Hisham Abdel-Ghaffar v. Illinois Tool Works Inc.

706 F. App'x 871
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedSeptember 5, 2017
Docket16-4039
StatusUnpublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 706 F. App'x 871 (Hisham Abdel-Ghaffar v. Illinois Tool Works 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
Hisham Abdel-Ghaffar v. Illinois Tool Works Inc., 706 F. App'x 871 (7th Cir. 2017).

Opinion

*873 ORDER

Hisham Abdel-Ghaffar was fired from his engineering job at Illinois Tool Works because, his boss said, his work and attitude were poor and had not improved after a warning. Abdel-Ghaffar, who was born in Egypt, then sued the company under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, see 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-2, and 42 U.S.C. § 1981, claiming that his national origin and Muslim religion are the real reasons he was fired. A magistrate judge presiding by consent, see 28 U.S.C. § 636(c), granted summary judgment for the employer, prompting this appeal.

Illinois Tool Works (“ITW”) hired Ab-del-Ghaffar as a senior research engineer in early February 2011. He was tasked with managing the design of a “wireless welding network” for an ITW client and subsidiary, but within four months his supervisor, Kathy Downie, had started comr plaining about his performance. According to Downie, the first red flag was that, after she explained that he needed to include specific information in a presentation to the client (the pros and cons of different wireless networks, such as Wi-Fi, ZigBee, and Bluetooth), he did not do so, leading to a complaint from the client about the presentation. Downie responded to that complaint by demoting Abdel-Ghaffar and replacing him with a new team leader.

After his demotion, Downie says, Abdel-Ghaffar grew antagonistic toward the other members of the team. He repeatedly questioned the new team leader’s ideas and debated small points, usually without data to support his views, causing delays in the team’s work. Downie said this behavior caused her to question Abdel-Ghaffar’s technical competence in addition to his attitude. On August 8, 2011, she gave Abdel-Ghaffar a performance-improvement plan with a “target” date of September 30 to develop his technical competence, his time-management skills, and his ability to work with others without being “stubborn and argumentative.” Downie updated this performance plan on August 10 and again on August 23, the day before Abdel-Ghaffar began a ten-day vacation. She wrote in these updates that Abdel-Ghaffar had not improved, had become more insubordinate and argumentative, and had even been observed sleeping at work. Abdel-Ghaffar returned from vacation on September 13, and Downie fired him on September 16— seven months after she hired him.

At summary judgment ITW introduced a declaration from Downie explaining that she had decided to fire Abdel-Ghaffar on August 23 but waited to deliver the news until after his vacation. Abdel-Ghaffar contended, however, that Downie (like many Americans, he says) adopted a negative view of Egyptian Muslims after international media began reporting about a political uprising in Egypt in February 2011, which reached its peak days before he started at ITW. Three incidents, he said, prove Downie’s hostility: First, on August 12, after telling coworkers he was fasting during Ramadan, Abdel-Ghaffar joined them for an event at a restaurant after work; when he arrived, Downie asked, “Why are you here? Aren’t you supposed to be fasting?” Second, Abdel-Ghaffar thought Downie was visibly uncomfortable when he discussed events in Egypt with an employee of ITW’s client. Third, he thought she was angry when he disclosed his vacation plan—a religious pilgrimage to Mecca. In opposing summary judgment, Abdel-Ghaffar also disagreed with Dow-nie’s assessment of his performance and her implementation of the improvement plan.

In ruling for ITW, the magistrate judge analyzed the parties’ submissions under both the direct and indirect methods of McDonnell Douglas Corp. v. Green, 411 *874 U.S. 792, 93 S.Ct. 1817, 36 L.Ed.2d 668 (1973). And while the court invoked our later-discarded “convincing mosaic” analogy in addressing the first of these methods, see Ortiz v. Werner Enters., Inc., 834 F.3d 760, 765 (7th Cir. 2016), the court also noted correctly that the “fundamental question” for both Title VII and § 1981 is whether a reasonable factfinder could infer discrimination from Downie’s comments or her decisions to demote and ultimately fire Abdel-Ghaffar. See id.; see also Bagwe v. Sedgwick Claims Mgmt. Servs., Inc., 811 F.3d 866, 879 n.39 (7th Cir.) (explaining that Title VII and § 1981 use “essentially identical” analyses), cert. denied, — U.S. -, 137 S.Ct. 82, 196 L.Ed.2d 36 (2016). The answer to this question is no, the court concluded.

The magistrate judge reached that conclusion after striking Abdel-Ghaffar’s opposition to ITW’s statement of material facts because his submission did not comply with Rule 66.1(b)(3) of the local rules for the Northern District of Illinois. The court faulted Abdel-Ghaffar, whose lawyer had by then withdrawn, for being wordy and for including “a significant amount of legal argument, conclusions, speculation, and purported factual statement unsupported by record citations.” Yet, oddly, the court then “reviewed in detail” all of Ab-del-Ghaffar’s supporting evidence. This manner of proceeding rewarded, rather than penalized, Abdel-Ghaffar’s disregard for the local rule, see Sojka v. Bovis Lend Lease, Inc., 686 F.3d 394, 398 (7th Cir. 2012) (noting that enforcing Local Rule 66.1 allows district courts to avoid having to “scour the record” for relevant information), but the magistrate judge’s benevolence also refutes Abdel-Ghaffar’s first claim on appeal: that it was error to strike his opposition to ITW’s statement of material facts. We followed the district court’s lead and evaluated all of the parties’ admissible evidence in the light most favorable to- Abdel-Ghaffar. See Simpson v. Franciscan All., Inc., 827 F.3d 656, 661 (7th Cir. 2016); see also Benuzzi v. Bd. of Educ., 647 F.3d 652, 655 (7th Cir. 2011) (noting that court of appeals defers to district court’s understanding of its own local rules), Abdel-Ghaffar’s contention that the district court improperly struck his factual responses is meaningless in light of the district court’s—and our—review of the entire record.

Abdel-Ghaffar next argues that the magistrate judge improperly ignored “direct evidence” of discrimination: Downie’s comment about his fasting and her purported discomfort upon hearing him discuss events in Egypt and his religious pilgrimage. The district court did not ignore this evidence; to the contrary, the court expressly concluded that while Dow-nie’s comments might have been “too flip, insensitive, or inappropriate,” there was nothing “objectively disparaging or derogatory about them.” We agree.

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706 F. App'x 871, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hisham-abdel-ghaffar-v-illinois-tool-works-inc-ca7-2017.