Perry v. St. Joseph Regional Medical Center , 110 F. App'x 63 ( 2004 )


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  •                                                                           F I L E D
    United States Court of Appeals
    Tenth Circuit
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    AUG 26 2004
    FOR THE TENTH CIRCUIT
    PATRICK FISHER
    Clerk
    SHERRYL PERRY,
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    v.                                                    No. 03-6120
    (D.C. No. 02-CV-542-C)
    ST. JOSEPH REGIONAL MEDICAL                           (W.D. Okla.)
    CENTER, an Oklahoma Corporation,
    a/k/a Via Christi Oklahoma Regional
    Medical Center Ponca City, Inc.;
    VIA CHRISTI HEALTH SYSTEMS,
    INC., a Kansas Corporation,
    Defendants-Appellees.
    ORDER AND JUDGMENT            *
    Before KELLY , Circuit Judge, BRORBY , Senior Circuit Judge, and        BRISCOE ,
    Circuit Judge.
    After examining the briefs and appellate record, this panel has determined
    unanimously to grant the parties’ request for a decision on the briefs without oral
    *
    This order and judgment is not binding precedent, except under the
    doctrines of law of the case, res judicata, and collateral estoppel. The court
    generally disfavors the citation of orders and judgments; nevertheless, an order
    and judgment may be cited under the terms and conditions of 10th Cir. R. 36.3.
    argument. See Fed. R. App. P. 34(f); 10th Cir. R. 34.1(G). The case is therefore
    ordered submitted without oral argument.
    Sherryl Perry appeals from the grant of judgment as a matter of law in
    favor of defendants on her wrongful termination claim brought under the Age
    Discrimination in Employment Act (ADEA).        See Fed. R. Civ. P. 50; 
    29 U.S.C. §§ 621-34
    . At the close of Ms. Perry’s case, defendants moved for judgment as
    a matter of law and the court took the motion under advisement. Following the
    presentation of all the evidence in the case, the district court granted the
    defendants’ motion for judgment as a matter of law.
    Our jurisdiction arises under 
    28 U.S.C. § 1291
    . Because we conclude that
    Ms. Perry failed to present sufficient evidence from which a jury could rationally
    conclude that she was terminated because of her age, we affirm.
    I. Legal standards
    We review de novo the grant or denial of a judgment as a
    matter of law, and apply the same legal standard as the district court
    and construe the evidence and inferences in the light most favorable
    to the nonmoving party without weighing the evidence, passing on
    the credibility of witnesses, or substituting our judgment for that of
    the jury. Judgment as a matter of law is appropriate only where the
    evidence and all inferences to be drawn therefrom are so clear that
    reasonable minds could not differ on the conclusion. Unless the
    proof is all one way or so overwhelmingly preponderant in favor of
    the movant as to permit no other rational conclusion, judgment as a
    matter of law is improper.
    -2-
    Greene v. Safeway Stores, Inc.    , 
    98 F.3d 554
    , 557 (10th Cir. 1996) (citations and
    quotations omitted). “However, we must enter judgment as a matter of law in
    favor of the moving party if there is no legally sufficient evidentiary basis . . .
    with respect to a claim or defense . . . under the controlling law.”      Mason v.
    Okla. Turnpike Auth. , 
    115 F.3d 1442
    , 1450 (10th Cir. 1997) (quotations omitted).
    Under the ADEA, “[i]t shall be unlawful for an employer . . . to      discharge
    any individual or otherwise discriminate against any individual with respect to his
    compensation, terms, conditions, or privileges of employment, because of such
    individual’s age.” 
    29 U.S.C. § 623
    (a)(1).
    To prevail on an ADEA claim a plaintiff must establish that
    age was a determining factor in the employer’s challenged decision.
    The plaintiff need not prove that age was the  sole reason for the
    employer’s acts, but must show that age made the difference in the
    employer’s decision. Under our precedents, an ADEA plaintiff may
    proceed by either of two general methods to carry the burden of
    making her or his case. A party may attempt to meet his burden
    directly, by presenting direct or circumstantial evidence that age was
    a determining factor in his discharge. Or, more typically, a party
    may rely on the proof scheme for a prima facie case established in
    McDonnell Douglas Corp. v. Green, 
    411 U.S. 792
    , 802-04 (1973),
    and Texas Department of Community Affairs v. Burdine,      
    450 U.S. 248
    , 252-56 (1981).
    Greene , 
    98 F.3d at 557-58
     (quotations and citations omitted). Here, lacking
    evidence directly related to the forbidden animus of age as a determining factor
    in her discharge, Ms. Perry relied on the inferential proof scheme set forth in
    -3-
    McDonnell Douglas Corp.           As in Greene , we turn now to consider whether
    Ms. Perry made a case that should have been presented to the jury.
    II. Relevant facts
    After a change of management at the hospital where she had been employed
    as the Nursing Director of the Emergency Department for twenty-six years,
    Ms. Perry was counseled by her new supervisor, Ms. Watson, that Ms. Perry
    needed to improve her job performance in several areas in order to meet federal
    emergency room (ER) standards, or be terminated.           See Aplt. App., Vol. I
    at 113-16. Defendants established that the hospital had received notice from the
    state about the ER’s deficiencies. The hospital’s board of directors had given
    “the [new] CEO marching orders to fix up the ER” because it was “one of the
    worst parts of [the] hospital.”      Id. at 160. Ms. Watson criticized Ms. Perry’s lack
    of enthusiasm for her job, her giving of priority to volunteer efforts instead of to
    her job, her failure to sufficiently support emergency room nursing staff, her
    failure to be visible in the ER and to check on the evening ER staff, her failure to
    follow through with critical ER issues, and her failure to “fix” ER problems after
    having earlier been released from other duties in order to concentrate on the ER
    department. Aplt. App., Vol. II at 537;       id. Vol. 1 at 198-203. Ms. Perry
    disagreed with her supervisor’s evaluation and wrote a response.         Id. Vol. II
    at 538-39.
    -4-
    Ms. Watson believed that Ms. Perry was not being truthful in her response.
    She determined that Ms. Perry continued to demonstrate a lack of responsibility
    for dealing with issues and a failure to make her job a priority. Ms. Watson was
    further of the opinion that Ms. Perry might be “burn[ed] out” and that “she was
    not going to be able to change her old ways.”    See id. at 541; id. Vol. I at 194,
    199, 217. Mr. Hufnagel, the vice president of human resources, also testified that
    Ms. Perry was not productive enough to keep up with the pace required by the
    new CEO’s “demanding and complicated new plans for growth and productivity
    and efficiency and excellence.”    Id. Vol. I at 159, 170. When Ms. Watson
    terminated Ms. Perry, Ms. Perry was fifty-five years old.
    After Ms. Perry’s termination, defendants promoted Ms. Peters,
    a thirty-eight-year-old nurse who had been serving as Ms. Perry’s second-in-
    command, to fill Ms. Perry’s position as interim director. Defendants also began
    advertising the position in national publications. Mr. Hufnagel testified that
    Ms. Peters, too, was not “productive enough to serve in that position
    permanently,” id. at 172, and that she was never permanently offered the job.
    Defendants paid the traveling expenses for a fifty-four-year-old applicant from
    Florida to personally interview for the job and offered to hire her before receiving
    Ms. Perry’s discrimination complaint.     Id. at 164-66. Ms. Perry’s position was
    ultimately permanently filled by Ms. Haub, a forty-eight-year-old nurse.
    -5-
    III. Analysis
    Ms. Perry relies on five pieces of evidence to support her claim that age
    was a “determining factor” that “made the difference” in her termination and that
    the issue should have gone to the jury: (1) her replacement by a younger person;
    (2) her favorable performance evaluations before the change in management;
    (3) Mr. Hufnagel’s testimony that she was terminated because she was
    not productive enough to keep up with the pace of the new management;
    (4) Ms. Watson’s testimony that Ms. Perry would not be able to change her old
    ways and that Ms. Perry had “burnout”; and (5) Ms. Young-Shiflet’s       1
    testimony
    that the hospital’s termination decision was best for the hospital because “it was
    time to have new blood and to have someone in that possibly could motivate the
    staff to do a better job, and I don’t believe that the work that needed to be done
    was getting done.”   Id. at 454. Ms. Perry argues that, based on this evidence, the
    jury could have inferred that her termination was pretextual and concluded that
    her age made the difference in the hospital’s decision to replace her.
    After hearing all the evidence, the district court disagreed. As a
    preliminary matter, the court held that Ms. Haub was “insignificantly younger”
    and, therefore, the evidence of a seven-year age difference between her and
    Ms. Perry was “not sufficient to raise an inference” that the reason for
    1
    Ms. Young-Shiflet preceded Ms. Watson as Ms. Perry’s supervisor.
    -6-
    Ms. Perry’s termination was age.       Id. at 506. The court further held that the jury
    could not infer pretext from the other testimony cited above.      Id. The court held
    that defendants had “shown a legitimate nondiscriminatory reason for the
    termination,” unrebutted by evidence of pretext, and granted judgment as a matter
    of law to defendants.   Id. at 507.
    a) The prima facie case        . In Reeves v. Sanderson Plumbing Products,
    Inc. , the Supreme Court explained that
    a plaintiff’s prima facie case, combined with sufficient evidence to
    find that the employer’s asserted justification is false, may permit the
    trier of fact to conclude that the employer unlawfully discriminated.
    This is not to say that such a showing by the plaintiff will
    always be adequate to sustain a jury’s finding of liability. Certainly
    there will be instances where, although the plaintiff has established a
    prima facie case and set forth sufficient evidence to reject the
    defendant’s explanation, no rational factfinder could conclude that
    the action was discriminatory. For instance, an employer would be
    entitled to judgment as a matter of law if the record conclusively
    revealed some other, nondiscriminatory reason for the employer’s
    decision, or if the plaintiff created only a weak issue of fact as to
    whether the employer’s reason was untrue and there was abundant
    and uncontroverted independent evidence that no discrimination
    had occurred.
    
    530 U.S. 133
    , 148 (2000). Here, the district court based its “insignificantly
    younger” analysis on    O’Connor v. Consolidated Coin Caterers Corp.        , 
    517 U.S. 308
     (1996). There, the Court stated,
    [i]n the age-discrimination context, [] an inference [of intent to
    discriminate] cannot be drawn from the replacement of one worker
    with another worker insignificantly younger. Because the ADEA
    -7-
    prohibits discrimination on the basis of age and not class
    membership, the fact that a replacement is substantially younger than
    the plaintiff is a far more reliable indicator of age discrimination
    than is the fact that the plaintiff was replaced by someone outside the
    protected class.
    
    517 U.S. at 313
    ; and see Munoz v. St. Mary-Corwin Hosp.            , 
    221 F.3d 1160
    , 1166
    (10th Cir. 2000) (holding that, “because plaintiff’s replacement was only two
    years his junior--an obviously insignificant difference--the necessary inference of
    discrimination was precluded, and he failed to establish his prima facie case”).
    Ms. Perry argues that the parties’ “principal dispute centers around whether Perry
    was replaced by Peters, 17 years her junior, or Haub, who is seven years younger
    than Perry,” and argues that the court impermissibly weighed the evidence in
    holding, as a matter of law, that Haub, and not Peters, replaced Perry. Aplt. Br.
    at 7-8. Ms. Perry also argues that a seven-year age gap is sufficient to support an
    inference of discrimination for a prima facie case. We need not decide these
    issues, however, because of the procedural and evidentiary posture of the case at
    the time of the district court’s decision.    Lucas v. Dover Corp., Norris Div.    ,
    
    857 F.2d 1397
    , 1401 (10th Cir. 1988) (addressing only whether there was
    sufficient evidence to establish that reasons for termination were pretextual).
    When a defendant presents evidence of a valid, nondiscriminatory reason
    for termination in a case in which the plaintiff is relying on a      McDonnell Douglas
    Corp. proof scheme to establish discrimination,
    -8-
    the McDonnell Douglas framework--with its presumptions and
    burdens--disappear[s], and the sole remaining issue [is]
    discrimination vel non . . . .
    The ultimate burden of persuading the trier  of fact that the
    defendant intentionally discriminated against the plaintiff remains at
    all times with the plaintiff. And in attempting to satisfy this burden,
    the plaintiff--once the employer produces sufficient evidence to
    support a nondiscriminatory explanation for its decision--must be
    afforded the opportunity to prove by a preponderance of the evidence
    that the legitimate reasons offered by the defendant were not its true
    reasons, but were a pretext for discrimination. That is, the plaintiff
    may attempt to establish that he was the victim of intentional
    discrimination by showing that the employer’s proffered explanation
    is unworthy of credence. Moreover, although the presumption of
    discrimination drops out of the picture once the defendant meets its
    burden of production, the trier of fact may still consider the evidence
    establishing the plaintiff’s prima facie case and inferences properly
    drawn therefrom . . . on the issue of whether the defendant’s
    explanation is pretextual.
    Reeves , 
    530 U.S. at 142-43
     (quotations and citations omitted). Even if we
    considered that Ms. Peters, and not Ms. Haub, replaced Ms. Perry, or that seven
    years is a substantial age difference that supports a prima facie case of
    discrimination, Ms. Peters still had the burden of producing sufficient evidence to
    show that defendants’ reasons for terminating her were not legitimate or were
    unworthy of credence and that age was the determining factor in her termination.
    This she did not do.
    Ms. Perry did not rebut the testimony that the ER, over which she had been
    the director for twenty-six years, did not meet federal standards and was
    considered to be the hospital’s worst department and in need of quick
    -9-
    improvement. She could not rebut the fact that defendants sought to replace her
    with a fifty-four-year-old nurse before they knew of her discrimination complaint.
    And none of the testimony that Ms. Perry points to regarding her lack of
    productivity and inability to keep the pace of the new CEO’s demands, her
    inability to change her ways, her apparent “burnout,” or the need for “new blood”
    to motivate ER employees raises an inference that she was terminated because of
    her age or that her termination was pretextual. An employee can be
    nonproductive, burned out, and unwilling or unable to change her ways at any
    age, just as an older employee can remain productive, enthusiastic, and able to
    change. Cf. Lindsey v. Baxter Healthcare Corp.    , 
    962 F.2d 586
    , 588 (7th Cir.
    1992) (stating that “[n]o weight can be attached to . . . ‘good old boys,’ [because]
    any competent user of the English (or rather the American) language knows that
    to be a good old boy one need not be old, or for that matter, good”).
    Evidence that Ms. Perry had never received a written negative evaluation
    before new management took over is relevant to the issue of substandard
    performance. But “[p]retext is not established by virtue of the fact that an
    employee has received some favorable comments in some categories or has,
    in the past, received some good evaluations.”    Ezold v. Wolf, Block, Schorr &
    Solis-Cohen , 
    983 F.2d 509
    , 528 (3d Cir. 1992). And that evidence alone, in light
    of the overwhelming evidence supporting defendants’ assertion that age was not
    -10-
    the determining factor in their decision to terminate Ms. Perry,      created, at most,
    “only a weak issue of fact as to whether the employer’s reason was untrue and
    there was abundant and uncontroverted independent evidence that no
    discrimination had occurred.” Reeves , 
    530 U.S. at 148
    . Although judgment as
    a matter of law should remain atypical in age discrimination cases,       see 
    id. at 155
    (Ginsburg, J., concurring), after a careful review of the record, we conclude that
    the district court did not err in granting judgment as a matter of law to
    defendants.
    The judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED.
    Entered for the Court
    Paul J. Kelly, Jr.
    Circuit Judge
    -11-