Szany v. Garcia et al
Filing
374
OPINION AND ORDER: Plaintiff's Motion for Leave to file an oversized brief 324 is GRANTED; Plaintiff's Motion for Leave to file a Seventh Amended Complaint 326 is DENIED; Plaintiff's Motion to Strike the Declaration of Captain Je ff Long 335 is DENIED; Defendant's Motion to Strike the Declaration of Denise Szany 344 is GRANTED; Plaintiff's Motion for Leave to File a Statement of Genuine Disputes of Material Fact 348 is DENIED; and Plaintiff's Objections to Docket 363 [DE 364 are OVERRULED. The Defendant the City of Hammond's Motion for Summary Judgment 308 is GRANTED. The Clerk shall ENTER FINAL JUDGMENT in favor of the City of Hammond. With judgment in favor of the City, the only rem aining claims are Indiana state law claims between two Indiana residents concerning an incident that took place in Indiana, and there is no federal jurisdiction over this lawsuit. Garcia's Motion for Summary Judgment 306 is DENIED AS MOOT, and the claims against Garcia are DISMISSED, without prejudice. If Szany wants to pursue those claims, she'll have to do so in state court. The Clerk is directed to CLOSE the case. Signed by Judge Philip P Simon on 5/28/2020. (bas)
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UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
NORTHERN DISTRICT OF INDIANA
HAMMOND DIVISION
DENISE SZANY,
Plaintiff,
v.
JAIME GARCIA, and
CITY OF HAMMOND,
Defendants.
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Case No. 2:17-cv-74-PPS-JPK
OPINION AND ORDER
Plaintiff Denise Szany, a Corporal with the Hammond Police Department, has
sued the City of Hammond and Jaime Garcia, a fellow Corporal in the Hammond Police
Department. The lawsuit stems primarily from an incident in October 2016 in which
Garcia grabbed and held Szany by her vest while they were at the station. A few
minutes later, when Szany went to get something from her locker, Garcia came up
behind her and slapped her on the buttocks with an open hand. Szany has sued Garcia
under state law for battery and false imprisonment and has brought Title VII claims for
sexual harassment and retaliation against the City.
Both defendants have moved for summary judgment. Szany and the City have
also filed a variety of ancillary motions in connection with summary judgment,
including motions to strike and a motion to amend the complaint (for the seventh time).
As outlined below, I will grant and deny some of these motions and will also overrule
Szany’s objections to the Magistrate Judge’s order on various motions to seal. In the
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end, I will grant summary judgment in favor of the City. The claims against Garcia, all
of which are state law claims, will be dismissed without prejudice to be pursued in state
court if Szany so chooses.
Background
Denise Szany is an officer with the Hammond Police Department and has been
one since 2006. Before that, she worked in the Lake County Sheriff’s Department for
several years and is thus a seasoned law enforcement professional. Defendant Jaime
Garcia was likewise an officer with the Hammond PD at the time of the events in
question and, like Szany, held the rank of Corporal. He was hired by Hammond in 2008
but is no longer on the force. And while the parties have directed me to various other
points in time, some more relevant than others, and a plethora of additional facts, the
key events in this case took place in October 2016 and the weeks following. They remain
relatively straightforward. What’s more, the key facts are largely undisputed, but I have
noted the parties’ different versions or the different inferences they ask me to draw
where necessary. Here’s what happened.
Around 11:00 PM on October 19, 2016, Szany entered the briefing room at the
police station to sign out her patrol car for the night and begin her shift. Garcia was in
the briefing room, along with several other police officers. Garcia previously loaned his
flashlight to Szany, and Garcia apparently noticed that she was wearing it in her gun
belt that night. Unprovoked and without saying anything, Garcia went up to Szany and
grabbed her by the collar of her vest. She told him to “get your hands off me” as he
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refused to let go, and she shoved Garcia as she backed up through a doorway. She
apparently then said “Don’t touch me” to Garcia, at which point he apparently decided
to double down and reached at Szany’s gun belt, where the flashlight was. Szany then
responded to the effect of “Don’t grab my shit … What? Do you want your flashlight
back?” Once they had exited the briefing room, it seems Garcia let go of Szany. This
entire incident took place in under a minute. And while Szany certainly did not
appreciate Garcia’s unwanted touching, she testified that there was nothing overtly
sexual (in the sense of a proposition) about the encounter from her perspective. [DE
309-1, Szany Dep. Tr. 83-84, 87, 93-94, 107-109.] But no party disputes the fact that
Garcia grabbed Szany without provocation or her explicit consent—although Garcia
maintains it was only “horseplay” between the two of them. [DE 309-2, Sgt. Mosier Rpt.
at p. 4.]
Minutes later, after things had seemingly calmed down, Szany re-entered the
briefing room to get her body camera from her locker. [DE 309-1, Szany Dep. Tr. 129.]
As she was turned away from him, Garcia walked up behind Szany and struck her on
the right buttock with an open hand. [Id. at 130.] He slapped her. Garcia then ran out of
the room. [Id. at 131.] There’s a dispute between Szany and Garcia about what words
were exchanged between the two after the slap, but the dispute about the exact
language used isn’t particularly material. Szany testified that she said, “Are you
kidding me?” [id. at 136] and then “I’m going to sue you,” “I’m going to sue your ass
off,” or words to that effect [Id. at 150.] Garcia and other officers present reported that as
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he slapped her, Garcia said, “good game” and that Szany responded that she “would
pay off her mortgage after she contacts her lawyer,” but Szany denied that Garcia ever
said, “good game.” [DE 309-2, Sgt. Mosier Rpt. at p. 3; DE 309-1 Szany Dep. Tr. 134.] In
any event, it is undisputed that Garcia struck Szany on the rear end with an open hand,
removed his hand shortly after striking her, and then ran out of the room.
At her deposition, Szany testified that she had not been subjected to any sexual
harassment prior to the events of October 19, 2016. Furthermore, she testified that since
October 19, 2016, she had not experienced any instances of sexual harassment from
Garcia, or anyone else within Hammond PD. That said, she did say there was a culture
of “joking” on the force between officers. It would occasionally include physical contact,
such as a nudge or light punch, and Szany testified that she would sometimes
participate; although, she testified she often wasn’t in the mood. In that vein, she
testified to a prior incident in which she and Garcia touched one another (he grabbed
her knee or legs and she punched him in the arm) after which she informed a
supervisor that Garcia was “annoying.” [DE 309-1, Szany Dep. Tr. 55-56, 58-60, 73, 82.]
She never filed a formal complaint or followed up on her verbal complaint that Garcia
was annoying. In another incident, Garcia asked Szany if she thought she was “too
good for him” and then walked shoulder to shoulder next to her waiting for an answer.
But she testified she did not perceive the interaction to be sexual, or even harassment at
the time, and that she did not report it. [DE 307-1, Szany Dep. Tr. 58-60.] But she
testified that the October 2016 incident when Garcia struck her backside was different.
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[Id. at 171.]
On October 20, the night after the altercation, Szany reported what happened
between her and Garcia to Sergeant Tom LaPosa, the acting supervisor on duty. [DE
309-1, Szany Dep. Tr. 248-249.] LaPosa informed her he would need to take the issue up
the chain of command within Hammond PD, to Lieutenant Tichy, who was not at the
station that night. [Id. at 250.] Szany testified she felt Sgt. LaPosa should have
immediately reached out to Lt. Tichy that night, but to her knowledge, he spoke with
him the following day. [Id. at 251.] Szany likewise met with and told Lt. Tichy about the
incident the following night when both were at the station. [Id. at 262.] Lt. Tichy told her
that he was going to contact Garcia’s direct supervisor (Lieutenant Berdine) and report
the matter to Captain Jeff Long. Lt. Tichy later asked Szany to file a formal
supplemental report. [Id. at 264.]
A formal investigation commenced thereafter. Garcia was notified by the Chief
of Police that he was the target of an investigation on October 24, 2016. [DE 309-2 at 29,
Ltr. to J. Garcia.] Captain Long directed the lieutenants in charge of each shift to direct
Garcia to have no contact with Szany and to ensure that the two of them did not work
the same shift. [DE 309-5, Aff. of J. Long.] Sergeant Anthony Mosier undertook the lead
role in investigating the incident. Throughout November 2016, Sgt. Mosier met with
and interviewed the officers who were present in the briefing room on the night in
question. [DE 309-2, Rpt. of Sgt. Mosier.] That included meeting with Szany first on
October 26 for an initial meeting and then on November 1 to conduct a full interview.
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[Id. at 25.] Sgt. Mosier then prepared a report which was signed and dated November
29, 2016. The report concluded that Garcia’s conduct violated Rules 16.1 and 16.2 of the
Hammond PD Rules and Regulations and Standard of Conduct, both of which relate to
officer conduct and professionalism. [Id.]
At her deposition, Szany testified that she had no criticisms of the investigation
as it was originally handled. [DE 309-1, Szany Dep. Tr. 264-65.] But in her opposition to
summary judgment, she raises numerous issues stemming from the investigation and
its results, including an argument that Garcia’s suspension was not valid because it did
not comply with certain laws or regulations. Szany focuses most of her attention on the
sufficiency of the punishment that Hammond PD doled out to Garcia. Szany points to
payroll records which she says show Garcia could make up the time he lost from his
paycheck during the suspension and that he may have even worked one of the days he
was supposedly on suspension. She likewise points out that while Sgt. Mosier’s
investigation concluded that Garcia violated the Hammond PD rules and regulations in
November 2016, the dates for Garcia’s suspension were not set out until February 2017
(after Szany filed her lawsuit). Deputy Chief Short testified at his deposition that he did
not know when he received Sgt. Mosier’s report. [DE 313-2, Short Dep. Tr. 17-22.] He
testified he was unsure when he had conversations with Captain Long or Chief
Doughty because he took time off for the Thanksgiving and Christmas holidays, as well
as deer season around the same time. [Id.] But it seems undisputed that those
conversations did take place and that action against Garcia was taken by Deputy Chief
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Short.
Szany further questions Hammond’s response to the incident by suggesting that
Garcia did not serve the five-day suspension for his violation until March 27, 2017, and
that it was served intermittently between March 27 and May 23. [DE 231-6.] The dates
of the suspension were settled on February 27, 2017, which as Szany notes was 12 days
after she filed her lawsuit. Presumably the inference she’s asking the Court to make (her
rather convoluted briefing is not helpful on this point), is that Garcia only actually
served his suspension because she sued the City. She also points that Garcia’s
suspension was “invalid” because it violated a 48-hour rule regarding suspensions that
she fails to develop in her briefing with any real clarity. She further states that despite
April 22, 2017 being a proposed date of Garcia’s suspension, he worked that day as a
police officer. I include these facts because they form a large part of Szany’s brief, but as
discussed below, have little to no legal bearing on the result in this case.
Szany also points me to other inappropriate (to say the least) actions by Garcia
against other women who were not members of the Hammond PD. 1 One thread of
evidence relates to allegations between Garcia and his ex-wife, culminating in his exwife obtaining an order of protection against Garcia in October 2014. His wife also has
Szany submitted 60 exhibits, totaling well over a thousand pages, in connection with
her opposition to summary judgment. The Court has reviewed the cited portions of that
evidence but is admittedly left somewhat in the dark by Szany’s counsel’s failure to
provide context for many of the quoted portions. That has made it difficult to
understand relevance of many of the “facts” alluded to by Szany in her briefing.
1
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stated, albeit not in testimony under oath, that Garcia was physically abusive towards
her. As a result of the order of protection, Garcia was stripped of his police-issued
firearm and police powers for one day. Thus, Hammond had at least some knowledge
of at least some of Garcia’s wife’s allegations when they happened. Szany also spends
large portions of her brief detailing Garcia’s inappropriate behavior towards two young
women who participated in a police “ride along” with Garcia that occurred in spring
2019, well-after this lawsuit was filed and more than two years after the incident
between Szany and Garcia. Garcia was alleged to have spoken inappropriately about
sex with the two young women (one of whom was a minor) and allegedly touched
them on their legs, buttocks and chest during the ride along. As a result of those
allegations, Garcia resigned from his job. But there’s no real connection between the
events and Szany. Accordingly, I need not go into any further detail about either of
these incidents because they do not involve Szany, and thus, as discussed later in the
opinion, they are not material to the issues before me on summary judgment.
Szany also brings up allegations of inappropriate conduct by other Hammond
police officers, none of which involves Garcia or Szany. One incident involved explicit
text messages between officers, but without any connection to this case aside from the
fact they involved Hammond police officers. Another involved an incident between two
completely different police officers that occurred prior to the events in this lawsuit, but
again did not involve either Szany or Garcia.
And while that covers the bases on the events relating to the sexual harassment,
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battery and false imprisonment allegations in this case, there’s another thread to the
story that must be explored. In January 2016, or nine months before the main incident in
this lawsuit, Szany was involved in a car accident with a civilian. She was on the job
and driving her squad car at the time. On April 21, 2017, (or roughly six months after
the incident involving Garcia and two months after this lawsuit was filed), Szany and
Hammond were sued by the driver of the other vehicle in state court.
Apparently, the attorneys for Hammond in the case before me represent the City
in most of its litigation. But that wasn’t possible in the car accident because those
lawyers were already defending the City in this lawsuit. The City hired a different
attorney, unaffiliated with its counsel in this case, to represent the City and Szany
jointly in the car accident case. But Szany was not happy with the City’s choice. Nothing
before me indicates that the attorney was incompetent or performed his job poorly.
Instead, Szany told the City and her lawyer at the time that he had a conflict of interest
and he could not represent both her and the City in the traffic accident case because she
was suing the City in this case. She wanted her own attorney who would represent her
in the traffic accident lawsuit and for the City to be represented by a different attorney.
After Szany and the attorney could not work out their differences, specifically
him agreeing only to represent only her or the City, but not both, the attorney withdrew
his appearance in November 2017 per her request. Szany then filed a complaint with the
Indiana Supreme Court Disciplinary Commission shortly thereafter against that
attorney. It’s not entirely clear what happened next (or what the result of Szany’s
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disciplinary complaint was), but on February 12, 2018, Szany defaulted in that lawsuit
but then obtained her own counsel and had the default vacated. She alleges that the
City’s refusal to hire a separate attorney for her was in retaliation for her filing the
sexual harassment lawsuit at issue here and presumably is seeking to recover the costs
of defending that lawsuit herself after she fired the attorney the City hired for her.
Discussion
The operative complaint is Szany’s sixth amended complaint, in which she
asserts four live claims, two against each defendant. She has sued the City for two
federal claims under Title VII: (1) for sexual harassment and a hostile work
environment to occur; and (2) for retaliating against her for filing this lawsuit by
providing her conflicted counsel in the state court traffic accident lawsuit. In addition,
she has sued Garcia for battery and for false imprisonment in relation to the vestholding and buttocks slapping incident. Each defendant has moved for summary
judgment on the claims respectively asserted against them.
Before addressing the substance of this case—the summary judgment motions—
there are a slew of other matters to be decided. The parties, as has they have frequently
done throughout this litigation, have avalanched the court with motions, so those will
be dealt with before getting to the meat of the matter.
A. The Preliminary Motions
Here are the pending motions to address:
•
Plaintiff’s motion to file excess pages in response to the defendants’
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motions for summary judgment [DE 324]
•
Plaintiff’s motion to strike the declaration of Captain Jeff Long in support
of Hammond’s motion for summary judgment [DE 325]
•
Plaintiff’s seventh motion to amend her complaint [DE 326]
•
Defendant Hammond’s motion to strike the declaration of Denise Szany
[DE 344]
•
Plaintiff’s motion for leave to file a statement of genuine issues in dispute
[DE 348-350]
•
Plaintiff’s objection to Magistrate Judge Kolar’s Order on maintaining
certain documents under seal. [DE 364.]
All six are ripe for ruling and will be resolved prior to diving into the summary
judgment motions.
1. Plaintiff’s Motion for Leave to File an Oversized Brief
Szany’s motion for leave to file a brief in excess of the page limit is first up. This
motion was filed contemporaneously with Szany’s response brief. Local Rule 7-1(e)
governs the page limits of briefs in this District. It limits response briefs to 25 pages but
Local Rule 7-1(e)(2) allows additional pages for “extraordinary and compelling
reasons.” N.D. Ind. L.R. 7-1(e)(2). The primary reason Szany offers for needing more
than twice the page limit is that she is responding to two summary judgment motions,
one from each defendant. [DE 324 at ¶ 3.] She says that if she had to file two briefs, they
would be more than 60 pages in total (and both over the page limit), so her one
behemoth of a brief is more efficient. I’m not sure I follow that argument, or her
statement that if she responded to the briefs separately it would require me to draft two
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separate opinions in the case. [Id.] While this case involves serious allegations and very
important issues, from a legal and factual perspective, it is not a complex case in the
least. What’s more, Szany’s response brief employs a variety of different font sizes and
formats, numerous footnotes, and large blocks of single-spaced text—in addition to a
10-page declaration laced with argument—all of which makes it in substance even
longer.
In any event, the brief is on file, the defendants have filed their replies, and I
have read and considered all of it. I will exercise my discretion to grant Szany’s motion
for leave to file her 52-page response brief, despite her failure to show “extraordinary or
compelling reasons.”
2. Plaintiff’s Motion to Amend and File a Seventh Amended Complaint
On the same day that she filed her opposition to summary judgment (which was
nearly two months after defendants filed their motions), Szany sought leave to file a
seventh amended complaint. [DE 326.] On the face of her motion, Szany seeks “leave to
substitute Defendant Garcia for Defendant Hammond in Counts IV and V . . . [and] to
add a Count V(A)” against Garcia which, in the alternative, alleges that he was acting
outside the scope of his employment when he struck Szany. [Id. at 1.] According to
Szany, allowing the amendment would not be prejudicial because Hammond has been
a party to this lawsuit and aware of the underlying facts for years, even if they hadn’t
been sued for those claims. Thus, she says there would be no prejudice in making the
City the defendant on those claims, even after both it and Garcia have moved for
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summary judgment on the prior complaint. Szany’s counsel, rather incredibly, further
says that suing Garcia (in her third, fourth, fifth, and sixth amended complaints) was
simply a mistake, and apparently asks that I view it as a slip of the pen or scrivener’s
error. [DE 326 at ¶ 3.] Szany’s argument in that regard is unmoored from the facts and
extensive history in this case.
As with many of the motions before me, this one must be understood in the
context of the larger procedural history of this case. Szany first sued Garcia in her
second amended complaint under a Section 1983 theory of liability for assault, battery,
false imprisonment and sexual misconduct. [DE 34.] When the Court dismissed that
claim, Szany petitioned the Court to allow her to amend her complaint “to add state
counts of Battery, Assault and False Imprisonment against Jamie Garcia.” [DE 48.] In
that motion, she stated that she could bring those claims against Garcia in a separate
state court action, but it would be more efficient to proceed in one federal lawsuit. [Id.]
Leave was granted [DE 51] and she filed her third amended complaint. [DE 52.] She was
granted leave to amend several more times thereafter, and in every version of the
complaint she filed, she asserted state law claims for battery and false imprisonment
against Garcia—but never against Hammond. Likewise, in each amended complaint,
she asserted (and continues to assert) that Garcia was acting within the scope of his
employment when he allegedly harassed and struck Szany.
In her fifth amended complaint, Szany alleged a retaliation claim premised on
the fact that she was forced to share the same patrol car with Garcia. Not at the same
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time mind you, but that they just happened to use the same patrol car on nonoverlapping shifts. Szany alleged this was retaliatory because there was a possibility
that she and Garcia may have some minimal contact during a handover, although that
never occurred. That claim was distinct and separate from the retaliation claim that is at
issue in this summary judgment opinion and which is discussed in detail below.
I granted Hammond’s motion to dismiss the retaliation claim based on shared
patrol cars on non-overlapping shifts. [DE 249.] I expressly granted Szany leave to file
an amended complaint as to that claim to see if she could allege additional facts which
may state a claim. [Id. at 7.] In my order allowing that limited amendment, I concluded
the opinion with the statement that “[n]o additional leave to amend will be granted
absent extraordinary circumstances and ample good cause.” [DE 249 at 7.] I specifically
admonished her counsel to “take this opportunity to make sure that previously
dismissed claims are not [incorrectly] repeated in her complaint, that the complaint
accurately states what iteration of the complaint it is, and that her paragraphs are
properly numbered” because the complaint before me had been littered with typos and
dismissed claims, making it difficult to understand in parts. [Id.] That resulted in the
sixth amended complaint, which again, only sued Garcia for the state law claims. [DE
258.]
Hammond again moved to dismiss the retaliation claim relating to the “shared”
patrol car. Hammond argued that it still did not allege sufficient facts to constitute a
viable retaliation claim. [DE 268.] I agreed and Szany’s claim was dismissed with
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prejudice because it was clear that there would not be any set of facts which would state
a claim. [DE 301.] I concluded that opinion by noting that I had allowed her the
opportunity to replead her claim with reluctance, and that reluctance was well-founded
because her amendment offered hardly anything new. [DE 301 at 7.] With discovery
closed and a summary judgment briefing schedule set soon thereafter, it seemed the
pleadings would finally be settled. Not so, and against that backdrop, Szany has now
asked for leave to file a seventh amended complaint.
It is axiomatic that under the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, leave to amend a
complaint should be liberally granted. Fed. R. Civ. P. 15(a)(2); Foman v. Davis, 371 U.S.
178, 182 (1962). But the deadline to amend in this case was May 15, 2018, [DE 58], and
thus Szany must demonstrate good cause to amend the scheduling order before she can
further have leave to amend. Fed. R. Civ. P. 16(b)(4). “Rule 16(b)’s ‘good cause’
standard primarily considers the diligence of the party seeking amendment.” Trustmark
Ins. Co. v. Gen. & Cologne Life Re of Am., 424 F.3d 542, 553 (7th Cir. 2005) (quoting Johnson
v. Mammoth Recreations, Inc., 975 F.2d 604, 609 (9th Cir. 1992)). In her motion and brief,
Szany doesn’t attempt to meet this good cause standard. Furthermore, “leave to amend
is ‘inappropriate where there is undue delay, bad faith, dilatory motive on the part of
the movant, repeated failure to cure deficiencies by amendments previously allowed,
undue prejudice to the opposing party by virtue of allowance of the amendment, or
futility of the amendment.’” Feldman v. Am. Mem'l Life Ins. Co., 196 F.3d 783, 793 (7th
Cir. 1999) (quoting Perrian v. O'Grady, 958 F.2d 192, 194 (7th Cir. 1992)).
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There are no recently discovered facts that Szany says she learned that require
amendment. Instead, the basis for the motion is the fact that the Indiana Tort Claims
Act generally prohibits a plaintiff from suing an individual defendant in tort for actions
which were done in the scope of the individual defendant’s government employment.
I.C. § 34-13-3-5(b); Bushong v. Williamson, 790 N.E.2d 467, 472-73 (Ind. 2003) (affirming
grant of summary judgment in favor of gym teacher who allegedly battered a student
during gym class). This is defendant Garcia’s primary argument on summary
judgment. Thus, it seems the only thing Szany has learned is that there is a fatal flaw in
the legal theory of her case.
That is not enough reason to justify an amendment. See Oruta v. Cent. Plaza Home,
472 F. Supp. 2d 951, 959 (N.D. Ill. 2006) (“[N]ormally a plaintiff may not amend his
complaint in response to a motion for summary judgment.”) (citing Griffin v. Potter, 356
F.3d 824, 830 (7th Cir. 2004)); Stokes v. Beth, No. 07-C-0496, 2009 WL 2984670, at *1 (E.D.
Wis. Sept. 17, 2009) (“Plaintiff did not file the motion until after the close of discovery
and after defendant's motion for summary judgment. The only purpose of plaintiff's
motion appears to be to avoid summary judgment[.]”) (denying leave to amend and
granting summary judgment). That’s especially true when the proposed amendment
comes years after the deadline to amend, long after discovery closed, and repeated
failures to cure deficiencies in the numerous previous complaints. See Feldman, 196 F.3d
at 793. “Regardless, ignorance is hardly a valid reason for missing the deadline by so
many months; the failure to anticipate an obvious and legally well-grounded defense
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does not excuse the delay.” Carroll v. Stryker Corp., 658 F.3d 675, 684 (7th Cir. 2011).
Nor do the cases relied on by Szany help her. The Seventh Circuit’s decision in
Joseph v. Elan Motorsports Techs. Racing Corp., 638 F.3d 555, 560 (7th Cir. 2011) involved a
multitude of different corporate entities run out of the same office and a plaintiff who
mistakenly mistook “Elan, Inc.” and “Elan Corp.” Nothing of the sort happened here.
Instead, Szany proceeded against Garcia under a legal theory that seemed to have no
viability under Indiana law. Szany’s remaining cases are Indiana state law cases, which
have little to no bearing on application of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure and
appear cited merely to explain how wrong Szany’s counsel previously understood
Indiana law on government employees and tort liability.
In sum, Szany’s motion for leave to file a seventh amended complaint is not well
taken. It came nearly two years after the deadline to amend, as well as after the close of
discovery and filing of summary judgment; makes no effort to meet Rule 16’s good
cause standard for amending the scheduling order; is not based on newly discovered
facts; displays a lack of diligence on Szany’s part; and would require substantial rebriefing of summary judgment, a process which will take up months of time in what is
already a more than three year old case. It seems apparent this was no scrivener’s error
and instead merely an attempt to change the legal theory of the case at the last minute.
The motion for leave to amend will be denied.
3. The Two Motions to Strike Declarations
Szany has moved to strike the affidavit of Captain Jeff Long. [DE 325.] The City
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included Captain Long’s affidavit as evidence in support of its motion for summary
judgment, but Szany says it violates the “sham affidavit” doctrine by which parties are
not allowed to create triable issues of material fact by submitting a declaration or
affidavit in support of summary judgment which contradicts prior deposition
testimony. [DE 335.] Likewise, Hammond has moved to strike Szany’s declaration (and
an additional exhibit, discussed below), submitted in connection with her opposition to
summary judgment. The basis for doing so isn’t because it is a sham affidavit, but
instead because it is unsigned, not made under penalty of perjury, and is otherwise
inadmissible evidence. [See DE 344.]
I’ll start with Szany’s motion to strike Captain Long’s affidavit. It’s a basic
principle that “a subsequent affidavit may not be used to contradict the witness’s
deposition” in order to create an issue of material fact and avoid summary judgment.
Thorn v. Sundstrand Aerospace Corp., 207 F.3d 383, 389 (7th Cir. 2000). So, the question
boils down to whether Captain Long’s declaration contradicts his deposition testimony,
or is it more akin to a clarification that remains consistent with his deposition
testimony? See Flannery v. Recording Indus. Ass’n of Am., 354 F.3d 632, 638 (7th Cir. 2004)
(“[A] definite distinction must be made between discrepancies which create transparent
shams and discrepancies which create an issue of credibility or go to the weight of the
evidence.”) (citation omitted). The affidavit statement in question is paragraph 5, which
reads:
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I also gave an order to my lieutenants, Lt. Tichy and Lt. Berdine,
who oversaw Cpl. Szany and Cpl. Garcia respectively, that Cpl.
Garcia was to have no contact with Cpl. Szany. Pursuant to my
order, Lt. Berdine ordered Cpl. Garcia to have no contact with Cpl.
Szany.
[DE 309-5, Aff. of J. Long ¶ 5.] Szany says that the existence of such an order directly
contradicts the following exchange from Captain Long’s deposition, which took place in
November 2018, approximately two years after the incident between Szany and Garcia:
Q.: Have you taken any steps to protect [Szany] from Corporal
Garcia as of recent?
A: I gave him five days off and she’s on a different shift. There’s no
other steps I feel like I can take.
[DE 313-2, J. Long Dep. Tr. 90:10-15.] Szany likewise points to Captain Long’s
deposition answer in which he said “Do I believe that—do we believe she’s in danger?
No, we don’t believe that. If you’re me and the assistant chief, we do not fear for her
safety.” [Id. at p. 86:4-7.]
Hammond responds that the deposition question only asked about “recent”
steps, i.e. recent as of November 2018 when Captain Long was deposed, but that
paragraph five of Captain Long’s affidavit is discussing actions near the time of the
incident between Szany and Garcia, i.e., October 2016. It further points out that Szany’s
counsel did not “close out” Captain Long at his deposition by asking him to list all
actions taken in response to the incident. Lastly, it says the answer about Szany’s safety
from the deposition is clearly stated in the present tense and thus has nothing to do
with what Captain Long may have done two years prior. Thus, there would be no
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contradiction. I agree.
“An affidavit that is an amplification rather than contradiction of prior testimony
is not within the ‘sham’ exclusionary rule.” Canen v. Chapman¸2016 WL 695970, at *2
(N.D. Ind. Feb. 22, 2016). It seems obvious that is the case here. In his deposition,
Captain Long did not say that he never issued a no contact order, which would be a
contradiction with what is stated in his affidavit. Nor did he purport to detail out every
step he took since the alleged incident—at least in the deposition testimony submitted
by the parties. Without some clear contradiction, there is no basis to strike Captain
Long’s affidavit. See Bank of Illinois v. Allied Signal Safety Restraint Sys., 75 F.3d 1162, 1169
(7th Cir. 1996) (noting that affidavits should be struck as shams with “great caution”).
Consequently, Szany’s Motion to Strike will be denied.
This brings me to the City’s motion to strike. [DE 344.] At issue is a 10-page
single spaced declaration submitted by Szany in opposition to summary judgment. The
declaration is a peculiar document. It quotes extensively from Szany’s own deposition
testimony, testimony that is then fully repeated in the briefing as well and finally is
attached as an exhibit. [See generally DE 319-2, Ex. 1 Decl. of D. Szany.] At times, it
quotes that testimony after statements from defendants’ motions for summary
judgment, presumably to rebut those statements. [Id. at p. 8-10.] In this way, it reads
much more like a legal brief than a factual declaration. It also includes Szany’s opinions
concerning what is or isn’t sexual assault under Indiana law [id. at ¶ 8], and a link to a
USA Today article about a TV reporter in Georgia who was slapped on the buttocks by
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a man who was then subsequently charged with sexual battery. [Id. at p.2, n.2.] She also
states her conclusions that Garcia received extra overtime hours and was not actually
“off-duty” during at least part of the period in which he was allegedly serving a fiveday suspension. She states her analysis and her conclusion (i.e., opinions) as to what
was or wasn’t or should have been in Garcia’s payroll file. [Id. at ¶¶ 23-35.] It further
includes allegations that Garcia behaved inappropriately with other women who are
not only not Szany, but not even on the police force, and who it doesn’t appear Szany
has any personal connection to. She says that she has “personal knowledge that Garcia
was never given sexual harassment training by the Hammond PD” but does not offer
any basis for what the personal knowledge is beyond the tautological statement that she
has such personal knowledge. [See id. at ¶ 55.] Furthermore, there are statements
concerning female anatomy, dispersions against defense lawyers, and statements
concerning what she says were societal norms in “the 1990s” compared to 2020. The
declaration then concludes with “Pursuant to 28 USC 1746, I affirm under penalty of
law that the foregoing is true and accurate based on my reasonable belief,
interpretations, observations, and experiences. s/Denise Szany 2-8-2020.” [Id. at p. 10.]
Hammond’s first argument in support of striking Szany’s declaration homes in
on that last part of the declaration, the affirmation. It says that the affirmation on its face
violates 28 U.S.C. § 1746 which requires that any such declaration, if it is unsworn,
include “in substantially the following form”: “I declare (or certify, verify, or state)
under penalty of perjury that the foregoing is true and correct. Executed on (date).
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(Signature)”. 28 U.S.C. § 1746. In support of this argument, the City points to how
Szany’s affirmation doesn’t track the language and to cases where courts have struck
similarly worded declarations.
“The Seventh Circuit teaches that a court is not to be ‘unnecessarily hypertechnical and overly harsh on a party who unintentionally fails to make certain that all
technical, non-substantive requirements of [declaration] execution ... are satisfied,’ ...
but compliance with 28 U.S.C. § 1746 is mandatory and fundamental, not a ‘nonsubstantive’ requirement.” Davis v. Wells Fargo Bank, 685 F. Supp. 2d 838, 842 (N.D. Ill.
2010), aff’d sub nom. Estate of Davis v. Wells Fargo Bank, 633 F.3d 529 (7th Cir. 2011)
(citation omitted); DeBruyne v. Equitable Life Assur. Soc. of U.S., 920 F.2d 457, 471 (7th Cir.
1990) (“[T]he ‘affidavit,’ which did not subject Hanan to the penalties for perjury, was
not within the range of evidence that the district court could consider.”). These cases
(and common sense) bring one to the conclusion that the specific “under penalty of
perjury” and broader “under penalty of law” are not synonyms or substantially the
same. The statutory language must be followed or else an unsworn declaration may not
be considered as evidence on summary judgement. See Trapaga v. Cent. States Joint Bd.
Local 10, No. 05 C 5742, 2007 WL 1017855, at *3 (N.D. Ill. Mar. 30, 2007) (analyzing
statutory language of § 1746 and striking affidavits despite “Plaintiffs’ counsel[‘s] …
self-proclaimed attempt to improve upon the statutory language of § 1746”).
Szany’s response to this argument is curious. Instead of seeking leave to refile the
affidavit in its proper form, which I would have readily granted, she doubles down.
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Her counsel points to other cases, before other judges (some in other districts) where he
has filed documents “with electronic signatures for years.” [DE 351 at ¶ 1.] He says this
is “the norm in federal courts.” [Id.] But again, he cites no precedent, statute or rule
which supports his position. What I think he is referencing are electronic signatures of
lawyers on court filings, not factual exhibits signed by a witness or party. See L.R. 5-1.
But that just makes this equitable estoppel-type argument even further far afield. At
bottom, he does nothing to challenge the clear mandate of Section 1746 or the Seventh
Circuit case law which makes clear that unsworn declarations may only be considered if
they are explicitly made under penalty of perjury that they are true and correct.
As I said, if the only problem with Szany’s declaration were its inadequate
affirmation, I would likely try to rectify the situation by ordering Szany to submit a
properly sworn declaration pursuant to Rule 56(e)(4), which allows courts to issue
appropriate orders to ensure facts are adequately supported or disputed. Fed. R. Civ. P.
56(e)(4). But, in any event, there are other substantive issues with the declaration which
render it inadmissible and improper for me to consider on summary judgment.
Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 56 states that “An affidavit or declaration used to
support or oppose a motion must be made on personal knowledge, set out facts that
would be admissible in evidence, and show that the affiant or declarant is competent to
testify on the matters stated.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(c)(4). As summarized above, Szany’s
declaration is replete with speculation, opinion, and legal conclusions—none of which
is evidence that is admissible at summary judgment. Other supposed facts are simply
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not relevant to the claims before me. For example, Szany’s opinions as to what is or isn’t
criminal conduct does not become fact because she has personal knowledge of criminal
laws as a police officer, as Szany states. [See DE 351 at ¶ 5.] That which isn’t irrelevant or
inadmissible on its face, namely the quoted portions of Szany’s deposition testimony,
are cited in the legal briefing or attached as exhibits. Thus, I will consider some of the
evidence contained within the declaration. In other words, her deposition testimony in
which she recounts her version of the factual events that form the basis of this lawsuit is
admissible, but Szany’s opinions, speculation, and legal conclusions are not. The City’s
motion to strike the declaration of Denise Szany will be granted.
Hammond has also moved to strike Exhibit 31 attached to Szany’s opposition
brief. It says the exhibit is unauthenticated hearsay. Exhibit 31 purports to be a portion
of transcript of a May 31, 2019 “Facebook Live” event in connection with WJOB, a
news/talk radio station based in Hammond, in which the Mayor of Hammond, Thomas
McDermott, Jr., was a guest and spoke with callers. [DE 319-2 at Ex. 31, Transcript of T.
McDermott Interview.] In the transcript, Mayor McDermott comments on this case,
discusses the then-recent dismissal of Garcia from the Hammond police, and other
aspects of the case. [Id.] What this exhibit is not, is a deposition transcript or other form
of testimony—although as a statement by the Mayor of Hammond, it’s hard to see how
it would be considered hearsay as opposed to an opposing party’s statement. See Fed. R.
Evid. 802(d)(2).
Szany defends the transcript as evidence by directing me to Federal Rule of
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Evidence 902 and 903. Rule 902 deals with self-authenticating evidence, while Rule 903
concerns whether a subscribing witness’s signature is necessary to authenticate
evidence. Frankly, Szany’s exclusive reliance on these two Rules of Evidence is
puzzling. Just because evidence is authenticated does not mean it is admissible. See, e.g.,
In re Barber, 236 B.R. 655, 662 (Bankr. N.D. Ind. 1998) (“[A]lthough this document is selfauthenticating, it must nevertheless satisfy the other pertinent Rules of Evidence as to
its admissibility.”). At most, this would seem to apply to a “Faragher-Ellerth defense” by
the City that it took reasonable steps to prevent and correct sexual harassment and that
Szany failed to comply with its policies. But as the City notes throughout its briefing, it
has not asserted such an affirmative defense in this case. Thus, there is little basis which
I can see for why this evidence would be relevant, a prerequisite of admissibility, and
Szany does not offer any in her briefing.
What’s more, even if Rule 902 somehow was applicable and determinative,
Szany has not included an authenticating certification from the custodian of the
purported record as required by the rule. See Fed. R. Evid. 902(11). Instead she offers a
statement by a court reporter who transcribed the audio file into a transcript. But that’s
not sufficient or what the rule requires. In any event, the statements contained in
Exhibit 31 will not be considered because they have no bearing on the material facts of
the case. Nor has the document been properly authenticated. The City’s Motion to
Strike Exhibit 31 will be granted.
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4. Plaintiff’s Motion for Leave to file her Statements of Genuine Disputes of
Material Facts
Now it’s on to Szany’s motion for leave to file her Statement of Genuine Disputes
of Material Facts. She is seeking leaving because she failed to include one her original
opposition to the defendants’ motions for summary judgment. The Local Rules of the
Northern District of Indiana require any party opposing summary judgment to include,
either in their response brief or as a separate appendix, a Statement of Genuine Disputes
of Material Facts, which responds to the required Statement of Undisputed Facts that
movants must include with their motions. N.D. Ind. L.R. 56-1.
Again, the procedural history of this case must be discussed to add some context
to my ruling. I previously admonished the parties about “flout[ing] the local rules.” [DE
284.] In a prior order I explained:
[A]ny further conduct which even appears to run afoul of
Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 1, the Indiana Rules of
Professional Responsibility, or the Northern District of
Indiana Local Rules, will not be taken lightly and will be dealt
with accordingly. Counsel should consider themselves
directed and admonished on these points and any further
impropriety will be handled with appropriate sanctions, up
to and including dismissal or striking of pleadings. … Enough
of that is enough.
Id. Unfortunately, that warning, whether by design, negligence or otherwise, went
unheeded. Plaintiff’s counsel has continued to violate the Local Rules of the Northern
District of Indiana, improperly filing their most recent Motion to Seal [DE 322-23], and
worse, failing to follow the requirements of L.R. 56 regarding summary judgment.
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After the defendants noted in their reply brief that Szany failed to include the
“Statement of Genuine Disputes” required by Local Rule 56-1(b)(2), Szany filed a
motion for leave to file such a statement. [DE 348.] In that filing, Szany’s attorney
acknowledged that he is “accustomed” to creating similar statements of disputed fact in
the Northern District of Illinois (presumably where he primarily practices law). [Id. at ¶
6.] But he simply failed to do so here, without any real explanation other than stating
that in his brief under the header of “Argument” he “initially had the label Facts in
Dispute.” [Id. at ¶ 5.] I’m not sure what that means, but no Statement of Genuine
Disputes was included in either the brief or as an appendix, as required by Local Rule
56-1(b)(2). That much is clear.
The Seventh Circuit has held that I would be “well within” my discretion to
strictly enforce this Local Rule against Szany and deem all of the defendants’ evidencebased factual statements as admitted for purposes of summary judgment. Wilson v.
Kautex, Inc. 371 Fed. App’x 663, 664 (7th Cir. 2010); Smith v. Lanz, 321 F.3d 680, 683 (7th
Cir. 2003) (“[F]ailure to respond by the nonmovant as mandated by the local rules
results in an admission.”). See also Thompson v. Einstien Noah Rest. Grp. Inc., No.
117CV02569JRSDML, 2019 WL 266671, at *3 (S.D. Ind. Jan. 18, 2019) (enforcing
analogous Local Rule of the Southern District of Indiana and deeming material facts of
the moving party as admitted for summary judgment purposes).
Given plaintiff’s counsel’s previous and multiple failures to follow the Local
Rules, including my explicit warning in a court order that doing so was not optional,
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there is sufficient cause to strictly enforce the Local Rules against Szany and her
counsel. But instead, I will strike a middle ground. I will deny Szany leave to file the
two separate statements and they will not be considered for purposes of summary
judgment. However, to the extent that Szany’s summary judgment opposition brief [DE
312] identifies material facts and controverts them with admissible evidence, I will
consider them. But to the extent there are material facts contained within the
defendants’ statements which are not controverted and are supported by evidence, I
will deem them to be uncontroverted.
5. Plaintiff’s Objection to the Magistrate Judge Opinion on Maintaining
Certain Information and Documents Under Seal
The final ancillary matter to address is Szany’s Objections to the Opinion and
Order of Magistrate Judge Kolar relating to various motions to seal materials submitted
by Szany in connection with summary judgment. [DE 364 2.] In that decision, Magistrate
Judge Kolar ordered that portions of Szany’s summary judgment brief be redacted and
that certain exhibits remain sealed. Specifically, Magistrate Judge Kolar ordered that
certain four specific documents (found at DE 358-2, 358-3, 358-4, and 358-5) remain
sealed, and that certain other documents, including Szany’s brief, be redacted. [DE 363
at 11.] All of these materials concern the allegations against Garcia made by his ex-wife
and the two women who participated in a ride along with him.
Magistrate Judge Kolar’s decision further addressed a motion for clarification [DE
337] but Szany does not appear to offer any specific objection to the decision as it relates
to that motion. So, I do not address it here either.
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First, I must lay out the appropriate standard of review at play. In her objection,
Szany cites to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 72(b)(2) multiple times as the standard of
review. [DE 364, at ¶¶ 1, 3.] But that is the incorrect standard, as motions to seal are
nondispositive matters covered instead by Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 72(a). See
Kounelis v. Sherrer, 529 F. Supp. 2d 503, 518 (D.N.J. 2008) (“Non-dispositive matters
include evidentiary rulings, pretrial discovery matters, and the imposition of sanctions
for discovery abuses[.]”) (citations omitted); 28 U.S.C. § 636(b)(1)(A) (listing categories
of motions which may not be referred to a magistrate judge for disposition but which
instead may only be referred for a report and recommendation).
This distinction matters because the standard for resolving objections under Rule
72(a) is not the same as under Rule 72(b). Pursuant to Rule 72(b)(3), “the district court
must determine de novo any part of the magistrate judge’s disposition that has been
properly objected to.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 72(b)(3) (emphasis added). On the other hand,
under Rule 72(a) “[t]he district judge in the case must consider timely objections and
modify or set aside any part of the order that is clearly erroneous or is contrary to law.”
Fed. R. Civ. P. 72(a); Cleversafe, Inc. v. Amplidata, Inc., 287 F.R.D. 424, 426 (N.D. Ill. 2012)
(“Rule 72, which was designed to implement § 636, introduced the terminology
‘dispositive’ and ‘not dispositive’ to differentiate those pretrial motions that a
magistrate judge can decide by an order having independent effect, subject to
reconsideration by the district court on a showing that the order is clearly erroneous or
contrary to law, from those that only allow for a recommended disposition through a
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report and recommendation having no independent effect, with review being de novo.”)
(citations omitted). Thus, my review under Rule 72(a) is lighter than under Rule 72(b)
and I will only set aside Magistrate Judge Kolar’s order if it is clearly erroneous or
contrary to law. As discussed below, it is neither of those things and Szany’s objections
will be overruled.
Szany says that Magistrate Judge Kolar’s order “offends the 7th Circuit’s position
on the sealing of documents” and that it broadly “deprive[s] the public of its ‘right to
know.’” [DE 364 at ¶¶ 4-6.] Slightly more specifically, she cites to GEA Group AG v. FlexN-Gate Corp., 740 F.3d 411, 419 (7th Cir. 2014) in which the court stated that “[s]ecrecy in
judicial proceedings is disfavored, as it makes it difficult for the public (including the
bar) to understand why a case was brought (and fought) and what exactly was at stake
in it and was the outcome proper.” But beyond these broad positions and quotes, Szany
offers nothing specific as to why Magistrate Judge Kolar’s decision was clearly
erroneous or contrary to law.
A review of Magistrate Judge Kolar’s order makes clear that his ruling has a
sound basis in the law on issues of relevance, confidentiality, and the public’s right of
access to judicial proceedings. The materials in question are not on their face relevant to
the issues in the lawsuit (concerning Garcia’s conduct towards Szany and/or other
police officers), nor have they been relied upon in any judicial opinion or proceeding in
the case. Of course, Szany submitted the materials in connection with her summary
judgment briefing, but there was no opinion which was yet affected by or influenced by
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them. As such, Magistrate Judge Kolar ruled that with no indication that these materials
were relevant (beyond Szany’s say-so), any presumption in favor of their public
disclosure wasn’t triggered unless the purportedly confidential materials otherwise
“affect the disposition of federal litigation.” GEA Grp., 740 F.3d at 419-420. As discussed
below, my decision on summary judgment doesn’t change matters.
On the other hand, in support of keeping these materials sealed, Garcia cited the
protective order in this case which keeps documents disclosed in discovery confidential
if their public disclosure would result in undue annoyance, embarrassment, or
oppression. [See DE 281 at 5-6.] This argument went unaddressed by Szany in her
briefing before Magistrate Judge Kolar and she does not confront it in her objections to
me. [DE 363 at 8]; see also Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(c)(1). And it is evident from a review of these
materials that they contain extremely troubling allegations against Garcia involving
non-parties to this case. But most importantly, as discussed below, my summary
judgment opinion does not change the calculus on the motions to seal because I find the
documents and evidence at issue to be immaterial for purposes of summary judgment.
They thus have no impact on the disposition of this case and there is no overriding
public interest in favor of their disclosure, especially when balanced against their
likelihood to cause undue annoyance, embarrassment and oppression. See GEA Grp.,
740 F.3d at 419-420. Szany offers nothing to upset Magistrate Judge Kolar’s finding on
this point and I see no other clear basis by which to overrule his well-reasoned decision.
Accordingly, her objection will be overruled.
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B.
Hammond’s Motions for Summary Judgment
With the exhausting work of the preliminary matters out of the way, it’s finally
on to the substance of the case: the two motions for summary judgment filed by the
defendants. I’ll begin with Hammond’s motion.
Summary judgment is appropriate when “there is no genuine dispute as to any
material fact and [the moving party is] entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” Fed. R.
Civ. P. 56(a). The moving party bears the initial burden of showing no genuine issues of
material fact. Celotex Corp. v. Catrett, 477 U.S. 317, 324 (1986). In deciding whether that is
the case, I must draw all reasonable inferences in favor of the nonmoving party.
Ozlowski v. Henderson, 237 F.3d 837, 839 (7th Cir. 2001). That means that if the
defendants meet their initial burden, it then falls to Szany to muster sufficient evidence
that contradicts the defendants’ so as to create a question which can only be resolved by
a jury. Basden v. Prof’l Transp., Inc., 714 F.3d 1034, 1037 (7th Cir. 2013) (“To survive a
motion for summary judgment, she must present the court with evidence that, if
believed by a trier of fact, would establish each of the elements of her claim.”).
A genuine issue of material fact is not demonstrated by the mere existence of
“some alleged factual dispute between the parties,” Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc., 477
U.S. 242, 247 (1986), or by “some metaphysical doubt as to the material facts.”
Matsushita Elec. Indus. Co. v. Zenith Radio Corp., 475 U.S. 574, 586 (1986). Rather, a
genuine issue of material fact only exists if “a fair-minded jury could return a verdict
for the [nonmoving party] on the evidence presented.” Anderson, 477 U.S. at 252.
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Furthermore, drawing reasonable inferences in favor of the non-moving party does not
mean I must indulge and accept every version of the facts espoused by them.
Arguments must be made on evidence, not mere innuendo. As the Seventh Circuit says,
“it is the put up or shut up moment in a lawsuit” to see if viable claims exist. Hammel v.
Eau Galle Cheese Factory, 407 F.3d 852, 859 (7th Cir. 2005) (citation omitted).
Szany’s complaint states two claims against the City, one for sexual harassment
and a hostile work environment pursuant to 42 § U.S.C. 2000e-2, and retaliation
pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-3(a). I’ll take them up in turn.
1. The Sexual Harassment Claim Against Hammond
The sexual harassment claim relates principally to the incident where Garcia
slapped Szany on the buttocks inside the police station in October 2016. “A sexual
harassment claim under Title VII requires [Szany] show: (1) her work environment was
objectively and subjectively offensive, (2) the harassment she complained of was based
on her gender, (3) the conduct was so severe or pervasive as to alter the conditions of
employment and create a hostile or abusive working environment, and (4) there is a
basis for employer liability.” Swyear v. Fare Foods Corp., 911 F.3d 874, 880 (7th Cir. 2018).
While the City raises multiple arguments and says that the undisputed facts
show that Szany’s claim fails to satisfy several elements, I will focus most of my
attention on the third element which focuses on the “severe or pervasive” nature of the
conduct. In the City’s view, the incident, even if it occurred exactly as Szany tells it, is
not enough to make out a sexual harassment and hostile work environment claim
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against it. The crux of the City’s argument comes down to this statement from its brief:
“The incident in the briefing room with Cpl. Garcia around 11:00 p.m. on October 19,
2016 is the one and only time during her 10 years with the department that Cpl. Szany
experienced an episode of inappropriate conduct that she perceived to be of a sexual
nature.” [DE 309 at 3.] That is, although Garcia’s actions are indefensible, this was an
isolated incident between two coworkers and thus the City cannot be liable for it,
regardless of any culpability or liability that Garcia may have.
The first issue is whether the encounter between Garcia and Szany was “severe”
as that term has been interpreted by the caselaw. “[I]solated incidents (unless extremely
serious) do not constitute a hostile work environment.” Faragher v. City of Boca Raton,
524 U.S. 775, 788 (1998). “Although one might think that any nonconsensual sexual
touching could give rise to a claim”, there is no such a categorical approach and instead
courts must assess the totality and particularities of each case. Everson v. City of Madison,
672 F. Supp.2d 881, 884 (W.D. Wis. 2009). That said, the Seventh Circuit has held in
multiple instances that otherwise isolated incidents of unwanted touching, including of
the buttocks, without more, will not constitute severe sexual harassment. Perez v.
Norwegian-Am. Hosp., Inc., 93 F. App’x 910, 914 (7th Cir. 2004) (disagreeing with district
court’s suggestion that a slap on the buttocks is comparable to athletes encouraging one
another or that it was inherently non-sexual but nonetheless finding it failed to
constitute severe harassment “because it was not objectively abusive”); Hilt–Dyson v.
City of Chicago, 282 F.3d 456, 463–64 (7th Cir. 2002) (two instances of back rubbing not
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sufficiently severe); Adusumilli v. City of Chicago, 164 F.3d 353, 361–62 (7th Cir. 1998)
(holding that “four isolated incidents in which a co-worker briefly touched her arm,
fingers, or buttocks” not sufficiently severe or pervasive to survive summary
judgment); Koelsch v. Beltone Electronics Corp., 46 F.3d 705, 706–08 (7th Cir. 1995)
(holding that physical contact of supervisor rubbing his foot against a plaintiff's leg and
grabbing her buttocks a single time insufficient to survive summary judgment); Saxton
v. AT &T, 10 F.3d 526, 528 (7th Cir. 1993) (running hand along plaintiff’s upper thigh
and kissing her not sufficiently severe).
Courts throughout the country continue to insist on a level of severity beyond
the evidence offered by Szany here and grant summary judgment when a plaintiff fails
to produce more. E.g., Clayton v. City of Atl. City, 538 F. App’x 124, 129 (3d Cir. 2013)
(affirming summary judgment in favor of city where one police officer grabbed
another’s “buttocks in public and commented that it was ‘the only thing she has going
for her’” as insufficiently severe); Paul v. Northrop Grumman Ship Sys., 309 F. App’x 825,
826 (5th Cir. 2009) (affirming summary judgment in favor of employer where single
incident involved one employee touching his chest to female coworkers and following
her when she tried to walk away and “in doing so, placed his hand on her stomach and
ran his arm around her waist … rubb[ing] his pelvic region across [her] hips and
buttocks”); Marquardt v. Ocean Reef Cmty. Ass’n, No. 19-10110-CIV, 2020 WL 1812303, at
*9 (S.D. Fla. Apr. 9, 2020) (inappropriate comments regarding anal sex and “hot single
women”, multiple instances of unwanted hugging, and hitting on the buttocks with a
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folder found to be neither severe nor pervasive); Barber v. Drury Dev. Corp, No.
4:14CV319 TIA, 2015 WL 1005513, at *8 (E.D. Mo. Mar. 5, 2015) (granting summary
judgment for employer where harassment at issue was “one single incident” of buttocks
slapping and there was “no evidence that I unreasonable interfered with Plaintiff’s
work”). See also Rester v. Stephens Media, LLC, 739 F.3d 1127, 1131 (8th Cir. 2014) (“This
singular incident, while most unfortunate, does not meet the [severity] standard
required.”).
By contrast, in cases in which the touching was more invasive, explicitly sexual
in nature, and coupled with verbal sexual harassment, courts have found the actions
sufficiently severe or pervasive. E.g., EEOC v. Mgmt. Hospitality of Racine, Inc. 666 F.3d
422, 432 (7th Cir. 2012) (conduct found severe when manager “engaged in sexually
harassing conduct during every shift” including “slap groping” of plaintiff’s buttocks
and making sexually explicit propositions); Patton v. Keystone RV Co., 455 F.3d 812, 816–
17 (7th Cir. 2006) (allegation that harasser’s “hand was under [plaintiff's] shorts, on her
inner thigh, and touching her underwear” was severe); Worth v. Tyer, 276 F.3d 249, 268
(7th Cir. 2001) (touching of plaintiff's “breast near the nipple for several seconds is
severe enough”); Hostetler v. Quality Dining, Inc., 218 F.3d 798, 807–09 (7th Cir. 2000)
(nonconsensual kissing and attempts to remove bra sufficiently severe to survive
summary judgment); Doe v. City of Belleville, 119 F.3d 563, 582 (7th Cir. 1997) (finding
repeated comments and threats concerning forcible anal sex, being called “queer” and
“fag,” and the nonconsensual grabbing of a teenager’s testicles to be severe and
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pervasive) (vacated on other grounds by City of Belleville v. Doe, 523 U.S. 1001 (1998)).
Szany dismisses much of this caselaw as outdated and from “the 1990’s” and
therefore no longer “precedent.” [DE 312 at 47.] While she and her attorney may hold
that attitude, I do not. Courts throughout the country continue to similarly apply these
standards. In a hierarchical system of courts, binding precedent is just that, district
court judges are not free to disregard the law as clearly espoused by the Seventh
Circuit, until it is either overruled by that court or the Supreme Court. That has not
happened and so those cases control the outcome.
In sum, I don’t think the incident between Garcia and Szany on October 19, 2016,
can be fairly characterized as severe. I don’t lightly arrive at that conclusion but am led
to it by the Seventh Circuit decisions I have cited above. The encounter between the two
began when Garcia grabbed Szany’s vest and they tussled back and forth. Szany admits
there wasn’t anything sexual or sex-based about Garcia grabbing her vest, and admits
she pushed him as well during the altercation. There is no allegation or suggestion that
Garcia made any sexually suggestive statements towards Garcia, prior to the
altercation, during it, or thereafter. A minute or so later, the encounter continued with
Garcia slapping Szany on the buttocks. Garcia did not squeeze Szany’s buttocks or
allow his hand to linger on her. And while Szany reiterates throughout her briefing that
her buttocks is near or adjacent to her genitals, that anatomical reality does not alter the
calculus here, as Garcia did not, for example, move his hand towards Szany’s genitals
after striking her buttocks.
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Before moving forward, let’s be clear about something: none of this is meant to
diminish any humiliation or the invasion of privacy and bodily autonomy that Szany
likely felt as a result of Garcia’s actions. Nor does it any way excuse Garcia’s actions. It
just means that under controlling law, it is not sufficiently severe to make a claim by
which an employer can be held liable.
That said, liability can also lay where the harassment is pervasive. Recall that the
standard is whether the harassment is severe or pervasive—it’s a disjunctive test. The
evidence is even weaker under this theory. Other than the incident on October 19, 2016,
Szany recounts two other encounters with Garcia that she argues shows Garcia’s
conduct was pervasive. She references the prior incident in which she and Garcia
touched one another (he grabbed her knee or legs and she punched him in the arm
accordingly) after which she informed a supervisor that Garcia was “annoying.” [DE
309-1, Szany Dep. Tr. 55-56, 58-60, 73, 82.] She also points me to the time Garcia asked
her if she was “too good for him” and walked shoulder to shoulder next to her waiting
for an answer. But she testified she did not perceive the interaction to be sexual, or even
harassment, and that she did not report it. [DE 307-1, Szany Dep. Tr. 58-60.] Thus, it is
difficult to say they were even subjectively offense to Szany—another required element.
These three incidents, which took place months, if not years apart, do not establish
pervasive sexual harassment in the workplace.
In addition to the three incidents that actually involved Szany, she further directs
me to Garcia’s actions and behavior towards (1) his ex-wife, which occurred outside the
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workplace and several years before the October 2016 incident between Garcia and
Szany; and (2) the two young women who participated in a police ride along with
Garcia, which occurred several years after the October 2016 incident involving Szany
and Garcia. Whatever relevance these other incidents may have to show that Garcia is
anything but an upstanding member of the community, the fact remains they have no
material relevance to Szany’s claims in this case. Neither of those incidents involved
Szany, nor were they harassment targeted at other employees of the City. And Szany
offers no legal support for the notion that Garcia’s alleged actions against his ex-wife,
which did not occur in the workplace, or his actions towards the women in the police
ride along, which post-date the lawsuit, may be used by Szany to make her hostile work
environment claim succeed.
Furthermore, even if the severe or pervasive nature of the harassment were a
closer call, an employer “will not be liable for the hostile environment absent proof that
it failed to take appropriate remedial measures once apprised of the harassment.”
Hrobowski v. Worthington Steel Co., 358 F.3d 473, 478 (7th Cir. 2004). In a similar vein,
“[a]n employer can generally avoid liability for a hostile work environment if it
promptly investigated complaints made by the plaintiff and acted to stop the harassing
behavior.” Montgomery v. Am. Airlines, Inc., 626 F.3d 382, 392 (7th Cir. 2010). The only
incident that Hammond had notice of was the slapping incident so that is where I will
focus my attention. When Szany brought that incident to the attention of her
supervisors, they promptly investigated the incident, determined that Garcia violated
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rules and regulations and disciplined him. Hammond says these measures were
sufficiently reasonable as a matter of law. I agree, and this provides another basis to
grant summary judgment in its favor.
Szany has tried to create an issue of fact regarding the investigation by claiming
that Hammond’s response was insufficient, but I don’t think the material facts, even
taken in a light most favorable to Szany create such an issue. Here the undisputed facts
show that within days of the incident, senior members of the Hammond PD issued a no
contact order between Szany and Garcia, ensured they would not work overlapping
shifts, and appointed an officer to investigate the incident. That officer conducted
interviews of Garcia and Szany, as well as the other officers who were present for the
incident. Summaries of those interviews were then turned into a written report which
concluded Garcia violated two of the Hammond PD’s rules and regulations relating to
officer conduct. That report was signed and dated on November 29, 2016, a little more
than a month after the incident.
From there, the parties diverge on what they say are the material facts, with
Szany focusing on how Hammond disciplined (or failed to discipline) Garcia for his
conduct. Hammond responds that even if everything Szany says is true, it does not
change the fact its response was reasonable under the circumstances and that Szany’s
focus on when Garcia served his suspension, how he served it, and whether it was a
“valid suspension” are red herrings. I tend to agree. The relevant point here, which
remains undisputed, is that Hammond investigated the incident, found Garcia violated
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the rules, and disciplined him. Most importantly, Hammond ensured that Garcia and
Szany were kept away from one another on the force, and there was no harassment
thereafter. That meets the legal requirements of a reasonable response. Sutherland v.
Wal-Mart Stores, Inc., 632 F.3d 990, 995 (7th Cir. 2011) (employer’s response to
harassment claims of reprimanding alleged harasser and then limiting overlap in
employee schedules was “reasonably likely to end” the harassment and thus entitled
employer to summary judgment).
It seems that in Szany’s view, anything less than Garcia’s immediate dismissal
after the incident makes Hammond liable, but that is not the law. Nor does it matter
whether Hammond followed every internal policy or rule in regard to how it
disciplined Garcia, so long as the response was otherwise reasonable. Milligan v. Bd. of
Trustees of S. Illinois Univ., 686 F.3d 378, 387 (7th Cir. 2012) (“Our focus is on whether the
defendant responded promptly and effectively to the incident not on whether it
complied with its own internal policy. The failure to follow internal policy does not
matter so long as the employer's response is otherwise reasonable under Title VII,
which it was here.”) (cleaned up).
The investigation here is a far cry from Nichols v. Tri-Nat’l Logistics, Inc., 809 F.3d
981 (8th Cir. 2016), a case relied on by Szany, in which the Eight Circuit reversed a grant
of summary judgment in favor of an employer and questioned the reasonableness of the
employer’s actions. In that case, the plaintiff, a truck driver, reported that her co-driver
asked if she wanted a romantic relationship. When she declined, he began harassing
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her. He purposefully exposed his genitals to her while she was driving, “often [stood] in
the back of the cab while she was in the driver seat, [and] lean[ed] over in his
underwear with his hands on the overhead compartment”, and then a few days later
offered to “forgive an eight hundred dollar debt” if she would have sex with him. 809
F.3d at 984-85. When she reported these incidents to her employer over the course of
several days, she was repeatedly told to try and endure it and to finish the trip before
the company would remove her from the situation and pair her with a different driver.
Id. That’s much more extreme than the situation here wherein there was a single
incident, no propositioning, and a (successful) no contact order and investigation were
undertaken immediately after Szany reported the incident.
Szany’s other arguments focus heavily on irrelevant facts. For example, Szany
points to an incident from October 2015 in which another female officer complained
about inappropriate touching by another male officer. She also points to an October
2018 complaint in which officers were using Hammond PD equipment to text one
another lewd statements and “jokes.” From these facts, Szany asks that I extrapolate
that Hammond consistently allowed a hostile work environment to fester. But none of
the allegations or alleged prior incidents relied upon by Szany involved Garcia. And
that makes it very distinguishable from the situation in Fuller v. Idaho Dep’t of Corr., 865
F.3d 1154 (9th Cir. 2017), wherein the employee who raped the plaintiff had a “history
of this kind of behavior” that was known to the employer.
Szany also refers to other prior incidents with Garcia to establish that Garcia had
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a pattern of harassment that Hammond was on notice of. As noted above, Szany
testified to a pre-October 2016 incident where Garcia asked her if she was “too good for
him” and he walked shoulder to shoulder next to her. But, again, she did not
subjectively perceive that to be sexual harassment at the time. [DE 307-1, Szany Dep. Tr.
56-60, 73.] On another prior occasion, she reported to Lt. Tichy that Garcia’s behavior
towards her was “annoying” after Garcia grabbed her knee and she lightly punched
him in the shoulder. But she did not file a formal complaint or follow-up after that
incident. [Id. at 73, 82.] Again, she testified she did not find them sexual in nature or
subjectively offensive beyond annoyance. [Id.] Szany asks that I interpret these events as
systematic harassment and assault by Garcia that Hammond was on notice of, but that
stretches the reality of what she testified to well-beyond making inferences in her favor.
Other arguments entirely miss the legal mark, such as those premised on the
Faragher-Ellerth defense, which is an affirmative defense in sexual harassment cases
derived from the Supreme Court’s decisions in Faragher v. City of Boca Raton, 524 U.S.
775 (1998) and Burlington Industries, Inc. v. Ellerth, 524 U.S. 742 (1998). First, it would be
inapplicable in this case, because Garcia was not Szany’s supervisor or superior at work
and instead held the same Corporal rank as she did. The Supreme Court has explained
the different standards and bases for employer liability in these two distinct contexts:
Under Title VII, an employer’s liability for such harassment may
depend on the status of the harasser. If the harassing employee is the
victim's co-worker, the employer is liable only if it was negligent in
controlling working conditions. In cases in which the harasser is a
“supervisor,” however, different rules apply. If the supervisor's
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harassment culminates in a tangible employment action, the
employer is strictly liable. But if no tangible employment action is
taken, the employer may escape liability by establishing, as an
affirmative defense, that (1) the employer exercised reasonable care
to prevent and correct any harassing behavior and (2) that the
plaintiff unreasonably failed to take advantage of the preventive or
corrective opportunities that the employer provided.
Vance v. Ball State Univ., 570 U.S. 421, 424 (2013). Second, as discussed in Vance, it is an
affirmative defense, and the City of Hammond has not sought to invoke it, so Szany’s
insistence that the City must satisfy its elements to prevail at summary judgment is
legally misplaced. Instead, I look to whether Hammond was “negligent either in
discovering or remedying the harassment” and here, as discussed above, the material
facts all show it was not.
Finally, some of Szany’s arguments cross the bridge into absurdity, such as her
counsel’s argument that she should prevail at summary judgment because he is a male
and “a staunch conservative” and still representing Szany in this case even though,
according to him, “many male lawyers” will not represent women in sexual harassment
lawsuits. [See DE 312 at 28.] The brief is littered with many such unfounded statements
and arguments without any citation to underlying facts or legal authority.
Accordingly, Hammond is entitled to summary judgment on the sexual
harassment claim because Szany has failed to present evidence of severe or pervasive
harassment against her. Furthermore, Hammond has shown that it promptly
investigated the situation, disciplined Garcia with a five-day suspension, and
successfully kept Garcia and Szany from interacting after the incident, all of which
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shows a reasonable response on its part.
2. The Retaliation Claim Against Hammond
I’ll now move on to Szany’s retaliation claim. “Title VII also prohibits retaliation
against employees who engage in statutorily protected activity by opposing an
unlawful employment practice or participating in the investigation of one.” Lord v. High
Voltage Software, Inc., 839 F.3d 556, 563 (7th Cir. 2016). Thus, Szany would be required to
show at trial that (1) she engaged in statutorily protected activity; (2) her employer took
an adverse action against here; and (3) there was a causal link between the protected
activity and the adverse action. Id. (“A retaliation claim requires proof that the plaintiff
suffered an adverse employment action because of his statutorily protected activity; in
other words, the plaintiff must prove that he engaged in protected activity and suffered
an adverse employment action, and that there is a causal link between the two.”); Mollet
v. City of Greenfield, 926 F.3d 894, 896 (7th Cir. 2019) (same). Hammond says that setting
the first element aside, the undisputed facts show that Szany cannot succeed on the
remaining two elements. If Hammond is right on either count, it is entitled to summary
judgment on this claim too.
In saying she suffered an adverse employment action, Szany does not say she
was demoted, held back, disciplined, or given a worse assignment. Instead, she focuses
on what Hammond allegedly did to her in the car accident lawsuit filed against her and
Hammond by a third party. But even assuming that part of her employment includes
the hiring of legal counsel by Hammond to defend her, there are still numerous
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problems with this claim. In order to show that there was an “adverse” action, she
needs to show that the counsel provided to her was deficient or had an actual conflict of
interest, not just one she subjectively felt existed. And there is no allegation, let alone
evidence, of deficient performance by the attorney, only Szany’s alleged conflict of
interest.
In order to determine whether a conflict of interest existed, I look to the Indiana
Rules of Professional Conduct on the issue. Rule 1.7 states that “a lawyer shall not
represent a client if the representation involves a concurrent conflict of interest.” A
concurrent conflict of interest is defined to include “the representation of one client will
be directly adverse to another client” or “there is a significant risk that the
representation of one or more clients will be materially limited by the lawyer’s
responsibilities to another client, a former client or a third person, or by a person of
interest to the lawyer.” Ind. R. Prof. Conduct 1.7. Here, it is undisputed that the lawyer
hired to represent both the City and Szany in the car accident case is different than the
counsel representing Szany or the City in this lawsuit. Likewise, it’s undisputed that
Szany’s and the City’s interests in the car accident lawsuit were wholly aligned—the
City was sued (and potentially liable) because Szany was driving her patrol car and on
the job at the time of the accident. She may have wanted a different lawyer and been
unhappy she didn’t get one, but it’s axiomatic under employee retaliation law that
“[n]ot everything that makes an employee unhappy is an actionable adverse action.”
Burton v. Board of Regents of University of Wisconsin Sys., 851 F.3d 690, 696 (7th Cir. 2017)
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(citation omitted). The adverse action must be “more disruptive than a mere
inconvenience or an alteration of job responsibilities.” Porter v. City of Chicago, 700 F.3d
944, 954 (7th Cir. 2012). Here, the legal representation in the car accident lawsuit had, at
most, a tangential relationship to Szany’s employment conditions. But more
importantly, there was no actual conflict of interest (as opposed to a subjective feeling
of one by Szany), so it’s impossible to say there was any adverse action whatsoever.
In support of her argument that a conflict existed, Szany eschews the Indiana
Rules of Professional Conduct (and in fact fails to cite any legal authority whatsoever in
support of her arguments on this claim). [See DE 312 at 56-58.] Instead, she points to the
fact that the Corporation Counsel for the City of Hammond testified at her deposition
that she did not discuss the car accident case with Szany because in her view it “would
have been a conflict” to communicate with Szany because of this lawsuit in which the
City is adverse to Szany. Thus, Szany’s entire argument regarding retaliation relies on
speculation and a statement by an attorney for the City that, as an attorney for the City,
she would not communicate with Szany, who she knew was represented by counsel
and suing the City in this lawsuit. It’s a fundamental ethical rule that attorneys cannot
reach out and speak to adverse parties that they know are represented by counsel. Ind.
R. Prof. Conduct 4.2. That fact does absolutely nothing to advance Szany’s retaliation
claim because she still cannot point to any adverse action by the City against her. She
has thus failed to show an adverse employment action.
What’s more, she has adduced zero evidence of any connection between the
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City’s actions and her protected activity, i.e., the required “but-for” causation required
in Title VII retaliation claims. Univ. of Texas Sw. Med. Ctr. v. Nassar, 570 U.S. 338, 360
(2013) (but-for causation in this context “requires proof that the unlawful retaliation
would not have occurred in the absence of the alleged wrongful action or actions of the
employer”); see also Lord., 839 F.3d at 563 (summarizing the question as “Does the
record contain sufficient evidence to permit a reasonable fact finder to conclude that
retaliatory motive caused the discharge?”). “Speculation based on suspicious timing
alone, however, does not support a reasonable inference of retaliation . . .. The mere fact
that one event preceded another does nothing to prove that the first event caused the
second.” Sauzek v. Exxon Coal USA, Inc., 202 F.3d 913, 918 (7th Cir. 2000). Here, Szany
offers nothing more than speculation and ipse dixit that the City’s refusal to pay for two
lawyers in the car accident lawsuit was because she sued it for sexual harassment.
Hammond is entitled to summary judgment on this claim too.
C. Garcia’s Motion for Summary Judgment
This brings me to Garcia’s motion for summary judgment. As alleged against
him in the operative complaint, there are only state law claims against him for battery
and false imprisonment. The only federal claims in this lawsuit were against Hammond
and those have been disposed of above. That leaves Indiana state law torts, being
asserted by one Indiana resident (Szany) against another Indiana resident (Garcia).
Given the factual overlap with the claims asserted against the City, it made sense for the
state law claims to be tried in the same forum as the federal claims under the
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discretionary doctrine of pendent or supplemental jurisdiction. See City of Chicago v. Int’l
Coll. of Surgeons, 522 U.S. 156, 172 (1997); 28 U.S.C. § 1367. But on its own, the case
against Garcia is a case which I do not have federal jurisdiction over and there are no
“special circumstances” that counsels in favor of allowing it to continue in federal court.
Buethe v. Britt Airlines, Inc., 749 F.2d 1235, 1240 (7th Cir. 1984) (“[T]his court has
consistently affirmed the district courts’ exercise of discretion in dismissing pendent
state law claims without prejudice when the federal claims are dismissed before trial.”).
Accordingly, the claims against Garcia will be dismissed, without prejudice. Szany can
sue Garcia in state court if she so chooses, and the statute of limitations should be a nonissue. See Huffman v. Hains, 865 F.2d 920, 923-924 (7th Cir. 1989) (“[T]he statute of
limitations should not be a concern in this case because Indiana has a savings statute . . .
[which] applies in a case such as this one where a federal court dismisses a state-law
claim for lack of subject matter jurisdiction.”); I.C. § 34-11-8-1.
Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, summary judgment will be granted in favor of the
City, the claims against Garcia will be dismissed for lack of jurisdiction, and this case
will be brought to a close before me. I have no doubt that this was a terrible experience
for Szany. The conduct described was highly inappropriate and shouldn’t have
happened anywhere, let alone in the workplace. I understand her anger and frustration.
The problem is, the evidence presented, taken in a light most favorable to Szany, just
does not add up to a meritorious federal claim.
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ACCORDINGLY: Plaintiff’s Motion for Leave to file an oversized brief [DE 324]
is GRANTED; Plaintiff’s Motion for Leave to file a Seventh Amended Complaint [DE
326] is DENIED; Plaintiff’s Motion to Strike the Declaration of Captain Jeff Long [DE
335] is DENIED; Defendant’s Motion to Strike the Declaration of Denise Szany [DE 344]
is GRANTED; Plaintiff’s Motion for Leave to File a Statement of Genuine Disputes of
Material Fact [DE 348] is DENIED; and Plaintiff’s Objections to Docket 363 [DE 364] are
OVERRULED.
The Defendant the City of Hammond’s Motion for Summary Judgment [DE 308]
is GRANTED. The Clerk shall ENTER FINAL JUDGMENT in favor of the City of
Hammond.
With judgment in favor of the City, the only remaining claims are Indiana state
law claims between two Indiana residents concerning an incident that took place in
Indiana, and there is no federal jurisdiction over this lawsuit. Garcia’s Motion for
Summary Judgment [DE 306] is DENIED AS MOOT, and the claims against Garcia are
DISMISSED, without prejudice. If Szany wants to pursue those claims, she’ll have to do
so in state court.
The Clerk is directed to CLOSE the case.
SO ORDERED on May 28, 2020.
/s/ Philip P. Simon
PHILIP P. SIMON, JUDGE
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
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