Chaney v. Plainfield Healthcare Center

612 F.3d 908, 2010 U.S. App. LEXIS 14804, 93 Empl. Prac. Dec. (CCH) 43,943, 109 Fair Empl. Prac. Cas. (BNA) 1377, 2010 WL 2813644
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedJuly 20, 2010
Docket09-3661
StatusPublished
Cited by79 cases

This text of 612 F.3d 908 (Chaney v. Plainfield Healthcare Center) 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
Chaney v. Plainfield Healthcare Center, 612 F.3d 908, 2010 U.S. App. LEXIS 14804, 93 Empl. Prac. Dec. (CCH) 43,943, 109 Fair Empl. Prac. Cas. (BNA) 1377, 2010 WL 2813644 (7th Cir. 2010).

Opinion

WILLIAMS, Circuit Judge.

This case pits a health-care worker’s right to a non-discriminatory workplace against a patient’s demand for white-only health-care providers. Plainfield Healthcare Center is a nursing home that housed a resident who did not want assistance from black certified nursing assistants. Plainfield complied with this racial preference by telling Brenda Chaney, a black nursing assistant, in writing everyday that “no black” assistants should enter this resident’s room or provide her with care.

Chaney brought this action under Title VII of the 1964 Civil Rights Act. She claims that Plainfield’s practice of acceding to the racial biases of its residents is illegal and created a hostile work environment. She also asserts that Plainfield fired her because she was black. The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, as amicus, agrees, and together they urge reversal of the district court’s grant of summary judgment to Plainfield. Because the racial preference policy violates Title VII by creating a hostile work environment and because issues of fact remain over whether race motivated the discharge, we reverse the district court’s order.

I. BACKGROUND

Since Plainfield Healthcare Center (“Plainfield”) prevailed on summary judgment, we recount the facts in the light most favorable to Brenda Chaney, the nonmovant. Plainfield hired Chaney as a nurse aide or certified nursing assistant (“CNA”). As a CNA, she was responsible for monitoring patients, responding to their requests for service, and generally assisting with their daily living needs. Plainfield detailed Chaney’s daily shift duties on an assignment sheet that she and other employees received upon arriving at work. The assignment sheet listed the residents in Chaney’s unit and their corresponding care needs. It also featured a column with miscellaneous notes about each resident’s condition. In the case of Marjorie Latshaw, a resident in Chaney’s unit, the sheet instructed nurse aides that Latshaw “Prefers No Black CNAs.”

Plainfield acknowledges its policy of honoring the racial preferences of its residents in assigning health-care providers. Plainfield maintains it expected its employees to respect these racial preferences because it otherwise risked violating state and federal laws that grant residents the rights to choose providers, to privacy, and to bodily autonomy. Indeed, in its reply brief to the district court on summary judgment, Plainfield acknowledged that the assignment sheet for Chaney “banned” her from assisting Latshaw.

For fear of being fired, Chaney went along with the policy. Although Latshaw remained on her assignment sheet, Chaney reluctantly refrained from assisting her, even when she was in the best position to respond. Once, Chaney found Latshaw on the ground, too weak to stand. Despite wanting badly to help, Chaney had to search the building for a white CNA. Plainfield housed at least two other residents with a similar distaste for black CNAs. One refused Chaney’s assistance in the shower, asking for a different nurse aide instead. On a separate occasion, a coworker warned Chaney that another resident does not care for blacks. Emotionally, these race-based limitations depressed Chaney, who routinely left work “teary eyed.”

*911 Plainfield’s practice of honoring the racial preferences of residents was accompanied by racially-tinged comments and epithets from co-workers. For instance, in the presence of a resident, a white nurse aide named Audria called Chaney a “black bitch.” Another time, a white coworker looked directly at Chaney and asked why Plainfield “... keep[s] on hiring all of these black niggers? They’re not gonna stay anyway.” The epithets were reported to the unit supervisor, Loretta Askew, who promised to address them. Although the epithets ceased, co-worker Audria continued to remind Chaney that certain residents were off limits because she was black. Chaney reported these comments to Askew, who renewed her promise to take care of it. Audria eventually left Chaney alone, but Plainfield’s racial preference policy remained in place and continued to surface in conversations with other employees.

After Chaney had worked at Plainfield for just three months, Plainfield fired her. In the early morning on September 6, 2006, according to Nurse Cafouras who lodged the complaint that led to Chaney’s discharge, a resident struggling to get out of bed had signaled a call light. Chaney and another CNA, C.J. Hart, were both positioned to respond but both initially refused. When Chaney ultimately came to the resident’s room, Cafouras alleged that Chaney used profanity while lifting the resident onto her bedside commode— “she’s shitting,” Chaney supposedly said.

Cafouras’s complaint was investigated concurrently by Askew, who normally investigated misconduct complaints in her unit, and John Reyes, the Director of Nursing. Askew was skeptical of the allegation, having never before heard Chaney use profanity at work. She investigated and learned that the resident’s roommate, a witness to the incident, did not hear Chaney use profanity. The record is silent as to whether the resident who signaled the call light heard Chaney use profanity. Askew relayed her findings, along with her skepticism, to Reyes. Although a full day had yet to pass since Cafouras filed her complaint, Reyes had resolved to fire Chaney. Hart, who heard the alarm but never responded, was not interviewed until two weeks after the incident. Hart was not disciplined even though the resident who signaled the alarm was in her unit, not Chaney’s.

On the evening of September 6, 2006, Chaney was sent home when she arrived to work her regular night shift. The next morning, she received a short phone call from Plainfield’s human resources manager, Donna Gray, informing her that she was terminated. At a post-termination meeting a few days later, Chaney alleges that Plainfield told Chaney that it fired her because she said the word “shitting” in the presence of a resident, and gave no other grounds for the firing. At this meeting, Chaney denied the charge and was invited to write her version of the events, but her termination was not overturned. Plain-field has since focused on other, independent grounds for her discharge: “bed alarm and call light infractions” and “not doing a shift change.”

The district court entered summary judgment in favor of Plainfield on the claims of hostile workplace and discriminatory discharge. Although the court recognized that the comments from Chaney’s co-workers had created a hostile work environment, it concluded that Plainfield avoided liability by responding promptly each time it received: a complaint. Treating the racial preference policy as a separate claim of a hostile work environment, the court concluded that the note on Chaney’s assignment sheet advising her of the “Prefers No Black CNAs” exclusion was reasonable given Plainfield’s good-faith *912 belief that ignoring the resident’s preferences would-have violated Indiana’s patient-rights laws. As for Chaney’s discriminatory-discharge claim, the court concluded that Chaney had failed to produce evidence from which an inference could be drawn that racial animus motivated Reyes’s decision to fire her.

II. ANALYSIS

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612 F.3d 908, 2010 U.S. App. LEXIS 14804, 93 Empl. Prac. Dec. (CCH) 43,943, 109 Fair Empl. Prac. Cas. (BNA) 1377, 2010 WL 2813644, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chaney-v-plainfield-healthcare-center-ca7-2010.