Yousef Ismail v. Megan J. Brennan , 654 F. App'x 240 ( 2016 )


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  •                         NONPRECEDENTIAL DISPOSITION
    To be cited only in accordance with Fed. R. App. P. 32.1
    United States Court of Appeals
    For the Seventh Circuit
    Chicago, Illinois 60604
    Argued April 27, 2016
    Decided June 28, 2016
    Before
    JOEL M. FLAUM, Circuit Judge
    DANIEL A. MANION, Circuit Judge
    ANN CLAIRE WILLIAMS, Circuit Judge
    No. 15-2701
    YOUSEF ISMAIL,                                  Appeal from the United States District
    Plaintiff-Appellant,                        Court for the Northern District of Illinois,
    Eastern Division.
    v.
    No. 11-cv-08812
    MEGAN J. BRENNAN,
    Postmaster General                              James B. Zagel,
    Defendant-Appellee.                        Judge.
    ORDER
    Yousef Ismail, who is of “Middle Eastern descent,” appeals the grant of summary
    judgment for his employer the United States Postal Service in this suit asserting claims
    under 42 U.S.C. §§ 2000e–2, 2000e–3 for disciplining him because of his race and
    national origin. Because the district court incorrectly concluded that Ismail had failed to
    establish a prima facie case of discrimination under McDonnell Douglas Corp. v. Green,
    
    411 U.S. 792
    (1973), we vacate the district court’s order and remand the case for further
    proceedings.
    No. 15-2701                                                                          Page 2
    Ismail, who was born in Israel and grew up in Jordan, started working as a letter
    carrier in the Carpentersville Post Office in 2001. He filed the first of his two suits
    against the Post Office in 2003, alleging that the postmaster of the Carpentersville Post
    Office, Ralph Kaiser, harassed and disciplined him because of his race and national
    origin. That suit ended with summary judgment being granted against him. See Ismail v.
    Potter, 
    2006 WL 2989293
    (N.D. Ill. Oct. 18, 2006).
    The events that give rise to Ismail’s second discrimination suit occurred on the
    snowy morning of December 10, 2010, when he was sorting the mail for his route. We
    repeat the facts in the light most favorable to Ismail, the party opposing summary
    judgment. See Brooklyn Bagel Boys, Inc. v. Earthgrains Refrigerated Dough Products, Inc.,
    
    212 F.3d 373
    , 377 (7th Cir. 2000). That day he was approached by his direct supervisor,
    Dawn Ellison, who asked if the snow would make him late delivering his mail. Ismail
    replied that he did not know. Anticipating a possible problem, Ellison alerted
    Postmaster Kaiser, who in turn approached Ismail in his casing unit (the area of the post
    office where the letter carriers sort the mail for their routes). Kaiser asked Ismail why he
    would be late given that less than an inch of snow had fallen that morning. Ismail
    responded that he didn’t anticipate being late but that if Kaiser wanted to observe him
    delivering his route he was welcome to do so.
    Shortly after Ismail began delivering his route, he noticed Kaiser sitting in his
    personal SUV watching him. Ismail ordinarily cut across the lawns of the homes on his
    route, but bushes blocked his path for the next stop, so he turned towards the sidewalk.
    Kaiser yelled out that the sidewalk had a foot of snow and ice debris and that cutting
    across the lawn would be the shortest path between the houses. When Ismail continued
    toward the sidewalk, Kaiser ordered him to walk instead on the street where there was
    no snow. Ismail believed that walking in the street was dangerous, so he took a couple
    of steps on the sidewalk to get around the bushes, stepped onto the lawn, and headed
    toward the house.
    Kaiser then got out of his vehicle, approached Ismail, and began screaming at
    Ismail that he was not following orders and would be disciplined. Ismail, fearing for his
    safety, pulled out his cell phone and called the police. A police officer later arrived,
    asked a few questions, and brushed off the incident as a routine workplace dispute.
    Upon returning to the post office, Kaiser contacted the Post Office’s labor
    relations department and explained that Ismail had disobeyed his orders when he
    continued to walk on snow and ice debris on the sidewalk. According to Kaiser, labor
    No. 15-2701                                                                        Page 3
    relations told him to have a second supervisor return with him to observe Ismail. Kaiser
    enlisted Ellison to return with him to follow Ismail.
    Kaiser and Ellison located Ismail on his route and watched him delivering mail
    to several houses. According to Ismail, he continued to deliver mail by cutting across
    the lawns of each home, except for two residences that had asked letter carriers not to
    walk on their lawns. When Ismail finished that street’s deliveries, he was approached
    by Ellison and Kaiser, who admonished him for failing to cut across lawns as instructed
    and for running late on his route. Ismail responded that he was doing the best he could
    and that he was on time for his route. Kaiser told Ismail to stop delivering mail and
    return to the post office.
    Kaiser followed Ismail back to the post office, where he took Ismail’s keys and
    sent him home on “emergency placement” for failing to follow orders and for
    performing his duties in an unsafe manner. Ismail was on emergency placement for
    17 days. During this time he was not allowed to work and he was not paid. When
    Ismail eventually returned, Kaiser issued him a two-week, paid suspension. Ismail
    received back pay for the majority of the 17 days that he served on emergency
    placement.
    Ismail filed an EEO complaint alleging that Kaiser had discriminated against him
    based on his race and national origin. In December 2011, Ismail brought this suit
    alleging that Kaiser disciplined him more harshly than other postal service employees
    because of his race and national origin.
    Ismail’s difficulties at work continued. Three months later, in March 2012, he had
    a verbal altercation with a coworker that resulted in both men being fired (though they
    were later reinstated). According to Ismail, David Sherrill, a fellow letter carrier,
    approached him one morning, cursed at him, and told him that he would “snap his
    neck.” Ismail alerted his supervisor, Dennis Arneson, who had both men write out
    statements about what had happened. Kaiser then put both men on emergency
    placement and issued letters of removal. Ismail and Sherrill both grieved their
    terminations and were eventually reinstated, though Sherrill’s grievance was resolved
    faster than Ismail’s, and he returned to work seven weeks earlier. Kaiser was not
    involved in the grievance resolution process.
    In June 2012 Ismail filed another EEO complaint about Kaiser’s conduct, alleging
    that Kaiser sent him a letter of removal in retaliation for his filing a lawsuit.
    No. 15-2701                                                                             Page 4
    In July, on Ismail’s first day back to work upon being reinstated, he had a
    confrontation with Kaiser that resulted in his being sent home for the day. Ismail was
    sorting mail for the day’s delivery in his casing unit when Kaiser and Arneson
    approached him with a workplace rules handbook. Three times, Kaiser says, he said
    “good morning” to Ismail while walking by his casing unit, and Ismail ignored him.
    Kaiser told Ismail to read the section of the manual relating to courteousness in the
    workplace and asked him if he understood what it meant. Ismail replied that he did.
    According to Kaiser, Ismail then threatened to kill him. Kaiser left Ismail’s casing unit
    and called the police. Arneson, who was standing nearby, did not hear any threat. An
    officer arrived and interviewed the three of them but concluded that Kaiser’s
    uncorroborated account was insufficient to arrest Ismail. Kaiser put Ismail on
    administrative leave for the rest of the day, and the officer escorted Ismail from the
    building.
    Ismail amended his EEO complaint to include these incidents and, in December
    2012, amended his complaint to add retaliation claims against Kaiser for the March and
    July incidents.
    The district court granted the Postal Service’s motion for summary judgment.
    Regarding Ismail’s claim of discrimination, the court concluded that he failed to
    establish a prima facie case through the indirect method of proof. Ismail was not
    meeting his employer’s legitimate business expectations, the court said, because he
    disobeyed Kaiser’s directive in December 2010 to walk on the street in order to avoid
    snow that had accumulated on the sidewalks of his route. Moreover, Ismail had not
    identified any similarly situated comparators who were treated more favorably.
    On appeal Ismail first challenges the district court’s conclusion that he failed to
    establish a prima facie case of discrimination. The court, he says, should not have relied
    on Kaiser's disputed testimony of his insubordination as the basis for concluding that
    he was not meeting his employer’s legitimate expectations. He adds that he should not
    have to show that he was meeting legitimate expectations because Kaiser is both the
    decision-maker and the person evaluating his performance.
    The district court erred in requiring Ismail to establish that he was meeting his
    employer’s legitimate expectations. Ordinarily, that factor must be established by a
    plaintiff seeking to state a prima facie case of discrimination, see McDonnell Douglas
    
    Corp., 411 U.S. at 802
    ; Gordon v. United Airlines, Inc., 
    246 F.3d 878
    , 885–86 (7th Cir. 2001).
    No. 15-2701                                                                            Page 5
    But the test is flexible and may be unnecessary where, as here, “the issue is whether the
    plaintiff was singled out for discipline based on a prohibited factor,” Curry v. Menard,
    Inc., 
    270 F.3d 473
    , 477 (7th Cir. 2001) (quotation and internal citation omitted), or where
    “the people judging [the plaintiff’s] performance were the same she accused of
    discriminating against her,” Oest v. Ill. Dept. Corr., 
    240 F.3d 605
    , 612 n.3 (7th Cir. 2001).
    Ismail next challenges the district court’s determination that he had not
    identified a similarly situated employee who received better treatment. He points to
    two individuals—not of Middle Eastern descent—who he believed were similarly
    situated employees yet were treated more favorably. First, he identified Don Daley, a
    letter carrier who had crashed his mail truck into a forklift and then left the scene of the
    accident without notifying his supervisor or cleaning up the broken glass on the
    roadway. Daley was not put on emergency placement but issued merely a 14-day
    suspension for “failure to perform your duties in a safe manner” and “failure to report
    an accident.” The district court acknowledged that Daley violated the same standard of
    conduct as Ismail—not performing his duties in a safe manner—but found Daley’s
    violation less severe because he admitted to having crashed his truck and failed to
    report it, whereas Ismail threatened workplace safety by refusing to accept
    responsibility for his conduct. But to establish an inferential case of discrimination,
    Ismail had to show only that Daley violated the same rules by engaging in an act of
    comparable seriousness but received better treatment. See Coleman v. Donahoe, 
    667 F.3d 835
    , 851 (7th Cir. 2012); Peirick v. IUPUI Athletics Dept., 
    510 F.3d 681
    , 689 (7th Cir. 2007);
    Ezell v. Potter, 
    400 F.3d 1041
    , 1050 (7th Cir. 2005). And a reasonable jury could conclude
    that Daley’s conduct, even if acknowledged, was far more dangerous—crashing his
    truck and leaving debris at the scene—than Ismail’s walking on top of snow. See Perez v.
    Thorntons, Inc., 
    731 F.3d 699
    , 704–05 (7th Cir. 2013) (jury must decide whether factual
    differences between extent and seriousness of two inventory control infractions
    supported employer’s differing discipline); 
    Coleman, 667 F.3d at 851
    (“[T]he employer
    cannot defeat a plaintiff’s prima facie case of discrimination on the theory that it applied
    its ‘no tolerance’ policy on threats to some workers while dismissing dangerous acts of
    others as mere ‘horseplay.’”); Srail v. Vill. of Lisle, 
    588 F.3d 940
    , 945 (7th Cir. 2009)
    (similarly situated comparator does not have to be identical in every respect and
    whether an employee is similarly situated is “usually a question for the fact-finder”).
    Ismail also challenges the court’s conclusion that a second comparator, Dana
    Hall, was not similarly situated because she was treated more harshly by being fired for
    her conduct. Hall, a window clerk, twice had reported to work acting erratically, as if
    she were intoxicated. The first time, Ellison watched Hall being rude to customers, slur
    No. 15-2701                                                                                Page 6
    her speech, make wild gestures with her arms, and nearly fall over; Ellison sent her
    home for the day but chose not to issue any discipline, a decision seconded by Kaiser.
    Less than three months later, Hall arrived at work smelling of alcohol, disregarded
    Kaiser’s instructions to secure a ride home, and drove her car out of the parking lot;
    Kaiser again declined to discipline her, though he did call the police to inform them that
    Hall might be intoxicated and was driving. Significantly, however, Hall was fired for
    unrelated “attendance issues,” not these two incidents involving intoxication. After the
    incidents she merely was referred, with Kaiser’s approval, to the employee assistance
    program and allowed to continue working. A reasonable jury could conclude that Hall
    was treated more favorably than Ismail because, unlike his immediate emergency
    placement and suspension, she was allowed to rectify her misconduct before facing any
    punishment. Moreover, the district court erred by characterizing Hall’s conduct as
    potentially not of comparable seriousness; the Postal Service admits that showing up to
    work intoxicated poses a safety risk, and that Hall disobeyed Kaiser’s direct order not to
    drive home.
    Because we believe that Ismail has established a prima facie case of
    discrimination, he still bears the burden of showing that the Postal Service’s legitimate,
    nondiscriminatory reason for disciplining him—that he posed a safety risk and failed to
    follow a direct order from his supervisor—is pretextual. See McDonnell Douglas 
    Corp., 411 U.S. at 802
    –03; Chaib v. Geo Grp., Inc., No. 15-1614, 
    2016 WL 1375869
    , at *3 (7th Cir.
    Apr. 6, 2016). This is an issue that the district court did not reach.
    But we also believe that Ismail has presented enough evidence to create a fact
    question concerning pretext. Establishing pretext requires Ismail to show that the
    employer’s stated reason for disciplining him was “a lie,” Naik v. Boehringer Ingelheim
    Pharm., Inc., 
    627 F.3d 596
    , 601 (7th Cir. 2010) (quoting Ineichen v. Ameritech, 
    410 F.3d 956
    ,
    961 (7th Cir. 2005)). As discussed above, Ismail provided evidence that Daley and Hall
    were situated similarly to him but treated more leniently. Because this evidence permits
    an inference that the defendant selectively enforced its policies on workplace safety and
    disobedience of supervisor orders, a fact question exists over the Postal Service’s stated
    reason for disciplining him. See 
    Coleman, 667 F.3d at 857
    (“[S]elective enforcement of a
    rule calls into question the veracity of the employer’s explanation.”); 
    Curry, 270 F.3d at 479
    ; 
    Gordon, 246 F.3d at 892
    ; Russell v. Bd. of Tr. of Univ. of Ill. at Chi., 
    243 F.3d 336
    , 342
    (7th Cir. 2001).
    What is more, Ismail has provided sufficient contextual evidence that a
    reasonable jury could find the Postal Service’s explanation for his discipline “fishy
    No. 15-2701                                                                            Page 7
    enough to support an inference that the real reason” was discriminatory. Loudermilk
    v. Best Pallet Co., 
    636 F.3d 312
    , 315 (7th Cir. 2011); 
    Coleman, 667 F.3d at 854
    –55. First,
    Kaiser testified in his deposition that he typically did not discipline employees and left
    such decisions to the discretion of the direct supervisors. Second, he didn’t normally
    observe letter carriers on their routes and this was the only time he ever instructed a
    mail carrier where to walk while delivering mail. Finally, when Kaiser put Ismail on
    emergency placement, it was only the second time he had ever put an employee on
    emergency placement in more than 20 years as postmaster at Carpentersville despite
    knowing that other employees had violated safety rules or disobeyed orders.
    One issue remains. Ismail also argues that the district court erred when it
    granted summary judgment against him on his retaliation claim because he did not
    provide evidence of a causal connection between a protected activity and an adverse
    employment action. But Ismail did provide such evidence by amassing a convincing
    mosaic of circumstantial evidence that would permit a reasonable juror to infer that his
    filing of various EEO complaints and this lawsuit resulted in adverse actions.
    See 
    Coleman, 667 F.3d at 860
    ; Leitgen v. Franciscan Skemp Healthcare, Inc., 
    630 F.3d 668
    , 673
    (7th Cir. 2011). Ismail provided evidence of suspicious timing: he pointed out that he
    was put on emergency placement and issued a letter of removal three months after
    filing this lawsuit, and he was accused of threatening Kaiser and sent home for the day
    only a few weeks after filing an EEO complaint. See 
    Coleman, 667 F.3d at 861
    (“[A]n
    interval of a few weeks or even months may provide probative evidence of the required
    causal nexus.”) Although “temporal proximity between an employee’s protected
    activity and an adverse employment action is rarely sufficient to show that the former
    caused the latter,” O’Leary v. Accretive Health Inc., 
    657 F.3d 625
    , 635 (7th Cir. 2011); see
    Scaife v. Cook Cnty., 
    446 F.3d 735
    , 742 (7th Cir. 2006), overruled on other grounds by Hill v.
    Tangherlini, 
    724 F.3d 965
    (7th Cir. 2013), Ismail also has provided evidence of pretext. He
    has introduced evidence that supports an inference that Kaiser lied when he stated that
    Ismail’s threat was the reason he called the police in July and had Ismail put on
    administrative leave. Ismail denies making any threat; Arneson, who was nearby, did
    not overhear any threat; and the police were unable to verify that a threat had been
    made.
    Accordingly, we VACATE the district court’s judgment, and REMAND for
    further proceedings.