Rodriguez v. Smithkline Beecham ( 2000 )


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  •               United States Court of Appeals
    For the First Circuit
    ____________________
    No. 99-2031
    HILDA RODRIGUEZ, ET AL.,
    Plaintiffs, Appellants,
    v.
    SMITHKLINE BEECHAM, THEIR AGENTS,
    OFFICERS, EMPLOYEES AND SUCCESSORS IN INTEREST,
    Defendant, Appellee.
    ____________________
    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
    FOR THE DISTRICT OF PUERTO RICO
    [Hon. Jaime Pieras, Jr., Senior U.S. District Judge]
    ____________________
    Before
    Torruella, Chief Judge,
    Campbell, Senior Circuit Judge,
    and Schwarzer,* Senior District Judge.
    _____________________
    José Enrique Colón-Santana for appellants.
    Gregory T. Usera, with whom Mariela Rexach-Rexach and Schuster
    Usera Aguilo & Santiago were on brief, for appellee.
    ____________________
    *   Of the Northern District of California, sitting by designation.
    August 16, 2000
    ____________________
    -2-
    TORRUELLA, Chief Judge. Before the Court is an appeal from
    the district court's entry of summary judgment. The district court
    held that appellant's sex discrimination claims under the Equal Pay Act
    and Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 failed as a matter of law
    and entered judgment in favor of the appellee.        We affirm.
    I.   BACKGROUND
    A.   Appellant's Employment at Smithkline
    Appellant Hilda Rodríguez began employment at appellee
    Smithkline Beecham Pharmaceutical, P.R., Inc. ("Smithkline") in 1979 as
    an Analytical Chemist, a grade level C position within Smithkline's
    compensation structure. She was promoted in 1985 to the position of
    Senior Analyst, with a grade level of E.
    In 1986, appellant applied for a lateral transfer to
    Smithkline's Documentation Department as a Senior Document Monitor; she
    received the transfer, although initially as a "temporary" assignment.
    In November of 1986, the Senior Document Monitor position was
    reevaluated and reclassified as a grade level F position, pursuant to
    Smithkline's Job Evaluation Program.1 Appellant's appointment as Senior
    Documentation Monitor was made permanent in June of 1987. In March of
    1988, the title of that position was changed to Senior Monitor. In
    February 1989, appellant was promoted to Master Records Specialist, a
    1 The Job Evaluation Program provides for the regular evaluation of
    positions to ensure that compensation is commensurate with the duties
    of the position, relative to other positions in the company.
    -3-
    grade level H position. In January 1991, she was again promoted, to
    the position of Quality Assurance Administrator in the Process
    Operations Management System project, with a job grade level of 5E.
    B.   Alleged Wage Discrimination with Regard to the Document
    Leader Position
    When appellant first joined the Documentation Department in
    1986, the position of Documentation Manager was held by Gloria Vales.
    Vales was compensated at level 7.      In September 1989, Vales was
    transferred to another department and was replaced by Manuel Llivina.
    Llivina was transferred in from a grade level 7 position in another
    department as part of Smithkline's Management Development Program, and
    he maintained his grade level while serving as Documentation Manager.2
    In August of 1992, Llivina was transferred out of the Documentation
    Department, again as part of the Management Development Program, and
    the Documentation Manager position became vacant.
    Meanwhile, in July 1991, a new position called Records
    Management Leader was created in the Documentation Department, at grade
    level 6. Rodoberto Feo was transferred to that position from another
    2 The Management Development Program, also called the Leadership
    Planning Program, protects an employee's grade level as he or she is
    rotated through different positions with the company for developmental
    purposes.
    -4-
    position within the company, and he maintained his previous grade level
    of 8 pursuant to Smithkline's Personal to Holder policy.3
    After reassessing departmental needs in 1992, Smithkline
    decided to eliminate the Documentation Manager and Records Management
    Leader positions. A new position entitled Documentation Leader was
    created in January of 1993, and appellant was identified as the
    candidate to fill the new position.       When the new position was
    evaluated pursuant to the Job Evaluation Program, it was designated a
    level 6 position. Appellant claims that the difference in grade level
    (and thus in compensation) compared to that of Llivina and Feo
    constituted gender-based wage discrimination.
    C.   Alleged Discriminatory Failure to Hire or Promote
    On January 16, 1995, Edwin López was hired as an Analytical
    Services Leader or Laboratory Manager, with a grade level of 8, to
    manage and direct the Quality Control section's analytical laboratories
    (which included all chemistry laboratories at the facility).        As
    required by the job description, López had a masters degree and
    significant previous work experience managing an analytical laboratory.
    Appellant claims, however, that appellee's failure to hire or promote
    her to the position of Analytical Services Leader, instead of López,
    3 The Personal to Holder policy allows the company to utilize a current
    employee in a lower grade position without negatively impacting the
    employee's compensation.
    -5-
    constituted sex discrimination.4 Although she does not hold a masters
    or doctoral degree, nor had she ever managed an analytical laboratory,
    appellant claims that her prior experience at Smithkline qualified her
    for the position.
    D.   Alleged Wage Discrimination with Regard to Compliance
    Process Improver Position
    As Analytical Services Leader, López's responsibilities
    included (1) managerial and supervisory responsibility for all of
    Quality Control's5 analytical laboratory operations; (2) monitoring of
    all analytical data for submission to regulatory agencies; (3) approval
    of all analytical reports, Annual Product Review reports, and Water
    Systems reports; (4) improvement, validation, and automation of current
    methodology and technology; (5) provision of analytical and technical
    support for complaints, internal investigations, product development
    activities, and product transfer areas; (6) development of new and
    improved analytical methodology, including review of pertinent
    literature and formulation of recommendations; and (7) extensive
    budgetary    responsibilities    for    the   analytical   laboratories.
    4 Nowhere does appellant indicate that she applied for this position.
    However, appellee seems to concede that she was in the pool of
    potential candidates, apparently pursuant to the company's practice of
    looking first at current employees when filling vacancies.
    5 Smithkline's Compliance Department is divided into two primary
    functional areas: Quality Control and Quality Assurance. According to
    the company, the functions and processes of each are different from
    those of the other.
    -6-
    Approximately sixty-two employees were under López's supervision as
    Analytical Services Leader.
    In 1995, Smithkline began to implement a new organic
    structure in the Compliance Department, as part of a facility-wide
    restructuring. During implementation of the new structure, López was
    informed that his title would eventually change to that of Compliance
    Process Improver for the Quality Control section, although his duties
    would not be affected.6 The Compliance Process Improver position was
    reviewed under the Job Evaluation Program and designated a level 6
    position. Before the transition was complete, however, Smithkline
    reassessed its needs and determined that López should retain his duties
    as head of the laboratories under the title of Compliance Laboratory
    Strategist. Because this position entailed most of the functions of
    the Analytical Services Leader position, plus some aspects of the
    Compliance Process Improver job, the Laboratory Strategist position was
    designated a level 8 position.7
    During the implementation of the new organic structure,
    appellant was also informed that her title would change to Compliance
    6 López continued, and still continues, to perform the duties of
    Analytical Services Leader, although he currently holds the title of
    Compliance Laboratory Strategist.
    7 In his new position, López has supervisory capacity over seventy-four
    employees, as well as additional quality control and budgetary duties
    beyond those described above in relation to the Analytical Services
    Leader position. Later in 1997, Smithkline's microbiology laboratory
    was added to the chemistry labs already under López's supervision.
    -7-
    Process Improver, in her case for the Quality Assurance section.
    Throughout the transitional period, appellant continued to perform her
    duties as Documentation Leader. On January 1, 1997, appellant's change
    in position became effective, and she assumed her duties as Compliance
    Process Improver.8 As such, appellant's duties included primarily the
    identification of potential improvement areas and the formulation and
    implementation of projects to make such improvements. She does not
    currently have, nor has she ever had, managerial responsibility for any
    of the laboratories, nor does she supervise any employees or control
    any budgetary decisions.
    E.   Procedural History
    On October 1, 1996, appellant sent a letter to Smithkline
    complaining of discriminatory treatment. She filed a discrimination
    charge with the Antidiscrimination Unit of the Puerto Rico Department
    of Labor and Human Resources on June 13, 1997. Appellant received her
    notice of right to sue from the Equal        Employment Opportunity
    Commission on March 25, 1998, and she subsequently filed this action in
    the United States District Court for the District of Puerto Rico,
    stating claims under the Equal Pay Act and Title VII of the Civil
    Rights Act of 1964.
    8  This was the same date upon which López became a Laboratory
    Strategist. The parties dispute whether López was ever actually a
    Compliance Process Improver.
    -8-
    On July 8, 1999, the district court granted summary judgment
    in favor of Smithkline, rejecting all of appellant's claims.
    See Rodríguez v. Smithkline Beecham Pharmaceutical, Puerto Rico, Inc.,
    
    62 F. Supp. 2d 374
    (D.P.R. 1999).9 The court first rejected appellant's
    failure to hire or promote claim as untimely. See 
    id. at 379.
    The
    court then proceeded to examine the Title VII wage discrimination
    claims. Following the majority of federal courts of appeals to have
    addressed the interplay of the Equal Pay Act ("EPA") and Title VII, the
    district court held that the Bennett Amendment to Title VII
    incorporated the EPA statutory defenses to wage discrimination claims
    but did not otherwise alter the Title VII analysis, including the
    burden-shifting aspects. See 
    id. at 381-82.
    Applying existing First
    Circuit law, the court determined that appellant had failed to make out
    a prima facie case of discrimination, see 
    id. at 383-84,
    and further
    that appellant had not shown Smithkline's proffered reasons to be
    pretextual, see 
    id. at 384.
    Finally, the district court rejected
    appellant's EPA claims, concluding as a matter of law that appellant's
    job was not substantially similar to that of López nor to that of
    Llivina or Feo.    See 
    id. 9 The
    court had previously denied a motion by appellant to add an
    expert to her witness list. See Rodríguez v. Smithkline Beecham
    Pharmaceutical, P.R., Inc., Civil No. 98-1649(JP) (D.P.R. filed Mar.
    25, 1999); 
    id. (D.P.R. filed
    Apr. 5, 1999) (denying motion for
    reconsideration).
    -9-
    This appeal followed. In addition to claiming that the
    district court erred in entering summary judgment against her on all
    claims, appellant also argues that the court erred in denying her
    motion to add an expert to her witness list.
    II.   LAW AND APPLICATION
    A.   Standard of Review
    We review orders granting summary judgment de novo,
    construing the record in the light most favorable to the nonmovant and
    resolving all reasonable inferences in her favor. See GE Supply v. C
    & G Enters., Inc., 
    212 F.3d 14
    , 17 (1st Cir. 2000). We are not limited
    to accepting or rejecting the district court's rationale; rather, we
    may affirm the entry of summary judgment on any sufficient ground
    revealed by the record.     See 
    id. The district
    court's exclusion of expert testimony is
    reviewed under an "abuse of discretion" standard. See General Elec.
    Co. v. Joiner, 
    522 U.S. 136
    , 139 (1997).
    B.   Equal Pay Act Claims
    The Equal Pay Act ("EPA"), codified at 29 U.S.C. § 206(d)(1),
    states:
    No employer . . . shall discriminate, within any
    establishment in which such employees are
    employed, between employees on the basis of sex
    by paying wages . . . at a rate less than the
    rate at which he pays wages to employees of the
    opposite sex in such establishment for equal work
    on jobs the performance of which requires equal
    -10-
    skill, effort, and responsibility, and which are
    performed under similar working conditions,
    except where such payment is made pursuant to (i)
    a seniority system; (ii) a merit system; (iii) a
    system which measures earnings by quantity or
    quality of production; or (iv) a differential
    based on any other factor other than sex . . . .
    An EPA claimant must make a prima facie showing that the employer paid
    different wages to a member of the opposite sex for substantially equal
    work. See Byrd v. Ronayne, 
    61 F.3d 1026
    , 1033 (1st Cir. 1995) (citing
    Corning Glass Works v. Brennan, 
    417 U.S. 188
    , 195 (1974)). Once a
    prima facie case has been made, the employer then must establish one of
    the four statutory affirmative defenses to avoid liability.          See 
    id. Appellant claims
    that she suffered gender-based wage
    discrimination in violation of the EPA with respect to two positions --
    that of Document Leader, and that of Compliance Process Improver.
    Neither claim has merit.
    1.   Document Leader Position
    Appellant claims that she was discriminated against on the
    basis of her gender when the Document Leader position was classified as
    a level 6 position. She bases this contention on the fact that the
    previous Document Manager was paid at level 7 and the previous Records
    Management Leader was paid at level 8. However, appellant has failed
    to make a prima facie showing that the Document Manager and Records
    Management Leader positions were substantially equal to the Document
    -11-
    Leader position, and Smithkline has also established that the different
    pay levels were based on a "factor other than sex."
    As the district court properly concluded, the position of
    Document Leader created in 1993 entailed a substantially different set
    of responsibilities from those of the Document Manager and Records
    Management Leader positions.      For instance, although there was
    certainly overlap between the duties of the new position and those of
    the former positions, several important functions of the Document
    Manager position were omitted from the role of Document Leader,
    including responsibility for the microfilming program, the handling of
    new drug applications, and the preparation of annual reviews. The
    Document Manager was also responsible for evaluating abnormalities in
    the manufacturing process and recommending solutions when problems
    arose, as well as informing the management of significant deviations
    from standard operating procedures and making sensitive decisions
    regarding drug recalls. We cannot conclude that these uncontested
    differences in responsibility were insubstantial, and we agree with the
    district court that appellant failed to make a prima facie showing of
    discrimination.
    Although the failure to establish a prima facie case is fatal
    to appellant's claim, we also mention our agreement with the district
    court that the different wages paid to appellant and the prior Document
    Manager and Record Management Leader were based on a factor other than
    -12-
    sex. See 29 U.S.C § 206(d)(1)(iv). Smithkline established that both
    Llivina and Feo were being paid at the level of a prior position
    pursuant to standing company policies designed, in one instance, to
    protect employees' salary and grade levels during developmental
    placements and, in the other, to allow the company to utilize employees
    at lower level positions without detriment to the employee's
    compensation. Such programs are "factors other than sex" within the
    meaning of the EPA and therefore constitute a legitimate basis for wage
    differentials. Cf. Handy v. New Orleans Hilton Hotel, 
    532 F. Supp. 68
    ,
    72 (E.D. La. 1982) (noting that wage differential was lawful because,
    inter alia, higher-paid employee's wage was set pursuant to defendant's
    Personnel Development Program).
    2.   The Compliance Process Improver Position
    Appellant next argues that she was discriminated against
    because she was compensated at level 6 while Edwin López was
    compensated at level 8, although it appears that the two may have had
    the same job title. Here again, appellant has failed to make out a
    prima facie case.
    Although job titles may be given some weight in determining
    whether two employees hold substantially equal positions, the EPA's
    emphasis is on the responsibilities and functions of the position. See
    Miranda v. B & B Cash Grocery Store, 
    975 F.2d 1518
    , 1533 (11th Cir.
    1992) ("Although job titles are entitled to some weight in this
    -13-
    evaluation [of whether jobs are substantially equal], 'the controlling
    factor under the Equal Pay Act is job content' -- the actual duties
    that the respective employees are called upon to perform."). Here,
    there exists a genuine dispute of fact over whether López at one time
    held the position of Compliance Process Improver;10 however, that
    dispute is not material, because appellant has failed as a matter of
    law to establish that her responsibilities were substantially equal to
    those   of   López.    López   has    had   managerial   and   supervisory
    responsibility for all of Smithkline's Quality Control analytical
    laboratories since he became Analytical Services Leader, and he now has
    responsibility for the microbiology and external compliance labs as
    well. He oversees the performance of scores of employees and also
    controls a budget of nearly three million dollars. Appellant has not
    shown that she ever had comparable responsibility. In sum, we are
    persuaded that the two positions were in fact substantially dissimilar,
    and we agree with the district court that appellant has failed to make
    a prima facie showing of disparate compensation for comparable work.
    Her EPA claim therefore fails as a matter of law.
    C.   Title VII Claims
    Appellant also makes two allegations under Title VII of the
    Civil Rights Act of 1964, codified at 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-2(a). She
    10 It is not contested that his title was changed to Laboratory
    Strategist on January 1, 1997, the same date that appellant became a
    Compliance Process Improver.
    -14-
    first alleges that Smithkline discriminatorily failed to hire or
    promote her to the position of Analytical Service Leader, the position
    for which López was hired in 1995, and she also claims that she
    suffered wage discrimination in violation of Title VII with respect to
    the Document Leader and Compliance Process Improver positions.
    1.   Failure to Hire or Promote Claim
    Appellant alleges that, when Smithkline hired López to fill
    the position of Analytical Service Leader in 1995, its failure to hire
    or promote her to that position constituted sex discrimination
    prohibited by Title VII. However, as the district court correctly
    noted, any person seeking relief under Title VII must file a charge
    with the EEOC "within one hundred and eighty days after the alleged
    employment practice occurred," 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-5(e)(1), or if a claim
    is filed with a state or local agency "within three hundred days after
    the alleged unlawful employment practice occurred," 
    id. López was
    hired on January 16, 1995. Appellant's charge was not filed until June
    of 1997.   Her cause of action is therefore barred.
    Appellant argues that the 300-day limitations period was
    tolled in her case because the discriminatory actions of the appellee
    were ongoing and systemic and subject to the continuing violation
    exception to the limitations period. See Provencher v. CVS Pharmacy,
    
    145 F.3d 5
    , 14 (1st Cir. 1998). However, the only evidence offered by
    appellant to support her contention of a discriminatory policy or
    -15-
    practice by Smithkline is what she optimistically refers to as
    "statistical" evidence. Although the figures admitted by appellant
    undeniably demonstrate that more males than females held higher paying
    positions at Smithkline's facility, the numbers are not provided in a
    context which would lend them probative value in a statistical sense.
    To give just one example, no showing has been made of how many females
    applied for higher-paying positions, nor of how many qualified females
    there may have been in any relevant pool of potential employees. See
    Blizard v. Frechette, 
    601 F.2d 1217
    , 1223-24 (1st Cir. 1979) (upholding
    exclusion of statistical evidence because, inter alia, "appellant's
    offer was in no way related to the available pool of qualified female
    applicants for the positions filled predominantly by males"). Although
    we recognize that statistical evidence can be a valid, and often
    powerful, means of proving discriminatory practices, the numbers
    offered by appellant fall far short of establishing any such
    discrimination by Smithkline. The continuing violation doctrine has no
    application to appellant's case, and her failure to hire or promote
    claim is time-barred.
    -16-
    2.   Wage Discrimination
    Appellant's Title VII wage discrimination claim fails for the
    same reason that her EPA wage discrimination contention failed -- she
    has not made a prima facie showing that she was paid less than a male
    employee for substantially equal work.
    While noting that the federal courts of appeals have
    disagreed over the effect of the Bennett Amendment to Title VII,11 the
    district court analyzed appellant's wage discrimination claim under the
    burden-shifting evidentiary framework generally applied to Title VII
    allegations.12 See 
    Rodríguez, 62 F. Supp. 2d at 382
    . In doing so, the
    11   The Bennett Amendment states:
    It shall not be an unlawful employment practice
    under [Title VII] for any employer to
    differentiate upon the basis of sex in
    determining the amount of the wages or
    compensation paid or to be paid to employees of
    such employer if such differentiating is
    authorized by the provisions of [the EPA].
    42 U.S.C. § 2000e-2(h). The disagreement among the courts of appeals
    has been over whether the Amendment merely incorporates the EPA's
    statutory affirmative defenses or whether the Amendment alters the
    actual evidentiary framework and analysis of Title VII wage
    discrimination claims to incorporate the liability standards of the
    EPA. See 
    Rodríguez, 62 F. Supp. 2d at 381-82
    (discussing the circuit
    split). We need not resolve that question in this case, because
    appellant failed to make a prima facie case under either the EPA or the
    general Title VII framework.
    12 We note the United States Supreme Court's recent decision in Reeves
    v. Sanderson Plumbing Prods., Inc., 
    120 S. Ct. 2097
    , 2109 (2000), in
    which the Court held that, under the McDonnell Douglas burden-shifting
    analysis, a plaintiff may rely on her prima facie case, together with
    a showing that the defendant's proffered reasons for the adverse
    -17-
    court properly found that appellant had failed to make a prima facie
    showing of gender-based wage discrimination.        See 
    id. at 383-84.
    As we set forth above, the uncontested facts before the
    district   court   indicate   that   appellant's   job   functions   and
    responsibilities were not substantially similar or comparable to those
    of Document Manager Llivina or Records Management Leader Feo, nor to
    those of Edwin López. Absent such a showing, plaintiff's Title VII
    claim fails as a matter of law for lack of a prima facie case.
    D.   Exclusion of Expert Testimony
    Finally, appellant argues, almost in passing, that the
    district court erred in excluding the testimony of her proposed expert.
    We hold that the district court did not abuse its discretion. See
    General Elec. Co. v. Joiner, 
    522 U.S. 136
    , 139 (1997) (abuse of
    discretion standard of review applies to admission or exclusion of
    expert testimony).
    The district court's orders make clear that appellant had
    failed to comply with the court's scheduling orders and was attempting
    to add an expert a mere two weeks before the deadline for filing
    employment action were false, without further demonstrating that the
    defendant's stated reasons were motivated by a discriminatory animus.
    Although the district court's reference to the so-called "pretext-plus"
    standard, see 
    Rodríguez, 62 F. Supp. 2d at 384-85
    , was therefore in
    error, such error does not require reversal because Smithkline is
    entitled to judgment as a matter of law on the basis that appellant
    failed to make out a prima facie case of wage discrimination (thus
    never reaching the subsequent stages of the burden-shifting analysis).
    -18-
    dispositive motions. Such noncompliance with court orders, together
    with the fact that appellant failed to even specify the area of the
    witness's expertise except to say that he would testify with respect to
    her EPA and Title VII claims, persuades us that the district court was
    well justified in excluding the proposed testimony. See Atlas Truck
    Leasing, Inc. v. First NH Banks, Inc., 
    808 F.2d 902
    , 903-04 (1st Cir.
    1987) (district court has wide latitude in formulating pretrial orders
    and imposing sanctions for noncompliance and will be reversed only when
    ruling results in clear injustice).
    III.   CONCLUSION
    For the reasons set forth above, we hold that the district
    court properly granted summary judgment in favor of Smithkline and
    against appellant on all of her EPA and Title VII claims.
    Affirmed.
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