ROVNER, Circuit Judge.
Plaintiff-Appellee Nereida Mendez brought a complaint against her former employer Perla Dental and Dental Profile (collectively "Perla") alleging gender discrimination and a hostile work environment in violation of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 ("Title VII"), 42 U.S.C. §§ 2000e et seq., retaliation in violation of Title VII, assault and battery, intentional infliction of emotional distress, retaliatory discharge in violation of Illinois law, and claims under the Fair Labor Standards Acts, 29 U.S.C. §§ 201 et seq., and the Illinois Minimum Wage Law, 820 ILCS 105/1 et seq. A jury found for Mendez on all claims and awarded Mendez compensatory and punitive damages, overtime damages, and lost wages.
On appeal, the defendants argue that the court lacked subject matter jurisdiction over the retaliatory discharge claim, and that both the decision on that claim and the punitive damages award based on it must be vacated. The defendants acknowledge that this appeal is the first time they have raised the jurisdictional issue, but they point out that issues of subject matter jurisdiction are never waived and can be raised at any point in the proceeding. See Dexia Credit Local v. Rogan, 602 F.3d 879, 883 (7th Cir.2010).
Because the appeal involves a narrow claim, we will set forth only the general facts relevant to that issue. The evidence at trial demonstrated that the defendants maintained an environment of ongoing verbal and physical sexual harassment of female employees, refused repeatedly to change that environment, and ultimately terminated Mendez for her complaints of mistreatment. Mendez's complaints took a variety of forms. She complained of sexual harassment to the office manager, the assistant office manager, and the general manager, but those complaints resulted in no changes in the environment, and in fact caused her to be criticized and ridiculed in front of the other employees. In addition, she complained to the police when one incident resulted in physical injury to her. In that incident, Dr. Dajani pushed her to the floor after she refused his suggestion that she date Dr. Ahmed. She injured her back in that fall and received treatment in the emergency room. She then filed a police report concerning that incident. That action caused an escalation in the harassment. Mendez introduced testimony that when she gave the defendants the bill from her hospital visit, the owner stated "[w]ho do you think you are bringing the police into our office," and then told her she was fired and had her escorted from the building.
The essence of the subject matter jurisdiction contention is that the claim presented to the jury was one of unlawful discrimination over which the Illinois
The parties agree, however, that at the time the complaint was filed, the district court had subject matter jurisdiction over the Illinois retaliatory discharge claim because the claim had an independent basis. In addition to the claims based on sexual harassment, the complaint also alleged that she was fired for filing a police report concerning the assault. The defendants concede that a discharge for filing a police report is an Illinois common law tort without reference to the duties created by the Act, and therefore not within the exclusive jurisdiction of the Commission. See Blount, 328 Ill.Dec. 239, 904 N.E.2d at 9. That ends our inquiry. Subject matter jurisdiction is determined as of the filing of a complaint, and with a few exceptions not relevant here, is not lost as a result of subsequent developments in a case. Greenberger v. GEICO General Ins. Co., 631 F.3d 392, 396 (7th Cir.2011); Cunningham Charter Corp. v. Learjet, Inc., 592 F.3d 805, 807 (7th Cir.2010). In Cunningham Charter, we identified some of those exceptions, such as where a class becomes moot in the course of litigation, or where a plaintiff amends away jurisdiction in a subsequent pleading.
The defendants do not point to any such circumstances here, but argue that Mendez essentially abandoned her claim of retaliatory discharge based on the filing of the police report, leaving only the sexual harassment underpinnings for the claim and depriving the district court of subject matter jurisdiction. This argument and conclusion are legally flawed. In fact, the Illinois Supreme Court rejected a nearly-identical argument in Blount. The plaintiff in Blount was fired because she refused to commit perjury in a co-worker's discrimination suit against Blount's employer. 328 Ill.Dec. 239, 904 N.E.2d at 9-10. The Illinois Supreme Court recognized that a retaliatory discharge premised upon that refusal to commit perjury was a tort that was independent of the Illinois Human Rights Act, and therefore could be maintained in the Illinois circuit court. Id. The Illinois Supreme Court therefore reversed the appellate court, which had held that her claim was preempted because the evidence at trial had not supported her allegation that she refused to commit perjury.
We need not even consider that issue, however, because an even more fundamental problem with the defendants' argument is that there is no factual basis for the conclusion that Mendez abandoned the claim. That argument is based entirely on the jury instruction given to the jury on the retaliation claim, which was so general that it would allow the jury to find retaliatory discharge based on the complaints of sexual harassment rather than the filing of the police report. Even if, as the defendants argue, the jury instruction failed to include an element of the claim, that raises only a challenge to the jury instruction, not a challenge to subject matter jurisdiction. It is undisputed that the evidence at trial included evidence relating to the police report, and in fact the defendants proposed a jury instruction for the retaliatory discharge claim that included reference to the police report. There is simply no factual basis to hold that Mendez abandoned her common law retaliatory discharge claim at trial. Thus, we need not even address the flawed argument that the abandonment somehow operated to deprive the court, at that late date, of subject matter jurisdiction.
The error in the jury instruction is simply a trial error that the defendants could have challenged on the merits, but they failed to do so at any appropriate point in time. At trial, the defendants agreed to the instruction, and on appeal to this court they failed to present any challenge to the jury instruction, relying entirely on a challenge to the subject matter jurisdiction of the district court. They attempt to belatedly raise a plain error challenge to the jury instruction in their reply brief, but it is well-established that arguments raised for the first time in the
The decision of the district court is AFFIRMED.