Janice LaRiviere v. Board Trustees of Southern Ill
Janice LaRiviere v. Board Trustees of Southern Ill
Opinion
Janice LaRiviere is an African-American woman who worked at Southern Illinois University-Edwardsville ("SIUE") for fifteen years. After several conflicts with coworkers, LaRiviere was notified that she would not be reappointed to her position. Immediately afterwards, she was transferred to a new office with less than satisfactory conditions. She sued SIUE and her supervisors. The district court granted summary judgment for defendants on all claims. Because LaRiviere has not identified evidence that her ethnicity was the reason for her termination or of a causal connection between protected activity and her termination, we affirm.
I. BACKGROUND
The following facts are undisputed. In 2002, Southern Illinois University-Edwardsville hired Janice LaRiviere on a continuing appointment as an Assistant Director of Building Maintenance. Her time with the Maintenance Department was uneventful until March of 2011, when LaRiviere learned that her supervisor was retiring. She spoke with Kenneth Neher-SIUE's Vice Chancellor for Administration-about becoming the new Director of Facilities Management. She asked if SIUE would waive two requirements: that the position be publicly posted and filled by someone with an engineering degree (which LaRiviere does not have). Neher declined to disregard those requirements and hire LaRiviere.
Instead, Neher hired Paul Fuligni to be the Director of Facilities Management. Fuligni was a (nearly) thirty-year Navy veteran-having served as a civil engineer with supervisory authority over hundreds of employees. Despite his manifest qualifications, LaRiviere believed she had been unfairly passed over. She filed two state court discrimination lawsuits challenging SIUE's hiring decisions. Both were dismissed. The state court dismissed the second lawsuit on August 14, 2014; the appeal ended in July 2015.
Meanwhile, Fuligni hired Donna Meyer to fill a newly created position-Associate Director of the Facilities Department. LaRiviere reported directly to Meyer, who reported to Fuligni. She resented the management styles adopted by her new supervisors.
Over the next several years, LaRiviere had several conflicts with coworkers. On multiple instances, she refused to sign a Position Description Questionnaire, a document prepared by her supervisor which defined her duties and responsibilities. In April 2013, LaRiviere refused to sign an updated PDQ-prepared by Meyer-because she objected to the new duties and responsibilities outlined within. In early 2016, Meyer gave LaRiviere an updated PDQ which, LaRiviere believed, did not accurately reflect her true duties. Ultimately, she signed the document but also wrote that she was "signing under duress."
The record contains other contentious workplace interactions. During one meeting, *359 LaRiviere referred to a group of architects as "paper pushers" and stated that she should receive a bonus for meeting with all of "these people." In March 2016, LaRiviere submitted sick leave and vacation requests for a two-week period. She wasn't ill and tentatively planned to work each of those days. But LaRiviere didn't want to comply with a recently implemented 48-hour notice requirement for leave in the event her plans changed.
Notwithstanding these incidents, LaRiviere received positive performance reviews. During her time at SIUE, she received no written reprimands and only one oral reprimand (for refusing to discipline a subordinate employee).
On May 5, 2016, SIUE notified LaRiviere that she would not be reappointed to her position. Pursuant to the applicable personnel policies, that meant her employment would end in a year. The district court found-and LaRiviere doesn't deny-that employees who have not been reappointed are often transferred to a different office to serve out their term. That's exactly what happened here. After making the decision to not reappoint LaRiviere, Fuligni transferred her to a building located at 420 University Park Drive.
The recently-built University Park building contained both offices and laboratories. Upon relocating, LaRiviere identified a number of deficiencies-including discolored drinking water, high humidity, and a refrigerator with apparently hazardous material (labeled "Student Sheep Brains"). Maintenance addressed all of LaRiviere's concerns, except for the high humidity, within ten days. After LaRiviere's termination, SIUE replaced her with a Caucasian man without a college degree.
LaRiviere brought suit against SIUE, Neher, Fuligni, and Meyer. Her Fourth Amended Complaint advanced claims for discrimination, retaliation, infliction of emotional distress, and breach of contract. At summary judgment, the district court granted judgment for the defendants on all counts. LaRiviere appealed the judgment with respect only to her Title VII discrimination and retaliation claims.
II. ANALYSIS
We review the district court's summary judgment decision
de novo
and draw all reasonable inferences in LaRiviere's favor.
Burritt v. Ditlefsen
,
The district court analyzed LaRiviere's Title VII claims by inquiring whether she had identified any "direct" or "indirect" evidence. This court has roundly rejected using "disparate methods" to analyze evidence of discrimination.
Ortiz v. Werner Enterprises, Inc.
,
Unmistakable evidence of racial animus-racial epithets or explicitly race-motivated treatment-makes for simple analysis. The more complicated cases arise when there is no smoking gun showing intentional discrimination. Then, courts
*360
may draw upon the familiar
McDonnell Douglas
burden-shifting framework to determine if triable issues exist.
McDonnell Douglas Corp. v. Green
,
We begin with discrimination. LaRiviere primarily argues that she suffered an adverse employment action when SIUE reassigned her to a new building. But that part of the
prima facie
case isn't in dispute. Everyone agrees that her termination was adverse, and LaRiviere's transfer to a new office with subpar working conditions seems to be as well.
Vance v. Ball State Univ.
,
LaRiviere makes no attempt to argue that coworkers ever made racially derogatory comments to her or others. She doesn't identify appreciable circumstantial evidence of racial animus either. In his deposition, Neher testified that employees who have not been reappointed are commonly transferred to another building to serve out their term. LaRiviere never identified contradictory evidence, nor does she challenge that assertion on appeal. Rather, she merely argues that "[s]imilarly situated white employees were not treated as shabbily as Plaintiff" because "[n]one of the other white managers in Facilities Management were ostracized and forced to join" LaRiviere in the other building. (Appellant's Br. at 18.) That's not enough to create a triable issue. SIU didn't fire any other Facilities managers around this time, and LaRiviere can't create a genuine issue by arguing that "there is no evidence in this case anyone else was terminated at this time but [me]."
Kampmier v. Emeritus Corp.
,
Her retaliation claim fares no better. LaRiviere argues that SIUE terminated her in retaliation for her prior state court lawsuits against SIUE. But her appeal in the second state court suit ended in July 2015. SIUE didn't make the decision to not reappoint LaRiviere until May 5, 2016, approximately ten months later. In her brief, she admits that "suspicious timing alone" may not support a reasonable inference of retaliation but argues that suspicious timing "together with other facts" may. Appellant's Br. at 16 (citations omitted). She never indicates what those other facts might be. Like with her discrimination claim, the record contains no evidence of SIUE decision-making premised on those state court lawsuits, and there aren't any similarly-situated employees. We've repeatedly held that similar intervals between the protected activity and adverse action are too long to suggest a causal nexus without additional evidence.
See, e.g.
,
Leonard v. E. Illinois Univ
.,
*361
Paluck v. Gooding Rubber Co.
,
III. CONCLUSION
LaRiviere did not identify evidence showing that SIUE terminated her because she was a member of a protected class. And there's also insufficient evidence to support her claim that SIUE terminated her employment because she previously filed discrimination lawsuits. For these reasons, we AFFIRM.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Janice LARIVIERE, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. BOARD OF TRUSTEES OF SOUTHERN ILLINOIS UNIVERSITY, Et Al., Defendants-Appellees.
- Cited By
- 67 cases
- Status
- Published