Elisa S. Gallo v. Mayo Clinic Health System-Fran ( 2018 )


Menu:
  •                                  In the
    United States Court of Appeals
    For the Seventh Circuit
    ____________________
    No. 17-1623
    ELISA S. GALLO, M.D.,
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    v.
    MAYO CLINIC HEALTH SYSTEM-
    FRANCISCAN MEDICAL CENTER, INC., et al.,
    Defendants-Appellees.
    ____________________
    Appeal from the United States District Court for the
    Western District of Wisconsin.
    No. 15 C 304 — James D. Peterson, Chief Judge.
    ____________________
    ARGUED APRIL 20, 2018 — DECIDED NOVEMBER 1, 2018
    ____________________
    Before SYKES, and BARRETT, Circuit Judges, and DURKIN, Dis-
    trict Judge.*
    DURKIN, District Judge. Elisa Gallo was a dermatologist at
    the Mayo Clinic. Less than a year into her employment, she
    resigned and entered into a separation agreement to prevent
    the Mayo Clinic from saying anything negative about her to
    * The Honorable Thomas M. Durkin, Northern District of Illinois, sit-
    ting by designation.
    2                                                   No. 17-1623
    prospective employers. Years later, her former supervisor
    rated her performance as “fair” on two criteria in a credential-
    ing form. Gallo then sued the Mayo Clinic for breach of the
    separation agreement. The district court granted the Mayo
    Clinic’s motion for summary judgment. Gallo appeals that or-
    der. We affirm.
    I. Background
    Gallo began working as a dermatologist at the Mayo Clinic
    in February 2010. In September 2010, she started having per-
    formance issues and conflicts with her supervisor, Dr. Mi-
    chael White. The Mayo Clinic contends that White outlined
    corrective steps for Gallo to take to continue her employment,
    but that Gallo refused to take those steps, causing the Mayo
    Clinic to place her on unpaid leave. No matter the circum-
    stances, Gallo soon hired an attorney, resigned, and entered
    into a separation agreement with the Mayo Clinic. The sepa-
    ration agreement was intended to prevent the Mayo Clinic
    from saying anything negative about Gallo in response to em-
    ployment inquiries. Specifically, the separation agreement
    stated:
    The parties have agreed upon a letter of refer-
    ence for Employee to be provided to potential
    employers seeking a reference. The letter of ref-
    erence is attached hereto as Exhibit A and incor-
    porated herein… . Employer will state nothing
    that will be inconsistent with the letter of refer-
    ence (Exhibit A) attached hereto. No reference
    will be made to any performance issue and
    nothing derogatory will be stated.
    In June 2013, Dr. Mark Lebwohl, a dermatologist at Mount
    Sinai Hospital in New York, recommended that Gallo apply
    No. 17-1623                                                  3
    to a position at Refuah Health Center (also in New York),
    which had a relationship with Mount Sinai. Refuah extended
    an offer to Gallo in August 2013. The proposed employment
    relationship was to be between Gallo and Refuah only, and
    not with Mount Sinai.
    From August to September 2013, Gallo negotiated various
    terms of her employment contract with Dr. Corinna Manini at
    Refuah. During negotiations, Manini wrote an email to one of
    her colleagues stating, “I can’t stand Gallo.” Refuah rescinded
    its offer a few days later on September 18, 2013. About a
    month later, Gallo wrote to Manini and explained that she did
    not understand the negotiating process and that she would
    accept whatever Refuah had to offer. Between mid-October to
    December 2013, Gallo and Manini discussed the prospect of
    Refuah hiring Gallo for a part-time position at Refuah. In De-
    cember 2013, Refuah extended an offer to Gallo for that posi-
    tion.
    Because Refuah physicians supervise Mount Sinai resi-
    dents, Gallo had to be credentialed by Mount Sinai to work at
    Refuah. Credentialing grants a physician privileges at a hos-
    pital to perform specific procedures there. Doctors do not
    have to be employed by a hospital to be credentialed at that
    hospital. As part of the credentialing process, Mount Sinai
    sent an Affiliation Verification form (the “credentialing
    form”) to the Mayo Clinic. In-house counsel at the Mayo
    Clinic sent the form to White to complete. The form asked
    White to rate Gallo from “poor” to “superior” in 13 categories.
    White completed the form after seeking advice from in-house
    counsel and approval from another doctor. For 11 out of the
    13 categories, White rated Gallo “superior” or “good.” White
    rated Gallo “fair” on two categories: accepting feedback and
    4                                                  No. 17-1623
    ability to work with others. After discovering that his ratings
    might hurt Gallo’s credentialing chances, White sent an email
    to Lebwohl recommending Gallo, but saying that he was not
    willing to artificially inflate the evaluation. White also spoke
    with the director of credentialing at Mount Sinai and told her
    that Gallo was a good physician and that he did not want to
    hurt Gallo’s credentialing prospects.
    Because Gallo was not yet licensed to practice medicine in
    New York, she did not sign the December 2013 offer. After
    Gallo received her license to practice in New York in April
    2014, Refuah sent Gallo an employment agreement for contin-
    gent part-time employment at Refuah. Gallo then began fur-
    ther negotiation of the terms of her employment. On April 30,
    2014, Manini wrote to Lebwohl that “Gallo is driving us
    nuts.” On May 6, 2014, Gallo wrote an email raising 18 addi-
    tional issues concerning her employment contract. Another
    Refuah employee asked Manini “Is this provider that amaz-
    ing?,” to which Manini responded, “I’m happy to rescind the
    offer.” Manini also told Lebwohl that Gallo was being “very
    unreasonable” and “questioned whether Gallo was the right
    person for the job.” Refuah rescinded its offer to Gallo and
    filled the position with another individual.
    After Mount Sinai received the credentialing form from
    the Mayo Clinic, the credentialing process required Lebwohl,
    as department head, to recommend Gallo for approval to the
    credentialing committee. But Lebwohl never made any rec-
    ommendation to approve Gallo for credentialing because he
    was aware that no job was available to her at Refuah. As a
    result, Gallo was neither approved for nor denied credential-
    ing by Mount Sinai. Nonetheless, on May 15, 2014, Lebwohl
    emailed Gallo stating: “Dear Elisa, Your application was not
    No. 17-1623                                                    5
    adequate for credentialing by the Mount Sinai credentialing
    committee and Refuah is therefore not waiting to offer you
    the job. Sorry to deliver this news. I’d be happy to discuss
    with you as I’m sure you’ll be applying for other positions.”
    Gallo sued the Mayo Clinic for breaching the separation
    agreement. The Mayo Clinic moved for summary judgment.
    The district court concluded as a matter of law that 1) the sep-
    aration agreement did not apply because the credentialing
    form was not an employment reference and 2) the credential-
    ing form was not the reason Refuah declined to hire Gallo.
    Gallo filed a motion to alter or amend the judgment, which
    the district court denied. Gallo now appeals the district
    court’s summary judgment decision.
    II. Analysis
    A. Motion to Supplement the Record
    Preliminarily, the Court addresses Gallo’s motion to sup-
    plement the record on appeal. Gallo seeks to add to the appel-
    late record eight documents produced during discovery but
    never presented to the district court. We instructed Gallo to
    present her motion to the district court in the first instance as
    required by Federal Rule of Appellate Procedure 10(e) and
    Circuit Rule 10(b). The district court denied Gallo’s request
    because none of the documents she sought to add were pre-
    sented to it during the case proceedings. This Court then held
    it would review her motion with this appeal.
    Federal Rule of Appellate Procedure 10(e) permits a party
    to supplement the appellate record “[i]f anything material to
    either party is omitted from or misstated in the record by error
    or accident.” “This rule is meant to ensure that the record re-
    flects what really happened in the district court, but not to
    6                                                  No. 17-1623
    enable the losing party to add new material to the record in
    order to collaterally attack the trial court’s judgment.” United
    States v. Banks, 
    405 F.3d 559
    , 567 (7th Cir. 2005).
    None of the documents Gallo seeks to add to the record
    are relevant to this appeal. Gallo’s proposed documents are
    (1) six documents containing employment records containing
    general praise of Gallo by third parties (A21 to A27, A30 to
    A31); (2) one document consisting of Exhibit A to the separa-
    tion agreement (A28), which reflected the agreed form for
    what the Mayo Clinic could say to Gallo’s prospective em-
    ployers; and (3) one document containing an email from
    Refuah confirming that Refuah was no longer considering
    Gallo for the part-time dermatologist position (A29). The evi-
    dence of third-party praise for Gallo is entirely irrelevant to
    this appeal regarding an alleged breach of contract. The ex-
    hibit to the agreement is likewise irrelevant because, as ex-
    plained below, Gallo has failed to refute the Mayo Clinic’s sig-
    nificant evidence that Refuah denied her employment for rea-
    sons unrelated to the credentialing form. There is no dispute
    that White did not follow the agreed upon reference form
    when he filled out Mount Sinai’s request. The exact content of
    the agreed form is thus unnecessary to this decision. Finally,
    the email is an unnecessary hearsay version of an email al-
    ready in the record. For those reasons, Gallo’s motion to sup-
    plement the record is denied.
    The Mayo Clinic seeks costs and attorney’s fees incurred
    in responding to the motion and requests that the Court strike
    references to the documents and argument based on those
    documents. Gallo has known that the form letter (as an exhibit
    to the separation agreement) was excluded from the record
    for some time. Indeed, in its summary judgment opinion, the
    No. 17-1623                                                                     7
    district court stated that neither side had put the form letter
    into the record. Gallo also made no effort to put the letter into
    the record in her motion to alter or amend the judgment.
    Gallo’s late attempt to add it to the appellate record now,
    along with irrelevant documents boasting of her credentials
    and a redundant email, is meritless. The Mayo Clinic’s motion
    is granted.
    B. Summary Judgment1
    We review the district court’s grant of summary judgment
    de novo, construing all facts and reasonable inferences in
    Gallo’s favor. Trentadue v. Redmon, 
    619 F.3d 648
    , 652 (7th Cir.
    2010). Summary judgment is appropriate “if the movant
    shows that there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact
    and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.”
    Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a). A genuine dispute of material fact exists
    if “the evidence is such that a reasonable jury could return a
    verdict for the nonmoving party.” Anderson v. Liberty Lobby,
    Inc., 
    477 U.S. 242
    , 248 (1986).
    To prevail on her breach of contract claim under Wiscon-
    sin law, Gallo needed to establish (1) the existence of a con-
    tract; (2) a breach of the contract; and (3) damages from the
    breach. See Matthews v. Wisconsin Energy Corp. Inc., 
    534 F.3d 1
    Gallo has waived any arguments regarding her tortious interference
    claim and her breach of contract claims based on derogatory or disparag-
    ing statements or based on the verbal employment reference language in
    the separation agreement, because she failed to address them before the
    district court. See United States v. 5443 Suffield Terrace, Skokie, Ill., 
    607 F.3d 504
    , 510 (7th Cir. 2010) (issue waived when not presented to the district
    court on summary judgment); Oates v. Discovery Zone, 
    116 F.3d 1161
    , 1168
    (7th Cir. 1997) (“[I]t is axiomatic that arguments not raised below are
    waived on appeal.”).
    8                                                  No. 17-1623
    547, 553 (7th Cir. 2008). The district court found that the Mayo
    Clinic’s return of the credentialing form to Mount Sinai was
    not a breach of the separation agreement because the agree-
    ment only applied to prospective employers seeking a refer-
    ence, and Mount Sinai was not a prospective employer. The
    district court also held that Gallo could not show damages re-
    sulting from anything the Mayo Clinic did—there was no ev-
    idence to indicate that the two “fair” ratings prevented Gallo
    from getting hired. The court further noted that the Mayo
    Clinic had shown sufficient evidence that Refuah had other
    reasons to not hire Gallo, including that it had other personnel
    available and that Gallo had been difficult to deal with. For
    those reasons, the court held that Gallo’s breach of contract
    claim failed.
    Reviewing the record de novo, the Court agrees that
    Gallo’s breach of contract claim fails. The evidence shows that
    the separation agreement did not apply to Mount Sinai’s cre-
    dentialing form request. The separation agreement is unam-
    biguous. It states: “The parties have agreed upon a letter of
    reference for Employee to be provided to potential employers
    seeking a reference.” This provision thus applies only to 1)
    potential employers 2) seeking a reference.
    It is undisputed that Mount Sinai was not a “potential em-
    ployer seeking a reference.” In the parties’ proposed findings
    of fact, Gallo admitted that she had no employment oppor-
    tunity with any entity other than Refuah:
    Proposed Finding of Fact 122. MSH [Mount Si-
    nai] had never offered Dr. Gallo an employment
    position at any MSH entity and had not prom-
    ised Dr. Gallo any future position at any MSH
    entity.
    No. 17-1623                                                  9
    ANSWER: Plaintiff admits Fact 122.
    Proposed Finding of Fact 141. Dr. Lebwohl, at
    no point, promised Dr. Gallo employment at
    MSH.
    ANSWER: Plaintiff admits Fact 141.
    Proposed Finding of Fact 142. The employment
    relationship was to be between Dr. Gallo and
    [Refuah] and not Dr. Gallo and MSH.
    ANSWER: Plaintiff admits Fact 142.
    Gallo nonetheless argues that the parties intended the sep-
    aration agreement to broadly apply to all potential employers.
    She says Mount Sinai was a potential employer, even if it was
    not Gallo’s imminent prospective employer. But the separation
    agreement does not apply to every potential employer. Such
    an interpretation would include every medical institution that
    might hire Gallo at any time in the future. The separation
    agreement instead limits itself to a potential employer seeking
    a reference. The limitless scope suggested by Gallo does not
    comport with the present facts and is inconsistent with her
    admissions. Those facts and admissions make clear that there
    was to be no employment relationship between Gallo and
    Mount Sinai. Only Refuah was potentially hiring Gallo. Fur-
    ther, the credentialing form was not a reference request.
    Mount Sinai sent the credentialing form only for purposes of
    determining whether Gallo could have privileges to perform
    procedures at Mount Sinai in order to supervise residents—
    not to hire Gallo. For these reasons, the Court declines to
    broadly read the contract to interpret the credentialing form
    as a “reference” request from a potential employer.
    10                                                       No. 17-1623
    Regardless, even if the separation agreement did apply to
    Mount Sinai’s request, Gallo cannot prove causation. Ma-
    nini’s declaration, which Gallo failed to refute,2 is dispositive.
    In that declaration, Manini made clear that Refuah’s decision
    to not hire Gallo was
    [N]ot based, in any way, on any credentialing
    decision by any other party; rather, the decision
    was based upon the combination of Dr. Gallo’s
    continued efforts to re-negotiate her employ-
    ment contract, her demand to make changes to
    the contract that were unacceptable to [Refuah]
    and the ability to fulfill [Refuah’s] staffing needs
    with a dermatologist who was already provid-
    ing dermatological services at [Refuah].
    Manini’s emails during the negotiation process support
    her declaration. On several occasions, Manini noted she
    “[couldn’t] stand [G]allo” and that “Gallo [was] driving
    [Refuah] nuts.” In May 2014, after Gallo requested 18 changes
    to the employment contract, Manini declared to another
    Refuah employee: “I’m happy to rescind the offer.” Lebwohl
    corroborated Manini’s declaration. In his deposition, he testi-
    fied that Refuah decided not to hire Gallo because of her end-
    less negotiating and Manini’s dislike of Gallo. Lebwohl also
    testified that Mount Sinai never completed the credentialing
    process. He explained that there was no need to credential
    Gallo “if the job was not there for her [at Refuah].”
    Gallo points to emails from Lebwohl in an attempt to cre-
    ate a disputed factual issue on causation. Lebwohl emailed
    2
    Despite being given the opportunity to do so on several occasions,
    Gallo’s attorney never deposed Manini.
    No. 17-1623                                                           11
    Gallo on May 15, 2014 and told her that her “application was
    not adequate for credentialing” by Mount Sinai and that
    “Refuah is therefore not waiting to offer you the job.” He also
    sent Gallo an email stating, “[s]ome people don’t realize the
    damage they do to others on a form they might think is unim-
    portant.” Any favorable inference from Lebwohl’s emails is
    rebutted by his clear deposition testimony. Lebwohl testified
    that the fair ratings were not the reason for Mount Sinai’s fail-
    ure to credential Gallo. In fact, Lebwohl testified that Mount
    Sinai never investigated the fair ratings as part of the creden-
    tialing process. He explained that the credentialing committee
    had asked him to look into the “fair” ratings, but he chose not
    to do so because Gallo “was already having this difficulty
    with Manini and the negotiations and we3 had somebody
    who was going to take the job.”
    Lebwohl also testified that he told Gallo about the fair rat-
    ings “in an attempt to help her so that she could find a job.”
    He explained, “I told her about the fair ratings and that the
    credentials committee had raised an issue with that and really
    intending her to use this as advice going forward, if she’s
    looking for a job, to try to make sure that whoever gave her
    3 Lebwohl’s use of the word “we” would suggest that Mount Sinai
    was a potential employer. There is no evidence in the record that Lebwohl
    had any decision-making influence in hiring Gallo as an employee at
    Refuah. Instead, because the Refuah position involved supervising Mount
    Sinai residents, Mount Sinai was involved in finding and approving phy-
    sicians for that supervision. In a letter sent by Lebwohl to White on No-
    vember 24, 2014, he confirms that the position at Refuah was filled by a
    physician at Mount Sinai who had the capacity to take on the additional
    responsibilities. While the two institutions clearly had a relationship,
    Gallo fails to point to any evidence that indicates Mount Sinai would em-
    ploy her.
    12                                                  No. 17-1623
    those fair ratings not be the one she goes to for an evaluation.”
    Even if Lebwohl’s emails raise a contested factual issue as to
    the credentialing of Gallo, there is no indication anyone at
    Refuah even saw the credentialing form submitted by White.
    This fact conclusively refutes the tenuous connection Gallo
    tries to draw between the credentialing form and her failure
    to receive the job.
    At bottom, the undisputed evidence indicates that Gallo
    was passed up by Refuah because of her over-demanding ne-
    gotiations and the availability of another individual to take
    the position. Drawing all factual inferences in Gallo’s favor,
    she has failed to show that the credentialing form—even if
    prohibited by the separation agreement—caused her any
    harm. Gallo’s breach of contract claim fails.
    III. Conclusion
    For these reasons, we AFFIRM the district court’s decision.