Sandra B. PALMER, Appellant,
v.
ARKANSAS COUNCIL ON ECONOMIC EDUCATION, Arkansas Department
of Education, State of Arkansas, Appellees.
No. 97-3840.
United States Court of Appeals,
Eighth Circuit.
Submitted May 12, 1998.
Decided Sept. 9, 1998.
James Henry Patrick III, Little Rock, Arkansas, argued, for appellant.
Abraham William Bogoslavsky, Little Rock, Arkansas, argued, for appellee Council on Economic Education.
Tim C. Humphries, Assistant Attorney General, Little Rock, Arkansas, for appellee Arkansas Department of Education.
Before BOWMAN, Chief Judge, HEANEY and HANSEN, Circuit Judges.
HEANEY, Circuit Judge.
Sandra Palmer appeals the district court's grant of summary judgment in favor of the Arkansas Council on Economic Education ("ACEE"), the Arkansas Department of Education ("ADE"), and the State of Arkansas on Palmer's claim under the Age Discrimination in Employment Act ("ADEA"), 29 U.S.C. §§ 621-634.1 We affirm.
I.
Because this case comes to us on summary judgment, we consider the facts in the light most favorable to Palmer. See, e.g., Roberts v. Francis,
The ACEE is chartered with the State of Arkansas as a private, nonprofit corporation. The ACEE's five employees are paid by the ACEE rather than through the state payroll, and its employees are not entitled to state benefits.2 The ADE exercises no control over ACEE employees with respect to job duties and performance, skills required, or the materials used by the employees in performing their duties. The ACEE's Executive Director hires and fires the ACEE's employees, who work exclusively on behalf of the ACEE, with the ACEE setting their pay and working hours.
On July 5, 1995, Sonya Schmidt, age 27, became the Executive Director of the ACEE. On October 3, 1995, after having placed Palmer, age 54, on a three-week probation, Schmidt terminated Palmer's employment with the ACEE, asserting that Palmer had been insubordinate. Palmer brought claims in federal court against the ACEE, the ADE, and the State of Arkansas, alleging that her termination constituted age discrimination in violation of the ADEA and Arkansas state law. She argued that under the Supreme Court's decision in Department of Employment v. United States,
II.
We review the district court's grant of summary judgment de novo. See Boise Cascade Corp. v. Peterson,
As an initial matter, we address whether the district court properly granted summary judgment in favor of the ADE and the State of Arkansas. For the ADE and the State of Arkansas to be liable under the ADEA, "there must be an employment relationship between the plaintiff and the defendant." Deal v. State Farm County Mut. Ins. Co.,
[The] ACEE is chartered with the state as a nonprofit corporation. The payroll is not paid through the state payroll and employees of [the] ACEE are not entitled to state benefits. [The] ADE exercised no control over plaintiff's job duties and performance and did not mandate the skills required by plaintiff for her job with [the] ACEE. The items used by plaintiff in the course of her employment were provided by the ACEE and plaintiff's work was all performed for [the] ACEE. The pay and working hours of ACEE employees are set by the ACEE and employees of [the] ACEE are hired and fired by the Executive Director of [the] ACEE with no approval from ADE.
Palmer v. Arkansas Council on Econ. Educ., No. LR-C-96-302, slip op. at 4 (E.D.Ark. Sept. 18, 1997). Because Palmer presented no evidence that either the ADE or the State of Arkansas had an employment relationship with her, we affirm the district court's grant of summary judgment in favor of the ADE and the State of Arkansas.
We now turn to whether the ACEE is an employer within the definition of the ADEA. Because the ACEE only has five employees, the question turns on whether the ACEE is an agency or instrumentality of the ADE or the State of Arkansas. Although other circuits have not distinguished between the terms "agency" and "instrumentality," see, e.g., Schaefer v. Transportation Media, Inc.,
To show that a defendant institution is an agency of a state or political subdivision of a state for ADEA purposes, a plaintiff must show that the state or political subdivision had some supervisory control over the plaintiff. Schaefer,
[T]he terms of employment such as pay, hours, and benefits are fixed by the [state or political subdivision] rather than the [defendant institution]. Other facts ... would be the source of funds for salaries and wages, whether the employees of the two parties have a common pension fund, and whether the employees are subject to a common civil service employment and grievance policy.
Rogero v. Noone,
The facts of this case show that the ACEE is a private employer. The ACEE's employees do not share in the ADE's or state's employee pension funds, and they are not subject to a common civil service employment or grievance policy. While Palmer has shown that the ACEE's creation included the involvement of people closely tied to the ADE, she has not shown that either the State of Arkansas or the ADE ever controlled the terms of employment for the ACEE's employees. Although the ADE provides significant funding for the ACEE, the ADE does so with the expectation of receiving value from the ACEE. The fact that the ADE and State of Arkansas rely on the ACEE to provide services to Arkansas' citizens does not transform the ACEE into an agency of the ADE or State of Arkansas under the ADEA. In extending the coverage of the ADEA, Congress did not intend "to give private employees a way around the minimum employee requirement [of the ADEA] by including in the definition of government employers private employers that do business with the government." Schaefer v. Transportation Media, Inc., No. 86 C 7377,
Having concluded that the ACEE is not an agency of the ADE, the only remaining issue is whether the ACEE is an instrumentality of the ADE. We need not reach this question, however, because we hold that (1) the ADEA's twenty-employee requirement also applies to agencies and instrumentalities of a state or political subdivision of a state, and (2) an instrumentality's employees should not be aggregated with those of a state or political subdivision of a state for meeting the ADEA's definition of an employer.
First, regarding whether an instrumentality is subject to the ADEA's twenty-employee minimum imposed upon private employers, we agree with Schaefer that § 630(b) is ambiguous as to whether the rule applies to agencies or instrumentalities of a state or political subdivision of a state. Id. at 1254 (citing Kelly v. Wauconda Park Dist.,
Second, an instrumentality's employees should not be aggregated with those of a state or political subdivision for meeting the ADEA's definition of an employer. An "agency" of a political subdivision that employs fewer than twenty employees may be an "employer" within the ADEA's definition if the number of the agency's employees exceeds twenty when added to the number of employees of the political subdivision to which the agency is affiliated, see Schaefer,
Congress based its twenty-employee minimum on "the practical consideration that a larger employer with more varied jobs could more constructively utilize an older worker's skills." Kelly,
Because the ACEE is not an agency of the ADE and because the ACEE fails to meet the § 630(b) twenty-employee requirement imposed on an instrumentality of a political subdivision of a state, the ACEE is not an employer for the purposes of the ADEA. We hold that the district court properly granted summary judgment in favor of the ACEE and properly dismissed Palmer's remaining state law claims. See United Mine Workers of Am. v. Gibbs,
III.
For the foregoing reasons, the district court's grant of summary judgment in favor of the ACEE, the ADE, and the State of Arkansas is affirmed.
Notes
Palmer also brought a state law claim against the ACEE under the Arkansas Public Employer Age Discrimination Act, Ark.Code Ann. §§ 21-3-201 to 21-3-205 and a common law claim of wrongful discharge. Because the district court granted the ACEE's motion to dismiss Palmer's ADEA claim, the court refused to exercise pendent jurisdiction over Palmer's remaining claims
The ACEE's employee handbook, which Palmer authored, states, "[t]he ACEE works in cooperation with and under the aegis of the ADE. While ACEE employees are not considered State employees and are not eligible for State hospitalization or Teacher Retirement, [ACEE employees work] cooperatively with State employees in many divisions of the ADE."
The State of Arkansas also moved for dismissal on Eleventh Amendment grounds. Because we dispose of Palmer's claims on the basis of the ADEA, we need not address whether the ADEA properly abrogates a state's immunity from suit
