Gacek v. American Airlines, Inc.

614 F.3d 298, 30 I.E.R. Cas. (BNA) 1676, 2010 U.S. App. LEXIS 14487, 2010 WL 2780318
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedJuly 15, 2010
Docket09-3131
StatusPublished
Cited by48 cases

This text of 614 F.3d 298 (Gacek v. American Airlines, 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
Gacek v. American Airlines, Inc., 614 F.3d 298, 30 I.E.R. Cas. (BNA) 1676, 2010 U.S. App. LEXIS 14487, 2010 WL 2780318 (7th Cir. 2010).

Opinion

POSNER, Circuit Judge.

A former baggage handler for American Airlines filed this diversity suit against the airline for retaliatory discharge in violation of the Illinois Workers’ Compensation Act, 820 ILCS 305/4(h). The district court granted summary judgment for the airline, precipitating this appeal, which involves the applicability of McDonnell Douglas Corp. v. Green, 411 U.S. 792, 802-03, 93 S.Ct. 1817, 36 L.Ed.2d 668 (1973), to a suit based on state law but litigated in federal court.

The plaintiff sprained the middle finger of his left hand at work on December 22, 2005, while lifting a bag, and a doctor at the airport’s medical clinic told him to wear a splint on the finger and do only light work until he recovered. Later another doctor at the clinic told him not to lift anything with his left hand. He called in sick on December 29 and an airline “attendance manager” phoned him to find out what was wrong. He didn’t answer or return the call, though she had left a message. Her supervisor began harboring suspicions of the plaintiff because it was the holiday season (when workers are tempted not to work), and so the airline hired a detective agency to check up on him. He called in sick the following two days as well, and on the second day was videotaped by a detective. The videotape showed the plaintiff running errands over a three-hour period, lifting and carrying grocery bags with both hands, and not wearing the splint. Later — but before learning about the surveillance — the plaintiff told the airline that he had been absent on December 29 through 31 because of the flu. Later still he said he hadn’t had the flu but had stayed off work because his finger was bothering him — a claim in tension with his having been observed lifting and carrying groceries with both hands and not wearing his splint. So he was fired.

He didn’t file a workers’ compensation claim till years later. But when he had first reported the injury a claim file had been opened by the airline’s administrator of workers’ claims; and a discharge motivated by such an injury report is a retaliatory discharge under Illinois workers’ compensation law. Hinthorn v. Roland’s of Bloomington, Inc., 119 Ill.2d 526, 116 Ill.Dec. 694, 519 N.E.2d 909, 913 (1988).

It seems unlikely that an airline would fire a baggage handler merely because he sprained a finger and might seek workers’ compensation, since worse injuries to baggage handlers are common. See Sahika Vatan Korkmaz et al., “Bag *300 gage Handling in an Airplane Cargo Hold: An Ergonomic Intervention Study,” 36 Int’l J. Indus. Ergonomics 301 (2006); Geoff Dell, “The Causes and Prevention of Baggage Handler Back Injuries: A Survey of Airline Safety Professionals,” Safety Science Monitor http://ssmon.chb.kth.se/voll/vli3art3.pdf (visited June 21, 2010). But plausible or not, no reasonable jury could find that the airline had fired the plaintiff because its claims administrator had opened a file on the injury rather than because it believed that he had lied about having the flu and had disobeyed the doctor’s orders to wear a splint on the injured finger and not lift anything with that hand.

We should consider whether this conclusion might be altered by whether the framework for deciding an employer’s motion for summary judgment in a retaliatory-discharge case governed by Illinois law is supplied by federal law, which is to say by McDonnell Douglas, or by state law. The question has arisen repeatedly in this circuit, see McCoy v. Maytag Corp., 495 F.3d 515, 521-22 (7th Cir.2007); Carter v. Tennant Co., 383 F.3d 673, 677-78 (7th Cir.2004); Borcky v. Maytag Corp., 248 F.3d 691, 696 n. 5 (7th Cir.2001); Bourbon v. Kmart Corp., 223 F.3d 469, 473-77 (7th Cir.2000) (concurring opinion), but we have ducked it because the lawyers ignored it or the answer would not have changed the outcome. It is time we answered the question. It is hard on the district judges for the court of appeals to allow a conflict in the rules that govern summary judgment to persist. It requires them to choose between the rules (when they would yield opposing results) without guidance, or, as a matter of prudence, to apply both rules in every case and hope the outcome will be the same under both. So let us choose.

In Clemons v. Mechanical Devices Co., 184 Ill.2d 328, 235 Ill.Dec. 54, 704 N.E.2d 403, 407-08 (1998), the Supreme Court of Illinois rejected the McDonnell Douglas framework for cases of retaliatory discharge for making a workers’ compensation claim. Cf. Jordan v. Clay’s Rest Home, Inc., 253 Va. 185, 483 S.E.2d 203, 207 (1997). It did so because it was unwilling to “expand the tort of retaliatory discharge by reducing plaintiffs burden of proving the elements of the tort,” one of which is that the workers’ compensation claim (or potential claim) was the cause of the plaintiffs being fired. 235 Ill.Dec. 54, 704 N.E.2d at 408.

In McEwen v. Delta Air Lines, Inc., 919 F.2d 58 (7th Cir.1990), another diversity case, we had held years earlier that if the rule in Illinois was, as the plaintiff argued in that case, that a plaintiff in a retaliatory-discharge case could defeat summary judgment however weak his prima facie case, nevertheless the McDonnell Douglas rule would govern. The employer in McEwen presented evidence of a lawful reason for the discharge, and the plaintiff did not rebut it. That defeated her case under McDonnell Douglas. But it would have done so under Illinois procedural law as well, since the evidence, uncontradicted as we said, precluded an inference of retaliation. We know from the Clemons decision, decided after McEwen, that the Illinois rule is not as was argued to us in McEwen. More important, the passage we quoted from Clemons makes clear that the rule adopted in that case (rejecting McDonnell Douglas) is grounded in substantive rather than procedural principles — in a desire as we said to assimilate retaliatory discharge to other torts. And so in the post-Clemons case of McCoy v. Maytag Corp., supra, 495 F.3d at 522, we treated the applicability of McDonnell Douglas to diversity cases governed by the Illinois law of retaliatory discharge as open. (“We leave the decision regarding ‘ “what the prima facie case of retaliation *301 is in the Seventh Circuit” ’ for another day.” Id.)

Snead v. Metropolitan Property Ins. & Casualty Co., 237 F.3d 1080 (9th Cir.2001), is similar to McCoy.

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614 F.3d 298, 30 I.E.R. Cas. (BNA) 1676, 2010 U.S. App. LEXIS 14487, 2010 WL 2780318, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gacek-v-american-airlines-inc-ca7-2010.