Detlef Sommerfield v. City of Chicago

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedJuly 12, 2017
Docket13-1265
StatusPublished

This text of Detlef Sommerfield v. City of Chicago (Detlef Sommerfield v. City of Chicago) 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
Detlef Sommerfield v. City of Chicago, (7th Cir. 2017).

Opinion

In the

United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit ____________________ Nos. 12‐1506 & 13‐1265 DETLEF SOMMERFIELD, Plaintiff‐Appellant,

v.

CITY OF CHICAGO, Defendant‐Appellee. ____________________

Appeals from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division. No. 06 C 3132 — Harry D. Leinenweber, Judge. ____________________

ARGUED MAY 19, 2017 — DECIDED JULY 12, 2017 ____________________

Before WOOD, Chief Judge, and POSNER and KANNE, Circuit Judges. WOOD, Chief Judge. After years of protracted litigation, a jury awarded Chicago Police Officer Detlef Sommerfield $30,000 in his workplace discrimination suit. For his efforts, Sommerfield’s lawyer requested $1.5 million in attorney’s fees, a sum the district court reduced to $430,000. Sommerfield now appeals, challenging the district court’s 2 Nos. 12‐1506 & 13‐1265

handling of his case and, in particular, its refusal to grant his attorney the full $1.5 million. We affirm. I Sommerfield has been an officer with the Chicago Police Department (CPD) since 1994. From 2000 to 2007 he was as‐ signed to the Eighth District, where he worked with Sergeant Lawrence Knasiak. Sommerfield is Jewish and German, which evidently bothered Knasiak. Throughout that time Knasiak publicly made offensive remarks about Sommer‐ field’s ethnicity. Examples include “Jews are bloodsucking parasites” and “Germans are like niggers, couldn’t get rid of them then, can’t get rid of them now.” We will not belabor the point—Knasiak’s other comments were similarly outrageous. Sommerfield complained, and in March 2004 CPD’s Internal Affairs Division launched an investigation of Knasiak that culminated in his suspension in April 2007. (Knasiak retired that June and so he never served this suspension.) Sommerfield also filed a charge with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC), which found “reasonable cause to believe that [CPD] violated Title VII by harassing [Sommerfield] based on his national origin, German, and religion, Jewish.” These complaints, Sommerfield believes, led to retaliation from an amorphous group of “supervisors” that included, but was not limited to, Knasiak. The alleged retaliatory acts included frequent postings to undesirable hospital duty, requirements to use his own car for police work, refusals to give him a beat‐car assignment, and assignments in which he had to work alone. Sommerfield was disciplined, too: Knasiak filed an insubordination complaint against him on March 15, 2004; other officers lodged complaints in January 2003, December 2004, and April 2005. Nos. 12‐1506 & 13‐1265 3

The cumulative disciplinary actions rendered Sommerfield ineligible for a promotion to the coveted post of dog handler. We refer to these incidents collectively as “staffing decisions.” Sommerfield did not take this lying down. He filed an‐ other EEOC charge alleging retaliation, and the agency once again found reasonable cause. In June 2006, Sommerfield’s lawyer, Joseph A. Longo, filed this lawsuit. The amended complaint alleged (1) discrimination based on religion, (2) dis‐ crimination based on national origin, (3) retaliation, (4) viola‐ tion of 42 U.S.C. § 1981, and (5) violation of 42 U.S.C. § 1983. Sommerfield later asked the district court to sanction the City for not informing him that the City Council passed two reso‐ lutions congratulating Knasiak on his retirement. In September 2010 the district court pared down the complaint considerably by granting partial summary judgment for the City. It confined the discrimination counts (1 and 2) to the question whether Knasiak’s statements had created a hostile work environment, and it eliminated Counts 4 and 5 altogether for lack of any evidence that would permit a finding that Sommerfield’s injury resulted from an express policy, a widespread practice, or a policymaker’s final action. It restricted the retaliation claim (Count 3) to the period after 2004. It excluded the staffing decisions from Count 3 because Sommerfield failed to point to facts establishing a jury question. Finally, the court refused to sanction the City, because the congratulatory resolutions were publicly available and there was no hint of bad faith in the City’s failure to send them to Sommerfield. The slimmed‐down case proceeded to trial, and in January 2012 the jury found for Sommerfield on the discrimination counts, but for the City on the retaliation count. It awarded 4 Nos. 12‐1506 & 13‐1265

him $30,000, which prompted Longo to seek a princely $1,496,930 in attorney’s fees for having prevailed. Longo claimed to have worked 3,742 hours at an hourly rate of $395. Magistrate Judge Cole reduced the hours to 2,878 and the rate to $300, which yielded a lodestar of $863,000. At that point, he took into account the modest degree of success Sommerfield had achieved and halved the lodestar, for a final fee of $430,000. The district court approved that recommendation, and this appeal followed. II Sommerfield’s complaints on appeal are wide‐ranging, in‐ cluding the adverse rulings on summary judgment, the rejec‐ tion of sanctions against the City, and the substantial reduc‐ tion in the requested attorney’s fees. We address the merits first, and then turn to the fees. A A plaintiff suing under Title VII “may pursue a claim not explicitly included in an EEOC complaint only if her allega‐ tions fall within the scope of the earlier charges contained in the EEOC complaint.” Ezell v. Potter, 400 F.3d 1041, 1046 (7th Cir. 2005). To decide if additional claims meet that stand‐ ard, we ask if they are “like or reasonably related to those con‐ tained in the EEOC complaint. If they are, then we ask whether the current claim reasonably could have developed from the EEOC’s investigation of the charges before it.” Id. Claims are “reasonably related” when “there is a factual rela‐ tionship between them.” Id. The EEOC charge and the com‐ plaint “must describe the same conduct and implicate the same individuals.” Id. Nos. 12‐1506 & 13‐1265 5

Sommerfield’s first EEOC charge accused Knasiak of cre‐ ating a “hostile work environment” by using “offense [sic] ra‐ cial remarks about Jewish people, Germans, African‐Ameri‐ cans and Mexicans.” Sommerfield argues that his allegations about undesirable work assignments, suspensions, and denial of the “K‐9” job all fit under this broad language and hence that the district court erred in excluding them. But the original charge does no more than describe verbal abuse by Lawrence Knasiak; it does not refer to any other people or conduct. Moreover, many of the staffing decisions to which Sommer‐ field alludes do not appear to be Knasiak’s doing at all, but rather are the work of an ill‐defined group of “supervisors.” This is not enough to show that the staffing decisions “impli‐ cate the same individuals.” Ezell, 400 F.3d at 1046. In fact, it is hard to see how the staffing decisions reflect discrimination at all. Knasiak is the only CPD officer Sommerfield accuses of bigotry. His core theory is that after Knasiak made offensive remarks and Sommerfield complained, “supervisors” retali‐ ated against Sommerfield for those grievances. That describes a case about retaliation, not discrimination. And indeed, that is just how the district court saw it: if they were anything, these incidents supported claims about retaliation under Count 3, not discrimination under Counts 1 and 2. Sommerfield’s fallback evidentiary argument is no better.

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Detlef Sommerfield v. City of Chicago, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/detlef-sommerfield-v-city-of-chicago-ca7-2017.