Moffitt, Kristin K. v. IL Board Education

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedJanuary 9, 2001
Docket99-1222
StatusPublished

This text of Moffitt, Kristin K. v. IL Board Education (Moffitt, Kristin K. v. IL Board Education) 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
Moffitt, Kristin K. v. IL Board Education, (7th Cir. 2001).

Opinion

In the United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit

No. 99-1222

KRISTIN K. MOFFITT,

Plaintiff-Appellant,

v.

ILLINOIS STATE BOARD OF EDUCATION,

Defendant-Appellee.

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Central District of Illinois. No. 96 C 3067--Richard Mills, Judge.

Argued January 13, 2000--Decided January 9, 2001

Before BAUER, POSNER, and ROVNER, Circuit Judges.

ROVNER, Circuit Judge. Pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P. 41(b), the district court dismissed this employment discrimination case with prejudice after the plaintiff, who was hospitalized for drug and alcohol addiction, failed to appear for trial and her attorney announced that she was not prepared to go forward in her client’s absence. Moffitt v. Illinois State Bd. of Educ., 184 F.R.D. 298 (C.D. Ill. 1999). The plaintiff appeals, contending that the district court abused its discretion in dismissing the case rather than granting her the continuance she requested./1 We affirm the dismissal of the case, because the plaintiff’s counsel not only declined to present any evidence when the case was called for trial, but also failed to make a record as to why the case could not proceed in the plaintiff’s absence.

I.

Kristin Moffitt began work for the Illinois State Board of Education (the "Board") in 1990 as a confidential clerk in its personnel department. In 1992, she assumed additional responsibilities that allegedly warranted an upgrade in her job classification to that of a confidential secretary, the next highest level of responsibility and pay. In July 1992, Moffitt requested the "desk audit" that was a prerequisite to a classification upgrade. In November 1992, one month after Moffitt informed the Board that she was pregnant, the Board denied her request for a desk audit.

Moffitt was on maternity leave from late February through mid-July of 1993. While she was on leave, the Board reassigned the additional duties that Moffitt had been handling to a new confidential secretary position. Moffitt interviewed for the new position, but the Board hired someone else to fill it. Consequently, when Moffitt returned from maternity leave, the added responsibilities that might have warranted an upgrade in her classification had been taken away from her position. In or around March of 1994, Moffitt transferred to a different department of the Board. She resigned from the Board’s employ in July of 1994.

In March of 1996, Moffitt filed suit against the Board under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 42 U.S.C. sec. 2000e, alleging that the Board discriminated against her on the basis of her pregnancy when it chose not to promote her to the new position for a confidential secretary that had been created, in part, to handle some of the responsibilities she had been given prior to taking maternity leave. The Board answered the complaint two months later, and discovery commenced. On October 11, 1996, the district court entered an order giving the parties a year in which to complete their discovery. R. 7. After an extension of the discovery deadline, as well as the entry of an order granting Moffitt’s motion to compel the production of certain documents that the Board regarded as confidential, discovery concluded at the end of January 1998.

The court conducted a final pre-trial conference on March 31, 1998, at which time the parties submitted their proposed pre-trial order. The court entered that order on the same day. The witness list that Moffitt included in that order identified more than 80 witnesses that she might call to testify and a total of 129 exhibits. R. 33, Exs. B, D. Nearly nine months later, on December 29, 1998, the court set the case for trial. Jury selection was scheduled to take place before the magistrate judge beginning January 20, 1999, with the trial to commence on January 26 before the district judge.

On January 14, 1999, Moffitt filed the first of several motions to continue the trial date. R. 43. In that motion, Moffitt’s counsel indicated that she was unable to contact her client. Attached to the motion was the affidavit of Moffitt’s mother, Darlene Hutchins, with whom Moffitt and her two small children resided. R. 43 Ex. A. Hutchins indicated that Moffitt had left home in Hutchins’ car on January 1 and, as of January 14, had not returned. Hutchins averred that Moffitt had contacted her on January 7 and indicated that she was being held against her will; since that time, Hutchins had not heard from Moffitt. On January 8, Hutchins’ car had been located by the Springfield police, occupied by two individuals whom Hutchins did not know. Hutchins believed that her daughter had been the victim of foul play, and had enlisted the aid of authorities in an effort to locate her.

On January 19, the district court denied the motion, believing that it would be "premature to continue the jury trial at this time." R. 45 at 2. "There is no evidence from law enforcement officers nor credible evidence from anywhere else to suggest that the Plaintiff is in fact a victim of foul play." Id.

On January 19, the same date that the court denied Moffitt’s initial continuance motion, Moffitt filed a first supplemental motion to continue the trial. R. 46. In that motion, Moffitt’s attorney indicated that her client had contacted her that day and informed her that she was hospitalized in Bloomington, Illinois and would remain so through the week of January 26. "Due to the foregoing," Moffitt’s counsel stated, "Plaintiff has been unable to assist in the preparation of her case for trial and will be unable to attend the trial . . . ." Id. at 1. The district court denied this motion on the day it was filed. See id.

On January 20, when jury selection was to begin, Moffitt’s counsel appeared before Magistrate Judge Evans and orally requested a continuance on the basis that Moffitt had been admitted into a drug and alcohol treatment program. Hutchins was present and testified in support of the motion. See R. 63. Hutchins indicated that after a two-week absence, her daughter had returned home several days earlier in a "very ill" state. Id. at 11. Hutchins had taken her daughter to a hospital in Bloomington on the previous day seeking treatment for her drug and alcohol addiction./2 The Bloomington hospital had been unable to admit Moffitt and instead, after assessing Moffitt, had sent her to an affiliated drug treatment program at a hospital in Peoria. Moffitt had voluntarily admitted herself to the Peoria hospital and, according to Hutchins, would be there for the next 18 to 21 days. Hutchins and Moffitt’s counsel also indicated that Moffitt had been unaware, until the previous day, that her case had been scheduled for trial in January, although her attorney had previously sent her correspondence notifying her of the trial date. According to Hutchins, Moffitt did not read her mail and "does not deal with anything." R. 63 at 18. Moffitt’s attorney added that she had spoken with Moffitt on the previous day and that "she was not lucid." Id. at 17. "She is not herself at all. . . . She doesn’t make sense when she tells you something. She is just not-- there is just something very wrong." Id. at 17-18. The defense opposed the continuance and asked that judgment be entered in the Board’s favor. Judge Evans noted that he had been designated solely to handle jury selection, and he decided to proceed with that task. Id. at 21-22, 27-28. The jury was selected and empaneled later that same day.

On January 22, Moffitt filed a second supplemental motion to continue the trial date. R. 48.

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