Andrew Dunlevy v. James Langfelder ( 2022 )


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  •                                In the
    United States Court of Appeals
    For the Seventh Circuit
    ____________________
    No. 21-3098
    ANDREW DUNLEVY,
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    v.
    JAMES O. LANGFELDER, et al.,
    Defendants-Appellees.
    ____________________
    Appeal from the United States District Court for the
    Central District of Illinois.
    No. 19-cv-3093 — Sue E. Myerscough, Judge.
    ____________________
    ARGUED MAY 25, 2022 — DECIDED OCTOBER 26, 2022
    ____________________
    Before RIPPLE, ROVNER, and JACKSON-AKIWUMI, Circuit
    Judges.
    JACKSON-AKIWUMI, Circuit Judge. Andrew Dunlevy, a
    white man who worked as a utility water meter reader for the
    City of Springfield, sued Mayor James Langfelder and the
    City for racial discrimination after he was fired for inaccu-
    rately reporting homeowners’ water meters. In support of his
    claims, Dunlevy compared himself to a black coworker, Tour
    Murray, who was not fired even though he started work late,
    2                                                 No. 21-3098
    left early, and took unauthorized hours-long breaks during
    his shift. At summary judgment, the district court ruled
    against Dunlevy because it concluded that the conduct at is-
    sue was so different that the men were not similarly situated,
    leaving Dunlevy unable to establish a prima facie case of dis-
    parate punishment. We reverse because the district court
    drew too narrow a comparison: The two men are sufficiently
    similarly situated for Dunlevy to at least bring his claims to
    trial.
    I
    Springfield’s publicly owned utility, City Water Light and
    Power, employs water meter readers. The utility assigns the
    meter readers a route to follow each month. On their routes,
    the meter readers visit each residential and commercial cus-
    tomer location, find the meter there, and enter the corre-
    sponding data into a handheld computer. There is no hand-
    book or policy manual for meter readers; they primarily re-
    ceive on-the-job training.
    Meter readers, like most City employees, are subject to a
    twelve-month probationary period at the beginning of their
    employment, as required by City ordinance. Springfield, Ill.,
    Code § 36.11 (2021). During the probationary period employ-
    ees can have their employment summarily terminated. Only
    after the probationary period ends are employees “certified,”
    which entitles them to certain employment protections. Meter
    readers work for the utility, but the mayor is the ultimate de-
    cisionmaker in all hiring and firing for the City.
    In September 2017, Mayor Langfelder hired Dunlevy and
    Murray as meter readers. Both men received the same pay
    and were placed on the twelve-month probationary period.
    No. 21-3098                                                  3
    The two men also had the same supervisory structure: they
    directly reported to the same supervisor, and there were five
    levels of supervision between them and the mayor.
    Near the end of their probationary periods, both Dunlevy
    and Murray were the subjects of investigations into miscon-
    duct. Supervisors discovered that Dunlevy had inaccurately
    recorded meters at seven different homes, a practice known
    as “curbing meters.” Whether Dunlevy did so accidentally or
    intentionally was of no importance to his supervisors. Two
    supervisors testified at a deposition that curbing meters is a
    fireable offense, even for protected employees. As for Murray,
    supervisors discovered that he had been starting work late,
    leaving work early, and walking off the job while on duty,
    sometimes for up to three hours. Murray also lied on his em-
    ployment application by failing to disclose a seven-year-old
    burglary conviction on his self-identification form, even
    though the city required applicants to disclose any prior con-
    victions. Although lying on a job application is considered a
    fireable offense, one witness stated that the City does not re-
    quire applicants to disclose convictions that are more than
    seven years old. All of the supervisors who worked beneath
    the mayor unanimously agreed that both men should be fired,
    and they presented this recommendation to the mayor.
    Langfelder fired Dunlevy, but not Murray. He extended
    Murray’s probationary period by another six months.
    Langfelder testified that he understood that Murray’s con-
    duct involved only taking 15-minute lunch breaks, which was
    merely a training issue.
    Dunlevy brought an equal protection claim (under 
    42 U.S.C. § 1983
    ) against Langfelder and an Illinois Human
    Rights Act claim (under 775 ILCS 5/2-101) and a Title VII
    4                                                      No. 21-3098
    claim (under 42 U.S.C. § 2000e) against the City for disparate
    punishment based on his race. 1 The mayor and the City
    moved for summary judgment, arguing that Dunlevy and
    Murray were not similarly situated therefore Dunlevy could
    not make a prima facie case for disparate punishment, and the
    district court agreed. Dunlevy now appeals that determina-
    tion.
    II
    We review a summary judgment decision de novo and
    construe the record in the light most favorable to the non-
    moving party. Hall v. Nalco Co., 
    534 F.3d 644
    , 646 (7th Cir.
    2008). Summary judgment is appropriate only when there is
    no genuine dispute of material fact, and the moving party is
    entitled to judgment as a matter of law. FED. R. CIV. P. 56(c).
    All three of Dunlevy’s claims follow the same analysis, so
    they all rise or fall together. See Barnes v. Bd. of Trs. of Univ. of
    Ill., 
    946 F.3d 384
    , 389 (7th Cir. 2020) (“The legal standard for
    analyzing racial discrimination claims under Title VII and §
    1983 is the same.”); Zaderaka v. Ill. Human Rights Comm’n, 
    545 N.E.2d 684
    , 687 (Ill. 1989) (adopting the “analytical frame-
    work” of Title VII cases for the Illinois Human Rights Act).
    Dunlevy pursues his claims under the McDonnell Douglas bur-
    den-shifting framework, see McDonnell Douglas Corp. v. Green,
    
    411 U.S. 792
     (1973), which gives the plaintiff the initial burden
    to establish a prima facie case of discrimination, after which
    the burden shifts to the defendant to provide a legitimate jus-
    tification, before finally shifting back to the plaintiff to estab-
    lish that such justification was pretextual. Purtue v. Wis. Dep’t
    1 Dunlevy also sued two other supervisors, but he does not appeal
    their dismissal.
    No. 21-3098                                                      5
    of Corr., 
    963 F.3d 598
    , 601–02 (7th Cir. 2020). The parties focus
    only on Dunlevy’s initial burden of establishing a prima facie
    case.
    To establish a prima facie case for disparate punishment,
    Dunlevy must show: (1) he is “a member of [a] protected
    class”; (2) he met his “employer’s legitimate job expectations”;
    (3) he suffered an “adverse employment action”; and (4) “sim-
    ilarly situated employees outside of the protected class were
    treated more favorably.” Naficy v. Ill. Dep’t of Human Servs.,
    
    697 F.3d 504
    , 511 (7th Cir. 2012). The parties disagree solely
    on the final element—whether Dunlevy and Murray are sim-
    ilarly situated.
    The parties’ dispute on appeal ignores an initial snag in
    Dunlevy’s claims. Because this is a reverse discrimination
    case (as Dunlevy is a member of a majority group), “the first
    prong of the McDonnell test cannot be used,” and Dunlevy
    cannot simply succeed by showing he is of a certain race. See
    Gore v. Indiana Univ., 
    416 F.3d 590
    , 592 (7th Cir. 2005) (citation
    omitted). Rather, Dunlevy must provide evidence of “back-
    ground circumstances … show[ing] an inference that the em-
    ployer has reason or inclination to discriminate invidiously
    against whites or evidence that there is something ‘fishy’
    about the facts at hand.” Bless v. Cook Cnty. Sheriff’s Office, 
    9 F.4th 565
    , 574 (7th Cir. 2021); see also Mills v. Health Care Serv.
    Corp., 
    171 F.3d 450
    , 455 (7th Cir. 1999). Dunlevy suggests that
    Langfelder and the City had a reason for discriminating
    against whites because the mayor “was very concerned about
    minority hiring numbers.” But that only shows that the mayor
    was concerned with minority hiring and retention—it does
    not support an inference that the mayor was intentionally dis-
    criminating against white employees. Regardless, we do not
    6                                                    No. 21-3098
    decide this issue because the mayor and the City rest solely
    on the similarly situated element before the district court and
    this court, so they have waived any argument on this front.
    See Cloutier v. GoJet Airlines, LLC, 
    996 F.3d 426
    , 451 (7th Cir.
    2021) (citations omitted).
    Employees are similarly situated if they “dealt with the
    same supervisor, were subject to the same standards, and had
    engaged in similar conduct without such differentiating or
    mitigating circumstances as would distinguish their conduct
    or the employer’s treatment of them.” Gates v. Caterpillar, Inc.,
    
    513 F.3d 680
    , 690 (7th Cir. 2008) (citation omitted). “This is not
    a ‘magic formula,’ however, and the similarly-situated in-
    quiry should not devolve into a mechanical, ‘one-to-one map-
    ping between employees.’” Coleman v. Donahoe, 
    667 F.3d 835
    ,
    847 (7th Cir. 2012) (citation omitted). If a comparator engaged
    in equivalent or more egregious conduct than the plaintiff but
    received a lighter punishment, or none at all, that satisfies the
    inquiry. Ezell v. Potter, 
    400 F.3d 1041
    , 1050 (7th Cir. 2005). The
    parties agree that Dunlevy and Murray had the same super-
    visor and were subject to the same standards. Thus, the only
    question is whether the two men’s conduct was of “compara-
    ble seriousness,” i.e., did they engage in “similar—not identi-
    cal—conduct to qualify as similarly situated.” Coleman, 667
    F.3d at 850–51 (citations omitted).
    Dunlevy suggests two bases for why Murray is an appro-
    priate comparator. First, Dunlevy contends that Murray’s re-
    peated disregard for his work hours rose to the same level of
    seriousness. This argument echoes our decision in Ezell.
    There, the United States Postal Service fired a white man for
    taking a single extended lunch break and identified a black
    employee who lost a piece of mail and was not disciplined.
    No. 21-3098                                                      7
    Ezell, 
    400 F.3d at 1050
    . We held that because the USPS’s “pri-
    mary business is delivering mail,” it logically followed that
    misplacing mail “would also be a serious offense, at least as
    serious as taking a long lunch.” 
    Id.
    Here, the utility’s core business is providing utilities to the
    residents of Springfield, and the core function of a meter
    reader is to accurately read and report customers’ usage. Dun-
    levy repeatedly curbed the meters of multiple residential cus-
    tomers, costing both them and the utility time and money. No
    doubt, Dunlevy’s conduct was serious in the eyes of the utility
    and Langfelder. But the same could be said of Murray. A rea-
    sonable factfinder can infer that an employee taking unau-
    thorized leave for multiple hours every day is engaging in se-
    rious misconduct. After all, an employee who simply fails to
    show up to work undermines the utility’s core mission just as
    much as an employee who shows up but periodically does a
    poor job.
    We have repeatedly warned that courts should not draw
    the question of similarly situated too narrowly. “Comparators
    need only be similar enough to enable ‘a meaningful compar-
    ison.’” Coleman, 667 F.3d at 848. A white plaintiff suing for
    discrimination need not find “a non-Caucasian employee
    who committed exactly the same infraction and was treated
    more favorably.” Ezell, 
    400 F.3d at 1050
    ; see also McDonald v.
    Santa Fe Trail Transp. Co., 
    427 U.S. 273
    , 283 n.11 (1976) (citation
    omitted) (“[P]recise equivalence in culpability between em-
    ployees is not the ultimate question…”). The north star in the
    similarly situated inquiry has always been whether the two
    employees “engaged in conduct of comparable seriousness.”
    Coleman, 667 F.3d at 851 (citation omitted). On the facts of this
    case, Dunlevy’s meter curbing undermined the core function
    8                                                                No. 21-3098
    of the utility, and Murray’s tardiness and absences under-
    mined a basic tenet of any employment: be present. 2
    Dunlevy also points to Murray’s burglary conviction. But
    a biographical fact does not make Murray similarly situated—
    we look only to conduct. See id. at 850–51. Dunlevy therefore
    notes that Murray indicated he was never convicted of a crime
    on the self-identification form that was part of his job applica-
    tion. While there is evidence that lying on a job application is
    grounds for termination, evidence also suggests that the City
    is not concerned with convictions that are seven years old.
    Moreover, unlike abandoning one’s post for hours on end, a
    2 We cannot agree with the dissenting opinion’s suggestion that our
    court has determined that lying to one’s employer is per se a more serious
    infraction than other irresponsible workplace conduct. Each of the cases
    the dissenting opinion cites for this implied proposition is distinguishable
    from our facts in a key manner: the record in each case contained inde-
    pendent evidence about the employer’s own view of the comparative se-
    riousness of violations. In Reives v. Illinois State Police, 
    29 F.4th 887
    , 892-93
    (7th Cir. 2022), the plaintiff and his comparator violated different rules,
    which carried different punishments—all codified in the state police’s
    Rules of Conduct. That internal variation led our court to find the con-
    duct at issue was not comparably serious. 
    Id.
     In Hiatt v. Rockwell Interna-
    tional Corporation, 
    26 F.3d 761
     (7th Cir. 1994), our court never reached the
    question of whether alcohol infractions were more or less serious than fal-
    sification offenses; in fact, we described Hiatt’s attempted comparison as
    “incomplete or arbitrary.” 
    Id. at 771
    . For this reason, one cannot read into
    Hiatt a rule about the comparative seriousness of deception versus other
    infractions. Lastly, in Ezell v. Potter, 
    400 F.3d 1041
    , 1050 (7th Cir. 2005), a
    third employee had been disciplined for delaying mail delivery. This evi-
    dence of the employer’s own general course of conduct allowed us to
    make an inference about which transgressions the employer considered
    serious; we did not establish a bright-line rule governing future cases.
    Here, by contrast, we have minimal guidance in the record about which
    infractions the City generally perceives as more or less serious.
    No. 21-3098                                                   9
    misstatement about an old conviction does not directly un-
    dermine the core duties of a meter reader or the utility’s func-
    tion. Regardless, we need not decide whether Murray’s mis-
    representation renders him similarly situated because he is al-
    ready an adequate comparator based on his repeated act of
    walking off the job while on duty.
    One final note is in order. Langfelder argues that he never
    personally met Dunlevy or Murray, so he did not know their
    races when he made his decision. See, e.g., Matthews v.
    Waukesha Cnty., 
    759 F.3d 821
    , 827 (7th Cir. 2014) (race discrim-
    ination claim failed because plaintiff “acknowledged that
    none of those involved in the hiring process … knew the race
    of the applicants when evaluating and grouping the applica-
    tions,” among other reasons). But the City asks every job ap-
    plicant to fill out self-identification forms, which includes a
    question about their ethnicity. These forms were part of their
    personnel files that the mayor reviewed. A jury could thus
    reasonably infer that Langfelder was aware of their races.
    III
    Because Murray’s tardiness and absences are of compara-
    ble seriousness to Dunlevy’s meter curbing for purposes of
    the McDonnell Douglas burden-shifting framework, we
    VACATE the district court’s decision and REMAND for further
    proceedings.
    10                                                 No. 21-3098
    RIPPLE, Circuit Judge, dissenting. Andrew Dunlevy sued
    Mayor Langfelder and the City of Springfield for racial dis-
    crimination after he was terminated from his position as a wa-
    ter meter reader for City Water Light and Power (“CWLP”)
    before the end of his probationary period. The City, acting
    through Mayor Langfelder, premised this termination on
    Mr. Dunlevy’s falsification of meter readings, a practice
    known as “curbing meters.” To support his disparate treat-
    ment claim, Mr. Dunlevy, a white man, compares himself to
    Tour Murray, a Black water meter reader whose probationary
    period was extended after the City discovered unauthorized
    gaps in his workdays. The majority concludes that Mr. Mur-
    ray’s tardiness and absences are of comparable seriousness to
    Mr. Dunlevy’s meter curbing for purposes of establishing a
    prima facie case of disparate punishment under the McDon-
    nell Douglas burden-shifting framework. See Majority Op. 9.
    In my view, the two men’s conduct is not comparably serious
    because tardiness and absences do not undermine the core
    business of CWLP to the same extent as falsifying meter read-
    ings. I therefore respectfully dissent.
    Mr. Dunlevy alleges disparate punishment by Mayor
    Langfelder and the City based on his race. To establish a
    prima facie case for disparate punishment under the well-es-
    tablished burden-shifting analysis outlined in McDonnell
    Douglas Corp. v. Green, 
    411 U.S. 792
     (1973), Mr. Dunlevy must
    show: (1) he was a member of a protected class; (2) he was
    meeting the City’s legitimate job expectations; (3) he was sub-
    jected to a materially adverse employment action; and (4) sim-
    ilarly situated employees outside of the protected class were
    treated more favorably. See Peirick v. Ind. Univ.-Purdue Univ.
    Indianapolis Athletics Dep’t, 
    510 F.3d 681
    , 687 (7th Cir. 2007).
    Here, the only dispute among the parties arises under the
    No. 21-3098                                                  11
    fourth prong: whether Mr. Dunlevy and Mr. Murray are sim-
    ilarly situated.
    Mr. Dunlevy must show that Mr. Murray’s conduct is suf-
    ficiently similar “to allow for a meaningful comparison in or-
    der to divine whether discrimination was at play.” Barricks v.
    Eli Lilly & Co., 
    481 F.3d 556
    , 560 (7th Cir. 2007). “[P]recise
    equivalence in culpability between employees is not the ulti-
    mate question.” Coleman v. Donahoe, 
    667 F.3d 835
    , 850 (7th Cir.
    2012) (quoting McDonald v. Santa Fe Trail Transp. Co., 
    427 U.S. 273
    , 283 n.11 (1976)). But the “similarly situated employees
    must be directly comparable to the plaintiff in all material re-
    spects.” Id. at 846 (quoting Patterson v. Ind. Newspapers, Inc.,
    
    589 F.3d 357
    , 365–66 (7th Cir. 2009)) (cleaned up).
    “In the usual case a plaintiff must at least show that the
    comparators (1) ‘dealt with the same supervisor,’ (2) ‘were
    subject to the same standards,’ and (3) ‘engaged in similar
    conduct without such differentiating or mitigating circum-
    stances as would distinguish their conduct or the employer’s
    treatment of them.’” Id. at 847 (quoting Gates v. Caterpillar,
    Inc., 
    513 F.3d 680
    , 690 (7th Cir. 2008)). Here, again, the first
    two factors are not in dispute. Mr. Dunlevy and Mr. Murray
    were hired at essentially the same time, had the same title, an-
    swered to the same chain of command, were subject to the
    same standards of conduct, and performed the same job. As
    for the third factor, “[t]o determine ‘whether two employees
    have engaged in similar misconduct, the critical question is
    whether they have engaged in conduct of comparable seri-
    ousness.’” Id. at 851 (quoting Peirick, 
    510 F.3d at 689
    ).
    No reasonable factfinder could infer from the facts of this
    case that Mr. Murray and Mr. Dunlevy engaged in conduct of
    comparable seriousness. Mr. Dunlevy falsified meter
    12                                                      No. 21-3098
    readings for at least seven different homes and therefore di-
    rectly harmed CWLP customers. His misconduct included
    charging a vacant house for water use and causing another
    customer to be required to pay $500 in a single bill. Mr. Mur-
    ray, in contrast, took unauthorized breaks during the work-
    day. Although Mayor Langfelder testified that he had under-
    stood Mr. Murray’s misconduct to consist of extending his
    lunch breaks by fifteen minutes, an internal CWLP memoran-
    dum reported large gaps in Mr. Murray’s daily work, includ-
    ing nearly three hours of downtime in addition to starting his
    workdays late and ending early.
    Under our case law, Mr. Dunlevy’s falsification of meter
    readings is a more serious transgression than Mr. Murray’s
    slacking off on the job. In Reives v. Illinois State Police, 
    29 F.4th 887
     (7th Cir. 2022), for example, we recognized that dishon-
    esty to one’s employer is a more serious offense than ineffi-
    ciency in the performance of one’s duties. In that case, two
    Illinois state troopers had been assigned identical inspection
    assignments and both had to submit a report after their su-
    pervisors became suspicious of their work activities. See 
    id. at 890
    . One trooper lied about his hours and activities; the other
    told the truth, admitting to cutting the day short to attend a
    wake while on duty. See 
    id.
     Both officers were charged with
    violating the Rules of Conduct, but one received a sixty-day
    suspension for his misrepresentations while the other was
    suspended for three days for “failing to be efficient in the per-
    formance of his duties for attending the wake.” 
    Id.
     at 892–93.
    We concluded that the officers had not engaged in conduct of
    comparable seriousness. See 
    id. at 893
    .
    In Hiatt v. Rockwell International Corp., 
    26 F.3d 761
     (7th Cir.
    1994), we similarly suggested that the submission of false
    No. 21-3098                                                            13
    information by an employee is more serious than certain other
    irresponsible workplace misconduct. There, a plaintiff was
    terminated for falsifying a receipt that he submitted for reim-
    bursement. See 
    id.
     at 763–64. The plaintiff claimed that his em-
    ployer’s reason for firing him was pretextual and argued that
    he received disparate treatment because he had filed workers’
    compensation claims, citing two other employees who were
    not terminated for alcohol-related offenses. See 
    id. at 771
    . We
    concluded that “[a]lcohol-related offenses are not the same
    type of misconduct as falsification of records” and therefore
    the plaintiff was not “similarly situated with these other em-
    ployees for purposes of a relevant comparison.” 
    Id.
    Contrary to the majority’s suggestion, Ezell v. Potter, 
    400 F.3d 1041
     (7th Cir. 2005), does not support the conclusion that
    Mr. Murray’s misconduct was comparably serious to
    Mr. Dunlevy’s. In Ezell, we held that a postal worker who was
    disciplined for taking an extended lunch break could point to
    the case of another postal worker who had lost a piece of cer-
    tified mail but had not been disciplined. See 
    id. at 1050
    . We
    allowed the comparison because the record also revealed that
    a third employee who had delayed the mail had been disci-
    plined, thus establishing that the Postal Service regarded mis-
    conduct compromising the integrity of the mail delivery sys-
    tem as a serious matter. See 
    id.
     In short, because the Postal Ser-
    vice’s “primary business is delivering mail” and there was
    “evidence in the record that another carrier was fired for de-
    laying mail,” we could “infer that losing mail would also be a
    1
    serious offense, at least as serious as taking a long lunch.” 
    Id.
    1 In Ezell, the plaintiff also presented evidence that the supervisor, who
    was not disciplined, had doctored employees’ time records, which
    14                                                           No. 21-3098
    The majority, relying on Ezell, concludes that a reasonable
    factfinder could infer that an employee taking unauthorized
    leave “is engaging in serious misconduct” on par with meter
    curbing because “meter curbing undermine[s] the core func-
    tion of the utility,” while “tardiness and absences under-
    mine[] a basic tenet of any employment: be present.” Majority
    Op. 7–8. However, our conclusion in Ezell that undermining
    an employer’s primary business is “at least as serious as tak-
    ing a long lunch,” Ezell, 
    400 F.3d at 1050
    , does not support the
    reverse inference in this case that unapproved absences are as
    serious as undermining CWLP’s primary business of provid-
    2
    ing, and accurately reporting and charging for, utilities. Ezell
    did not suggest that extended lunch breaks or other such un-
    authorized absences, on their own, undermine an employer’s
    primary business. It simply held that if an employer had not
    disciplined an employee who had interfered with the busi-
    ness’s core function, a factfinder could consider its disciplin-
    ing of an employee for an act that did not affect the core func-
    tion as some proof of discrimination.
    Even if the conduct of the two men were sufficiently com-
    parable for Mr. Dunlevy to make out a prima facie case of dis-
    parate punishment, that would merely mean that the burden
    amounted to falsifying records and violated the Fair Labor Standards Act.
    See Ezell, 
    400 F.3d at 1050
    . We concluded that the offense was “arguably
    very similar” to the conduct that led to the plaintiff’s termination and re-
    iterated that the plaintiff had sufficient evidence to survive summary
    judgment. 
    Id.
    2 Notably, although meter curbing was an offense warranting discharge,
    even for protected employees, there is no evidence in the record that un-
    authorized absences or tardiness were treated similarly seriously by
    CWLP.
    No. 21-3098                                                  15
    shifts to the City “to provide a legitimate, non-discriminatory
    reason for the action.” Ineichen v. Ameritech, 
    410 F.3d 956
    , 961
    (7th Cir. 2005) (quoting Stewart v. Henderson, 
    207 F.3d 374
    , 376
    (7th Cir. 2000)). Mayor Langfelder, as the decisionmaker, can
    be mistaken about the facts in his termination decision, as
    long as the “mistake” is not a pretext for animus. See 
    id.
    Mr. Dunlevy presents no argument that Mayor
    Langfelder’s explanation for his decisions is pretextual.
    Mayor Langfelder considered Mr. Murray’s slacking off, but
    not Mr. Dunlevy’s meter curbing, to be merely a “training is-
    sue” that could be solved through an extended probationary
    3
    period. Mayor Langfelder also assumed that the City’s Hu-
    man Resources Department had “vetted” Mr. Murray’s con-
    viction history and had approved his employment, despite
    4
    that conviction, prior to hiring him. He felt no need to second
    guess that assessment a year into Mr. Murray’s tenure with
    the City. There is no reason to believe that these non-discrim-
    inatory explanations are not legitimate.
    The unanimous recommendation by supervisors under
    Mayor Langfelder that both Mr. Dunlevy and Mr. Murray be
    terminated is not evidence that Mayor Langfelder’s explana-
    tion is pretextual. Under the City’s employment scheme, the
    ultimate decision-making authority over both Mr. Dunlevy
    and Mr. Murray rested with Mayor Langfelder, an elected of-
    ficial who could take a broader view of City administration
    when making employment decisions. It is unsurprising that
    the Mayor balanced the competing considerations of the
    3 R.23-7 at 30:18–22.
    4 
    Id.
     at 33:13–34:18; see also 
    id.
     at 35:3–5.
    16                                                   No. 21-3098
    employment decision in a manner different from supervisors
    who might bear the day-to-day brunt of training a slacking
    employee.
    Although we must “resist the temptation to act as jurors
    when considering summary judgment motions,” we also
    must not “sit as a ‘super-personnel department,’ second-
    guessing an employer’s ‘business decision as to whether
    someone should be fired or disciplined because of a work-rule
    violation.’” Coleman, 667 F.3d at 862 (quoting Ptasznik v. St. Jo-
    seph Hosp., 
    464 F.3d 691
    , 697 (7th Cir. 2006)). In this case,
    Mayor Langfelder, as the decisionmaker, made a permissible
    mayoral decision in distinguishing between the misconduct
    of Mr. Dunlevy and of Mr. Murray. Mr. Dunlevy’s affirmative
    dishonesty went to the heart of the function for which he was
    hired and directly harmed CWLP customers. On the other
    hand, the more passive activity of Mr. Murray, while delaying
    the performance of his duties, nevertheless did not directly
    impair the function of CWLP and could be remedied by the
    easily implemented extension of his probationary period.
    For the foregoing reasons, I would affirm the judgment of
    the district court and therefore respectfully dissent.