In the
United States Court of Appeals
For the Seventh Circuit
____________________
No. 17‐2564
QUINN R. HEATH,
Plaintiff‐Appellant,
v.
INDIANAPOLIS FIRE DEPARTMENT,
Defendant‐Appellee.
____________________
Appeal from the United States District Court for the
Southern District of Indiana, Indianapolis Division.
No. 1:15‐cv‐425‐JMS‐MJD — Jane E. Magnus‐Stinson, Chief Judge.
____________________
ARGUED FEBRUARY 21, 2018 — DECIDED MAY 9, 2018
____________________
Before RIPPLE, KANNE, and HAMILTON, Circuit Judges.
KANNE, Circuit Judge. In January 2015, Quinn Heath ap‐
plied to become an Indianapolis firefighter. Over the next four
months, he passed the Indianapolis Fire Department’s written
examination, oral interview, and Certified Physical Agility
Test. Quinn’s performance during the application process led
to his placement on a ranked list for hiring consideration. The
Department hired two academy classes in 2015 from that
ranked list, but Quinn was not selected for either class.
2 No. 17‐2564
Meanwhile, Quinn’s father—Rodney Heath—filed a qui
tam suit under the False Claims Act against the Indianapolis
Fire Department, alleging that the Department had made
false statements of material fact to the federal government in
order to receive federal grant funds. At the time, Rodney was
a backup investigator in the Department’s arson unit. The
same day that Quinn found out he had not been selected for
the second academy class, the Department’s Deputy Chief
told several Department employees they needed to be inter‐
viewed by the U.S. Department of Homeland Security in con‐
nection with Rodney’s suit.
Thereafter, Quinn joined his father’s suit, alleging that the
Department retaliated against him for his father’s complaint,
in violation of the False Claims Act. Quinn’s retaliation claim
alleges that he was not hired as an Indianapolis firefighter be‐
cause of his father’s suit.
The district court granted summary judgment to the Indi‐
anapolis Fire Department on Quinn’s retaliation claim. Quinn
now appeals that decision.
We review the district court’s grant of summary judgment
de novo, viewing the record in the light most favorable to
Quinn. Austin v. Walgreen Co., 885 F.3d 1085, 1087 (7th Cir.
2018). We may affirm summary judgment on any ground sup‐
ported by the record as long as the issue was adequately
raised below and the nonmoving party had an opportunity to
contest it. See West Side Salvage, Inc. v. RSUI Indem. Co., 878
F.3d 219, 222 (7th Cir. 2017). For the reasons that follow, we
affirm.
No. 17‐2564 3
I. ANALYSIS
The False Claims Act protects whistleblowers from retali‐
ation, providing that “[a]ny employee … shall be entitled to
all relief necessary to make that employee … whole, if that
employee … is discharged, demoted, suspended, threatened,
harassed, or … discriminated against in the terms and condi‐
tion of employment because of lawful acts done by the em‐
ployee … or associated others” in furtherance of a False
Claims Act action. 31 U.S.C. § 3730(h)(1) (2010); see also
§ 3730(h)(2) (describing relief under (h)(1)).
The district court’s dismissal of Quinn’s claim turned on
its conclusion that the False Claims Act’s anti‐retaliation pro‐
visions do not cover job applicants or prospective employees.
This court has not yet addressed that issue, and we decline to
do so now. Even assuming that § 3730(h)’s definition of “em‐
ployee” is broad enough to encompass job applicants or pro‐
spective employees, the Indianapolis Fire Department would
still be entitled to summary judgment. Section 3730(h)(1) re‐
quires that Quinn show he was retaliated against because of his
father’s protected activity, and he cannot do so.
Recent authority raises a question about what causation
standard Quinn must meet to show that he was retaliated
against because of his father’s protected activity. In Fanslow v.
Chicago Manufacturing Center, Inc., relying in part on Title VII
principles, we noted that False Claims Act complainants can
establish that they were retaliated against because of pro‐
tected activity by demonstrating that the retaliation was mo‐
tivated “at least in part” by the protected activity. 384 F.3d 469,
485 (7th Cir. 2004). Nearly ten years post‐Fanslow, the Su‐
preme Court held that Title VII retaliation claims require
4 No. 17‐2564
but‐for causation, rather than the lesser mixed‐motive stand‐
ard of causation we described in Fanslow. Univ. of Tex. Sw. Med.
Ctr. v. Nassar, 570 U.S. 338, 360 (2013). We have not yet revis‐
ited Fanslow to extend Nassar’s Title VII holding to
§ 3730(h)(1), though the similarity of the two provisions
might give us reason to do so in a future case. See United States
ex rel. King v. Solvay Pharm., Inc., 871 F.3d 318, 333 (5th Cir.
2017) (noting that the False Claims Act requires but‐for cau‐
sation). But the causation standard makes no difference here.
Under any standard, there is no evidence—even when con‐
struing the facts in Quinn’s favor—from which a jury could
conclude that the Department did not hire Quinn because of
his father’s qui tam suit.
Applicants to the Indianapolis Fire Department are placed
on a ranked hiring list according to their scores on various
merit‐based metrics. Under a local ordinance governing the
Department’s hiring, eighty percent of an academy class is to
be filled in rank order, starting with the top candidate on the
list. Then, the fire chief can exercise his discretion to fill the
remaining twenty percent of the class. The Department has
also established selection criteria that guide the fire chief’s dis‐
cretionary picks, preferencing applicants with two or more of
the following “markers”: “racial minority, female gender, col‐
lege degree, fire training or experience, and legacy” (meaning
a family member is a current or former member of the Depart‐
ment). (Appellant’s Br. at 3.) Applicants receive the college de‐
gree marker only if they earned a degree; they do not receive
the marker if they have simply accumulated college credit
without earning a degree.
No. 17‐2564 5
To survive summary judgment, Quinn needed to demon‐
strate either (1) that he should have been an automatic selec‐
tion for an academy class and he was not, or (2) that the chief
exhausted two‐marker applicants for discretionary selections
and still did not select Quinn. Only then could a reasonable
trier of fact have any evidence from which to conclude that
Rodney’s qui tam suit motivated, at least in part, the Depart‐
ment’s decision not to hire Quinn.
At best, Quinn was ranked 64th on the hiring list. (Appel‐
lant’s Br. at 5, 30 (citing R. 84‐4).) And he had one marker—
legacy—because of his father’s employment at the Depart‐
ment. Though Quinn had 66 hours of college credit, he never
earned a degree, and thus did not receive that marker. Quinn
did not receive an automatic or discretionary selection to ei‐
ther of the two academy classes chosen in 2015.
The fire chief selected 30 applicants from the list for the
first academy class. The first 24 were hired in rank order. At
64th, Quinn did not receive an automatic selection. Then, 6
spots remained for the chief’s discretionary picks. All 6 spots
were filled by applicants with two or more markers, and 3 of
those spots were filled by applicants ranking ahead of Quinn.
Given that 27 applicants ranked ahead of Quinn were se‐
lected for the first class, Quinn’s ranking improved to, at best,
37th for the second class.
The chief planned to fill the second academy class with 40
applicants from the list. The chief filled the first 29 spots in the
class in rank order. He then filled the remaining 11 spots with
discretionary selections, all of which had two or more mark‐
ers. More than 10 two‐marker applicants still remained on the
list who were not selected for an academy class. It appears an
6 No. 17‐2564
automatic selection withdrew from the hiring process after
the selections were finalized, and the chief did not replace her,
leaving the second academy class at 39 recruits.
If the chief was following the Department’s 80/20 rule
based on a 40‐recruit class, he should have picked 32 appli‐
cants as automatic selections. But even if the chief had picked
32 automatic selections, Quinn would not have been an auto‐
matic selection ranked at 37th. And selecting 8, rather than 11,
discretionary picks would have similarly had no impact on
Quinn’s chances, particularly because a large pool of
two‐marker applicants still remained after the chief filled both
academy classes.
In sum, Quinn was ranked, at best, five spots too low to
receive an automatic selection to an academy class. And every
discretionary pick in both classes had more markers than
Quinn, consistent with the Department’s policy for discretion‐
ary selections. Thus, there is no evidence from which a rea‐
sonable jury could conclude that Rodney’s suit was even a
motivating factor in the decision not to hire Quinn.
II. CONCLUSION
Quinn’s retaliation claim against the Indianapolis Fire De‐
partment raises a complicated question about the scope of the
False Claims Act’s anti‐retaliation provisions. We need not re‐
solve that question in this case, however. Even assuming that
the meaning of “employee” under § 3730(h) is broad enough
to encompass job applicants or prospective employees, there
are no facts from which a jury could conclude that Quinn was
retaliated against because of his father’s qui tam suit.
The district court’s judgment in favor of the Indianapolis
Fire Department on Quinn’s retaliation claim is AFFIRMED.