Leonard v. EASTERN ILLINOIS UNIVERSITY

614 F. Supp. 2d 918, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 37421, 2009 WL 1193777
CourtDistrict Court, C.D. Illinois
DecidedMay 4, 2009
DocketCase 07-CV-2172
StatusPublished

This text of 614 F. Supp. 2d 918 (Leonard v. EASTERN ILLINOIS UNIVERSITY) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, C.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Leonard v. EASTERN ILLINOIS UNIVERSITY, 614 F. Supp. 2d 918, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 37421, 2009 WL 1193777 (C.D. Ill. 2009).

Opinion

*921 OPINION

MICHAEL P. McCUSKEY, Chief Judge.

On September 21, 2007, Plaintiff Robert Leonard filed a Complaint (# 1) alleging that Defendant, Eastern Illinois University (EIU), violated the anti-retaliation provisions of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 when he was denied a promotion at work. Defendant filed its Answer and Affirmative Defenses (# 11) on November 19, 2007. Defendant filed a Motion for Summary Judgment (#23) on February 9, 2009. Plaintiff filed his Memorandum in Opposition (# 27) on April 2, 2009. Defendant filed its Reply (#29) on April 16, 2009. The motion is now fully briefed and ripe for a ruling. For the following reasons, Defendant’s Motion for Summary Judgment (# 23) is GRANTED.

FACTUAL BACKGROUND

The following facts are taken from “Statement of Material and Undisputed Facts In Support of Defendant’s Motion for Summary Judgment” filed by Defendant that have not been objected to by Plaintiff, the deposition testimony of Plaintiff and others, and from exhibits filed as attachments to the filings in this case.

Plaintiff, a Native American, was hired by Defendant in 1987 under the Learner’s Program, a program to hire women and minorities and people with handicaps at EIU. Plaintiff suffers from retrograde amnesia as the result of a severe closed head injury occurring in 1987. Plaintiff was hired as a building service worker. He worked at EIU for six months before resigning and moving to Michigan with his wife. Plaintiff was rehired at EIU in August 1991 under the same Learner’s Program. After completing a probationary status of six months, he was considered a full status employee. He was again a building service worker, at which position he worked from 1991 until his resignation on February 26, 2008.

Plaintiff is a Native American through his father’s family history and believes his father was enrolled as a member of the Saginaw Tribe. Plaintiff has never sent in letters to be enrolled as a tribe member himself due to his personal beliefs, but this lack of enrollment does not preclude him from being considered a Native American. No documentation exists that he is a member of a tribe except for his father’s enrollment and his father’s family documentation as to that status.

From 1987 to 2008 Plaintiff estimates that he has participated in four or five interviews for a promotion to Building Services Subforeman and that in the last five years he has participated in three interviews for a promotion. However, he estimates that he has missed approximately three to five interviews. Unlike a building service worker, a Building Service Sub-foreman does inventories and checks up on the work of others. In fact, a week prior to the March 2005 interview he missed an interview for the same position. Plaintiffs father was sick at the time and he called ahead to cancel the interview.

In March 2005, he did attend an interview for a promotion to Building Services Subforeman. The six interviewers sitting on the interview panel were: Valerie Leonard (no relation), Kevin Larkin, Steve Gilbert, Herb McElwee, Travis McGee, and John Sigler. Each interviewer had a equal role in the decision-making process of choosing an individual for promotion to subforeman. Plaintiff knew all of the interviewers and had worked with them pri- or to his interview. When Plaintiff arrived at the interview, two of the interviewers, McElwee and Magee, took off their jackets and were wearing Chief Illiniwek shirts. The interview occurred on March 24, 2005, *922 the same day the University of Illinois men’s basketball team was playing in the Sweet 16 of the NCAA Basketball Tournament. During this time there were a lot of Illini fans in Champaign and Charleston, Illinois, including on EIU’s campus. In the spring of 2005, it was common to see people in public wearing clothing in support of the men’s basketball team and Chief Illiniwek as well.

Plaintiff claimed that he was surprised that Magee and McElwee were wearing the Chief Illiniwek (the Chief) shirts because of his extreme distaste for the symbol. Plaintiff felt that it was extremely inappropriate for them to display such things at an interview for a promotion. Plaintiff knew there were other opinions concerning the Chief even in the Native American community. Plaintiff claims a coworker told him that he overheard Ma-gee and McElwee saying that they will wear their Chief stuff no matter what Plaintiff likes or what he thinks. Plaintiff claims he heard about Magee and McElwee’s statements regarding the Chief just prior to Plaintiffs interview. Plaintiff believed that when Magee and McElwee wore the shirts it was directed at him. Plaintiff believed this because of comments he heard about what Magee and McElwee were going to do from the unknown coworker. Despite hearing from that coworker about Magee and McElwee’s plans to wear the shirts, Plaintiff was still surprised they wore them and thought it was unprofessional because they knew of his feelings about racial mascots. Other than McElwee and Magee, none of the other interviewers were wearing Chief shirts.

The interview was directed towards Plaintiffs role as a building service worker. All of the questions during the interview were directed towards the job Plaintiff was seeking and how he would perform in that position. The same questions were asked of all the applicants and none of the six members of the interview panel had anything to do with drafting the questions. Labor relations and human resources had something to do with writing the questions and selecting the criteria for selecting a subforeman. The interviewers on the panel usually did not deviate from the set questions they were given. Plaintiff did not have any knowledge as to how the other candidates for the promotion performed in their interviews, but felt that he did not perform well in his because he was angry and that was how he came across. He also did not know how Magee and McElwee rated him in his interview nor does he know how he was evaluated compared to the other candidates.

To make a decision on who would be selected for a subforeman position, each candidate was scored on the basis of five different categories: (1) related work experience; (2) supervisory experience; (3) ability to work with and lead others; (4) problem-solving ability; and (5) attendance at work. For each of those categories an individual could receive 1 to 5 points with 1 being the minimum and 5 being the maximum. All the scores would be totaled up for a total score of between 5 and 25 points. After every interviewer has scored the applicant, there is a discussion about said applicant, but no one changes their scores. The interviewers score applicants based on how the interviewer felt the applicant answered the questions. All of the interviewers are supervisors in some capacity and generally know an applicant’s work history prior to the interview because it is a small campus and generally at least one member of the interview panel has supervised the applicant prior to the interview.

Magee had no opinion of Plaintiff as an employee prior to the interview and no one expressed their opinion to Magee about *923 Plaintiff prior to the interview. Following the March 2005 round of interviews, no candidate was hired for the position of Building Service Subforeman. Plaintiff does not know why no one was hired at the time.

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Bluebook (online)
614 F. Supp. 2d 918, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 37421, 2009 WL 1193777, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/leonard-v-eastern-illinois-university-ilcd-2009.