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Appellate Court Date: 2016.11.08
09:49:52 -06'00'
Vulpitta v. Walsh Construction Co., 2016 IL App (1st) 152203
Appellate Court ANTHONY VULPITTA, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. WALSH
Caption CONSTRUCTION COMPANY and THE WALSH GROUP, Ltd.,
Defendants-Appellees.
District & No. First District, Sixth Division
Docket No. 1-15-2203
Filed September 2, 2016
Decision Under Appeal from the Circuit Court of Cook County, No. 13-L-11488; the
Review Hon. Margaret A. Brennan, Judge, presiding.
Judgment Affirmed.
Counsel on Law Office of William M. Walsh (William M. Walsh, of counsel), and
Appeal Law Office of Paul Luka, P.C. (Paul Luka, of counsel), both of
Chicago, for appellant.
Kelley Drye & Warren, LLP, of Chicago (Matthew C. Luzadder and
John C. Pirra, of counsel), for appellees.
Panel JUSTICE DELORT delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion.
Presiding Justice Rochford and Justice Hoffman concurred in the
judgment and opinion.
OPINION
¶1 Plaintiff Anthony Vulpitta sued defendants Walsh Construction Company (Walsh) and
The Walsh Group, Ltd. (Walsh Group), for retaliatory discharge and discrimination on the
basis of a work-related disability. The main issue presented in this appeal is whether Vulpitta
filed his original underlying charges with the Department of Human Rights (Department)
within 180 days of his termination as required by law. Vulpitta claims the defendants
terminated him on July 11, 2012, which would make his charges timely; the defendants
contend they terminated Vulpitta on May 24, 2012, which would make his charges untimely.
The trial court granted summary judgment to the defendants, finding that Vulpitta was
terminated on May 24, 2012. The court also found there were no material issues of fact
supporting Vulpitta’s retaliatory discharge claim. Vulpitta appeals, contending that the trial
court made improper factual findings to resolve these claims. We disagree and therefore
affirm.
¶2 BACKGROUND
¶3 The facts established by the depositions and pleadings in the record are as follows. Vulpitta
worked for defendants as a carpenter and carpenter foreman from around June 2000 until May
24, 2012, when he was laid off due to a slowdown in construction activity. He testified that, as
a foreman on small Walsh construction projects, he was able to hire a construction worker “for
a week or so” but observed that requirements in the employee handbook made it difficult to do
so and that a prospective employee was no longer a “Walsh guy *** if you missed 30 days.” In
other words, “If you were laid off for 30 days, you had to re[-]sign up with Walsh.”
¶4 Around March 7, 2008, Vulpitta suffered a work-related injury to his left bicep and wrist.
He received treatment and returned to work in August or September 2008 with various job
restrictions recommended by his physician (primarily in the form of weight limitations and
daily break periods), which defendants provided. Vulpitta testified that Patrick Easterday, his
friend and supervisor, told him to take breaks as needed and that he was never denied a work
break. He filed a workers’ compensation claim as to these injuries on August 20, 2009. He did
not dispute that defendants employed him on nine different construction projects from the time
he filed the claim until his layoff on May 24, 2012.
¶5 Around August 15, 2011, Vulpitta suffered a work-related injury to his left hip and went to
the hospital for an evaluation. He was examined and discharged to return to unrestricted work
the following day. He went to his primary care physician the day after (August 17), but that
physician also approved his return to work without restrictions.
¶6 On October 31, 2011, Vulpitta began working at defendants’ construction project at the
Spring Grove apartment complex, and Easterday was again his supervisor. In December 2011,
defendants offered Vulpitta $80,000 to settle his 2009 workers’ compensation claim, but he
rejected the offer the following March.
¶7 Easterday testified at his deposition that, on May 24, 2012, Vulpitta was laid off from the
Spring Grove project because the carpentry work was complete. Easterday further noted that
Vulpitta was the last carpenter to be laid off. Easterday’s secretary Michelle Griffin, who
handled payroll for the project, stated that because no carpenters were paid after that date,
carpentry work must have stopped at that time.
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¶8 Vulpitta testified that, on May 24, Easterday had told him “Walsh was slow but that things
would be breaking.” Easterday did not recall making this statement to plaintiff. Vulpitta and
Easterday, however, agreed that Vulpitta was the last carpenter to be laid off at the Spring
Grove project, Easterday did not promise to rehire Vulpitta, and Easterday never indicated to
Vulpitta that his layoff was only “temporary.” Easterday further testified that, after May 24, he
had no work for a carpenter foreman and did not hire any carpenters or carpenter foremen for
the rest of 2012. Vulpitta, however, testified that he had heard from other carpenters that there
was still carpentry work to be done at the Spring Grove project.1 Vulpitta admitted that he only
“heard rumors” and “believed” that there was a carpenter foreman still working on the Spring
Grove project.
¶9 Vulpitta further admitted that, following the May 24 layoff, he no longer received any
compensation or benefits from defendants. He also testified that he filed for unemployment
benefits between May 24 and June 3, 2012, and listed the reason for being unemployed as
“lack of work.” He testified, however, that he believed that he was still “employed” by
defendants because Easterday told him that “there would be something breaking.”
¶ 10 On July 2, 2012, Vulpitta went to a third physician, Dr. Robert Fink, for treatment of his
left hip pain. Dr. Fink ordered Vulpitta to undergo an X-ray examination that same day, the
results of which indicated no fractures or dislocations. Dr. Fink then ordered an MRI of
Vulpitta’s pelvis, including both hips.
¶ 11 Vulpitta contacted Griffin the same day and told her that Dr. Fink needed the medical
records and information relating to his August 15, 2011, treatment at Central DuPage Hospital
for his “workmen comp claim.” According to Vulpitta, Griffin retrieved that information for
him that day, and Vulpitta passed it along to Dr. Fink. Griffin testified during her deposition,
however, that she never had a conversation with Vulpitta regarding any information his doctor
needed so that he could pursue a workers’ compensation claim regarding his August 2011
injury. Griffin added that it was against company policy to provide any medical or injury
documentation to anyone, even if it were an employee requesting his own documentation;
instead, Griffin said she would “[p]erhaps” refer the employee to the insurance department.
Griffin further confirmed that she never had a conversation with Easterday regarding
Vulpitta’s termination or workplace injuries, although she would ordinarily “apprise”
Easterday of an employee’s call regarding a workplace injury. Easterday testified that he was
unaware as to whether Griffin and Vulpitta spoke regarding the need for plaintiff to obtain
information about his August 2011 injuries. Easterday further noted that it was “doubtful” that
Griffin would have told him of the conversation, because she would not have asked Easterday
about any employee seeking his personal records.
¶ 12 On July 6, 2012, Vulpitta filed a workers’ compensation claim for his August 2011 hip
injury. Four days later, he underwent the MRI that Dr. Fink had ordered. The next day, July 11,
2012, Vulpitta and Easterday met for lunch. Easterday said that he had never met a laid-off
employee for lunch before, but he and Vulpitta had been friends for many years. Vulpitta
agreed that Easterday was a friend of his and added that they played on a hockey team together,
that their families had spent holidays together, and that he and Easterday had met for lunch “a
couple hundred times” before. According to Vulpitta, Easterday told him, “I have to let you
1
At the subsequent hearing on defendants’ motion for summary judgment, the trial court declined
to consider this evidence on hearsay grounds.
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go,” and “I don’t want to do this. You know I have to do this. It’s not coming from me, but I
have to do this.” Easterday did not recall making any of those statements. According to
Easterday, he informed Vulpitta at the lunch that “nothing was breaking,” that there were no
openings for a carpenter foreman in the near future, and that Vulpitta should feel free to find a
position elsewhere if necessary.
¶ 13 On July 16, 2012, Dr. Fink told Vulpitta that the results of the MRI also showed no
fractures, bone chips, or dislocations. According to Vulpitta, Dr. Fink told him that a
“different” MRI might show something, so sometime that summer, he saw a Dr. Kuhlman,
who ordered a “Tesla” MRI. The results of that MRI showed that he had a “torn labrum,” but
he never reported those results to defendants.
¶ 14 Vulpitta recalled that, around June 2008, he learned that Easterday was going to terminate
a labor foreman, Anestacio Ferralez,2 because Ferralez had gotten “hurt a lot” and became a
“liability.” Vulpitta, however, admitted that he did not hear the conversation between
Easterday and Ferralez and was not in the room when Ferralez was terminated. Easterday
testified at his deposition that Ferralez was laid off because the work at the job site was
complete and that Ferralez had announced his retirement to Easterday.
¶ 15 Finally, when asked what specific facts he had to support his claim that he was fired in
retaliation for seeking a claim under the Workers’ Compensation Act (820 ILCS 305/1 et seq.
(West 2012)), Vulpitta responded that it was Easterday’s use of the “same words in our
conversation as was [Ferralez’s] conversation[:] that he had to let me go, that he didn’t want to
do this. He didn’t want to have to fire me, but it’s something he had to do.” Vulpitta admitted
that his employment could be terminated if work was “slow” and that, at the time of his layoff,
work was slow.
¶ 16 On December 28, 2012, Vulpitta filed a charge of discrimination with the Department,
alleging that defendants discriminated against him when it terminated his employment on the
bases of retaliation and disability. On August 1, 2013, the Department dismissed Vulpitta’s
charges for lack of jurisdiction, finding that he filed them 218 days after his “discharge date of
work” (May 24, 2012), which was more than the statutory time limit of 180 days after the
commission of an alleged civil rights violation. Complainants aggrieved by an adverse
decision of the Department have an option to file a complaint regarding the Department’s
decision with the Human Rights Commission (775 ILCS 5/7A-102(D)(3) (West 2012)) or by
filing a civil action in the circuit court, which hears the claim de novo rather than by
administrative review (775 ILCS 5/8-111(A) (West 2012)). The Department advised Vulpitta
of these options in its dismissal order. He chose to bypass the Commission and proceed
directly to circuit court. Accordingly, the part of this case regarding discrimination based on
disability comes to us in a rather unusual stance. We must review whether a claim was filed
timely with an administrative agency not based on the record made before the agency and
under the deferential standards applicable to administrative review, but rather based on a
factual record created at the trial court level.
¶ 17 On October 15, 2013, Vulpitta filed a three-count complaint against the defendants. Count
I alleged retaliatory discharge, i.e., that defendants terminated his employment in retaliation
for his seeking benefits under the Workers’ Compensation Act (820 ILCS 305/1 et seq. (West
2
In the record, Ferralez’s name is also spelled “Anastacio Forales” and “Anastacio Ferales.” For the
sake of clarity, we will use the spelling “Anestacio Ferralez,” the spelling used in the complaint.
-4-
2012)). Counts II and III alleged unlawful discharge/refusal to accommodate based upon an
actual (count II) or perceived (count III) disability, in violation of the Illinois Human Rights
Act (Act) (775 ILCS 5/1-101 et seq. (West 2012)).
¶ 18 On July 15, 2014, defendants filed their answer to the complaint. In response to Vulpitta’s
allegation that they continued to hire carpenters “[f]ollowing the termination of plaintiff’s
employment,” defendants admitted that Vulpitta was laid off on May 24, 2012, and that Walsh
hired carpenters “subsequent to May 24, 2012.”
¶ 19 Defendants moved for summary judgment, arguing that counts II and III (alleging
violations of the Act) were untimely because Vulpitta filed his original charges with the
Department outside of the 180-day limitations period, and that count I (alleging retaliatory
discharge) failed both because Vulpitta failed to establish causation and also because
defendants had a valid nonpretextual reason for terminating him. Following a hearing, the trial
court granted defendants’ motion for summary judgment. This appeal followed.
¶ 20 ANALYSIS
¶ 21 On appeal, Vulpitta contends that the trial court erred in granting defendants’ motion for
summary judgment. Specifically, he argues that the trial court erred in finding that there was no
genuine issue of fact that his employment termination date was May 24, 2012, and not July 11,
2012 (the date of his lunch with Easterday). Plaintiff claims that using the later date would
preserve counts II and III because the underlying charges would have then been filed with the
Department within the 180-day limitations period for claims under the Act. He also contends
that count I should survive because of the temporal proximity—a mere five days—between the
July termination date and the date he filed his workers’ compensation claim relating to his
August 2011 work-related injury.
¶ 22 Summary judgment is appropriate “if the pleadings, depositions, and admissions on file,
together with the affidavits, if any, show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact
and that the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law.” 735 ILCS 5/2-1005(c)
(West 2012). Summary judgment is a drastic measure and should only be granted when the
moving party’s right to judgment is “clear and free from doubt.” Outboard Marine Corp. v.
Liberty Mutual Insurance Co., 154 Ill. 2d 90, 102 (1992). To determine whether there is a
genuine issue of material fact, we construe the pleadings, depositions, admissions, and
affidavits strictly against the moving party and liberally in favor of the opponent. Id. at 131-32.
However, unsupported conclusions, opinions, or speculation are insufficient to raise a genuine
issue of material fact. Id. at 132. We review a trial court’s entry of summary judgment de novo.
Id. at 102. Moreover, this court reviews the judgment, not the reasoning, of the trial court, and
we may affirm on any grounds in the record, regardless of whether the trial court relied on
those grounds or whether the trial court’s reasoning was correct. Leonardi v. Loyola University
of Chicago, 168 Ill. 2d 83, 97 (1995).
¶ 23 The Disability Discrimination Claims (Counts II and III)
¶ 24 Vulpitta contends that the trial court erred in granting summary judgment on counts II and
III for numerous reasons. First, he contends that the trial court erred in finding that he was
“judicially estopped” from denying he was terminated on May 24, 2012, a finding based on his
sworn statement in his application for unemployment benefits that he had been terminated on
that date due to a lack of work. Vulpitta further faults the trial court for discrediting his
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testimony regarding Easterday’s alleged statements to him at their July 11, 2012, lunch. He
also argues that the trial court erred in finding that an employee who has been temporarily laid
off has been terminated for purposes of claims under both the Act and the Workers’
Compensation Act. Finally, he argues that he reasonably believed that he had not been
“permanently terminated” on May 24, 2012, based upon both Easterday’s purported comments
to him that “new work would be breaking soon” and also his history of “temporary layoffs after
which Easterday recalled him to work.”
¶ 25 The Act prohibits employment discrimination on the basis of a disability. 775 ILCS
5/1-101 et seq. (West 2012); Raintree Health Care Center v. Illinois Human Rights Comm’n,
173 Ill. 2d 469, 479 (1996). In addition, “where the Act provides coverage, it is the exclusive
remedy for employment discrimination.” Baker v. Miller, 159 Ill. 2d 249, 256 (1994). With
certain exceptions not relevant here, “no court of this state shall have jurisdiction over the
subject of an alleged civil rights violation other than as set forth in this Act.” 775 ILCS
5/8-111(D) (West 2012).
¶ 26 Section 7A-102 of the Act provides that charges of civil rights violations must be filed with
the Department within 180 days after the date of the commission of the alleged violation. 775
ILCS 5/7A-102(A)(1) (West 2012). Compliance with the statutory time limit is a condition
precedent to the right to seek a remedy and is a prerequisite to the Commission’s acquisition of
subject matter jurisdiction. Weatherly v. Illinois Human Rights Comm’n, 338 Ill. App. 3d 433,
437 (2003). Accordingly, even though the trial court considered Vulpitta’s charges de novo, if
he did not originally file them with the Commission on time, he is precluded from pursuing
them in the circuit court.
¶ 27 The undisputed facts outlined above lend ample support to the trial court’s conclusion that
Vulpitta was terminated on May 24, 2012, for the purpose of determining whether his charges
were timely. These facts include the following: (1) Easterday’s testimony that Vulpitta was
laid off on May 24 because the Spring Grove carpentry work was complete, (2) Vulpitta was
the last carpenter to be laid off of that job and received no pay after that date, (3) Easterday’s
testimony that Walsh had no further work for carpenters in 2012, and (4) Vulpitta’s filing for
unemployment benefits immediately after the May 24 layoff. Vulpitta challenges the
underpinnings of some of these facts, but below, we explain that none of his contentions are
meritorious.
¶ 28 We first review Vulpitta’s contentions that the trial court found that he was estopped from
claiming the July termination date because he had used the May date on his unemployment
application. Under the doctrine of judicial estoppel, “[t]he party to be estopped must have (1)
taken two positions, (2) that are factually inconsistent, (3) in separate judicial or quasi-judicial
administrative proceedings, (4) intending for the trier of fact to accept the truth of the facts
alleged, and (5) have succeeded in the first proceeding and received some benefit from it.”
Seymour v. Collins, 2015 IL 118432, ¶ 37.
¶ 29 Contrary to Vulpitta’s contentions, the record reveals that the trial court never specifically
barred his contention that he was terminated on July 11, 2012, based on judicial estoppel. The
court simply referenced Vulpitta’s deposition testimony—in which he agreed that, when he
filed his unemployment compensation claim, he had been terminated on May 24 for lack of
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work—and merely observed that he could not really “back away” from that sworn statement.3
Because we can affirm on other grounds, we decline to address the issue of whether Vulpitta’s
statement on his unemployment application might have estopped him from claiming a later
termination date.
¶ 30 The trial court characterized Vulpitta’s claim that his termination date was July 11, 2012,
the day he met Easterday for lunch, as “at best disingenuous,” “creative[,] and a significant
reach.” Vulpitta claims these statements amounted to an improper credibility determination
regarding this testimony. Indeed, a trial court cannot weigh evidence, decide facts and make
credibility determinations at the summary judgment stage. Gulino v. Economy Fire & Casualty
Co., 2012 IL App (1st) 102429, ¶ 25. However, we do not believe that the trial court was
making a credibility determination to resolve the conflict between the two possible termination
dates. Instead, it appears that the court was criticizing the viability of the legal conclusion that
Vulpitta reached based on the undisputed evidence in the summary judgment record. At any
rate, we review the judgment, not the reasoning, of the trial court, and we may affirm on any
basis in the record, regardless of whether the trial court relied upon it and regardless of the
correctness of the trial court’s reasoning. Leonardi, 168 Ill. 2d at 97.
¶ 31 The evidence demonstrates that Vulpitta was terminated in May. At the lunch meeting,
plaintiff merely testified that Easterday told him, “I have to let you go,” and “I don’t want to do
this. You know I have to do this. It’s not coming from me, but I have to do this.” Easterday
recalled that he only informed plaintiff at the lunch that “nothing was breaking,” that there
were no openings for a carpenter foreman in the near future, and that plaintiff should feel free
to find a position elsewhere if necessary. These statements, even taken as true, do not create an
issue of material fact as to the date Vulpitta was terminated. Therefore, regardless of the trial
court’s characterizations, these statements lend no factual support to Vulpitta’s claim
regarding the later termination date.
¶ 32 Vulpitta’s third argument is that a temporary layoff does not equate to a termination for
claims under the Act and the Workers’ Compensation Act. Easterday’s hopeful comment that
another construction project would begin at some unspecified point in the near future (or in his
terms, “something would be breaking soon”) was not enough to establish that Walsh failed to
make a final decision to terminate Vulpitta’s employment and that Walsh failed to give him
unequivocal notice of his termination. Here, Vulpitta—an at-will employee—was told that he
was laid off on May 24, 2012, and he no longer received wages or benefits from Walsh as of
that date. He also acknowledged in his deposition that: there was no promise of permanent
employment; there was no promise to rehire him; there was no statement that his layoff was
only temporary; he filed for unemployment benefits, based upon a lack of work; he could be
terminated “if Walsh was slow” (i.e., for lack of work); and “things were slow” at the time of
his layoff.
3
The record only includes plaintiff’s deposition testimony regarding his application for
unemployment benefits and does not include the actual application. Plaintiff, however, does not
challenge either the trial court’s or defendants’ claim that his statements to IDES were made under oath.
See Foutch v. O’Bryant, 99 Ill. 2d 389, 391-92 (1984) (holding that an appellant has the burden to
present a sufficiently complete record of the proceedings at trial to support a claim of error, and in the
absence of such a record, “it will be presumed that the order entered by the trial court was in conformity
with law and had a sufficient factual basis”).
-7-
¶ 33 Along the same line, Vulpitta contends that Walsh did not make the finality of the May 24
layoff sufficiently clear to him so as to put him on notice of an impending deadline to file
charges. Vulpitta cites Paradise v. Augustana Hospital & Health Care Center, 222 Ill. App. 3d
672, 676 (1991), for the proposition that “sufficient notice [of a termination] is that which
clearly discloses to persons of ordinary intelligence what is intended.” Even so, the Paradise
court rejected an argument similar to that Vulpitta makes here, finding that the letter at issue,
which terminated a consulting agreement, “constituted sufficient notice because it clearly
disclosed to a person of ordinary intelligence that defendant intended to terminate the
contract.” In light of the closing of the carpentry work at the Spring Grove project, we cannot
discern how anyone in Vulpitta’s place would have understood the May 24 discussion with
Easterday as anything but a termination.
¶ 34 Nonetheless, relying upon a federal decision, Flannery v. Recording Industry Ass’n of
America, 354 F.3d 632 (7th Cir. 2004), Vulpitta argues that there was not a “ ‘final, ultimate,
non-tentative decision to terminate’ ” his employment and that he did not receive clear and
unequivocal notice that defendants intended to “end their employment relationship with
[p]laintiff.” We are unpersuaded by Vulpitta’s reliance upon Flannery. Decisions of federal
district or circuit courts are not binding on Illinois courts. Prodromos v. Everen Securities, Inc.,
389 Ill. App. 3d 157, 175 (2009) (citing Travelers Insurance Co. v. Eljer Manufacturing, Inc.,
197 Ill. 2d 278, 302 (2001)). More importantly, however, Flannery is distinguishable.
¶ 35 In Flannery, the plaintiff alleged that his supervisors told him in a March 2000 meeting that
he would have to leave his employment because of his age and bad health, but when the
plaintiff responded that he did not want to leave, “[a]t that point, they told him that they would
keep him on and see how things went.” (Emphasis added.) Flannery, 354 F.3d at 636. In June
2001, however, the plaintiff was informed that he would be (and was) terminated effective
October 1, 2001; the plaintiff then filed his claim with the Equal Employment Opportunity
Commission (EEOC) on October 22, 2001. Id. The federal trial court, however, found that the
300-day limitations period began as of the March 2000 meeting and that the plaintiff’s claims
were time-barred. Id. The Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals reversed, holding that the
defendant’s acquiescence in allowing the plaintiff to continue working after the March 2000
meeting rendered it “at least *** plausible” that the decision to terminate the plaintiff was June
2001, making the EEOC claim timely. Id. at 640-41. Here, by contrast, defendants did not
acquiesce in Vulpitta’s continued employment past May 24, 2012, and Vulpitta does not
dispute that he was laid off by defendants on that date and was no longer receiving a salary or
employment-related benefits thereafter. His reliance upon Flannery is therefore unavailing.
¶ 36 Vulpitta’s last argument is that he “reasonably believed” that he would be rehired after
May 24 based upon Easterday’s purported statement that new work would be “breaking” soon,
and as such, his termination date should be July 11, when Easterday informed him that nothing
would be breaking. This claim, however, also fails. At his deposition, Vulpitta freely admitted
that, if you were laid off for 30 days or more, you were no longer a “Walsh guy” and had to
“re[-]sign up” with Walsh. Therefore, based upon his own deposition testimony, Vulpitta
could no longer consider himself a Walsh employee as of June 23, 2012 (i.e., 30 days after
May 24, 2012), and he had to file his claim of discrimination under the Act by December 20,
2012 (180 days after June 23, 2012). However, he filed his discrimination claim on December
28, 2012. As noted above, the Act is the “exclusive remedy” for employment discrimination
claims (Baker, 159 Ill. 2d at 256), and no court has jurisdiction “over the subject of an alleged
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civil rights violation other than as set forth in th[e] Act” (775 ILCS 5/8-111(D) (West 2012)). It
follows perforce that since Vulpitta’s claim with the Department was untimely, the trial court
did not have statutory jurisdiction over the counts seeking remedies created by the Act.
Therefore, the trial court correctly entered summary judgment on these counts in favor of
defendants.
¶ 37 Retaliatory Discharge Claim (Count I)
¶ 38 Vulpitta also challenges the trial court’s granting of summary judgment in favor of
defendants on his retaliatory discharge claim. Specifically, he argues that the trial court erred
in finding that no genuine issue of fact that his employment termination date was May 24,
2012, and not July 11, 2012, because the later date was only five days after he filed his
workers’ compensation claim relating to his injury from the prior August. Vulpitta explains
that: On July 2, he asked Griffin (Easterday’s secretary) for his medical record to process his
claim; on July 6, he filed his claim; and then on July 11, he had lunch with Easterday, during
which Easterday “permanently discharged” him and said there were no new construction
projects “breaking.” Vulpitta imputes Griffin’s alleged knowledge of his worker’s
compensation claim to Easterday.
¶ 39 As a general rule, an employer in Illinois may discharge an at-will employee at any time
and for any reason. Zimmerman v. Buchheit of Sparta, Inc., 164 Ill. 2d 29, 32 (1994). In Kelsay
v. Motorola, Inc., 74 Ill. 2d 172, 181-85 (1978), however, our supreme court carved out a
limited exception to this rule and recognized an employee’s right to file a retaliatory discharge
claim if he was fired for seeking workers’ compensation benefits. To state a claim for
retaliatory discharge, a plaintiff must establish the following elements: (1) he was an employee
of the defendant at or before the time of the injury; (2) he exercised some right under the
Workers’ Compensation Act; and (3) his discharge was causally related to the exercise of his
rights under the Workers’ Compensation Act. Grabs v. Safeway, Inc., 395 Ill. App. 3d 286, 291
(2009). The element of causation is not met, however, if the employer has a valid,
nonpretextual basis for discharging the employee. Clemons v. Mechanical Devices Co., 184 Ill.
2d 328, 336 (1998). With respect to the element of causation, “the ultimate issue to be decided
is the employer’s motive in discharging the employee.” Id.
¶ 40 In this case, the trial court properly granted defendants’ motion for summary judgment
because Vulpitta failed to establish a causal connection between his exercise of his rights under
the Worker’s Compensation Act and his discharge. Vulpitta’s first reported work-related
injury occurred in March 2008, and he returned to work in August or September of that year
with restrictions involving the need to take multiple work breaks and a limit on the amount of
weight he could lift. Vulpitta admitted that he was never denied a work break, and defendants
consistently accommodated his restrictions. In addition, Vulpitta does not challenge
defendants’ claim that he was continuously employed on nine different construction projects
between the date he filed his workers’ compensation claim (August 20, 2009) and the date of
his layoff for lack of work (May 24, 2012). While it is true that the mere passage of time will
not per se insulate an employer from a retaliatory discharge claim (see Netzel v. United Parcel
Service, Inc., 181 Ill. App. 3d 808, 813 (1989)), the undisputed facts in this case, including
Vulpitta’s continued work on at least nine different construction projects and the employer’s
allowance of his work restrictions, amply support the trial court’s finding that Vulpitta’s
termination was not retaliatory.
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¶ 41 In addition, Vulpitta’s claim that he was permanently discharged in July 2012 (and
implicitly in retaliation for his filing for benefits in August 2011) also fails for lack of
causation. Easterday testified that Vulpitta was the last carpenter to be laid off from the Spring
Grove project because the carpentry was complete, and Easterday further testified that, after
May 24, he had no work for a carpenter foreman and did not hire any carpenters or carpenter
foremen for the rest of 2012. This testimony was corroborated by both Vulpitta, who agreed
that he was the last carpenter to be laid off, and Griffin, who stated that she no longer saw any
carpenters listed on the payroll sheet after May 24, 2012.
¶ 42 Vulpitta claims that, when he contacted Griffin and asked for his medical records for his
August 2011 workers’ compensation claim (July 2, 2012), it was only a few days prior to his
July 12 lunch with Easterday, which Vulpitta characterizes as the date of his “permanent
discharge.” Vulpitta then implies that Griffin provided this information to Easterday, who then
“permanently” terminated Vulpitta in retaliation for filing this claim. Setting aside Griffin’s
denial of having had any such conversation with Vulpitta, he cannot establish that Griffin
communicated this information to Easterday. 4 Easterday could not recall ever having a
conversation with Griffin regarding Vulpitta and stated that it was “doubtful” that she would
have discussed that with him because she would not have asked Easterday about any employee
that was seeking his or her own personal records.
¶ 43 Vulpitta relies on the similarity between Easterday’s purported rationale for terminating
Ferralez (purportedly because Ferralez was “getting hurt a lot”) and the statements made to
him in July. However, Vulpitta admitted that he was not present when Ferralez was terminated
and thus cannot contradict Easterday’s testimony that Ferralez was terminated because work at
the job site was complete and Ferralez retired afterwards.
¶ 44 Finally, Vulpitta testified that the only fact supporting his claim was Easterday’s statement
at their lunch that Easterday had to let Vulpitta go but did not want to. This does not contradict
Easterday’s testimony that he met with Vulpitta to explain that new work was not, in fact,
breaking soon and that Vulpitta should seek alternate employment if necessary. In sum,
Vulpitta’s evidence failed to establish a retaliatory motive as the cause of his termination. The
trial court thus properly granted summary judgment in favor of defendants because
unsupported conclusions or speculation cannot create a genuine issue of material fact.
Outboard Marine, 154 Ill. 2d at 132.
¶ 45 Vulpitta, however, replies that it was “undisputed” that Walsh hired carpenters after his
layoff, but we note that Vulpitta’s complaint merely asserted that Walsh did so “[f]ollowing”
his layoff, and Walsh agreed to this vague assertion: Walsh’s answer, filed on July 15, 2014,
agreed that, “subsequent to” Vulpitta’s layoff in May 2012 (and prior to the filing date of the
answer to the complaint), Walsh did hire carpenters. Similarly, although Vulpitta testified that
other carpenters told him that there was additional work to be done at Spring Grove, Vulpitta
conceded that he only heard rumors and merely “believed” that there was another carpenter
4
In his reply brief, Vulpitta asserts that Griffin testified at her deposition that she “advised
Easterday of all work-related phone calls, including calls regarding workers’ compensation matters.”
She did not. The portion of the record Vulpitta cites merely indicates that Griffin would advise
Easterday of work-related matters and workplace injuries. Matters involving a workers’ compensation
claim would “[p]erhaps” be referred to the Insurance Department because “company policy” prohibited
Griffin from providing any individual with documentation.
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foreman that was still working on that project. In sum, there is nothing in the record that either
established that Walsh hired these carpenters shortly after plaintiff’s layoff or contradicted
Easterday’s statement that, after May 24, he did not hire any carpenters or carpenter foremen
for the rest of 2012. This argument also fails to create an issue of fact because it is too
speculative. See id. Vulpitta’s final contention of error is therefore without merit.
¶ 46 CONCLUSION
¶ 47 The trial court properly granted summary judgment in favor of defendants on plaintiff’s
retaliatory discharge claim because he failed to establish causation. The court also properly
granted summary judgment to defendants on the discrimination claim because the plaintiff did
not assert it in a timely manner. Accordingly, we affirm the judgment of the trial court.
¶ 48 Affirmed.
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