Groves v. South Bend Community School Corp., No. 21-3336 (7th Cir. 2022)

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Justia Opinion Summary

The School District includes four high schools. Groves, who is white, started at the District in 1991 as a teacher. In 2007 he became the Adams High School athletic director. In 2017 Groves applied to serve as Corporation Director of Athletics, a new, District-wide position. Superintendent Spells interviewed four applicants and recommended Gavin, who is Black, explaining that Gavin inspired confidence in his ability to repair the District’s relationship with the Indiana High School Athletic Association; Groves interviewed poorly and seemed to boast of firing 24 coaches during his tenure. Noncompliance with Association regulations occurred under Groves’s watch at Adams.

Groves sued under Title VII, noting that Spells is also Black. The District later eliminated the Corporation Director of Athletics position and created a hybrid Dean of Students/Athletics position at each of the four high schools. Groves, Gavin, and seven other candidates applied for the four new positions. The Riley High School position went to Gavin. Groves added a claim of retaliation based on the elimination of his position. The Seventh Circuit affirmed the summary rejection of his claims. Groves was not substantially more qualified than Gavin. Both met the criteria that the District required for the position. The court rejected a claim of pretext. Although Gavin’s criminal background came to light after the challenged hiring decisions, the District interpreted its background check policy as applying only to external hires, not existing employees moving to new positions.

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In the United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit ____________________ No. 21-3336 WILLIAM GROVES, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. SOUTH BEND COMMUNITY SCHOOL CORPORATION, Defendant-Appellee. ____________________ Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Indiana, South Bend Division. No. 3:18-cv-00979 — Jon E. DeGuilio, Chief Judge. ____________________ ARGUED SEPTEMBER 19, 2022 — DECIDED OCTOBER 19, 2022 ____________________ Before WOOD, SCUDDER, and JACKSON-AKIWUMI, Circuit Judges. SCUDDER, Circuit Judge. After not receiving two athletic administration positions at public high schools in South Bend, Indiana, William Groves invoked Title VII and brought reverse discrimination claims. The district court carefully reviewed the evidence presented at summary judgment and saw nothing allowing a jury to nd that the School District, in 2 No. 21-3336 o ering the positions to a Black applicant, discriminated against Groves because he is white. We agree and a rm. I A South Bend Community School Corporation, which we will refer to as the School District, consists of 29 schools, including four traditional high schools: Adams, Clay, Riley, and Washington. William Groves is a longtime employee of the School District. He started in 1991 as a social studies teacher and in 2007 became the athletic director at Adams High School. In 2017 Groves applied to serve as Corporation Director of Athletics, a newly created, District-wide position. Superintendent Kenneth Spells interviewed four applicants and ultimately recommended Seabe Gavin for the position. Dr. Spells explained that Gavin interviewed very well, inspiring con dence in his ability to repair the School District’s strained relationship with the Indiana High School Athletic Association. Yet Groves interviewed poorly, with Dr. Spells nding it particularly o -putting that Groves seemed to boast of ring 24 coaches during his tenure at Adams High School. And so too did Dr. Spells question Groves’s ability to restore the School District’s relationship with the IHSAA given that prior instances of noncompliance with athletics regulations occurred under Groves’s watch at Adams. The school board hired Gavin for the position. Groves responded to not receiving the job by invoking Title VII and suing the School District on a theory of reverse race discrimination. He rooted his claim in the contention that he was so much more quali ed than Gavin for the Corporation No. 21-3336 3 Director of Athletics position that his not receiving it had to be the product of unlawful discrimination. He alleged that Dr. Spells, himself Black, wanted Gavin, who is also Black, in the role. Groves’s lawsuit further focused on a second position he applied for that likewise went to Gavin. In March 2019 the School District announced the elimination of the Corporation Director of Athletics position and the creation of a hybrid Dean of Students/Athletics position at each of the four high schools. Groves, Gavin, and seven other candidates applied for the four new positions. Although Groves received an interview, an o er never followed. Gavin, however, fared better. Principal Shawn Henderson o ered the Riley High School position to Gavin, explaining that he earned the job in large part based on the quality of the answers he gave during his interview. Groves amended his original complaint to add a claim of race discrimination based on his not receiving one of the new Dean of Students/Athletics positions and a claim of retaliation for the elimination of his athletic director position. B Discovery ensued and in time the School District moved for summary judgment on all counts. The district court granted the motion, explaining that Groves had failed to identify any evidence upon which a jury could rely to nd he did not receive the two jobs in question because of his race. The district court’s reasoning proceeded in a couple of steps. First, the court rejected Groves’s contention that he was much more quali ed than Gavin for either of the two positions—so much so, at least as Groves insisted, that race 4 No. 21-3336 discrimination was the only explanation for his not receiving either job. The district court explained that the record evidence did not show Groves to be substantially more quali ed than Gavin. To the contrary, while Groves had more experience as an athletic director, Gavin had relevant high school coaching experience. Further, both applicants, the district court continued, met the only criteria that the School District required (and posted) for the position—holding a bachelor’s degree and driver’s license. Second, the district court addressed an aspect of Gavin’s background that came to light well after the challenged hiring decisions (in fact, during discovery) that most troubled Groves: Gavin had a criminal record—indeed two felony convictions from the 1990s. Groves found it shocking the School District did not know about these convictions and claimed that the District chose to bury its head in the sand by purposely not following its written policy of running background checks on new hires. By Groves’s account, this too showed that the reasons the School District gave for not hiring him for either of the two positions were false and pretextual, with the real reason being that he was white. The district court rejected this contention because the evidence showed that the School District interpreted its background check policy as applying only to external hires, not existing employees moving to a new position. At bottom, the district court emphasized that it saw nothing in the record suggesting that race ever came up, directly or indirectly, during the challenged hiring processes. So summary judgment was proper for the School District on Groves’s claims of race discrimination. The district court likewise No. 21-3336 5 rejected Groves’s claim of retaliation because he had abandoned it at summary judgment. Groves now appeals, challenging the district court’s adverse rulings on his two race discrimination claims. II A In reviewing the district court’s summary judgment decision, we take our own fresh look at the record and draw all inferences in favor of the nonmoving party—here, Groves. See Joll v. Valparaiso Cmty. Sch., 953 F.3d 923, 928 (7th Cir. 2020). The overarching question “is simply whether the evidence would permit a reasonable fact nder to conclude that the plainti ’s race” caused the adverse employment action. Ortiz v. Werner Enters., Inc., 834 F.3d 760, 765 (7th Cir. 2016). At summary judgement, Groves invoked the familiar McDonnell Douglas burden-shifting framework in an e ort to press his claim of reverse race discrimination to trial. See McDonnell Douglas Corp. v. Green, 411 U.S. 792 (1973). Under McDonnell Douglas, the plainti shoulders the initial burden of showing what the law calls a prima facie case of discrimination. See id. at 802; Bless v. Cook County Sheri ’s O ., 9 F.4th 565, 574 (7th Cir. 2021) (outlining the four elements of a prima facie case of reverse race discrimination). The burden then shifts to the defendant employer to o er a nondiscriminatory justi cation for the challenged employment action. At the nal step, the plainti must prove that the employer’s proffered nondiscriminatory reason amounted to pretext for discrimination. See Purtue v. Wisconsin Dep’t of Corr., 963 F.3d 598, 602 (7th Cir. 2020). 6 No. 21-3336 Plainti s like Groves most often seek to show pretext by pointing to “weaknesses, implausibilities, inconsistencies, or contradictions” in the nondiscriminatory justi cation that would permit a reasonable jury to infer that the employer did not tell the truth. Parker v. Brooks Life Sci., Inc., 39 F.4th 931, 938 (7th Cir. 2022) (quoting Marnocha v. St. Vincent Hosp. & Health Care Ctr., Inc., 986 F.3d 711, 721 (7th Cir. 2021)). But identifying an inconsistency (or even a lie) is not necessarily su cient to prove that the employer’s rationale was pretext for discrimination. What ultimately matters is causation: the plainti must point to evidence that would allow a jury to nd a connection between the statutorily protected factor (here, race) and the adverse action (here, Groves not receiving either of the two athletic administration jobs). See Joll, 953 F.3d at 929. Right to it, the controlling question is “whether a reasonable jury could nd prohibited discrimination.” Bass v. Joliet Pub. Sch. Dist. No. 86, 746 F.3d 835, 840 (7th Cir. 2014). B The parties agree that the case turns on the nal factor in the McDonnell Douglas framework—pretext. To fend o summary judgment, Groves had to show not only that the School District lied about its reason for not hiring him , but also that the true reason was because of racial discrimination. He did not clear this hurdle. Start with Groves’s contention that the School District disregarded its background check policy when hiring Gavin to serve as the Corporation Director of Athletics. See Baines v. Walgreen Co., 863 F.3d 656, 664 (7th Cir. 2017) (“An employer’s unusual deviation from standard procedures can serve as circumstantial evidence of discrimination.”). The district court rightly recognized that Groves did not address the School No. 21-3336 7 District’s approach to internal hires with evidence—all he has is his own speculation. He identi ed no instances of the School District running background checks on existing employees seeking new, internal positions and o ered no personal knowledge of the District’s actual practices. Groves’s evidentiary shortcoming proves fatal because, for its part, the School District came forward with the explanation that it has always viewed its policy as applying only to external hires. On the record Groves assembled, he fell short of identifying a factual dispute for a jury to resolve at trial. It was his burden to do so to defeat summary judgment. Groves fared no better on his second contention that he was far more quali ed than Gavin for the position in question. Here, too, the district court was right to conclude that Groves was only looking at half of the evidentiary picture. Yes, he may have been the more quali ed candidate on paper alone. But the School District explained that side-by-side resume comparisons were not only the measure. How applicants performed in interviews greatly mattered, and, on this score, the record showed that Gavin outperformed Groves by a long shot. Dr. Spells conducted the interviews and later testi ed that Gavin inspired con dence that he could help the School District rebuild its relationship with the IHSAA. Groves’s interview, on the other hand, did not go well and left Dr. Spells uneasy about hiring him. These assessments, subjective though they may be, were entirely proper, especially given the absence of anything in the record suggesting that considerations of race in uenced Dr. Spells’s decision to hire Gavin as the School District’s Corporation Director of Athletics. 8 No. 21-3336 On this record, Groves has failed to convince us that there would be “no dispute among reasonable persons of impartial judgment that [he] was clearly better quali ed for the position.” Robertson v. Dep’t of Health Servs., 949 F.3d 371, 381 (7th Cir. 2020) (emphasis in original) (quoting Millbrook v. IBP, Inc., 280 F.3d 1169, 1180–81 (7th Cir. 2002)); see also Joll, 953 F.3d at 934 (explaining that the Millbrook rule applies when competing quali cations account for the plainti ’s only evidence). C Groves’s second claim concerning the Dean of Students/Athletics position also fell short. Once again the evidence before the district court at summary judgment showed that Gavin received the role at Riley High School based largely on the quality of his interview. Principal Shawn Henderson oversaw the interview and testi ed that, on balance, Gavin performed well and showed himself quali ed for the new position. Groves, by contrast, interviewed poorly, ranking last among all nine applicants in the scoring compiled by the School District’s interview committee. Furthermore, the di erence in quali cations on paper between Groves and Gavin had narrowed by the time the School District created the new position: Gavin had accumulated two more years of relevant experience by serving as the Corporation Director of Athletics. Having taken our own look at the evidence, we see no error in the district court’s entry of summary judgment for the School District on this claim. III Groves advances a range of other contentions he sees as suggesting pretext and, by extension, reverse race No. 21-3336 9 discrimination. We have considered each of these points and nd none of them additive or persuasive. In the end, Groves’s case su ered from a failure of proof—he alleged a theory and account of reverse race discrimination but ultimately never backed it with enough evidence to allow a jury to nd in his favor. For these reasons, we AFFIRM.
Primary Holding

Seventh Circuit rejects Title VII reverse discrimination claims by a high school athletic director, passed over for promotion.


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