Case Information
*1 Before EDMONDSON and MARCUS, Circuit Judges, and HANCOCK [*] , Senior District Judge.
PER CURIAM:
Plaintiff Abel appeals the district court's granting of a renewed motion for judgment as a matter of law as to her Title VII claim against her former employer, Defendant Fulton County, and her section 1983 claim against her former supervisor, Defendant Gladys Dennard. Because this Court finds that Abel did not show that she was treated dissimilarly to any similarly situated fellow employees, the judgment of the district court is due to be affirmed.
I. Factual and Procedural History
Abel was formerly employed by Defendant Fulton County as a Library Principal Associate. She was hired in October of 1994 and was initially assigned to the Washington Park Branch of the Atlanta-Fulton County Public Library, but in May of 1995, she was transferred to the South Fulton Branch. Abel was the first Caucasian to be assigned to the South Fulton Branch, where Defendant Dennard, an African-American female, was her supervisor. From the start, Dennard and Abel did not have a good working relationship.
On December 8, 1995, Abel took $10.00 from the library's cash register to purchase gasoline for her personal car, which she then drove to the bank to deposit her pay check. Abel put a signed I.O.U. in the *2 register after taking the cash, and replaced the $10.00 on December 12, 1995, her next day on the job. Dennard met with Abel on December 12 about the I.O.U. incident. Abel freely admitted taking the money, but insisted that she believed that the practice was acceptable. In fact, Abel's actions violated a strict policy against personal use of county funds for which the penalty was termination, and Dennard informed her that she would be charged with theft and that a record of the meeting would be made.
Abel eventually filed two grievances concerning the December 12 meeting with Dennard. At a grievance meeting with the library branch's group manager, Julie Compton, Abel again freely admitted to taking the $10.00 from the cash register. At a still later meeting with the library director, Defendant Ronald Dubberly, Abel also confessed to taking the $10.00 from the cash register. By the time she met with Dubberly, the termination process was already under way, and Abel was officially informed, on July 3 or 5, 1996, of her firing for misuse of county funds.
Abel believed that the I.O.U. incident was used merely as a pretext and that race was the real factor for her termination because, she argued, an African-American employee had also taken county money but had not been similarly disciplined and an African-American male had taken her position at South Fulton. Acting on her belief, Abel filed suit in federal court, alleging claims under 42 U.S.C. § 2000e (the Title VII claim), 42 U.S.C. § 1983, and various state law theories. The Title VII claim against Fulton County and the section 1983 claims against Dubberly and Dennard survived a motion for summary judgment. A jury trial was held; Defendants moved, under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 50(a), for judgment as a matter of law, which was denied; and the jury found in favor of Abel as to the Title VII claim against Fulton County and the section 1983 claim against Dennard. However, the jury found in favor of Dubberly on Abel's other section 1983 claim.
The jury verdicts in favor of Abel, though, would not stand. After the trial, Fulton County and Dennard renewed their motion for judgment as a matter of law, under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 50(b). *3 During a hearing approximately two months after the trial, the district court granted the Defendants' renewed motion for judgment as a matter of law. Abel timely appealed.
II. Discussion
A Rule 50 motion for judgment as a matter of law is reviewed
de novo,
and this Court applies the
same standards employed by the district court.
See Combs v. Plantation Patterns,
Before turning to the merits of Abel's appeal, we must address two preliminary matters. First, Abel
argues that Rule 50 motions are rarely granted when summary judgment against a plaintiff has already been
denied, suggesting that we should affirm merely on the basis of that rarity. Binding precedent in this Circuit,
[1]
however, expressly permits consideration of a Rule 50 motion after the denial of summary judgment.
See
Gross v. Southern Ry. Co.,
Also as a preliminary matter, Abel argues that the district court, in granting the renewed motion for
judgment as a matter of law, erred because the Defendants raised issues in their Rule 50(b) motion not raised
at trial in their Rule 50(a) motion, and, therefore, she was denied her Seventh Amendment right to cure any
defects before the case was given to the jury. "When reviewing a trial court's resolution of a Rule 50(b)
motion, we compare the grounds originally argued by the movant in its Rule 50(a) motion with those cited
by the trial court in granting a renewed motion for judgment as a matter of law."
Ross v. Rhodes Furniture,
Inc.,
The outcome on the merits of Abel's suit is dictated by our prior Title VII decisions, as illustrated
by
Jones v. Gerwens,
co-employee and also placed her on notice that Defendants believed she had failed to produce any evidence showing that the legitimate, nondiscriminatory reasons advanced for Plaintiff's termination were mere pretext. (Trial Tr. 229-31.) These same grounds were fully developed in their written Rule 50(b) motion, filed ten days after entry of judgment. The same analysis applies to the Plaintiff's section 1983 claim against Dennard, as discriminatory intent
is an element to be shown in the same manner as in an alleged Title VII violation when the two claims arise
from the same conduct and constitute parallel remedies.
See Richardson v. Leeds Police Dept.,
Although the setting is somewhat different in the present case, we reach the same ultimate conclusion
as in
Jones.
First, although Abel claims that she was similarly situated to an African-American employee
who also took county funds for personal use, a key difference is readily apparent between Abel and the
purported comparator.
[4]
Whereas Abel has always freely admitted having taken $10.00 from the cash
register,
[5]
the other employee has never confessed to taking county funds for personal use; at worst, the
would-be comparator has admitted to temporarily misplacing funds. Abel did not offer any evidence
sufficient to show that she was similarly situated to any other employee, and absent some other similarly
situated but differently disciplined worker, there can be no disparate treatment.
See Jones,
III. Conclusion
Although Plaintiff Jennifer Ann Abel argued that her treatment by the Defendants violated Title VII and section 1983, she failed to show that she was similarly situated to any differently treated employee, much less show that she was discriminated against on the basis of race or another illegal factor. Because Abel demonstrated neither disparate treatment nor discriminatory intent, the district court did not err in granting judgment as a matter of law to the Defendants Fulton County and Gladys Dennard. Therefore, the decision below is AFFIRMED.
Notes
[*] Honorable James H. Hancock, Senior U.S. District Judge for the Northern District of Alabama, sitting by designation.
[1]
See Bonner v. City of Prichard,
[2] In their oral Rule 50(a) motion at the close of Plaintiff's case-in-chief, the Defendants explicitly raised Abel's failure to offer evidence demonstrating the existence of any similarly situated but differently treated
[4] Abel attempted to compare her treatment to that of several African-American female employees, but
apparently only one of those other individuals was ever suspected or accused of taking county funds for
personal use, and whether that individual was ever really suspected by anyone other than Plaintiff is a matter
of contention. Because a comparator must have engaged in at least similar or comparable misconduct to that
of the disciplined worker,
Jones,
[5] Although termination may, to some, seem a draconian response given the level of the Plaintiff's offense,
the reasonableness of Fulton County's disciplinary policies are not a consideration. As we have said before,
an "employer may fire an employee for a good reason, a bad reason, a reason based on erroneous facts, or for
no reason at all, as long as its action is not for a discriminatory reason."
Nix v. WLCY Radio/Rahall
Communications,
