Terrance McKinney v. Sheriff's Office of Whitley Co , 866 F.3d 803 ( 2017 )


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  •                               In the
    United States Court of Appeals
    For the Seventh Circuit
    ____________________
    No. 16-4131
    TERRANCE S. MCKINNEY,
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    v.
    OFFICE OF THE SHERIFF OF WHITLEY COUNTY,
    Defendant-Appellee.
    ____________________
    Appeal from the United States District Court for the
    Northern District of Indiana, Fort Wayne Division.
    No. 1:15-cv-79 — William C. Lee, Judge.
    ____________________
    ARGUED APRIL 19, 2017 — DECIDED AUGUST 8, 2017
    ____________________
    Before BAUER, POSNER, and HAMILTON, Circuit Judges.
    HAMILTON, Circuit Judge. In 2013 the Sheriff of Whitley
    County, Indiana hired the County’s first black police officer
    ever, Terrance McKinney. Nine months later, McKinney was
    fired. He sued for race discrimination. The district court
    granted summary judgment for the Office of the Sheriff, and
    McKinney has appealed.
    2                                                    No. 16-4131
    We reverse. Viewed in the light most favorable to plaintiff
    McKinney, his extensive evidence adds up to a strong case of
    race discrimination. As we explain in detail, the defendant has
    offered an ever-growing list of rationales for firing McKinney
    that fall apart in the face of his evidence. The Sheriff’s termi-
    nation letter provided three reasons for his discharge. Four
    days later, the Whitley County Board of Commissioners sent
    McKinney another letter that added two more reasons. After
    McKinney brought suit, the defense added three more rea-
    sons. Yet patch after patch, the defense arguments for sum-
    mary judgment still will not hold water. McKinney presented
    evidence that he was treated differently than his similarly sit-
    uated colleagues who are not black. He also presented sub-
    stantial evidence that the many rationales offered for firing
    him were baseless and pretextual. In addition, the district
    court erred by disregarding most of McKinney’s evidence, im-
    properly discounting his testimony as “self-serving,” and
    misreading our precedent on the “common actor” inference
    that is sometimes argued in discrimination cases. We remand
    for trial.
    I. Factual and Procedural Background
    A. McKinney’s Tenure as a Deputy Sheriff
    Because the Office of the Sheriff moved for summary judg-
    ment, we construe all evidence and present the facts in the
    light most favorable to McKinney, who was the non-moving
    party. E.g., Chaib v. GEO Group, Inc., 
    819 F.3d 337
    , 340 (7th Cir.
    2016). On August 5, 2013, then-Sheriff Mark Hodges hired
    McKinney as a full-time merit officer. This position entails a
    one-year probationary period during which the Sheriff may
    fire the officer at his sole discretion, i.e., without approval
    No. 16-4131                                                  3
    from the merit board. See 
    Ind. Code § 36-8-10-10
    (b). The pro-
    bationary period is intended to ensure that new officers are
    capable of performing their duties before they benefit from
    state law that requires good cause for firing and provides ex-
    tensive procedural protections. See 
    Ind. Code § 36-8-10-11
    .
    McKinney was Whitley County’s first black merit officer.
    Sheriff Hodges discussed McKinney’s race with him during
    his job interview, and McKinney later testified that he did not
    expect that he would experience racial discrimination at the
    Sheriff’s Office. After he began, however, a number of inci-
    dents started to make him feel uncomfortable. One officer
    used the “n-word” in front of him. Once when buying coffee,
    McKinney’s fellow officer said that he wanted his “coffee
    black like my partner.” McKinney also testified that the other
    officers refused to train him and sometimes would not speak
    to him. Sheriff Hodges told McKinney that he should watch
    the movie “42,” which is about Jackie Robinson breaking the
    color barrier in major league baseball in 1947. Hodges told
    McKinney that the movie would “help [him] out.”
    On May 15, 2014, Sheriff Hodges fired McKinney. The ter-
    mination notice gave three reasons: submitting false work
    hours while attending the Indiana Law Enforcement Acad-
    emy; violating the standard operating procedure that requires
    filing complete monthly reports; and violating the standard
    operating procedure that governs fueling county vehicles.
    Four days later, the Whitley County Board of Commissioners
    sent McKinney a termination letter that added two more rea-
    sons for his discharge: damaging a county vehicle and “fail-
    ure to complete a transport and follow verbal instructions.”
    After McKinney brought suit, the defense added three more
    reasons, claiming that McKinney once texted while driving,
    4                                                     No. 16-4131
    crashed a county vehicle, and was late transporting a juvenile
    to court. These various rationales and McKinney’s evidence
    undermining their credibility are discussed below in Part II-
    C.
    B. Discrimination Lawsuit
    After he was terminated, McKinney brought suit against
    the Office of the Sheriff of Whitley County and Deputy Sheriff
    Tony Helfrich on several theories. The only claim on appeal is
    McKinney’s claim against his employer, the Office of the Sher-
    iff itself, for race discrimination in violation of Title VII of the
    Civil Rights Act of 1964, 42 U.S.C. § 2000e–2. The Office of the
    Sheriff moved for summary judgment, arguing that McKin-
    ney “pointed to no direct evidence of racial discrimination.”
    The defense also argued that McKinney could not establish
    discrimination through the burden-shifting approach
    adapted from McDonnell Douglas Corp. v. Green, 
    411 U.S. 792
    (1973), because he did not meet the Sheriff’s legitimate em-
    ployment expectations. As evidence of this, the defense relied
    on Sheriff Hodges’ affidavit, which listed the various ration-
    ales that had accumulated since McKinney was fired.
    McKinney responded that the racial comments, social ex-
    clusion at work, and failure to train provided direct evidence
    of discrimination. He also submitted unusually detailed evi-
    dence—including testimony, interrogatory answers, relevant
    gas receipts, scheduling records, prisoner transport records,
    the Sheriff’s standard operating procedures, and much
    more—to show that the supposed reasons for firing him were
    not only wrong but so baseless as to support an inference of
    pretext, meaning dishonesty.
    No. 16-4131                                                    5
    The district court granted summary judgment for the de-
    fense. McKinney v. Office of the Sheriff of Whitley County, No.
    1:15-cv-79, 
    2016 WL 6680288
     (N.D. Ind. Nov. 14, 2016). The
    court wrote that McKinney failed to specify “any direct evi-
    dence of discrimination.” It also expressed displeasure with
    the format of McKinney’s response to the motion for sum-
    mary judgment, writing that McKinney “points in general to
    his Statement of Genuine Issues of Fact” but does “not specify
    which facts would constitute such direct evidence.” The court
    apparently refused to consider these facts, saying it “is not the
    Court’s job to sift through the record to determine whether
    there is sufficient evidence to support a party’s claim.” 
    2016 WL 6680288
    , at *5.
    The district court also determined that McKinney failed to
    establish a prima facie case under the McDonnell Douglas
    framework because he failed to meet the Sheriff’s legitimate
    employment expectations. The court based this conclusion al-
    most exclusively on Sheriff Hodges’ version of events from his
    affidavit. The court did not address most of McKinney’s evi-
    dence, writing that “all that McKinney offers is his own asser-
    tions that he was meeting Defendant’s legitimate job expecta-
    tions.” The court discounted this testimony as “self-serving,
    speculative, and conclusory.” In addition, the court noted the
    “strong presumpti[on]” against finding discrimination when
    the same person both hires and fires a plaintiff-employee: “If
    Sheriff Hodges wanted to discriminate against McKinney
    based on his race, he could have refused to hire him in the first
    place.”
    6                                                     No. 16-4131
    II. Analysis
    A. Legal Standards
    Summary judgment is appropriate only if the “materials
    in the record, including depositions, documents, electroni-
    cally stored information, affidavits or declarations, stipula-
    tions (including those made for purposes of the motion only),
    admissions, interrogatory answers, or other materials” show
    that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that
    the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.
    Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(c); Magin v. Monsanto Co., 
    420 F.3d 679
    , 686
    (7th Cir. 2005), citing Celotex Corp. v. Catrett, 
    477 U.S. 317
    , 322–
    23 (1986). To the extent the district court’s ruling was based on
    its local rules, we review the application of those rules for
    abuse of discretion. See Friend v. Valley View Comm. Unit School
    Dist. 365U, 
    789 F.3d 707
    , 710 (7th Cir. 2015); Harmon v. OKI
    Systems, 
    115 F.3d 477
    , 481 (7th Cir. 1997) (district court did not
    abuse discretion by overlooking moving defendant’s technical
    failure to comply with local summary judgment rule where
    opposing party was not prejudiced).
    Title VII prohibits an employer from discharging an em-
    ployee because of that person’s race. See 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-
    2(a)(1). A plaintiff may prove race discrimination either di-
    rectly or indirectly, and with a combination of direct and cir-
    cumstantial evidence. The direct method requires the plaintiff
    to set forth “sufficient evidence, either direct or circumstan-
    tial, that the employer’s discriminatory animus motivated an
    adverse employment action.” Coleman v. Donahoe, 
    667 F.3d 835
    , 845 (7th Cir. 2012). The indirect method allows a plaintiff
    to prove discrimination by using the burden-shifting ap-
    proach articulated in McDonnell Douglas Corp. v. Green, 
    411 U.S. 792
     (1973). See Coleman, 667 F.3d at 845.
    No. 16-4131                                                       7
    In Ortiz v. Werner Enterprises, Inc., 
    834 F.3d 760
    , 765 (7th
    Cir. 2016), we clarified that the “direct” and “indirect” meth-
    ods are not subject to different legal standards. Courts should
    not sort evidence of discrimination “into different piles, la-
    beled ‘direct’ and ‘indirect,’ that are evaluated differently.” Id.
    at 766. Instead, there is a single inquiry: it is “simply whether
    the evidence would permit a reasonable factfinder to con-
    clude that the plaintiff’s race … caused the discharge.” Id. at
    765. Our decision in Ortiz did not alter “McDonnell Douglas or
    any other burden-shifting framework, no matter what it is
    called as a shorthand.” Id. at 766.
    The McDonnell Douglas burden-shifting framework is de-
    signed to “sharpen the inquiry into the elusive factual ques-
    tion of intentional discrimination.” Texas Dep't of Community
    Affairs v. Burdine, 
    450 U.S. 248
    , 255 n.8 (1981). The plaintiff car-
    ries the initial burden of establishing a prima facie case of dis-
    crimination, which can be accomplished by setting forth evi-
    dence that: “(1) she is a member of a protected class, (2) her
    job performance met [the employer’s] legitimate expectations,
    (3) she suffered an adverse employment action, and (4) an-
    other similarly situated individual who was not in the pro-
    tected class was treated more favorably than the plain-
    tiff.” Burks v. Wisconsin Dep’t of Transportation, 
    464 F.3d 744
    ,
    750–51 (7th Cir. 2006) (citation omitted). Once established,
    this prima facie case creates a presumption of discrimination,
    and the “burden then must shift to the employer to articulate
    some legitimate, nondiscriminatory reason” for its employ-
    ment decision. McDonnell Douglas, 
    411 U.S. at 802
    . “When the
    employer does so, the burden shifts back to the plaintiff, who
    must present evidence that the stated reason is a ‘pretext,’
    8                                                   No. 16-4131
    which in turn permits an inference of unlawful discrimina-
    tion.” Coleman, 667 F.3d at 845, quoting McDonnell Doug-
    las, 
    411 U.S. at 804
    .
    B. Plaintiff’s Presentation of Evidence
    It is undisputed that McKinney is a member of a protected
    class and suffered an adverse employment action. To defeat
    summary judgment by the burden-shifting route, McKinney
    must also come forward with evidence that he was meeting
    the Sheriff’s legitimate employment expectations and that a
    similarly situated employee who is not in his protected class
    was treated more favorably. McKinney presented substantial
    documentary and testimonial evidence to support his claim,
    but the district court seems to have disregarded most of his
    evidence in favor of Sheriff Hodges’ affidavit. We first sort out
    the evidence properly before the district court and then turn
    to the employer’s stated rationales for firing McKinney.
    The employer’s motion for summary judgment was typi-
    cal of many such motions in employment discrimination
    cases. It offered plausible rationales for the employer’s action
    and challenged the plaintiff, who has the burden of persua-
    sion on all or nearly all issues, to come forward with enough
    evidence to reach a jury.
    Plaintiff responded with three documents. Docket entry 30
    in the district court docket was a 25-page legal memorandum
    in opposition to the motion. Docket entry 31 was called Plain-
    tiff’s Statement of Genuine Disputes, and it had over 30 pages
    of detailed factual assertions with numerous citations to sup-
    porting evidence. The third document was an evidentiary ap-
    pendix to the legal memorandum, containing around 125
    No. 16-4131                                                     9
    pages of the evidence cited in the Statement of Genuine Dis-
    putes.
    The district court disregarded most of McKinney’s evi-
    dence, and that choice lies at the root of the erroneous grant
    of summary judgment. The court said McKinney presented
    no direct evidence of racial discrimination because he “points
    in general to his Statement of Genuine Issues of Fact” but does
    “not specify which facts would constitute such direct evi-
    dence.” The court seemed to indicate that this rendered
    McKinney’s filings noncompliant with the Northern District
    of Indiana’s Local Rule 56-1, but it did not explain further. In-
    stead, the court noted that it need not “sift through the record
    to determine whether there is sufficient evidence to support a
    party’s claim” and it is the “advocate’s job … to make it easy
    for the court to rule in his client’s favor.” 
    2016 WL 6680288
    , at
    *5 (citations and quotations omitted.)
    The district court was entitled to seek specific guidance
    through the record, but McKinney provided it here. A party
    seeking or opposing summary judgment must support his
    factual assertions about disputed facts with citations to “par-
    ticular parts of the materials in the record,” and the court need
    consider only the cited materials (though it may consider
    other materials in the record). Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(c)(1) & (c)(3).
    A party opposing summary judgment does not meet this ob-
    ligation by simply dropping a stack of paper into the court file
    (literally or electronically) and asserting that someone who
    reads the stack will find a genuine issue of material fact. Ac-
    cordingly, we have routinely affirmed grants of summary
    judgment when non-moving parties have failed to guide the
    court through their evidence. See, e.g., Sommerfield v. City of
    Chicago, — F.3d —, —, Nos. 12-1506 & 13-1265, 
    2017 WL 10
                                                        No. 16-4131
    2962243, at *3 (7th Cir. July 12, 2017) (affirming partial sum-
    mary judgment: the judge “rightly declined to wade through
    the voluminous record to find evidence on a counseled plain-
    tiff’s behalf”); Ammons v. Aramark Uniform Services, Inc., 
    368 F.3d 809
    , 817–18 (7th Cir. 2004) (“[W]here a non-moving party
    denies a factual allegation by the party moving for summary
    judgment, that denial must include a specific reference to the
    affidavit or other part of the record that supports such a de-
    nial. Citations to an entire transcript of a deposition or to a
    lengthy exhibit are not specific and are, accordingly, inappro-
    priate.”); see also Friend, 789 F.3d at 710–11; Davis v. Carter, 
    452 F.3d 686
    , 692 (7th Cir. 2006).
    Like many district courts, the Northern District of Indiana
    has adopted local rules regarding the format of summary
    judgment filings aimed at avoiding such failings and promot-
    ing sound decisions on the merits instead of procedural
    slipups. We review for abuse of discretion the district court’s
    enforcement of its local rules. Friend, 789 F.3d at 710.
    In this case, the court’s explanation of this important issue
    was terse, and its exact concerns about McKinney’s filings are
    unclear. As best we can tell, there was no valid ground for re-
    fusing to consider McKinney’s evidence. Plaintiff’s legal
    memorandum, statement of genuine issues of fact, and sup-
    porting evidence provide what the district court said was
    missing: a detailed and organized guide to plaintiff’s evidence
    supporting his assertions of disputed facts and his legal argu-
    ments.
    The district court asserted that McKinney failed to “spec-
    ify which facts” support his claim, but in saying that, the court
    cited one of many pages on which McKinney did include a ci-
    No. 16-4131                                                               11
    tation to the specific, relevant facts: “McKinney in the State-
    ment of Genuine Disputes has presented at length in Dispute
    9 what a reasonable trier of fact could determine includes di-
    rect evidence supporting racial discrimination.” Dkt. No. 30
    at 11. Turning to “Dispute 9,” the reader finds detailed factual
    assertions about arguably direct evidence of discrimination,
    supported by specific citations to supporting evidence. Dkt.
    No. 31 at 18.
    We see nothing in the Northern District’s Local Rule 56-1
    that plaintiff failed to satisfy, and the district court and the
    employer have not identified such a failing. 1 The rule specifies
    the “Required Filings” for a party opposing summary judg-
    ment, which include a response brief and any materials that
    the party claims raise a genuine dispute. In addition, the rule
    notes that the “response brief or its appendix must include a
    section labeled ‘Statement of Genuine Disputes’ that identifies
    the material facts that the party contends are genuinely dis-
    puted.”
    1   The Northern District’s Local Rule 56-1 states in relevant part:
    (b) Opposing Party’s Obligations.
    (1) Required Filings. A party opposing the motion must, within
    28 days after the movant serves the motion, file and serve
    (A) a response brief; and
    (B) any materials that the party contends raise a genuine dis-
    pute.
    (2) Content of Response Brief or Appendix. The response brief or
    its appendix must include a section labeled “Statement of Genu-
    ine Disputes” that identifies the material facts that the party con-
    tends are genuinely disputed so as to make a trial necessary.
    12                                                    No. 16-4131
    McKinney’s brief opened by noting his two concurrent fil-
    ings and how they complied with local rules: “This Brief in
    response, as well as the Appendix, are filed pursuant to Fed-
    eral Rule of Civil Procedure 56 and N.D. Ind. L.R. 56-1(b). The
    Appendix, which is separately filed pursuant to (b)(2), in-
    cludes a section labeled ‘Statement of Genuine Disputes’ and
    contains the material facts that the Plaintiff contends are re-
    lated to facts that are genuinely disputed.” Dkt. No. 30 at 1. In
    addition, the second page of McKinney’s brief included cita-
    tions to the “Statement of Genuine Disputes,” listing where
    each factual dispute was discussed in that filing. Id. at 2.
    It is also unclear what action, if any, the district court took
    in response to the perceived deficiency of McKinney’s filings.
    The court did not strike any part of the filings, and it expressly
    considered portions of McKinney’s testimonial evidence.
    However, it did not address most of McKinney’s other evi-
    dence, which, to be frank, demolishes the employer’s shifting
    list of rationales. The court instead relied on the Sheriff’s affi-
    davit to determine that McKinney did not meet the Sheriff’s
    legitimate employment expectations. Because the court did
    not explain its apparent rejection of McKinney’s evidence and
    we see no violation of Local Rule 56-1, we must conclude that
    the court abused its discretion when it failed to consider fully
    McKinney’s evidence.
    C. The Employer’s Stated Rationales for Firing Plaintiff
    The most striking features of this lawsuit are the sheer
    number of rationales the defense has offered for firing plain-
    tiff and the quality and volume of evidence plaintiff has col-
    lected to undermine the accuracy and even the honesty of
    those rationales. We review these matters in detail, for they
    are the heart of the case.
    No. 16-4131                                                 13
    1. The Sheriff’s Original Reasons
    When Sheriff Hodges fired McKinney, he gave three rea-
    sons. None holds water, at least for purposes of summary
    judgment.
    a. Falsified Hours at the Indiana Law Enforcement
    Academy?
    First, the Sheriff claims, McKinney falsified his hours
    while attending the Indiana Law Enforcement Academy. That
    Academy is in Plainfield, Indiana, which is approximately 140
    miles from the Sheriff’s Department in Whitley County.
    McKinney began a fifteen-week course at the Academy in
    March 2014. The course entailed ten hours per day at the
    Academy (including breakfast and lunch) from Monday to
    Thursday. McKinney stayed overnight on the Academy’s
    campus and ate most meals in the Academy’s cafeteria.
    McKinney’s supposedly falsified hours are the hours he rec-
    orded for breakfast and lunch to reach ten-hour work days.
    McKinney presented ample evidence that he did not fail
    to meet legitimate employment expectations by falsifying
    hours and that this rationale was false. The Sheriff has no
    written policy governing how to calculate compensable hours
    while attending the Academy. McKinney presented emails
    showing (a) that he had asked both the Sheriff’s administra-
    tive assistant and the Chief Deputy Sheriff how he should rec-
    ord his hours at the Academy, and (b) that both confirmed he
    should record ten hours per day. McKinney also testified that
    he asked Sheriff Hodges himself about his hours at the Acad-
    emy, and the Sheriff said: “It’s ten-hour days. Any time that
    you do outside of that ten hours, like you got night classes …
    just blot down your time.” And the Sheriff later confirmed
    14                                                    No. 16-4131
    that McKinney was correctly documenting his hours, telling
    him “just keep doing what you’re doing.” Finally, McKinney
    presented timesheets showing how other officers had calcu-
    lated their time while attending the Academy. None of them
    clocked out for lunch. They all just recorded ten-hour days.
    Based on this evidence, a jury could reasonably infer that
    Sheriff Hodges’ first stated rationale for firing McKinney was
    not just a misunderstanding but a pretext.
    b. Missing Monthly Report?
    Second, the Sheriff claimed McKinney did not meet legiti-
    mate employment expectations because he failed to comply
    with the standard operating procedure that required him to
    submit complete monthly reports. As a preliminary matter,
    there simply is no standard operating procedure governing
    monthly reports. McKinney testified to this effect, and the
    Sheriff appears to acknowledge this in an interrogatory re-
    sponse.
    The supposed infraction involved one missing monthly re-
    port, and that was for a month that McKinney spent entirely
    in training at the Academy. McKinney testified that since the
    monthly report simply lists his law enforcement activities
    (e.g., number of traffic stops, arrests, etc.), he had no reason to
    submit it while training at the Academy. Since he had already
    submitted his gas receipts, it would have amounted to
    “turn[ing] in a blank document.” McKinney testified that no
    one told him to submit a monthly report for his time at the
    Academy until four days before his termination. Once he was
    told the report was needed, he submitted it within an hour.
    The defendant has not tried to refute McKinney’s evidence on
    this point. It simply states on appeal that he “did not turn in
    No. 16-4131                                                   15
    his monthly report as required by the Whitley County Sher-
    iff’s Department [standard operating procedures].” Firing
    someone for violating a standard operating procedure that
    does not actually exist, or about which he was not told, could
    easily be found to be a pretext.
    c. Misusing Gasoline Credit Card?
    Third, the Sheriff claimed McKinney violated the standard
    operating procedure that governs fueling county vehicles.
    This is so, the Sheriff said, because McKinney used his official
    gasoline credit card to fuel his county-provided car while at-
    tending the Academy in Plainfield instead of using the desig-
    nated county gas facility in Whitley County. In this instance,
    there was a standard operating procedure, but McKinney pre-
    sented substantial evidence that he did not actually violate it.
    He also presented evidence that he received express permis-
    sion from his supervisors to use his credit card and that other
    officers used their credit cards in the same way he had. This
    evidence would allow a jury to find that the Sheriff’s rationale
    was both wrong and dishonest.
    The relevant part of the standard operating procedure
    reads: “Gasoline credit cards shall be … Used only with a
    county commission [i.e., vehicle] when fueling at the county
    facility is not available; Used only for purchases of gas and oil
    without prior approval from the Sheriff or Chief Deputy.”
    McKinney presented evidence that the county facility in
    Whitley was “not available” when he was approximately 140
    miles away at the Academy in Plainfield. McKinney testified
    that several senior officers instructed him that he was re-
    quired to keep his fuel tank at least half full in case of emer-
    gencies. Basic math shows that his squad car could not make
    the round trip to and from Plainfield on one tank of gas, let
    16                                                    No. 16-4131
    alone half a tank, so he had to use his gas credit card to fuel
    his vehicle when he was at the Academy. McKinney also tes-
    tified that before leaving for the Academy the Chief Deputy
    Sheriff asked: “[Y]ou got your gasoline credit cards? ... you’re
    gonna need those.” Finally, McKinney presented dozens of
    gas receipts from other officers that spanned several years.
    They had also used their gas cards to fuel their county-owned vehi-
    cles while attending the Academy. Again, this evidence would
    easily support an inference that the Sheriff’s rationale for fir-
    ing McKinney was not merely mistaken but dishonest.
    2. The Commissioners’ Rationales
    Four days after the Sheriff issued the initial termination
    letter, the Whitley County Board of Commissioners added
    two new reasons for McKinney’s discharge. The County
    Board said that McKinney damaged a county vehicle and
    failed to complete a detainee transport. For summary judg-
    ment purposes, these two rationales fare as poorly as the Sher-
    iff’s first three.
    The vehicle damage, as explained by McKinney’s testi-
    mony, was a slight ding to the side view mirror of his squad
    car. This damage occurred when he was responding quickly
    to an emergency message that an officer was in trouble. After
    the emergency was resolved (fortunately it turned out to be a
    false alarm), McKinney reported the ding on his mirror, and
    he was told by a detective that it was “No big deal.” Nonethe-
    less, the Sheriff testified that McKinney violated the standard
    operating procedure that requires officers to report an acci-
    dent from the scene where the accident occurred.
    No. 16-4131                                                  17
    Once again, the Sheriff seems to have misconstrued his
    own standard operating procedures. The policy says in rele-
    vant part: “All such crashes shall be investigated at the scene,
    as soon as possible, unless an emergency or other justifiable
    reason causes a delay.” McKinney presented evidence that he
    was responding to an emergency. The employer has not dis-
    puted his evidence. Based on this record, McKinney’s conduct
    simply did not violate the standard operating procedure.
    What’s more, McKinney testified that another new officer
    who was white had an accident that tore off the front bumper
    of his squad car. That officer did not receive a reprimand. In-
    stead, other officers joked about the accident and gave him
    the wrecked bumper as a gag gift at a Christmas party.
    The Commissioners’ second new rationale was McKin-
    ney’s “Failure to complete a transport” and to follow certain
    unspecified instructions. McKinney presented evidence that
    he completed the transport as ordered. He submitted the ac-
    tual transport records that include the date, time, and location
    of the completed transport, along with signatures by the ap-
    proving officials. As for the “instructions,” McKinney testi-
    fied in detail, explaining how he followed the exact instruc-
    tions that he received. Again, considering the evidence in the
    light reasonably most favorable to McKinney, his evidence re-
    futing the charges is so specific that a jury could reasonably
    conclude that these added rationales for his firing were not
    only mistaken but dishonest.
    3. Still More Rationales
    After McKinney brought suit, the defense offered three
    more rationales for McKinney’s termination: texting while
    driving; an accident in a vehicle; and a late transport of a ju-
    18                                                    No. 16-4131
    venile to court. The Sheriff’s Office did not develop these ra-
    tionales and mentions them only in passing on appeal.
    McKinney offered evidence controverting or explaining these
    as well, just as with the first five rationales for his termination.
    The Sheriff testified that another officer reported that she
    saw McKinney texting while driving. McKinney told the
    Sheriff that he was not texting, but rather using his phone’s
    GPS function. The Sheriff said “regardless, he admitted to us-
    ing his phone while driving which is contrary to our [stand-
    ard operating procedures] and is extremely unsafe.” Yet
    again, the Sheriff misreads his own standard operating proce-
    dures. The relevant provision says only that cell phones may
    “not be used for texting while the vehicle is in motion,” and it
    specifically permits some uses of cell phones: “Use of cellular
    telephones while driving is permitted only when it can be
    done safely.” McKinney presented evidence that he was not
    texting and that he was using his phone in a way permitted
    by the relevant standard operating procedure.
    The Sheriff’s Office also asserts that McKinney had a sec-
    ond “chargeable accident” with a vehicle (the first was the
    ding to his side mirror), but does not explain any further. In
    his deposition McKinney indicated this accident occurred
    while he was driving in a snowstorm and slid off the road into
    a guardrail.
    The defense also now claims that McKinney was late
    transporting a juvenile to a court proceeding. Again, McKin-
    ney explained the incident in detailed testimony. In short, he
    was told that two juveniles were at the same location when
    they were not, and as a result, the transport was about one
    minute late.
    No. 16-4131                                                     19
    The Sheriff’s Office failed to explain these rationales at all,
    and McKinney presented evidence to challenge or explain
    them. The fact that the defendant did not offer any of these
    rationales at the time it fired McKinney also calls into ques-
    tion whether any of these reasons actually motivated the fir-
    ing, so these could easily be deemed pretexts, as well.
    D. Sufficient Evidence to Survive Summary Judgment
    Thus, McKinney offered substantial circumstantial evi-
    dence at summary judgment to support his claim of racial dis-
    crimination. The core question is “simply whether [McKin-
    ney’s] evidence would permit a reasonable factfinder to con-
    clude that the plaintiff’s race … caused the discharge.” Ortiz,
    834 F.3d at 765. McKinney’s evidence would easily support
    such a finding. He offered various forms of evidence—includ-
    ing testimony, interrogatory answers, internal department
    documents, and more—to show that: officers and supervisors
    made inappropriate racial remarks to him; he was socially os-
    tracized; supervisors failed to train him adequately; he was
    fired for conduct that supervisors expressly authorized (e.g.,
    recording ten-hour days at the Academy, using his gas card,
    and more); he was treated more harshly than other employees
    for the same conduct (e.g., dinging his side mirror); he was
    penalized for violating standard operating procedures that ei-
    ther did not exist or that he did not in fact violate (e.g., the
    monthly report, use of his cell phone’s GPS function); and
    more. In response, the Sheriff’s Office has offered sparse evi-
    dence, relying almost exclusively on an affidavit from Sheriff
    Hodges. After reviewing this evidence, a reasonable fact-
    finder could conclude that McKinney was fired because of his
    race.
    20                                                    No. 16-4131
    McKinney also offered sufficient evidence to satisfy the
    McDonnell Douglas burden-shifting framework. At the first
    stage of McDonnell Douglas, where McKinney must establish
    a prima facie case, our inquiry is objective. We do not inquire
    into the subjective belief of the employer, such as whether the
    employer made an honest mistake. The McDonnell Douglas di-
    vision of labor reserves that consideration for the pretext anal-
    ysis. E.g., Gilty v. Village of Oak Park, 
    919 F.2d 1247
    , 1251 (7th
    Cir. 1990) (“[T]he determination of whether a plaintiff is ‘qual-
    ified’ requires an objective analysis. As such, an employer’s
    knowledge or lack of knowledge is of no relevance at the
    prima facie stage of the case.”); see also Pilditch v. Board of Ed-
    ucation of City of Chicago, 
    3 F.3d 1113
    , 1117 (7th Cir. 1993) (at
    prima facie stage, relevant question is not whether employee
    satisfied employer’s legitimate employment expectations “in
    the subjective sense” but rather “whether the employee is able
    to put on objective evidence that he is sufficiently competent
    to satisfy the legitimate expectations of an employer”).
    Here, McKinney presented evidence that rebuts defend-
    ant’s claim that he did not meet legitimate employment expec-
    tations. He also presented evidence that shows he was treated
    differently than similarly situated employees who were not in
    his protected class. Because it is also undisputed that McKin-
    ney is a member of a protected class and suffered an adverse
    employment action, he has established a prima facie case of
    discrimination. See Burks, 
    464 F.3d at
    750–51.
    The Sheriff’s Office has satisfied the second step of McDon-
    nell Douglas by articulating what would be legitimate, non-
    discriminatory reasons for the termination. See McDonnell
    Douglas, 
    411 U.S. at 802
    . That shifted the burden to McKinney
    to offer evidence that the stated reasons were pretexts. As we
    No. 16-4131                                                       21
    explained above, McKinney has presented ample evidence
    that the stated non-discriminatory reasons are pretextual. Ev-
    idence that the employer has offered false reasons for its ac-
    tions permits an inference of unlawful discrimination. See
    Coleman, 667 F.3d at 845, quoting McDonnell Douglas, 
    411 U.S. at 804
    ; Reeves v. Sanderson Plumbing Products, Inc., 
    530 U.S. 133
    ,
    147 (2000) (“it is permissible for the trier of fact to infer the ul-
    timate fact of discrimination from the falsity of the employer’s
    explanation”).
    E. Additional Issues
    The foregoing warrants reversal, but we write further to
    note two additional legal errors in the summary judgment or-
    der. First, the court was wrong to discount McKinney’s testi-
    mony as “self-serving, speculative, and conclusory.” Our
    cases for at least the past fifteen years teach that “Self‐serving
    affidavits can indeed be a legitimate method of introducing
    facts on summary judgment.” Widmar v. Sun Chemical Corp.,
    
    772 F.3d 457
    , 459–60 (7th Cir. 2014) (citations omitted). We
    have tried often to correct “the misconception that evidence
    presented in a ‘self‐serving’ affidavit is never sufficient to
    thwart a summary judgment motion.” Payne v. Pauley, 
    337 F.3d 767
    , 773 (7th Cir. 2003); see especially Hill v. Tangherlini,
    
    724 F.3d 965
    , 967 & n.1 (7th Cir. 2013) (overruling earlier cases
    indicating “self-serving” evidence could not be used to show
    genuine dispute of fact) (“Deposition testimony, affidavits, re-
    sponses to interrogatories, and other written statements by
    their nature are self‐serving. As we have repeatedly empha-
    sized over the past decade, the term ‘self-serving’ must not be
    used to denigrate perfectly admissible evidence through
    which a party tries to present its side of the story at summary
    judgment.”) (citations omitted).
    22                                                    No. 16-4131
    Second, the district court seems to have overestimated the
    strength of the “common actor” inference when it wrote that
    if the Sheriff had wanted to discriminate against McKinney,
    he would have refused to hire him in the first place. As we
    have explained, the “common actor inference says it is reason-
    able to assume that if a person was unbiased at Time A (when
    he decided to hire the plaintiff), he was also unbiased at Time
    B (when he fired the plaintiff).” Perez v. Thorntons, Inc., 
    731 F.3d 699
    , 710 (7th Cir. 2013). The district court used this prin-
    ciple by relying on our decision in EEOC v. Our Lady of Resur-
    rection Medical Center, 
    77 F.3d 145
    , 151–52 (7th Cir. 1996). Our
    cases since then, however, have clarified that this inference is
    not a conclusive presumption and that it should be consid-
    ered by the ultimate trier of fact rather than on summary judg-
    ment or the pleadings. See, e.g., Perez, 731 F.3d at 709 (“The
    ‘common actor’ or ‘same actor’ inference is a reasonable infer-
    ence that may be argued to the jury, but it is not a conclusive
    presumption that applies as a matter of law. … That inference
    is ‘something for the trier of fact to consider.’”) (citations and
    quotations omitted); Herrnreiter v. Chicago Housing Authority,
    
    315 F.3d 742
    , 747 (7th Cir. 2002) (“It is misleading to suggest
    (as some cases do) that [the common actor inference] creates
    a ‘presumption’ of nondiscrimination, as that would imply
    that the employee must meet it or lose his case. It is just some-
    thing for the trier of fact to consider.”) (citations omitted); Ka-
    das v. MCI Systemhouse Corp., 
    255 F.3d 359
    , 361 (7th Cir. 2001)
    (“We emphatically rejected the ‘same-actor inference’ in the
    race-discrimination setting in Johnson v. Zema Systems
    Corp., 
    170 F.3d 734
    , 745 (7th Cir. 1999)… .”).
    We have tried to impose limits on the common actor infer-
    ence to ensure it does not outgrow its usefulness. The infer-
    ence may be helpful in some limited situations, which is why
    No. 16-4131                                                                  23
    “we allow the jury to hear such evidence and weigh it for
    what it is worth.” Perez, 731 F.3d at 710. There are many other
    occasions, however, where it is unsound to infer the absence
    of discrimination simply because the same person both hired
    and fired the plaintiff-employee. Examples abound. The same
    supervisor may need to fill a position quickly, then later when
    the exigency subsides, fire the employee due to unlawful bias.
    The same supervisor could both hire a woman and then re-
    fuse to promote her for discriminatory reasons. The same su-
    pervisor could both hire a woman and later fire her because
    she became pregnant. Cf. Young v. United Parcel Service, Inc.,
    575 U.S. —, —, 
    135 S. Ct. 1338
    , 1343 (2015) (“The Preg-
    nancy Discrimination Act makes clear that Title VII’s prohibi-
    tion against sex discrimination applies to discrimination
    based on pregnancy.”). The list could go on, but only one
    more example is needed. The same supervisor could hire a
    county’s first black police officer, hoping there would be no
    racial friction in the workplace. But after it became clear that
    other officers would not fully accept their new black col-
    league, that same supervisor could fire the black officer be-
    cause of his race based on a mistaken notion of the “greater
    good” of the department. 2
    For the foregoing reasons, we REVERSE the district court’s
    grant of summary judgment, and we REMAND for further
    2 Our caution toward the common actor inference is supported by
    substantial research in the social sciences. See, e.g., Victor D. Quintanilla &
    Cheryl R. Kaiser, The Same-Actor Inference of Nondiscrimination: Moral Cre-
    dentialing and the Psychological and Legal Licensing of Bias, 
    104 Cal. L. Rev. 1
    ,
    6, 11–18 (2016) (“the implicit behavioral theories underpinning the same-
    actor doctrine have been discredited by decades of psychological science
    on aversive racism, implicit bias, and moral licensing”).
    24                                           No. 16-4131
    proceedings on McKinney’s Title VII claim consistent with
    this opinion.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 16-4131

Citation Numbers: 866 F.3d 803

Judges: Hamilton

Filed Date: 8/8/2017

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 1/12/2023

Authorities (17)

Clyde Ammons v. Aramark Uniform Services, Inc. , 368 F.3d 809 ( 2004 )

Pamela J. Burks v. Wisconsin Department of Transportation, ... , 464 F.3d 744 ( 2006 )

Joseph Harmon and Marilyn Harmon v. Oki Systems and Crown ... , 115 F.3d 477 ( 1997 )

Richard M. Kadas v. MCI Systemhouse Corporation , 255 F.3d 359 ( 2001 )

Jon Magin v. Monsanto Company, Pharmacia Corporation and Cp ... , 420 F.3d 679 ( 2005 )

Barbara Payne v. Michael Pauley , 337 F.3d 767 ( 2003 )

EQUAL EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY COMMISSION, Plaintiff-... , 77 F.3d 145 ( 1996 )

Siegfried Herrnreiter v. Chicago Housing Authority , 315 F.3d 742 ( 2002 )

Selester GILTY, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. VILLAGE OF OAK PARK,... , 919 F.2d 1247 ( 1990 )

Deidre Davis v. Yolanda Carter , 452 F.3d 686 ( 2006 )

79-fair-emplpraccas-bna-584-75-empl-prac-dec-p-45787-leon-johnson , 170 F.3d 734 ( 1999 )

62-fair-emplpraccas-bna-1216-62-empl-prac-dec-p-42518-walter-e , 3 F.3d 1113 ( 1993 )

McDonnell Douglas Corp. v. Green , 93 S. Ct. 1817 ( 1973 )

Texas Department of Community Affairs v. Burdine , 101 S. Ct. 1089 ( 1981 )

Young v. United Parcel Service, Inc. , 135 S. Ct. 1338 ( 2015 )

Celotex Corp. v. Catrett, Administratrix of the Estate of ... , 106 S. Ct. 2548 ( 1986 )

Reeves v. Sanderson Plumbing Products, Inc. , 120 S. Ct. 2097 ( 2000 )

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