Foster v. Secretary of Navy ( 1995 )


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    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT

    _________________________

    No. 95-1522



    SHARON C. FOSTER,

    Plaintiff, Appellant,

    v.

    JOHN H. DALTON, SECRETARY OF THE NAVY,

    Defendant, Appellee.

    ____________________


    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
    FOR THE DISTRICT OF RHODE ISLAND

    [Hon. Raymond J. Pettine, Senior U.S. District Judge] __________________________
    ____________________

    Before

    Selya, Cyr and Stahl, Circuit Judges. ______________

    ____________________


    Robert B. Mann, with whom Mann & Mitchell was on brief, for ______________ _______________
    appellant.
    Jennifer H. Zacks, Attorney, U.S. Dep't of Justice, with __________________
    whom Frank W. Hunger, Assistant Attorney General, Sheldon _________________ _______
    Whitehouse, United States Attorney, and Marleigh D. Dover, __________ ___________________
    Attorney, U.S. Dep't of Justice, were on brief, for appellee.

    ____________________

    December 11, 1995

    ____________________



















    SELYA, Circuit Judge. Plaintiff-appellant Sharon C. SELYA, Circuit Judge. _____________

    Foster, an African-American woman, sued the Secretary of the Navy

    on the ground that the Newport Naval Hospital (the Hospital)

    denied her a job due to her race.1 Following a bench trial, the

    district court rendered judgment for the Secretary. Although the

    record makes it painfully clear that this episode is light years

    away from the Navy's finest hour, we have no principled choice

    but to affirm.

    I. BACKGROUND I. BACKGROUND

    The subsidiary facts are largely undisputed. The

    United States Navy maintains a substantial presence in Newport,

    Rhode Island. In the summer of 1989, the appellant found

    civilian employment at the Naval War College. Seeking to advance

    through the ranks, she assiduously applied for other, more

    attractive jobs in the Newport naval establishment. Since most

    facilities located at the base adhered to a policy of filling

    vacancies by selecting internal candidates (i.e., candidates

    already employed within the particular facility) where possible,

    the appellant had no luck until the Hospital hired her as its

    professional affairs coordinator. She reported for duty in July

    of 1990.

    Shortly after the appellant came on board, the

    Hospital's director of administration, Commander William Travis,

    sought to fill a newly created opening for a management analyst.

    ____________________

    1The Secretary is the appropriate defendant in this type of
    action. See 42 U.S.C. 2000e-16(c) (1988). ___

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    Because he believed that available funding would be jeopardized

    if the position remained open at the start of the next fiscal

    year (October 1, 1990), Commander Travis eschewed the hiring

    procedure ordinarily used to recruit civilian staff and undertook

    a non-competitive search. This process consisted mainly of

    culling the names of aspirants for advancement from existing

    files and assembling a list of potential candidates. Staff

    personnel compiled a roster of five such candidates (including

    the appellant). As among the five nominees, the appellant was

    twice distinguished: she was the only non-Caucasian and the only

    person already employed at the Hospital. Thus, had Commander

    Travis adhered to the usual policy of preferring in-house

    aspirants, the appellant who was plainly qualified for the post

    would have been selected.

    When George Warch, the Hospital's civilian program

    specialist, presented Commander Travis with the list, Travis

    inquired why James Berry's name was omitted from it. Warch

    informed Travis that Berry Warch's "fishing buddy" and Travis's

    acquaintance could not be offered employment at the grade

    specified for the position. Travis promptly directed Warch to

    rewrite the job description, specify a lower grade (at which

    Berry would be eligible), and generate a new list. Leaving

    little to chance, Travis also decreed that candidates for the

    position should have certain computer expertise expertise that

    Berry possessed and intimated that he would invoke the Veterans

    Readjustment Act (VRA), 38 U.S.C. 4214 (1988 & Supp. V 1993),


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    in filling the management analyst vacancy.2

    The modified job description yielded a fresh list with

    only one name on it: James Berry. Although Warch mused that the

    revisions made it appear that the powers-that-be had connived to

    preselect Berry for the vacancy, Travis brushed these concerns

    aside and named Berry to the management analyst position.

    In the wake of Berry's hiring, the appellant filed an

    administrative complaint with the Navy, alleging that the

    Hospital had discriminated against her on the basis of her race

    and gender. Receiving no satisfaction, she brought suit in Rhode

    Island's federal district court, charging discrimination in

    contravention of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 42

    U.S.C. 2000e (1988). Following a bench trial that focused on

    allegations of race discrimination,3 the district court ruled in

    the Secretary's favor. The court thought that the appellant

    proved a prima facie case, see Foster v. Secretary of the Navy, ___ ______ ______________________

    No. 93-0509, slip op. at 12 (D.R.I. Apr. 13, 1995), and also

    thought that she was better qualified for the position than

    Berry, see id. at 8. But the court determined that the Secretary ___ ___
    ____________________

    2Under the VRA, veterans receive preference in certain
    governmental employment. See, e.g., Jakes v. Veterans Admin., ___ ____ _____ _______________
    793 F.2d 293, 295 (Fed. Cir. 1986) (elucidating VRA preference
    system); see also Keyes v. Secretary of the Navy, 853 F.2d 1016, ___ ____ _____ ______________________
    1020-21 (1st Cir. 1988) (discussing veterans' preferences
    generally); 5 C.F.R. 307.102(a) (1995) ("Federal agencies have
    the responsibility to provide the maximum of employment and job
    advancement opportunities to eligible veterans . . . ."). Not
    coincidentally, Berry had served in the United States Navy.

    3The appellant did not press her claim of gender
    discrimination at trial, and does not seek to resurrect it on
    appeal. The claim is therefore waived.

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    had successfully rebutted the prima facie case by proffering a

    nondiscriminatory, if unsavory, reason for the personnel action:

    preselection of a friend of the appointing officer. See id. at ___ ___

    14. Overriding Travis's and Warch's pious assurances that

    cronyism played no role in Berry's recruitment, the court

    concluded that this was a near-classic case of an old boy network

    in operation, but not a situation in which the employment

    decision was motivated by racial animus.4 This appeal ensued.

    II. ANALYSIS II. ANALYSIS

    The district court wrote a thoughtful, meticulously

    reasoned opinion dealing with many of the same contentions that

    Foster voices on appeal. Having carefully explored the nooks and

    crannies of the case, we affirm the judgment essentially on the

    basis of Judge Pettine's rescript. We embellish only in certain

    limited respects.

    First: We start at a high level of generality. The First: _____

    appellant does not seriously dispute the district court's account

    of the facts, but vigorously attacks the inferences that the

    court saw fit to draw from them. Although she denies it, her

    jeremiad essentially asks that we reweigh the evidence de novo,

    and substitute a new set of inferences for the inferences drawn

    ____________________

    4Though entering judgment in the Secretary's favor, the
    district court expressed its distaste for Commander Travis's
    ichthyophagous hiring practices. Among other things, the court
    chastised Travis for his "ignorance of EEO hiring policies, his
    calloused attitude toward the hiring of minorities, and the fact
    that he rejected [Warch's] pre-selection concern . . . ."
    Foster, slip op. at 14. The court's criticism appears to be ______
    well-founded.

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    by the trier. Our standard of review, however, is much more

    circumscribed.

    Following a bench trial, an appellate tribunal is not

    warranted in substituting its judgment for that of the trial

    court. This rule is composed of equal parts of common sense and

    practical wisdom: it is difficult to gain a full appreciation of

    a fact-sensitive controversy from a paper record, and the

    district judge ordinarily has had the benefit of seeing and

    hearing the witnesses in person. Hence, we are not free to

    reject either his findings of fact or the conclusions he draws

    therefrom unless they are clearly erroneous, that is, "unless, on

    the whole of the record, we form a strong, unyielding belief that

    a mistake has been made." Cumpiano v. Banco Santander P.R., 902 ________ ____________________

    F.2d 148, 152 (1st Cir. 1990). Findings concerning an employer's

    intent are subject to review under this standard, and can be set

    aside only for clear error. See id. (citing authorities). ___ ___

    This case is troubling in that we, if writing on a

    pristine page, might well have reached a different conclusion as

    to the impetus behind the refusal to hire. But that is not the

    test. See Keyes v. Secretary of the Navy, 853 F.2d 1016, 1027 ___ _____ ______________________

    (1st Cir. 1988). While the record, read objectively, shows that

    the district court could have drawn an inference of

    discriminatory intent, it does not show that such an inference is

    compelled. That raises the stakes appreciably. It is common

    ground that, "when there are two permissible views of the

    evidence, the factfinder's choice between them cannot be clearly


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    erroneous." Johnson v. Watts Regulator Co., 63 F.3d 1129, 1138 _______ ___________________

    (1st Cir. 1995) (citing Anderson v. City of Bessemer City, 470 ________ ______________________

    U.S. 564, 574 (1985)). So it is here.

    Second: Turning to specifics, the appellant says that Second: ______

    preselection (which, according to the court below, dictated the

    adverse employment decision) occurred only after the

    decisionmaker learned that the management analyst post would go

    to an African-American woman, virtually by default, if he failed

    to adopt an alternative means of candidate selection. This is a

    plausible rendition of the facts, but not the only permissible

    one. Though Berry's name first surfaced after Commander Travis

    received an initial list, Travis could well have expected all

    along to see Berry in that lineup and, when his hopes were

    dashed, attempted to regain lost ground by altering the rules.

    Because both scenarios are plausible, we will not disturb the

    trial judge's choice between them. See Johnson, 63 F.3d at 1138; ___ _______

    Cumpiano, 902 F.2d at 152; Keyes, 853 F.2d at 1019-20. ________ _____

    Third: The appellant insists that Commander Travis's Third: _____

    abandonment of the Hospital's wonted policy of preferring in-

    house candidates itself gives rise to an irresistible inference

    of racial animus. The appellant weaves a complicated tapestry

    with the threads of this argument, hinting that the policy often

    operated in the past to exclude minority candidates from

    elevation, thus making the Hospital's disregard of it in a case

    where that policy would redound to the advantage of a minority

    candidate all the more cruel. In her view, this abrupt departure


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    from past practice can only be explained on the basis of racial

    bias. We do not agree.

    The district court treated this departure as

    suspicious, but concluded that Commander Travis tweaked the

    ordinary praxis to benefit a friend rather than to thwart a

    person of color. Two obvious propositions spring to mind. One

    is that cronyism is deplorable, especially when it is allowed to

    infect public sector employment decisions. The other obvious

    proposition is that Title VII does not have a limitless remedial

    reach. An employer can hire one person instead of another for

    any reason, fair or unfair, without transgressing Title VII, as

    long as the hiring decision is not spurred by race, gender, or

    some other protected characteristic. See Keyes, 853 F.2d at ___ _____

    1026. As we explain infra, Title VII does not outlaw cronyism _____

    and, in this case, cronyism provides a sufficient alternative

    explanation for the challenged deviation from the standard hiring

    protocol. Thus, the district court's assessment of the proffered

    evidence was not clearly erroneous.

    Fourth: At trial, Commander Travis stalwartly Fourth: ______

    maintained that he hired Berry because he was the best qualified

    aspirant. Judge Pettine understandably discounted this

    testimony. See Foster, slip op. at 14-15. Although the ___ ______

    appellant concedes that a court is not legally bound to find for

    a Title VII plaintiff simply because it rejects the employer's

    proffered reason for an employment decision, she maintains that,

    here, the court's disbelief of the explanation, coupled with the


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    deviation from the standard policy of in-house preferment,

    compels an inference that the decision was race-driven. To shore

    up this contention, the appellant points to the naval officials'

    repeated denials of favoritism. Noting that the district court

    declined to credit these denials because they were self-serving,

    see id. at 14, the appellant asseverates that, since preselection ___ ___

    was the only alternative rationale that could sidetrack a finding

    of racial discrimination, the district court erred; the denials

    of preselection were, in fact, against self-interest, and the

    employer should be held to them.

    This argument is too clever by half. We do not believe

    it is implausible that veteran bureaucrats and, in our view,

    "bureaucrat" and "naval officer" are not mutually exclusive terms

    would deny preselection to avoid the stigma of having failed to

    follow neutral hiring procedures. Indeed, Travis's and Warch's

    on-the-stand denials are replete with clues from which the

    district judge reasonably could have deduced that the two men

    collogued to tilt the process in Berry's favor.5 In all events,

    actions speak louder than words. In a bench trial "what an actor

    says is not conclusive on a state-of-mind issue. Notwithstanding

    a person's disclaimers, a contrary state of mind may be inferred

    from what he does and from a factual mosaic tending to show that

    he really meant to accomplish that which he professes not to have

    intended." Anthony v. Sundlun, 952 F.2d 603, 606 (1st Cir. _______ _______
    ____________________

    5To cite one example, Warch admitted that he proposed
    invoking the VRA as a means to getting Berry's name to the
    forefront.

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    1991).

    In one sense, the district court's finding that an old

    boy network was in operation though the old boys denied it

    amounts to a credibility call. By and large, such calls are for

    the district court, not for the court of appeals. See, e.g., id. ___ ____ ___

    (warning that the court of appeals "ought not to disturb

    supportable findings, based on witness credibility, made by a

    trial judge who has seen and heard the witnesses at first hand").

    There is no reason to apply a different rule in this case.

    Fifth: The appellant argues passionately that even if Fifth: _____

    Commander Travis fished Berry from the applicant pool simply

    because he was spawned by the old boy network, such a hiring

    decision itself contravenes the mandate of Title VII. Though

    this construct, which rests on the premise that cronyism is the

    primary means by which employers perpetuate workplace apartheid,

    possesses a certain superficial appeal, it cannot withstand close

    perscrutation.

    Indeed, the construct lacks any vestige of precedential

    support. The very cases on which the appellant relies explicitly

    reject it. See, e.g., Holder v. City of Raleigh, 867 F.2d 823, ___ ____ ______ _______________

    825-26 (4th Cir. 1989) (rebuffing plaintiff's assertion that

    nepotistic hiring practices, even when denied by defendant under

    racially charged circumstances, constitute impermissible

    discrimination under Title VII); Autry v. North Carolina Dep't of _____ _______________________

    Human Resources, 820 F.2d 1384, 1385 (4th Cir. 1987) (similar). _______________

    Thus, her argument amounts to nothing more than a plea that we


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    impose the construct by judicial fiat. But that is not our

    province. Given the state of the law, appellant's construct

    should be debated before the Congress, not argued before the

    courts.

    Relatedly, the appellant suggests that Title VII must

    be read to bar cronyism because that tawdry practice assures

    continued white domination in the workplace. But this suggestion

    challenges as discriminatory a facially race-neutral (if

    offensive) policy, and necessarily depends for support on an

    examination of multiple hiring decisions. It is, therefore,

    better tailored to cases alleging disparate impact as opposed to

    disparate treatment. See Autry, 820 F.2d at 1385; see generally ___ _____ ___ _________

    Furnco Constr. Corp. v. Waters, 438 U.S. 567, 575, 579-80 (1987) _____________________ ______

    (explaining the basic dichotomy between disparate impact and

    disparate treatment); cf. EEOC v. Steamship Clerks Union, Local ___ ____ ______________________________

    1066, 48 F.3d 594, 606 (1st Cir.) (holding in disparate impact ____

    case that a policy of nepotism can, under certain circumstances,

    constitute evidence of race discrimination in employment), cert. _____

    denied, 116 S. Ct. 65 (1995). ______

    Where, as here, a disappointed applicant has made no

    systematic effort to prove pervasive cronyism or to show that _________

    cronyism, when practiced in a particular workplace, regularly

    yields a racially discriminatory result, a disparate impact claim

    goes by the boards. So here: at trial, appellant's counsel,

    responding to the district court's insightful questioning,

    characterized the suit as one involving disparate treatment, not


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    disparate impact. That characterization binds the appellant in

    the present venue as well.

    This brings us full circle. While the facts of this

    disparate treatment case can support an inference of

    discriminatory intent, they can equally support a finding of

    undiluted favoritism, unmixed with racial animus. On such a

    record, it is the trial court's prerogative indeed, its duty

    to select the inference that it deems appropriate. Because we

    cannot accept the appellant's invitation to create a presumption

    that the use of an old boy network in hiring constitutes per se

    racial discrimination, we are powerless to subvert the district

    court's election between conflicting inferences.

    III. CONCLUSION III. CONCLUSION

    We need go no further.6 Title VII "does not presume

    to obliterate all manner of inequity, or to stanch, once and for

    all, what a Scottish poet two centuries ago termed ``[m]an's

    inhumanity to man.'" Keyes, 853 F.2d at 1026 (quoting Robert _____

    Burns, Man Was Made to Mourn (1786)). Like the court below, we ______________________

    find the conduct of the naval hierarchy in this case to be

    deserving of opprobrium, but two wrongs seldom make a right.

    Discerning no clear error in the district court's finding that

    favoritism, not racism, tainted Commander Travis's

    decisionmaking, we reject Foster's appeal.

    ____________________

    6This appeal concerns only Foster's claims under Title VII.
    We take no view of what remedies, if any, federal law or
    regulations governing personnel practices may afford the
    appellant to redress this seeming injustice.

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    Affirmed. No costs. Affirmed. No costs. ________ ________




















































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