When Discrimination Claims Go Under the Knife: A Surgeon’s Legal Misadventure

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The United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit recently dissected a bariatric surgeon’s discrimination claims. The surgeon alleged that his former employer discriminated against him based on his race and color when it favored another surgeon who allegedly harassed the plaintiff. However, the plaintiff misdiagnosed the situation.

Let’s explore why his arguments flatlined.

The Prima Facie Misdiagnosis

The plaintiff alleged that his employer refused to hire an additional bariatric surgeon to join his practice but found backup coverage for another surgeon outside his protected classes. To establish a claim of discrimination based on such circumstantial evidence, a plaintiff must identify circumstances suggesting discriminatory intent. The plaintiff pointed to a Caucasian colleague who received additional staffing support as a comparator. However, the court found that comparing these two surgeons was like comparing a stethoscope to a scalpel. They worked in different locations, hospitals, and cities, and their staffing needs and patient demands were incomparable.

Takeaway: When claiming discrimination, finding a comparator who is truly similarly situated in all relevant aspects is essential. Just sharing the same job title and employer isn’t enough. Think of it like comparing two different medical instruments—they may both be used in healthcare, but their functions and contexts are entirely different. When that happens, the discrimination claim is DOA.

The Cat’s Paw Catastrophe

Our surgeon also tried to argue discrimination based on the “cat’s paw” theory, which involves a biased subordinate influencing an unbiased decision-maker to take adverse action. He claimed that two colleagues harassed him and manipulated the employer into taking adverse actions against him. However, his argument fell apart because he couldn’t provide any evidence that his colleagues acted out of discriminatory animus. He admitted he never heard them make any comments about his race or color and had no evidence that they treated him differently based on his race or color. His assumptions and speculations were as flimsy as a paper gown.

Takeaway: The “cat’s paw” theory requires solid evidence of discriminatory intent from the subordinate. Without it, the argument is as weak as a patient’s pulse during a code blue.

Conclusion

This case serves as a reminder that establishing a prima facie case of discrimination requires more than just identifying an adverse action and a protected class. Comparators must be similarly situated in all material respects, and claims of discriminatory intent must be supported by evidence. Cases like these underscore the importance of thorough documentation and evidence when handling discrimination claims.

In employment law, evidence as precise as a surgeon’s scalpel and arguments as robust as a healthy heartbeat will send a plaintiff’s baseless assumptions to the legal equivalent of the morgue.

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