Mr. Albert J. AUTRY, Individually, Plaintiff-Appellant v. FORT BEND INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT, Defendant-Appellee.
No. 11-20639.
United States Court of Appeals, Fifth Circuit.
Jan. 7, 2013.
AFFIRMED
Richard Alan Morris, Paul A. Lamp, Rogers, Morris & Grover, L.L.P., Houston, TX, for Defendant-Appellee.
Before HIGGINBOTHAM, OWEN, and SOUTHWICK, Circuit Judges.
PATRICK E. HIGGINBOTHAM, Circuit Judge:
In 2008, Albert Autry sued the Fort Bend Independent School District (“FBISD“), alleging that the district‘s decision to hire a Caucasian woman in lieu of promoting Autry amounted to race discrimination in violation of Title VII. The district court granted summary judgment to FBISD and ordered Autry to pay attorneys’ fees. We affirm the district court‘s grant of summary judgment but vacate its fee award.
I.
In July 2008, FBISD hired Michael Johnson as its new director of facilities. Johnson immediately began reorganizing the facilities department. As part of the reorganization, Johnson created a new administrative position entitled “support manager.” Johnson drafted a job description, and in October 2008, the human relations department issued a vacancy posting. The posting provided that the new position entailed “a wide range of administrative oversight tasks relating to supervision, monitoring, and quality control of FBISD support.” Under the heading “Qualifications,” the posting listed “Bachelor‘s Degree in engineering, business administration, facilities management or related field.”
At the prompting of two other facilities department employees, Albert Autry applied for the new position. Autry had
At some point in late October 2008, facilities director Johnson and a committee of FBISD facilities department employees met with Autry to discuss his application for the support manager job opening. However, FBISD ultimately awarded the new position to Jo Ann Baker. Baker is Caucasian and has no formal education beyond the high-school level. At the time FBISD offered Baker the job, she apparently had no prior connection to the district, having worked for eleven years as an escrow coordinator for a title insurance company. The record does not reflect what Ms. Baker‘s prior work as an escrow coordinator entailed.
On November 10, 2008, Autry lodged a complaint with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (“EEOC“), asserting that FBISD‘s decision to offer the new support manager position to a less-qualified Caucasian woman was racial. On October 18, 2010, the EEOC issued Autry a right-to-sue letter, and on January 13, 2011, Autry initiated the instant litigation in the Southern District of Texas. In his complaint, Autry claimed that FBISD denied him the promotion because of his sex and race in violation of Title VII, also asserting an age-discrimination claim under the Age Discrimination in Employment Act.
On April 11, 2011, the district court entered an order dismissing Autry‘s age- and sex-discrimination claims. Thereafter, FBISD moved for summary judgment on Autry‘s race-discrimination claim. At a hearing held on July 13, 2011, the district court orally ruled that Autry would “take nothing” and invited the school district to move for attorneys’ fees pursuant to
II.
We begin by reviewing de novo the district court‘s award of summary judgment to FBISD, applying the familiar McDonnell-Douglas burden-shifting framework that governs Title VII race-discrimination claims. Under that framework, a plaintiff challenging a failure to promote must first establish a prima facie case, demonstrating that (1) he was not
FBISD concedes that Autry has established a prima facie race-discrimination case but asserts that it hired Baker through a nondiscriminatory, merit-based selection process. In support of its claim, FBISD submitted affidavits and documentation that establish the following facts: In October 2008, facilities director Johnson and a facilities department employee screened fifteen applications for the support manager position, meeting with each applicant and ultimately selecting Autry, Baker and two other individuals as finalists. Thereafter, Johnson convened a committee including himself and six facilities department employees—two of whom were African American—to interview the four finalists. After the interviews, the seven-member committee met to discuss the candidates and their respective qualifications and interview performances. Approximately one week after the interviews, Johnson created a chart on which he set forth each committee member‘s rank ordering of the four finalists, from one (most preferred) to four (least preferred). Johnson based the committee members’ rank orderings on his understanding of their preferences. He then approached each of the committee members, asking them to acknowledge their rank ordering on the chart. As Baker had the lowest point total, Johnson awarded the new position to her.
Because FBISD has met its burden to proffer a legitimate, non-discriminatory reason for hiring Baker in lieu of promoting Autry,5 this case hinges on whether Autry has made the evidentiary showing to carry his burden at stage three of the McDonnell-Douglas inquiry. Autry argues that FBISD‘s proffered reason is pretextual, urging that he was more qualified for the support manager position than Baker. In the Title VII failure-to-promote context, we have found pretext on a showing that the unsuccessful employee was “clearly better qualified” than the successful candidate.6 Here, though Autry‘s qualifications are sterling, Autry failed to introduce any evidence shedding light on Baker‘s credentials or work experience. Indeed, in his deposition, Autry conceded that he had never met Baker, did not know how Baker had performed in her inter-
Autry also argues that FBISD‘s purportedly meritocratic, committee-based selection process was a sham, urging that the process was inconsistent with the district‘s established procedures and suggesting that facilities director Johnson held absolute control over the ultimate hiring decision. A Title VII plaintiff can establish pretext by presenting evidence that his employer‘s proffered explanation for an adverse employment decision is “false or unworthy of credence.”9 In this case, Autry‘s allegations of procedural irregularities are unsubstantiated in the record,10 and would not be conclusive of pretext even if accepted as true.11 Nor does the summary judgment record contain any evidence to contradict FBISD‘s affidavits and documentation, which establish that Johnson offered Baker the support manager position because the facilities department hiring committee had determined that she was the most qualified finalist for the position.12 Sheer speculation aside, the record gives a reasonable juror no reason to doubt FBISD‘s version of events.
Autry‘s only other evidence that race played a role in FBISD‘s hiring decision comes from certain comments allegedly made by facilities director Johnson at and around the time of Autry‘s October 2008
Autry also testified that shortly after his October 2008 job interview, Mario Carrera—one of the committee members present at the interview—told Autry that Johnson had said that “[i]f President Obama‘s elected, they‘re going to have to take the Statute of Liberty and put a piece of fried chicken in his [sic] hand.” While FBISD challenged the statement as rank hearsay, the district judge rejected it as political, observing that “no black individually and no blacks collectively owns [sic] the sensitivity rights to fried chicken or anything else.” The district judge‘s comment misses the mark, as it overlooks the racial component of Johnson‘s alleged statement.14
However, we must agree with FBISD (and the district court‘s implicit ruling) that Autry‘s deposition testimony was without force in the face of a motion for summary judgment. After searching the record and liberally construing Autry‘s arguments on appeal, we find no competent evidence from which a reasonable juror could infer that FBISD‘s decision to hire Baker in lieu of promoting Autry was motivated by impermissible racial considerations.
III.
We next assess whether the district court abused its discretion in awarding FBISD attorneys’ fees under
IV.
The summary judgment award to FBISD is AFFIRMED. The award of attorneys’ fees to FBISD is VACATED.
