched
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uled surgery, he would never work for Yellow Freight again. However, as noted by the district court, Mr. Roger did not testify in his deposition that Thompson and. Ball actually accused him of anything; he testified that he perceived Thompson’s and Ball’s hostility to be rooted in their belief that he was feigning his injury. Even if his perceptions were taken as evidence, they are insufficient to establish a genuine issue concerning Yellow Freight’s motive in discharging him, in light of the fact that Mr. Roger was retained for a year and a half after his injury.
See Bush v. Commonwealth Edison Co.,
Not only is Mr. Roger’s case based upon speculation, but Yellow Freight offers a legitimate nonpretextual justification for the discharge.
See Slover v. Brown,
Mr. Roger offers no evidence that a reduction in force did not take place.
See Aungst v. Westinghouse Elec. Corp.,
Conclusion
The evidence, when viewed in the light most favorable to Mr. Roger, presents no genuine issue of triable fact. Summary judgment was proper in this case.
Affirmed.
Notes
. The record contains no description of the job duties of a claims examiner. Nor does it identify who, other than Mr. Roger, paid his medical bills. Yellow Freight states in its brief that the company had been self-insured for workers' compensation for many years. Mr. Roger notes, on the other hand, that Yellow Freight became self-insured for workers’ compensation claims and third-party claims in 1991.
. Although there is a dispute as to whether Yellow Freight actually offered Mr. Roger an alternative position, we must assume Mr. Roger’s version of the events to be true here for purposes of summary judgment.
