Burrell v. Board of Trustees of Georgia Military College ( 1997 )


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  •                                  United States Court of Appeals,
    Eleventh Circuit.
    No. 95-9135.
    Melba J. BURRELL, Plaintiff-Appellant,
    v.
    The BOARD OF TRUSTEES OF GEORGIA MILITARY COLLEGE, et al., Defendants,
    Alva L. Baggarly, Individually and in his official capacity as Chief Executive Officer of First
    Federal Savings and Loan Association of Milledgeville, First Federal Savings and Loan Association
    of Milledgeville, Defendants-Appellees.
    Oct. 24, 1997.
    Appeal from the United States District Court for the Middle District of Georgia. (No. 5:88-CV-169-
    4(DF), Duross Fitzpatrick, Judge.
    Before EDMONDSON and BLACK, Circuit Judges, and HILL, Senior Circuit Judge.
    EDMONDSON, Circuit Judge:
    Plaintiff brought suit against Defendants under Title VII for gender discrimination and
    retaliation. The case was one involving an employment decision—Plaintiff's dismissal—which was
    the product of mixed motives on the employer's part. The district court conducted a bench trial and
    entered judgment for Defendants. We affirm.
    Background
    Plaintiff Melva J. Burrell ("Plaintiff") began working in Milledgeville, Georgia for First
    Federal Savings and Loan of Milledgeville ("First Federal") as a teller in 1972. In her 16 years
    there, she advanced rapidly to higher positions. In 1986, she was appointed senior vice president.
    Plaintiff also served as corporate secretary and was appointed to the Board of Directors.
    For the first six months of 1987, Plaintiff acted as the interim Chief Executive Officer
    ("CEO") and was on the search committee for a new CEO.1 Plaintiff recommended Alva Baggarly
    to the Board for the CEO position, and they voted to hire him. Baggarly started as CEO of First
    Federal in July 1987.
    1
    Although the Board encouraged her to apply for the CEO position herself, she declined.
    Baggarly and Plaintiff met to discuss the company's organization. They disagreed over how
    First Federal should be structured and what Plaintiff's responsibility would be. Baggarly disclosed
    his intent to establish an executive vice president position that would fall directly below the CEO.
    When Plaintiff expressed interest in the position, she claims that Baggarly told her that he planned
    to hire a male because too many women filled First Federal's officer positions. Baggarly never
    admitted or denied making this statement, but he repeatedly denied that he ever discriminated
    against Plaintiff based on her gender.
    In the following months, Plaintiff and Baggarly had constant disputes.2 The tension between
    Baggarly and Plaintiff was visible to First Federal's employees, who felt that they had to choose
    sides. Board members eventually became aware of the problem; Plaintiff met with some of them
    to discuss her conflicts with Baggarly, particularly her concern over loan-policy violations.
    Baggarly began to isolate Plaintiff from his management scheme. In the fall of 1987,
    Baggarly hired Larry Smith as an officer to manage real estate lending. Baggarly introduced Smith
    to other board members, but not to Plaintiff. Baggarly, Smith and Fred Williamson, another male
    loan officer, met each morning to discuss loan matters; but in spite of her position as chief financial
    officer, Plaintiff was not included in the meetings. In early 1988, Baggarly began to have business
    development parties for local realtors; but he invited only the other male employees and Board
    members. Plaintiff at this time confided to a close friend that Plaintiff thought that she was being
    discriminated against because she was a woman.
    During this same period, Plaintiff was also serving as president of the Baldwin County PTA.
    She publicly criticized Georgia Military College ("GMC") at PTA meetings and Board of Education
    meetings for what Plaintiff believed were GMC's segregationist practices. She also advanced the
    2
    For example, they argued over whether Baggarly could hire officers without Plaintiff having
    an opportunity to interview them and without following Board policy requiring prior Board
    approval of new officer positions. They disagreed over employee personnel files, employee
    loans, and equipment and supply purchases. Plaintiff repeatedly accused Baggarly of violating
    Board policy and of ethical deficiencies in some of his interest-charging and changing of
    payment due dates (what she called a "bait and switch").
    2
    position that GMC should receive no public funding in the light of these practices. Jacob Goldstein,
    one of the seven members of First Federal's Board of Directors and also a member of the Board of
    Trustees of GMC, frequently debated his opposing views of GMC with Plaintiff.
    In Spring 1988, Plaintiff wrote a letter to the editor of the local newspaper.            The
    Milledgeville Union Recorder published the letter to the editor, which criticized public funding of
    GMC. A reporter from the Atlanta Journal and Constitution called to interview Plaintiff on the
    subject. In preparation for this interview, Plaintiff inquired into the racial composition of GMC's
    faculty; she was informed that there were no black faculty members. This information and other
    statements provided by Plaintiff were printed in an Atlanta Journal article.
    In response to Plaintiff's public criticism of GMC, Goldstein's brother withdrew his funds
    from First Federal. Other GMC advocates threatened to do the same. Baggarly asked an employee
    to notify him of account closings because of the GMC situation and further asked that instances of
    Plaintiff's poor performance be documented.
    Over the next weeks, Baggarly spoke with several Board members about his conflicts with
    Plaintiff. Plaintiff and Baggarly agreed to submit their differences to the Board at the next meeting.
    At this meeting, Plaintiff and Baggarly each addressed the Board individually. Plaintiff's most
    pressing complaint was that Baggarly repeatedly and consistently failed to follow Board policy; she
    cited many examples to that effect. Plaintiff also complained that she had requested that Baggarly
    define her duties and that he had not responded. Plaintiff also mentioned complaints of sexual
    harassment at one of the branches.3
    In his presentation, Baggarly described what he viewed as "personality conflict" and "style
    of management" problems. He also responded to Plaintiff's allegations of board-policy violations.
    The Board conferred for a short time and unanimously adopted a resolution supporting Baggarly's
    3
    Plaintiff contends that she also mentioned that she felt that she was being discriminated
    against on the basis of her gender. No Board member recalls her mentioning this topic. One
    Board member's notes from the meeting show an entry of "sex disc." It is not clear, and the
    district court did not specifically resolve, whether this phrase referred to sex discrimination at
    First Federal's other branches or referred to Plaintiff's own claim of gender discrimination.
    3
    right to make employment decisions without the Board's prior consent. Baggarly then requested that
    Plaintiff resign, but she refused. He fired her the next day.4
    The Board paid Plaintiff to relinquish her seat on the Board, but she received no severance
    pay. Baggarly hired John Collins to replace Plaintiff at a salary $7000 higher than what Plaintiff had
    been making, although neither had college degrees.
    Plaintiff sued under Title VII for sex discrimination and retaliatory discharge.5 Following
    a bench trial, the district court found for First Federal on both Title VII claims. Plaintiff appealed.
    I. Gender Discrimination Claim
    Plaintiff testified that when she asked Baggarly—about a year before she was fired—to give
    her the executive vice president job, he responded that he wanted to hire a man for the position
    because too many women filled First Federal's officer positions. She says the statement constitutes
    direct evidence of gender discrimination. Assuming for the sake of argument that Baggarly did, in
    fact, make the statement,6 it is not direct evidence of gender discrimination in Plaintiff's termination.
    Direct evidence is "evidence, which if believed, proves existence of fact in issue without
    inference or presumption." Rollins v. TechSouth, Inc., 
    833 F.2d 1525
    , 1528 n. 6 (11th Cir.1987)
    (citing Black's Law Dictionary 413 (5th ed.1979)).            Here, we cannot say that Baggarly's
    statement—even if fully credited—proves the existence of a discriminatory motive in his decision
    4
    Before Plaintiff was actually fired, students and teachers at GMC heard that Plaintiff had
    been fired and celebrated.
    5
    Plaintiff also brought claims under section 1983 and section 1985, alleging that certain
    officials from GMC, a public institution, conspired with First Federal officers to have her fired in
    retaliation for her constitutionally protected speech. On a previous appeal from the denial of the
    government's motion for summary judgment, we dispensed with all but the Title VII claims. We
    held that Plaintiff had adduced insufficient evidence of a conspiracy between First Federal and
    government officials to support the section 1983 and section 1985 claims. See Burrell v. Bd. of
    Trustees of Ga. Military College, 
    970 F.2d 785
    (11th Cir.1992).
    6
    Baggarly has neither admitted nor denied making this statement.
    4
    to terminate Plaintiff's employment; at best, the evidence suggests—but does not prove—a
    discriminatory motive.7 "By definition, then, it is circumstantial evidence." Id.8
    7
    The evidence in this case is distinguishable from other cases in which this court has found
    direct evidence of discrimination. In Caban-Wheeler v. Elsea, 
    71 F.3d 837
    , 842-43 (11th
    Cir.1996), for example, this court found that a statement by a black decisionmaker to a white
    employee that the decisionmaker wanted a black person to have the white employee's job
    constituted direct evidence that the white employee was terminated for racially discriminatory
    reasons. Unlike the comments in Caban-Wheeler, however, the statements made here by
    Baggarly—the male decisionmaker—do not specifically address nor were they made in the
    context of Plaintiff retaining her job with First Federal. The context was a different one:
    Baggarly's decision not to promote Plaintiff to the executive vice president position. Inferences
    would still have to be drawn by the factfinder that Baggarly's unwillingness to promote a female
    to the second-highest office in management meant that he also intended to later terminate female
    employees because they were female. No such inferences needed to be drawn in Caban-
    Wheeler, where the decisionmaker's alleged comments addressed the specific job from which the
    white employee was terminated.
    Haynes v. W.C. Caye & Co., Inc., 
    52 F.3d 928
    (11th Cir.1995), is distinguishable
    for the same reason. In Haynes, the male decisionmaker allegedly stated that women
    were simply not tough enough to do the job from which the plaintiff had been removed
    and suggested to a third party that it would take a man to do the job from which the
    plaintiff was removed. The court found these comments to be direct evidence of gender
    discrimination. 
    Id. at 930.
    As in Caban-Wheeler, the statements related directly to the
    adverse employment action for which the plaintiff was suing. The nexus between the
    discriminatory statements and the adverse employment action, therefore, was much
    closer than the nexus here. For Caban-Wheeler or Haynes to be more like our case, the
    plaintiffs in those cases would have had to try to use the proffered statements by
    decisionmakers as direct evidence for some employment action not tied to the position
    and job action about which the comments were made.
    EEOC v. Alton Packaging Corp., 
    901 F.2d 920
    (11th Cir., 1990), is different than
    our case in another way. There, we held that general racially discriminatory statements
    made by two decisionmakers constituted direct evidence of those decisionmakers' failure
    to promote black employees for discriminatory reasons. 
    Id. at 924.
    One decisionmaker
    had allegedly said that, if it were his company, he would hire no black people; the other
    allegedly told a black employee that "you people can't do a thing right." We rejected the
    defendant's argument that because one statement referred to hiring, not
    promoting—which was the challenged employment action—and the other did not refer to
    the employment process at all, these statements were not direct evidence. This court
    wrote: "The statements indicate a decidedly negative attitude toward black people on the
    part of the two people responsible for promotions. There is no reason to think that those
    attitudes differ from hiring to promotion." 
    Id. at 924
    n. 6 (emphasis added).
    When employers (like the decisionmakers in Alton), without concern for
    particulars, make broad, derogatory statements about a gender or a race and, thus,
    demonstrate a general discriminatory animus toward that protected group, the scope of
    that evidence can be as broad as the broad statements. These statements—because of
    their breadth—may obviate the need for inferences about the speaker's motivation for a
    wide category of employment decisions, including hiring and promoting practices. In
    5
    Whether the plaintiff—by means of circumstantial or direct evidence or both—has carried
    the burden to show discrimination is a question of fact, which will only be overturned by this court
    if clearly erroneous. Lake v. B.F. Goodrich Co., 
    837 F.2d 449
    , 451 (11th Cir.1988). "Findings
    based on the credibility of witnesses demand even greater deference to the trial court's findings; for
    only the trial judge can be aware of the variations in demeanor and tone of voice that bear so heavily
    on the listener's understanding of and belief in what is said." Caban-Wheeler v. Elsea, 
    71 F.3d 837
    ,
    843 (11th Cir.1996) (internal quotation marks omitted). And "[w]hen there are two permissible
    views of the evidence, the factfinder's choice between them cannot be clearly erroneous." 
    Id. (citation omitted).
    Here, the district court, after conducting a complete trial and hearing extensive testimony
    from the parties involved, found that the evidence (including the testimony on Baggarly's statement
    about promoting plaintiff) failed to prove—on the pertinent termination issue—gender
    discrimination at all.9 The court wrote: "The court cannot say that Plaintiff has proved that her
    contrast, when the employer—as in our case—makes a specific comment in relation to a
    specific job or promotion, we believe that the value of that comment as direct evidence is
    limited to a challenge to that specific job or employment decision. Still, a comment,
    which was narrowly tailored to a particular event, might constitute some evidence of
    discrimination for a case based on a separate event; the statement, however, must then be
    seen not as direct evidence of discrimination, but as circumstantial evidence of
    discrimination. So—unlike Alton Packaging's broad-sweeping statements—the specific
    comment about a high promotion is circumstantial evidence in this employment
    termination case: because the comment is not tied closely enough to the challenged
    employment action, some reason does exist to think that an employer might have one
    attitude about a promotion to a specific high job and might have an unrelated attitude
    about a later termination from a different job.
    8
    Even if we concluded that Plaintiff's evidence was direct evidence, the result in this case
    would be the same. The burden of persuasion does not automatically shift to the defendant upon
    the plaintiff's presentation of direct evidence. For the burden of persuasion to shift, the plaintiff
    must present direct evidence of the discrimination and the factfinder must believe the direct
    evidence; put differently, plaintiff must show that discrimination was a substantial motive for
    the employer's action. 
    Haynes, 52 F.3d at 931
    . Otherwise, the burden of persuasion does not
    shift to the defendant. Here, the district court found that Plaintiff never met her burden to show
    that gender was a factor at all in her termination.
    9
    Despite Plaintiff's contentions to the contrary, the district court did not fail to make
    credibility determinations about Plaintiff's evidence. The district court discussed it specifically:
    6
    gender was a factor in Baggarly's decision to discharge her." Based on the sum of the evidence, this
    finding was certainly a permissible view of the evidence; it is not, therefore, clearly erroneous.
    II. Retaliation Claim
    Plaintiff also contends that her discharge from First Federal was in retaliation for her public
    criticism of GMC's discriminatory employment practices. By a preponderance of the evidence,
    Plaintiff convinced the factfinder (here, the district court judge) that "her criticism of GMC was a
    factor in the decisionmaking process to terminate her";10 in accordance with Price Waterhouse v.
    Hopkins, 
    490 U.S. 228
    , 
    109 S. Ct. 1775
    , 
    104 L. Ed. 2d 268
    (1989), the district court then shifted the
    burden of persuasion to First Federal to prove that it would have fired her even in the absence of her
    Plaintiff has urged the court to view Plaintiff's testimony that Baggarly told her he
    did not wish to consider a female for the position of executive vice president as
    direct evidence of discrimination. Plaintiff argues that Baggarly never
    specifically rebutted or denied making such a statement and the testimony by
    Plaintiff is therefore proved as fact. The court declines to give this testimony the
    same weight as if Baggarly had admitted making the statement. It considers the
    statement unrefuted but not admitted. The court will assign the testimony the
    weight and credibility it deems proper, viewing the testimony as that of an
    interested party.
    (emphasis added). Although the district court did not designate the specific weight it
    assigned the evidence, it did acknowledge the evidence. The court also indicated,
    however, that it did not consider the evidence to be proved as fact or admitted. That
    Plaintiff was an interested party would also weigh in the equation. The district court's
    ultimate determination on the evidence, including Baggarly's supposed statement made
    almost a year before Plaintiff was fired, is evident from the remainder of the opinion:
    "The court cannot say that Plaintiff has proved that her gender was a factor in Baggarly's
    decision to discharge her."
    10
    In so deciding, the district court accepted the argument that Plaintiff's opposition to GMC's
    supposed discriminatory hiring practices satisfied the "engaged in statutorily protected conduct"
    element. First Federal argued at the district court level that, for the purposes of a prima facie
    case of retaliation, the employee must oppose its own employer's supposed discriminatory
    practices, not simply any employer's. The district court rejected First Federal's position,
    reasoning that because the Board of Directors for First Federal and GMC had one interlocking
    member (Jacob Goldstein), a sufficient nexus was shown to allow Plaintiff's criticisms of GMC
    to constitute statutorily protected conduct.
    We question the district court's decision to extend Bailey v. USX Corp., 
    850 F.2d 1506
    (11th Cir.1988) (allowing former employee to sue for retaliation under Title VII), to
    allow Title VII to reach alleged retaliation by the employer for its employees' statements
    in a public controversy about GMC. We, however, do not reach this issue. No party has
    raised the issue on appeal, and the judgment is due to be affirmed without considering it.
    7
    criticism of GMC.11 Price Waterhouse provides specific guidance on how the employer must meet
    this burden:
    [T]he employer should be able to present some objective evidence as to its probable decision
    in the absence of an impermissible motive ... An employer may not ... prevail in a
    mixed-motives case by offering a legitimate and sufficient reason for its decision if that
    decision did not motivate it at the time of the decision. Finally, an employer may not meet
    its burden in such a case by merely showing that at the time of the decision it was motivated
    only in part by a legitimate reason ... The employer instead must show that its legitimate
    reason, standing alone, would have induced it to make the same decision.
    
    Id. at 250-53,
    109 S.Ct. at 1791-92 (emphasis added).
    Plaintiff contests the district court's determination that First Federal met its burden, arguing
    that the district court misapplied Price Waterhouse in two ways: (1) the court did not understand
    that the defendant's legitimate reason had to be able to stand alone—in other words, that it had to
    be a reason for which she would have been fired in the absence of any illegal motive and (2) the
    court did not understand that the legitimate reason had to be able to stand alone at the time of the
    firing.
    As support for her contention that the district court did not understand that the legitimate
    reason had to stand on its own, Plaintiff points out the district court's statement that "many
    motivations did indeed coalesce on the date the Board adopted a resolution granting Baggarly the
    authority to fire Plaintiff" and that "a merger of motives, illegitimate and legitimate, requires a
    finding for the Defendant."
    While the district court's language in this case might at times have been more clear, a district
    court, writing after a bench trial, is not required to use "magic words" or to write with such precision
    that no trained legal mind could find an ambiguity. "Trial judges are presumed to know the law and
    to apply it in making their decisions." Walton v. Arizona, 
    497 U.S. 639
    , 653, 
    110 S. Ct. 3047
    , 3057,
    
    111 L. Ed. 2d 511
    (1990). When a trial judge tries a case without a jury, the judge is presumed to
    11
    As the district court noted, in a mixed motives case premised on employment decisions
    occurring before November 1991—as this case is—a defendant may escape liability entirely by
    proving by a preponderance of the evidence that it would have made the same decision if it had
    not allowed the illegitimate motive to play a role in the employment decision.
    8
    have discharged his official responsibilities properly. Ferrari v. United States, 
    169 F.2d 353
    , 355
    (9th Cir.1948). Only if no reasonable construction of what the district court wrote can support a
    lawful judgment, will we find error. And, we note that in this case it is highly unlikely that the
    district court—which cited Price Waterhouse—would misapprehend that the legitimate reason had
    to stand on its own, as this point is the crux of a mixed-motive analysis. We understand the
    opinion's words stressed by Plaintiff to be no more than the district court's observation that the court
    was facing and deciding a mixed-motives case: Plaintiff's termination was the product of a mixture
    of legitimate and illegitimate motives.
    That the district court knew the law is borne out here by the remainder of the opinion. The
    opinion, when viewed in its entirety, makes clear enough that the district court did find that First
    Federal relied on a legitimate decisive motivation—that is, a reason which, by itself, would have
    caused her dismissal—for firing Plaintiff: the personality clashes and management conflicts. For
    example, the district court said,
    The Board is the body who tacitly made the decision to discharge plaintiff by adopting the
    resolution that shifted the decision to Baggarly. It did so because it needed to remedy the
    discord with in its management. The bottom line is that the two disagree at virtually every
    turn, and as the lowest ranking official, Plaintiff lost.
    * * * * * *
    Although the Board may have had an intent to retaliate against Plaintiff, the court has
    already determined that other considerations were driving the Board's decision. This court
    cannot help but feel that her letters to various papers was [sic.] a compelling factor,
    nevertheless, it still believes her termination would have occurred for all the reasons
    previously mentioned.
    The driving considerations for an act are those that cause the act. See generally The Random
    House Dictionary (2d Ed.1987) (defining "drive" as "to cause to move," "an inner urge that
    stimulates activity or inhibition" and "to force to work or act.") So, when read in its entirety and in
    favor of the judgment, the district court's opinion adequately demonstrates that it understood the
    necessity that the employer's legitimate reasons, standing alone, would have caused the employer
    to make the same decision.
    9
    In support of Plaintiff's position that the district court was unaware that the employer's
    legitimate motive had to be the one operating at the time she was fired, Plaintiff cites to the district
    court's statement that First Federal had proven that the difference between Plaintiff and Baggarly
    was such that it would "ultimately culminate in the termination of one." Plaintiff reads the word
    "ultimately" to indicate that the district court made no finding as to whether the Plaintiff/Baggarly
    conflicts were the decisive reason motivating First Federal at the time of Plaintiff's firing; she
    stresses that a finding that she would have been fired at some point in the future is not sufficient
    under Price Waterhouse.
    Again, the district court's complete thought must be reviewed in context, bearing in mind our
    presumption that the district court knows and correctly applies the relevant law:
    Defendant has convinced the court that the personality and management controversy
    between Baggarly and Plaintiff ran too deep to believe it would not ultimately culminate in
    the termination of one. As the person second in command, Plaintiff suffered the adverse
    consequences.
    (emphasis added).
    Especially when read in a light favorable to the judgment, the district court's full statement
    supports its determination that First Federal met its Price Waterhouse burden. The district court
    found that the conflicts between Plaintiff and Baggarly would, in the end, cause the employment of
    one of them to be terminated. Then the court notes that the end came, in fact, on the day of the
    Board meeting.
    The judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED.
    10