Alma Sanchez v. El Milagro, Inc.

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedMay 27, 2026
Docket24-3250
StatusPublished
AuthorRipple

This text of Alma Sanchez v. El Milagro, Inc. (Alma Sanchez v. El Milagro, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alma Sanchez v. El Milagro, Inc., (7th Cir. 2026).

Opinion

In the

United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit ____________________ No. 24-3250 ALMA SANCHEZ, on behalf of herself and all others similarly situated, Plaintiff-Appellant,

v.

EL MILAGRO, INC., doing business as EL MILAGRO, Defendant-Appellee. ____________________

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division. No. 1:22-cv-01852 — LaShonda A. Hunt, Judge. ____________________

ARGUED NOVEMBER 5, 2025 — DECIDED MAY 27, 2026 ____________________

Before RIPPLE, KIRSCH, and LEE, Circuit Judges. RIPPLE, Circuit Judge. Alma Sanchez, invoking Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the Illinois Human Rights Act (IHRA), 1 claimed that she was sexually harassed by a coworker at an El Milagro tortilla factory. She further alleged

1 42 U.S.C. § 2000e et seq.; 775 Ill. Comp. Stat. 5/1-101 et seq. 2 No. 24-3250

that El Milagro had failed to investigate promptly her allega- tions. The district court granted summary judgment for El Milagro, and Ms. Sanchez brought this timely appeal. For the reasons set forth in this opinion, we affirm the judgment of the district court. I BACKGROUND 2 El Milagro manufactures and distributes tortilla products. It operates eight locations in Illinois and employs approxi- mately 500 individuals. At the Chicago manufacturing facility involved in this case, the production department has multiple lines. Employees on the “back line” use machinery to make tortillas; employees on the “front line” pack the tortillas. Since Ms. Sanchez joined El Milagro in July 2019, she has worked continuously in the production department on the second shift. Initially, Ms. Sanchez was a “passer.” In that role, she verified the quality of newly produced tortillas and passed satisfactory items down a conveyor for packaging and organization. Ms. Sanchez’s role later changed because a dis- ability prevented her from moving the fingers on her left hand, and she could not work a full eight-hour shift as a passer. Her supervisors, therefore, permitted her to work as a “free person.” 3 In this capacity, Ms. Sanchez substituted on

2 Because this appeal arises from the district court’s grant of summary

judgment for El Milagro, we must take all facts and draw all reasonable inferences in the light most favorable to Ms. Sanchez. Whitaker v. Dempsey, 144 F.4th 908, 916 (7th Cir. 2025). 3 R.154 at 3. No. 24-3250 3

the production line and spent the remainder of her shift per- forming sweeping and cleaning duties. Because her supervisors did not require that she work on the production line for a full eight hours, at least eight of her coworkers began to express discontent about her accommo- dation. At one point (the timing is not clear from the record), they collected signatures with the intent of petitioning El Mil- agro to terminate Ms. Sanchez’s employment. The record is unclear as to whether this petition reached El Milagro’s man- agement, but Ms. Sanchez reported her coworkers’ comments to Arturo Brito, the second shift supervisor in the production department. Brito took two actions in response. On October 1, 2019, he wrote a report to El Milagro’s Human Resources (HR) department. He also raised the issue during a regularly scheduled pre-shift team meeting for the production depart- ment employees. After Brito wrote his report to HR, El Mil- agro provided a formal designation to Ms. Sanchez as a “free person.” 4 Ms. Sanchez relates that although her co-workers’ adverse comments decreased for a while, they eventually be- came more frequent. Brito raised the issue again at another meeting. Francisco Gutierrez is, according to Ms. Sanchez, one of the workers who petitioned for her discharge. Ms. Sanchez claims that Gutierrez sexually harassed her by inappropri- ately touching her three times over the following year. There is significant ambiguity in Ms. Sanchez’s allegations about these encounters. Several record documents frame the ambi- guity. One document is a written statement that Ms. Sanchez prepared for El Milagro’s HR department when she reported

4 R.135-3 at 44:17–20, 45:06–17. 4 No. 24-3250

the third incident on August 30, 2020 (“the HR statement”). The other documents are the operative complaint and her deposition in this lawsuit. The HR statement at times contra- dicts her complaint and some of her later deposition testi- mony. The first inconsistency involves the timing of the alleged incidents of harassment. According to the HR statement, Gutierrez inappropriately touched Ms. Sanchez first in Octo- ber or November 2019, then in March 2020, and finally in Au- gust 2020. But Ms. Sanchez alleges in her operative complaint that Gutierrez touched her first in May or June 2020, then in July 2020, and finally in August 2020. Both her HR statement and her representations in the lawsuit, however, assert that the third and final incident happened on August 29, 2020. There is also ambiguity with respect to Ms. Sanchez’s ac- counts of how Gutierrez inappropriately touched her. With respect to the first incident, Ms. Sanchez alleges in her com- plaint that Gutierrez intentionally “rubbed his genitals” against her buttocks as he passed by her on the production line and then continued to walk away. 5 She recounts in her deposition that she believes Gutierrez purposefully touched her because “there were many ways for him to pass through without touching me.” 6 He did not touch her for long because “he made it look like he was passing by.” 7 When she felt the contact and turned around, “[h]e had already passed.” 8 In her

5 R.79 at ¶ 22.

6 R.145-4 at 77:21–22.

7 Id. at 78:23–24.

8 Id. at 79:19. No. 24-3250 5

HR statement, Ms. Sanchez wrote that Gutierrez “only said sorry.” 9 But in her deposition, she said that Gutierrez walked away laughing. 10 He “turned around and stare at me like watching and saying ‘oops’ [sic].” 11 Ms. Sanchez recounted that she responded not with words but by making a facial ex- pression indicating she found his conduct inappropriate. She “looked at him making him aware that he was making [her] feel uncomfortable.” 12 Ms. Sanchez relates that she verbally reported this first in- cident two hours later to her supervisor, Brito.13 El Milagro disputes that Ms. Sanchez reported this incident directly to Brito. Again, the record reveals inconsistent allegations. In her HR statement, Ms. Sanchez stated that although she men- tioned this incident to Brito, she did not tell him Gutierrez’s name. 14 She claimed at one point in her deposition, however, that she “specifically told [Brito] that Mr. Gutierrez had rubbed his genitals on my buttocks.” 15 But when asked out- right, she agreed that she did not share Gutierrez’s name with Brito when she reported the first incident. 16 Brito stated in his deposition that she did not complain to him about sexual

9 R.135-16 at *3.

10 R.145-4 at 65:18.

11 Id. at 79:22–23.

12 Id. at 65:08–09.

13 R.135-3 at 84:14–20.

14 R.135-16 at *3.

15 R.145-4 at 84:22–24.

16 R.135-15 at 12:18. 6 No. 24-3250

harassment at all prior to August 2020.17 No report was made to HR about this individual incident. Ms. Sanchez alleges that Gutierrez sexually harassed her for the second time in July 2020. She claims that he groped her buttock with his hand. Ms. Sanchez again contradicts herself about when she reported this incident. She wrote in her HR statement that she could not have reported the incident be- cause the factory had shut down because of the pandemic.18 But her Rule 56.1 statement recited that she did report the har- assment to Brito the day after it happened. 19 Brito did not for- ward a complaint about this incident to HR.

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