Haywood, Cherry v. Lucent Technologies

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedMarch 20, 2003
Docket01-4092
StatusPublished

This text of Haywood, Cherry v. Lucent Technologies (Haywood, Cherry v. Lucent Technologies) 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
Haywood, Cherry v. Lucent Technologies, (7th Cir. 2003).

Opinion

In the United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit ____________

No. 01-4092 CHERRY HAYWOOD, Plaintiff-Appellant, v.

LUCENT TECHNOLOGIES, INCORPORATED, Defendant-Appellee. ____________ Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division. No. 00 C 4445—James H. Alesia, Judge. ____________ ARGUED SEPTEMBER 6, 2002—DECIDED MARCH 20, 2003 ____________

Before POSNER, EASTERBROOK, and DIANE P. WOOD, Circuit Judges. DIANE P. WOOD, Circuit Judge. Cherry Haywood, an African American woman who worked for some time at Lucent Technologies as an engineer, had consistently unfavorable performance reviews. After a tense encoun- ter with a supervisor, Lucent fired her. Convinced that it had done so for racially discriminatory reasons and in retaliation for an earlier complaint, Haywood sued Lucent under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 42 U.S.C. § 2000e, et seq. To these federal claims, she added a supplemental state law claim for defamation. The dis- trict court granted summary judgment in favor of Lucent on all counts. We affirm. 2 No. 01-4092

I Haywood began working for Lucent in 1996. In December 1997, after various assignments, she transferred to the company’s Switching and Access Systems (SAS) organiza- tion. In July 1998, Haywood received her mid-year perfor- mance review, which was generally unfavorable. Hay- wood, who felt that the problem was really management and not her performance, responded by filing an internal complaint of race discrimination with Lucent’s Equal Op- portunity/Affirmative Action (EO/AA) organization. Yolanda Escalante, an employee of the EO/AA organization, investi- gated Haywood’s complaint and found no evidence of race discrimination. Nevertheless, Escalante suggested that management had not adequately defined Haywood’s objectives, nor had it sufficiently documented its con- cerns about Haywood’s performance. At her recommenda- tion, management gave Haywood a satisfactory year-end performance rating for 1998 and agreed to help Haywood transfer to another department. Thereafter, Haywood contacted Spencer Foote, an African-American senior manager in Lucent’s Wireless or- ganization, hoping to pursue opportunities in his organiza- tion. When Foote interviewed Haywood in December 1998, she told him about her earlier EO/AA complaint. Foote con- tinued the hiring process, and in January 1999 he offered her a position as a project engineer. Haywood accepted. Once again, however, in May 1999, she received a gen- erally unfavorable performance review, this time from Darlene Scott, her manager in the Wireless group. Scott appraised Haywood’s performance based on a list of 19 job objectives Haywood had received at the beginning of the year. Although the evaluation attempted to be kind, praising Haywood for her contributions to Lucent’s re- cruiting efforts, it was generally critical. Scott’s evaluation reported a number of problems, including that Haywood (1) did not take personal responsibility for results and No. 01-4092 3

usually deflected failure toward others; (2) did not as- sume accountability and responsibility; (3) received feed- back on her behaviors and interaction with team members in a way that caused concern; (4) was not “proactive” in providing information on her project; (5) inconsistently met obligations, sometimes missing deadlines; and (6) did not regularly submit time reports. Scott also pre- pared a detailed, five-page, single-spaced memorandum listing specific examples of these problems. In a meeting with Scott, Foote, and the department’s human resource manager, Melinda Jackson Douglas, Haywood was not receptive to management’s feedback. Instead, she at- tacked Scott’s evaluation of her performance, calling it subjective and defamatory. Haywood promised to prepare a rebuttal to Scott’s evaluation, but she never provided any such document to her managers. Around the beginning of July 1999, for reasons unre- lated to this litigation, Lucent decided to disband Scott’s group and allow project engineers to find work in other groups within Foote’s organization. After some contro- versy over an alleged delay, Haywood was transferred to Robert Shuman’s group in early August. In November 1999, the pattern of unfavorable reviews continued. Shuman prepared Haywood’s end-of-year per- formance review based on his own assessment of her work and feedback from Haywood’s prior managers and peers that year. His evaluation was negative: on a scale of one to six (with six indicating the likelihood of termination), Shuman gave Haywood a rating of “five.” A “five” meant that Haywood would not be terminated, but placed on a performance improvement plan. Haywood thought that Shuman’s assessment was wrong. In the end, however, another incident intervened that led to Haywood’s termination. On December 2, 1999, she was called to Shuman’s office to discuss the status of one 4 No. 01-4092

of her projects. Although the facts surrounding this inci- dent are in dispute, and we would normally accept the facts most favorable to Haywood, in this instance it is important to recount both versions, because both ver- sions reached the ultimate decisionmaker—Foote. Accord- ing to Haywood, Shuman told Haywood that he felt she did not put in the aggressive work he expected. When Haywood responded that she did not understand, Shuman became agitated and said, “Cherry, I think you don’t un- derstand how much stress and pressure I am under here.” Haywood responded, “Well, Bob, you know, I really feel sorry for a person who allows their moral values and ethics to be compromised if that is how you feel.” Shuman ordered Haywood to “get the hell out of his office” and told Haywood he never wanted to see her again without a third person present. Shuman then rose from his chair, came over to where Haywood was standing, took her by the elbow, and pushed her out of the doorway. Shuman’s account is quite different. He recalled that Haywood was upset that he had questioned her progress on a project. She attacked him personally, telling him that he was a bad supervisor, that she did not respect him, and that he thought he was God. After this outburst, Shuman ended the discussion and told Haywood that he wanted to have a third party present at any further discussions because of his concern that Haywood would misrepresent him. He asked Haywood to leave the office, at which point she “stood her ground and proceeded to stick her finger in [his] face, escalating her tone.” Shuman raised his voice, stood up, opened the door, and asked her to leave. Both Shuman and Haywood e-mailed Foote, documenting their versions of the incident. In Haywood’s e-mail, Hay- wood acknowledged that she had raised her voice in re- sponse to Shuman’s statements “attacking [her] credibility.” Foote apparently chose to believe Shuman’s version of No. 01-4092 5

the facts. After meeting with legal counsel, he terminated Haywood on December 7, 1999, for (1) her inability to accept and act upon constructive feedback; (2) her inabil- ity to “establish a viable working relationship with man- agement”; and (3) her “pattern of insubordinate behavior.” On January 10, 2000, Haywood filed a complaint with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC), which issued Haywood a right-to-sue letter. This law- suit followed on July 21, 2000.

II We review the district court’s grant of summary judg- ment de novo, examining the facts in a light most favor- able to Haywood as the nonmoving party, and drawing all reasonable inferences in her favor. Greer v. Board of Educ. of City of Chicago, 267 F.3d 723, 726 (7th Cir. 2001).

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