In this аge discrimination suit brought by a .plant manager whose employment was terminated when he was 55 years old, the district court entered summary judgment for the defendant, Suttle Caribe, on the recommendation of the magistrate judge. Both judges found that the plaintiff, Alberto Dominguez-Cruz, made out a prima facie case of age discrimination under the familiar McDonnell Douglas-Bur-dine-Hicks framework. They determined, however, that he had not overcome Suttle Caribe’s articulated non-discriminatory reason for the termination with evidence sufficient to permit а rational factfinder to conclude that the termination was motivated by age discrimination.
The record shows that the employer has, at different times, articulated to varied audiences different reasons for ending the plaintiffs employment. At times, Suttle Caribe has said that the termination was not an issue of performance but was instead the result of a business restructuring plan that involved the elimination of the plant manager position. At other times, Suttle Caribe has claimed that the termination was based on the plаintiffs job performance. At still other times, Suttle Car-ibe has said that violations of company policy and insubordination were the reasons for the termination. In addition to the potentially inconsistent reasons the company gave for the termination, notes of a conversation between a member of the personnel department and the key deci-sionmaker in the plaintiffs termination include — unusually and unfortunately for the company — the phrases “age descrim, [sic]” and “cover up.” Finally, the key decision-maker referred to the plaintiff more than once as an “old fart” in front of two younger employees who would eventually assume many of the plaintiffs job responsibilities. One of those younger employees in turn referred to the plaintiff as “el viejo” (“the old one” or “the old man”) and told another employee at least a year before the plaintiffs termination that he had been offered the plaintiffs job. While the termination of the plaintiffs employment may prove to have been innocеnt of age discrimination, these facts are surely enough to raise genuine issues of material fact that should be left to the jury. We reverse entry of summary judgment and remand.
I
Alberto Dominguez-Cruz began working for Suttle Caribe on October 12, 1978. He was hired to set up and manage Suttle Caribe’s plant in Humacao, Puerto Rico, and he continued in the position of plant manager until his termination on September 22, 1995. He was 55 years old at the time of his termination. Although his record was not spotless, all parties agree that Dominguez-Cruz perfоrmed his job well. He successfully launched and nurtured Suttle Caribe’s Puerto Rico operations and received recognition for his efforts in the form of positive performance evaluations, merit pay increases, and commendations. In fact, his immediate supervisor agreed that the plaintiffs 1993 performance evaluation characterized him as “an outstanding employee and manager[,] in general terms.” In addition, Dominguez-Cruz received a merit pay increase for 1995.
In 1994, upper management at Suttle Caribe’s parent company, Suttle Apparatus, began a restructuring initiative, designed to reduce costs and standardize operations by putting the “right people in the right place.” Dominguez-Cruz directed this initiative at Suttle Caribe and, as a result, was responsible for terminating the employment of a number of employees in 1994. Although the company now claims that the long-term plan had always been to eliminate the plant manager position, the plaintiff testified that he was not aware *428 that the restructuring initiative might result in the loss of his job.
]¡n September 1995, Dean Ovitt, Vice President of Manufacturing for Suttle Apparatus and Dominguez-Cruz’s direct supervisor as of late 1992, and Jeffrey Berg, President of Suttle Apparatus, traveled to Puerto Rico to meet with Dominguez-Cruz and to assess Suttle Caribe’s operations. During this time, Dominguez-Cruz had conversations with both Berg and Ovitt pertaining to his concerns with some of the proposed changes to the organizational chart. In addition, Berg and Ovitt discussed with Dominguez-Cruz some of their complaints regarding his handling of certain situations, including an accident involving a company vehicle, the awarding of a contract to an employee, and the filing of unemployment paperwork associated with an employee’s leave of absence. On September 22, 1995, Ovitt, with the consent of Berg and Curtis Sampson, the Chief Executive Officer and President of the Board of Directors, informed Dominguez-Cruz that his employment was being terminated. Ovitt told Dominguez-Cruz that the plant manager position was being eliminated as a part of the organization’s restructuring plan.
Dominguez-Cruz and his wife filed suit against Suttle Caribe in federal district court in May 1996, alleging age discrimination under both federal and Puerto Rican law and claiming violations of various other provisions of Puerto Rican law. They sought damages and a preliminary injunction reinstating Dominguez-Cruz to his position and enjoining Suttle Caribe from discriminating or taking any retaliatory action against Dominguez-Cruz. On September 23, 1997, Suttle Caribe filed for summary judgment, arguing that Dominguez-Cruz had failed to make out a prima facie case of age discrimination and that hе had failed to rebut its proffered non-discriminatory reasons for the termination. The motion was referred to a magistrate judge, who recommended granting summary judgment to Suttle Caribe. The district court agreed, concluding that although Dominguez-Cruz had put forth a prima facie case of age discrimination, he had failed to rebut Suttle Caribe’s nondiscriminatory reasons for the dismissal. Summary judgment was entered for Suttle Caribe and supplemental jurisdiction over the Puerto Rican law claims was declined. Dominguez-Cruz appealеd to this court.
II
Our review of the entry of summary judgment is de novo.
See Thomas v. Eastman Kodak Co.,
The plaintiff offers two approaches to this case. 2 First, he says that the ageist statements allegedly made by Ovitt and another individual and the notes taken by a personnel manager in a meeting with Ovitt constitute “direct evidence” of age discrimination. Because he produced direct evidence sufficient to sustain his burden, Dominguez-Cruz says, summary judgment should have been denied without resort to the McDonnell Douglas-Bur-dine-Hicks burden-shifting framework. The district court rejected this argument, concluding that this evidence was not “direct evidence” but instead constituted “stray remarks” that failed to “tie [Dominguez-Cruz’s] dismissal from Suttlе to his age or to age discrimination.”
Second, the plaintiff says that even under the
McDonnell Douglas-Burdine-Hicks
framework,
3
summary judgment
*429
was improper because he produced evidence from which a jury could infer that the employer’s articulated reasons were pretextual and that age discrimination was the real reason for his termination.
See McDonnell Douglas Corp. v. Green,
When a plaintiff presents direct evidence of age discrimination, the defendant must then either “deny the validity or the sufficiency of the plaintiffs evidence,” and “[have] the jury ... decide[ ] whether the plaintiff has proved discrimination by a preponderance of the evidence,” 8 Lex K. Larson,
Employment Discrimination
§ 136.02, at 136-6 (2d ed.1999), or “prove that it would have made the same decision even if it had not taken the protected characteristic into account,”
Ayala-Gerena v. Bristol Myers-Squibb Co.,
It is often quite difficult to draw the line between what is “direct evidence” and what is “circumstantial evidence.”
See, e.g., Fernandes v. Costa Bros. Masonry, Inc.,
*430
In appeals after trial, this and other courts have recognized the need for flexibility and have sometimes bypassed these approaches and instead looked at whether the totality of the evidence permits a finding of discrimination.
See F.W. Morse,
A. McDonnell Douglas-Burdine-Hicks
Under this framework, the plaintiff must first make a prima facie showing of age discrimination.
See Burdine,
Once the plaintiff has made out a prima facie case, a presumption that the employer unlawfully discriminated against the employee is created and the burden shifts to the employer to articulate a nondiscriminatory reason for the dismissal.
See Hicks,
Where, as here, the plaintiff has raised a prima facie case and the defendant has met the burden of production, the
McDonnell Douglas-Burdine-Hicks
framework becomes less relevant.
See Hicks,
We hold that there was evidence presented on summary judgment from which a jury could (although need not) infer that the employer’s claimed reasons for terminating Dominguez-Cruz’s employment were pretextual and that the decision was the result of discriminatory animus. First, the evidence put forth by the plaintiff in making his prima facie case clearly established that Dean Ovitt, who was the plaintiffs direct supervisor and twelve years younger than him, and Jeffrey Berg, who was two years younger than the plaintiff, made the decision to terminate the plaintiff, with Sampson’s approval. After his termination, Dominguez-Cruz’s job responsibilities were assumed by Ovitt, Mario Medina, Suttle Caribe’s Operations Manager, Nilda Torres, Suttle Caribe’s then Quality Control Supervisor, and Adalberto Sierra, Suttle Caribe’s Personnel Manager. All four individuals are younger than Dominguez-Cruz (although Sierra only by one year). In fact, the evidence showed that Dominguez-Cruz was the оldest Suttle Caribe employee. In addition, while Suttle Caribe claims that Luis (“Tony”) Hernández, the Costa Rica plant manager, did not assume any of the plaintiffs job responsibilities, there is evidence that Hernández, who is ten years younger than the plaintiff, oversees Medina and Sierra and was selected for this position “rather than” the plaintiff.
Second, and in addition to the evidence supporting Dominguez-Cruz’s prima facie case, the defendant presented explanations for Dominguez-Cruz’s termination that could be viewed as inconsistent. When Dominguez-Cruz was informed by Ovitt and Janice Wielke, a Suttle Apparatus personnel manager, that he was being dismissed, he was told that his position was being eliminated as a result of the restructuring plan. That same day, a memorandum from Ovitt was distributed to all employees, informing them that some “organizational changes” would be made as a part of the “restructuring of the organization.” Ovitt’s notes made shortly before the plaintiff was informed of the decision support the restructuring explanation: “This reorganization is nоt a performance issue. This was a difficult decision of restructuring the company to combine operation resourses [sic] and better utilize resources [sic] available.” When Dominguez-Cruz contacted Sampson for an explanation, he received a letter stating that Her-nández had been selected “rather than” himself to sit on the committee that would oversee Suttle Caribe operations. When the plaintiff met with Sampson a week or so later, Sampson told him that while there had been some сomplaints about his performance, they were “not important.”
However, in its answer to Dominguez-Cruz’s complaint, Suttle Caribe changed its reasons for the termination of plaintiffs employment. It denied that the plaintiff was discharged as a result of restructuring, instead claiming that “Plaintiff was terminated for his repeated failure to abide by company policies and to commit to the team efforts as required.” At another point in the answer, Suttle Caribe stated that the plaintiffs termination “was determined exclusively becаuse of his violations to [sic] company policies” and referred to his “inability to commit to the managerial efforts directed by the parent corporation, covering up employee misconduct which required termination, and his failure to abide by previous commitments *432 to his immediate supervisor with respect to team work and reorganization.”
The depositions betray a similar inability to settle on an explanation for Dominguez-Cruz’s dismissal. At one point, Ovitt stated that “[t]he reason that he was terminated was because of his performance, it was performance issues.” At another point, Ovitt acknowledged that he told “the employees of the corporation, other than the executive staff,” that the dismissal was not related to performance. Later, he indicated that the plaintiff was fired because of “his refusal to take the direction that the company was going” and his insubordination. Finally, Ovitt referred to Dominguez-Cruz’s failure to abide by company policies. Sampson, in contrast, stated in his depositiоn that Dominguez-Cruz was doing a “good job” and was “very adequate” and that “[t]he primary reason for termination was always that they wanted to eliminate the position, they didn’t think it was necessary any more.”
A company may have several legitimate reasons to dismiss an employee. But when a company, at different times, gives different and arguably inconsistent explanations, a jury may infer that the articulated reasons are pretextual.
See Thurman v. Yellow Freight Sys., Inc.,
Third, and further supporting a possible inference that Suttle Caribe’s explanations are pretextual, there is evidence suggesting that restructuring was not the reason for thе termination of the plaintiffs employment. First, there is evidence that, in 1994 or earlier, Ovitt had offered the plant manager position to Medina. Medina told another employee that he was considering taking the offer. Second, the plaintiff had no prior notice that the company was considering eliminating the plant manager position, even though he was integrally involved in the restructuring efforts at Suttle Caribe. Third, while Suttle Caribe maintains that the plan had always been to eliminate the plant manager positions in both Puerto Rico and Cos-ta Rica, the position in Costa Rica had not, as of the time of the depositions, been eliminated.
The performance explanation also suffers from some deficiencies. At least one of the alleged violations of company policy upon which Suttle Caribe relies occurred approximately two years before Dominguez-Cruz was dismissed, and his 1993 evaluation, at roughly the same time, called him an outstanding employee. And there is at least some question whether Dominguez-Cruz was directly responsible for two of the alleged violations. Further, the fact that the other employees involved in some of these violations were not terminated may cast doubt on the veracity of *433 this explanation. Finally, Domínguez-Cruz’s record at the company may undermine the performance explanation. He had a strong record with the company, received a positive performance evaluation in 1993, was given a letter of commendation from Berg in August of 1994, and receivеd a merit pay increase in 1995. A jury could conclude that the alleged performance problems only arose once the plaintiff came under Ovitt’s supervision; Ovitt terminated the plaintiff within three years of becoming his supervisor.
Finally, evidence of age-related comments could support an inference of pretext and discriminatory animus. 6 The record reflects that Ovitt — the plaintiffs direct supervisor and the key decisionmaker regarding his termination — referred to the plaintiff, more than once, as an “old fart” in front of other employees, including Medina and Sierra. Medina, in turn, was heard by another employee referring to Domínguez-Cruz as “el viejo” (“the old one” or “the old man”) in the course of saying that he had been offered Dominguez-Cruz’s job.
In addition, there are the notes made by Wielke, the personnel manager. Wielke, in some way, participated in the dismissal and flew to Puerto Rico with Ovitt to inform plaintiff that his employment was terminated. Her notes about the decision to terminate the plaintiff contain his full namе and include the phrases “cover up so Alberto doesn’t,” “all over 40,” “Tony— age,” and “age descrim, [sic].” Perhaps the discussion memorialized in these notes was about how to comply with the law, but, if so, the “cover up” language is an odd choice. These notes, as well as the remarks made by the key decisionmaker and another employee, could lead a reasonable jury to infer that age discrimination was at work. 7
This recitation of the facts has taken the evidence in the light most favorable to the plaintiff.
See Levy v. Federal Deposit Ins. Corp.,
B. Direct Evidence
We defer any decision as to whether plaintiff has produced direct evidence of discrimination in light of our holding. Should such a decision prove material it would be better made after the development of the evidence.
See, e.g.,
W. Carl Jordan,
Employment Discrimination Law
223 (1998 Supp.);
see also Fernandes,
The decision of the district court is reversed. We remand for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
So ordered.
Notes
. "We regard Title VII, ADEA, ERISA, and FLSA as standing
in pan passu
and endorse the practice of treating judicial precedents interprеting one such statute as instructive in decisions involving another.”
Serapión v. Martinez,
. This framework applies to Age Discrimination in Employment Act (ADEA) cases under the law of this circuit.
See Mesnick v. General Elec. Co.,
. The 1991 Civil Rights Act modified this portion of the "direct evidence” scheme in Title VII cases by providing that, even if a defendant proves that it "would have taken the same action in the absence of the impermissible motivating factor,” a court may still award declaratory relief, injunctive relief, and attorney's fees and costs where a plaintiff has shown that "race, color, religion, sex, or national origin was a motivating factor for [the] employment practice.” 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-5(g)(2)(B);
id.
§ 2000e-2(m);
see Higgins v. New Balance Athletic Shoe, Inc.,
. The plaintiffs burden at this stage is often seen as comprising two separate tasks. “The plaintiff must present sufficient evidence to show both that 'the employer's articulated reason for laying off the plaintiff is a pretext’ and that 'the true reason is discriminatory.' "
Thomas,
. The district court dismissed many of these comments as “stray remarks” not connected to the employment action at issue. It is true that the weight of such remarks “is circumscribed if they were made in a situation temporally remote from the date of the employment decision or if they were not related to the employment decision in question or were made by nondecisionmakers.”
McMillan v. Massachusetts Soc'y for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals,
. Although plaintiff produced some "statistical” evidence of age discrimination, consideration of it is not necessary to our decision.
