Alexander v. Loyola University Medical Center

2024 IL App (1st) 230980-U
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJune 10, 2024
Docket1-23-0980
StatusUnpublished

This text of 2024 IL App (1st) 230980-U (Alexander v. Loyola University Medical Center) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alexander v. Loyola University Medical Center, 2024 IL App (1st) 230980-U (Ill. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

2024 IL App (1st) 230980-U

NOTICE: This order was filed under Supreme Court Rule 23 and is not precedent except in the limited circumstances allowed under Rule 23(e)(1).

FIRST DIVISION June 10, 2024 No. 1-23-0980 ______________________________________________________________________________

IN THE APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS FIRST DISTRICT ______________________________________________________________________________

BRIDGET ALEXANDER, ) Appeal from the ) Circuit Court of Plaintiff-Appellant, ) Cook County ) v. ) No. 21 L 8911 ) LOYOLA UNIVERSITY MEDICAL CENTER, ) The Honorable ) Michael F. Otto, Defendant-Appellee. ) Judge Presiding.

PRESIDING JUSTICE FITZGERALD SMITH delivered the judgment of the court. Justice Coghlan concurred in the judgment. Justice Pucinski dissented.

ORDER

¶1 Held: The appellate court affirms the trial court’s entry of summary judgment in favor of the defendant on the plaintiff’s complaint alleging that the defendant wrongfully terminated her employment in retaliation for opposition to unlawful discrimination.

¶2 The plaintiff, Bridget Alexander, appeals from the trial court’s order granting a motion for

summary judgment by the defendant, Loyola University Medical Center (Loyola), on the

plaintiff’s one-count complaint alleging retaliation in violation of section 6-101(A) of the Illinois

Human Rights Act (775 ILCS 5/6-101(A) (West 2018)). For the reasons that follow, we affirm.

¶3 I. BACKGROUND No. 1-23-0980

¶4 The summary judgment record discloses that the plaintiff was an employee of Loyola from

April 2, 2001, until July 30, 2019. She was hired into its billing department, and by 2016 she had

attained the position of manager of collections. In that role, she oversaw around 20 employees

working in the collections department. A substantial number of the collections department’s

employees are bilingual speakers of Spanish and English, and they frequently spoke Spanish

among each other in the office prior to May 2019.

¶5 On May 8, 2019, an incident occurred in which a collections department employee named

Melissa Connor chastised two other coworkers for conversing in Spanish, telling them that they

should be speaking only English in the workplace. The following day, one of the staff members

who had been speaking Spanish complained to the plaintiff that Connor’s behavior had been rude.

Conner also complained to the plaintiff that it was unfair for staff members who spoke Spanish to

do so on the job, as she could not understand what they were saying or whether their conversations

were personal or work-related.

¶6 Later that day, the plaintiff brought the issue to the attention of her supervisor, Anna

Carpenter, who was the interim director of Loyola’s single billing office. Carpenter told the

plaintiff to document the incident and that she would look into it. According to the plaintiff’s

discovery deposition testimony, on May 22, 2019, Carpenter informed her that she had spoken to

Loyola’s human resources department about the matter and was told that Loyola had a policy

where only English could be spoken during office hours. Upon learning this information from

Carpenter, the plaintiff testified that she responded as follows:

“When she mentioned that there was a policy, a Loyola policy, I said—I asked her

for the location of the policy because I had never heard of it before. I asked her if the policy

was only restrictive to our department or if it was wider than that. I asked her—I told her I

-2- No. 1-23-0980

had concerns about how do I enforce this, and she said that people can only speak Spanish

when they’re on their lunch or their brakes and during office hours that people could only

speak English in the office.

And so I then asked her—because I had so many questions about this policy that I

didn’t see written, I asked her if it was possible that I could have a copy of this policy so

that I could have a document to support what the directive came from HR. I also asked her

at that point during that meeting I asked her if we could involve the Director of Diversity

& Inclusion to this conversation.

***

Q. After you suggested—after you asked Anna if you could get [the director of

diversity and inclusion] involved in the conversation, was it at that point that you expressed

to Anna that you didn’t feel comfortable enforcing this policy?

A. It told her—when she told me about this Loyola policy for English-only, after the

questions I asked her, I told her I didn’t feel comfortable enforcing a policy like this

because I wasn’t sure if it would cross any lines for discrimination, and I didn’t want to be

accused of discriminating or holding others punitively responsible for violating that policy,

and I wasn’t sure how to message such a policy with our department when I wasn’t sure of

the ramifications of that.”

¶7 Although Carpenter denied in her discovery deposition that she instructed the plaintiff to

implement any form of policy, she acknowledged later stating to the Illinois Department of Human

Resources (IDHR) that she relayed to the plaintiff a “suggestion” from human resources to

encourage colleagues to only speak English on the floor. She also acknowledged stating to IDHR

that the plaintiff “refused and said she would not give the guidance to her colleagues because she

-3- No. 1-23-0980

felt it was wrong.” She testified that it was true that the plaintiff said to her that she would not

implement the policy. She testified that “it was clear that [the plaintiff] was uncomfortable with

it,” and Carpenter testified she did not pursue the issue further. There was a suggestion in

Carpenter’s testimony that there may have been more than one conversation between them on this

topic between May 9, 2019, and May 22, 2019, although this is not clear.

¶8 Following their conversation of May 22, 2019, the plaintiff and Carpenter had a phone

conversation about the English-only policy with Christin Zollicoffer, the Midwest director of

diversity, equity and inclusion for Loyola’s parent company, Trinity Health. According to the

plaintiff’s testimony, she explained to Zollicoffer the incident in which an employee had

complained about others speaking Spanish. She also explained that Carpenter had told her that,

according to human resources, Loyola had an English-only policy. The plaintiff did not recall how

the conversation with Carpenter and Zollicoffer ended, but Zollicoffer told her that she was going

to reach out to human resources also.

¶9 Zollicoffer’s testimony was that sometime in May 2019, she received an e-mail from the

plaintiff “trying to understand the policy of when colleagues can use their primary language or a

secondary language other than English.” Zollicoffer testified that the plaintiff indicated that she

was uncomfortable implementing a rule requiring only English to be spoken. She testified that the

plaintiff “wanted clarification on the rule and that it was being relegated to someone can only speak

another language in the halls and the restrooms, and I wanted to get clarification on that.”

Zollicoffer testified that there was in fact a draft of a written policy explaining when employees

could speak a language other than English, which had been prepared by the general counsel’s

office.

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2024 IL App (1st) 230980-U, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alexander-v-loyola-university-medical-center-illappct-2024.