Detlef Sommerfield v. Lawrence Knasiak

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedJuly 23, 2020
Docket18-2045
StatusPublished

This text of Detlef Sommerfield v. Lawrence Knasiak (Detlef Sommerfield v. Lawrence Knasiak) 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. Lawrence Knasiak, (7th Cir. 2020).

Opinion

In the

United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit ____________________ No. 18-2045 DETLEF SOMMERFIELD, Plaintiff-Appellee, v.

LAWRENCE KNASIAK, Defendant-Appellant. ____________________

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division. No. 08 C 3025 — Joan B. Gottschall, Judge. ____________________

ARGUED FEBRUARY 19, 2020 — DECIDED JULY 23, 2020 ____________________

Before FLAUM, RIPPLE, and WOOD, Circuit Judges. WOOD, Circuit Judge. After experiencing virulent anti-Se- mitic abuse at the hands of Sergeant Lawrence Knasiak, Of- ficer Detlef Sommerfield of the Chicago Police Department (CPD) filed a lawsuit against Knasiak and the City of Chicago in which he alleged discrimination, harassment, and retalia- tion based on his German national origin and his Jewish eth- nicity. After the City was dismissed from the case, a jury re- turned a verdict for Sommerfield and awarded him $540,000 2 No. 18-2045

in punitive damages; he also received a modest award repre- senting pre-judgment interest for backpay and pension bene- fits he already had received. Knasiak has appealed, contend- ing that he was entitled to judgment as a matter of law, or at least a new trial, and that the court should have reduced the punitive-damage award. We recognize that this was a closely contested case, but in the end we find no error in the district court’s decisions, and so we affirm. I We recount the facts in the light most favorable to the jury’s verdict. Sommerfield was born and raised in Germany, where some of his family members had died in concentration camps during the Holocaust. At some point he emigrated to the United States, settled in Chicago, and joined the CPD. His supervisor there was Sgt. Knasiak. For years, Sommerfield en- dured vicious anti-Semitic abuse from Knasiak. We prefer not to debase this opinion by repeating what Knasiak said: suffice it to say that the vitriol invoked Hitler, the actions the Nazis took in the death camps, and regret that Jews today live in the United States. Although Sommerfield repeatedly pleaded with Knasiak to stop the harassment, Knasiak never let up. On March 13, 2004, Sommerfield’s girlfriend was taken to the emergency room after suffering a severe allergic reaction to a medication. Sommerfield received permission from the police captain to go visit her in the hospital during his shift. When he returned, Knasiak said, “if you want to take care of your f**king Mexican girlfriend, you take time off like every- body else.” This was the last straw for Sommerfield; he re- sponded by filing a formal complaint, known as a CR, or “complaint register,” to the internal affairs division about Knasiak’s offensive comment about his girlfriend and the No. 18-2045 3

relentless harassment. Filing the CR against Knasiak was a drastic step: one CPD sergeant testified at trial that he had never heard of another officer filing a CR against a superior. On March 15, 2004, two days after filing his complaint, Sommerfield was riding in the passenger seat of a patrol car driven by another officer. Attempting to refuel the car at a gas station, the driver discovered that his gas card did not work. He suggested that, because Sommerfield lived in the area, they could go to Sommerfield’s house to retrieve his gas card. Sommerfield agreed, they drove to his house, and Sommer- field ran inside for a moment and retrieved the card. Sergeant Kelly, another police officer, was on Sommer- field’s street at the time Sommerfield went into his house. Kelly immediately called Knasiak, who ordered Sommerfield and the driver to meet him back at the station in the com- mander’s office. They complied. At the station, Knasiak had summoned four other superior officers to witness his disci- pline of Sommerfield. At trial, CPD officers testified that they had never heard of this happening before. Knasiak first inter- rogated the driver, and then dismissed him and turned to Sommerfield. Knasiak accused Sommerfield of violating rules by failing to contact the dispatcher while he was retrieving the gas card. Knasiak then filed a CR against Sommerfield alleg- ing that he had been insubordinate by leaving the car without contacting the dispatcher and recommending that Sommer- field be suspended. This was the only time Knasiak had ever issued a CR, much less one with the serious charge of insub- ordination. An apparently independent group of Department officials briefly investigated Knasiak’s complaint and suspended Som- merfield for five days. This measure was unprecedented; in 4 No. 18-2045

fact, the record showed, it was common practice in the De- partment not to bother the dispatchers for such a short errand. Sommerfield was the only person Knasiak ever disciplined for the relatively minor infraction of “failure to report location to dispatch.” The driver who suggested the brief stop received only a reprimand. There were other apparent lapses in the in- vestigation, too. The investigating sergeant failed to interview a secretary whom Knasiak told to leave the office the night he disciplined Sommerfield, nor did the investigator interview two patrol officers who were sitting outside Knasiak’s office at the time of the reprimand. Further, the report omitted evi- dence that Knasiak had shouted profanities at Sommerfield as he disciplined him, relying instead exclusively on the state- ments of the officers Knasiak had brought into the office, who insisted that it was Sommerfield, and not Knasiak, who had lost his temper. Later Sommerfield was passed over for a promotion to the position of canine handler, even though he was rated “well- qualified.” According to Department rules, in order to be eli- gible for that position, an officer could not have three or more complaints against him that resulted in suspension. The CPD’s canine coordinator testified that Sommerfield did not get the promotion because he had had exactly three suspen- sions in the preceding five years, including the one that re- sulted from Knasiak’s recommendation. In 2006, Sommerfield filed a lawsuit against the City of Chicago and Knasiak (Sommerfield I). Because the statute of limitations had run on the only claim he raised against Knasiak, the court dismissed Knasiak from that case, which proceeded against only the City. Sommerfield won a jury ver- dict of $30,000. Still wishing to sue Knasiak, however, No. 18-2045 5

Sommerfield brought the present action (Sommerfield II) against Knasiak and the City on May 23, 2008. In it, he com- plained that Knasiak had harassed him and discriminated against him on the basis of race, religion, and national origin, and had retaliated against him based on protected activities, and that the City was responsible for all this. The district court dismissed the claims against the City with prejudice on Feb- ruary 26, 2009, on the ground that they duplicated those in Sommerfield I, but it permitted the claims against Knasiak to proceed. A somewhat pared down version of that part of the case went to a jury trial. On July 24, 2014, the jury returned a verdict in Sommerfield’s favor for $540,000 in punitive dam- ages and $0 in compensatory damages. At that point, before the district court entered final judg- ment on the verdict, three years of post-trial litigation ensued. It was concerned primarily with Sommerfield’s efforts to add a belated indemnity claim against the City and to obtain pre- judgment interest, and the efforts of the court to calculate (by the parties’ agreement) Sommerfield’s economic damages The district court entered its final judgment in Sommerfield II on May 12, 2017. It awarded Sommerfield a total of $548,703.96, which represented $540,000 in damages awarded by the jury and $8,703.96 in pre-judgment interest.

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