*1 Before ANDERSON, Chief Judge, MARCUS, Circuit Judge, and HANCOCK [*] , Senior District Judge.
*2 MARCUS, Circuit Judge:
This case involves various claims of race discrimination brought by eighteen current and former Fulton County Sheriff’s Department employees individually and on behalf of all similarly situated white employees of the Sheriff’s Department against Fulton County, Georgia and Sheriff Jacquelyn H. Barrett, in her official and individual capacities (collectively, “Defendants”). Plaintiffs sued Fulton County and Sheriff Barrett alleging that Fulton County maintained a “policy or custom” of racial discrimination in employment decisions, that Fulton County and the Sheriff’s Department engaged in a “pattern or practice” of employment discrimination, and specifically that Fulton County and Sheriff Barrett intentionally discriminated on the basis of race with respect to discipline, promotions, transfers, reclassifications, promotional examinations, restorations of rank, and appointments to unclassified positions. Defendants now appeal from a jury verdict entered for most of the Plaintiffs finding that Fulton County maintained a policy or custom of discrimination against white employees and that Sheriff Barrett intentionally discriminated against white employees. After a thorough review of the record, we affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
1.
In September 1993, Plaintiffs [1] filed their complaint as a class action alleging a “pattern or practice” of employment discrimination against white personnel of the Fulton County Sheriff’s Department in the terms and conditions of employment in violation of 42 U.S.C. § 1981, [2] 42 U.S.C. § 1983, [3] and Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 42 U.S.C. § 2000e et seq. [4] In April 1994, the district court,
*4 finding the requisite numerosity, commonality, typicality, and adequacy of representation, certified under Rule 23(b)(2) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure the following class: [5]
All present and future sworn white employees of the Fulton County Sheriff’s Department and all past sworn white employees who allege discriminatory acts by Defendants within the applicable statute of limitations.
On June 12, 1996, after an extended trial, the jury awarded damages to
fifteen of the eighteen Plaintiffs and the district court entered judgment.
[6]
On July
8, 1996, Plaintiffs moved to amend the judgment, requesting injunctive relief and
retaliation and gender. Before trial, the parties agreed to sever those claims from this lawsuit.
[5]
Rule 23(b)(2) includes those class action suits where “the party opposing the class has acted
or refused to act on grounds generally applicable to the class, thereby making appropriate final
injunctive relief or corresponding declaratory relief with respect to the class as a whole.” This
subdivision was added specifically to Rule 23 to facilitate civil rights class actions. See Kincade v.
General Tire & Rubber Co.,
[6] The jury did not indicate on which theory of liability it relied in reaching its verdict. However,
because the substantive law and proof requirements of Title VII, section 1981, and section 1983 are
the same for claims alleging intentional employment discrimination based on race by state actors,
this failure to identify the particular basis of liability does not present any insurmountable problems
for appellate review. See, e.g., Standard v. A.B.E.L. Servs., Inc.,
back pay, and, on July 10, 1996, the district court vacated the judgment. Thereafter, the district court entered a modified judgment for damages, backpay, individual equitable relief, and class-based injunctive relief.
The jury verdict and final judgment included the following for each Plaintiff: 1. Major A.M. Alexander - The jury found that the Defendants had discriminated against Alexander with respect to assignments or transfers and that he had been disciplined in whole or in part because of his race. The jury awarded Alexander $125,000 in compensatory damages against both Fulton County and Sheriff Barrett and $25,000 in punitive damages against Sheriff Barrett for discriminatory assignments or transfers. The jury also awarded Alexander $2,800 in back pay, an additional $125,000 in compensatory damages against Fulton County and Sheriff Barrett, and $25,000 in punitive damages against Sheriff Barrett for his suspension. The district court also ordered that the record of disciplinary action against Alexander be expunged from his Sheriff’s Department file.
2. Sergeant Charles “Tony” Alexander - The jury awarded Charles Alexander $15,000 in compensatory damages because of Sheriff Barrett’s failure to restore Alexander’s rank after his voluntary demotion from sergeant to deputy. The district court ordered the Defendants to recalculate Alexander’s retirement benefits and other employee benefits to reflect any changes that would have occurred had his rank been restored.
3. Sergeant Joseph Bantin - The jury found in favor of Bantin on his claims that Sheriff Barrett did not consider him for appointment to the unclassified [7] positions of captain or major on account of his race, and that he was not permitted to compete in the promotional process for
the rank of classified lieutenant, also because of race. Finally, the jury returned a verdict for the Defendants on Bantin’s claim that he had not been considered for reclassification because of his race. The jury awarded Bantin $10,000 in compensatory and $5,000 in punitive damages based on its finding of discrimination against Bantin in the promotional process.
4. Sergeant Billy Bolt - The jury found that Bolt was wrongfully not appointed to the classified position of lieutenant in June 1993 because of his race and awarded him $20,000 in compensatory damages and $5,000 in punitive damages. The district court also entered an award of $1,000.98 in back pay and ordered the Defendants to reclassify Bolt as a lieutenant providing him with the pay grade, employee benefits, and seniority he would have achieved had he been appointed to the rank of classified lieutenant on June 1, 1993.
5. Sergeant Denise Brooks - The jury found that Brooks was not selected for appointment to the unclassified positions of captain or major due to her race. The jury concluded that Brooks should have been appointed as an unclassified captain in June 1993 and awarded her $10,000 in compensatory damages and $10,000 in punitive damages. The jury also found that she was discriminated against with respect to assignments or transfers and awarded her an additional $25,000 in compensatory damages and $5,000 in punitive damages. The district court also ordered the Defendants to provide Brooks with the pay grade, employee benefits, and seniority she would have achieved had she been appointed to captain on June 1, 1993.
6. Lieutenant Robert Fox - The jury found that Fox was not appointed to the position of unclassified captain in March 1993 and was transferred to a position in the Jail against his will in 1994 because of race. The jury awarded Fox $20,000 in compensatory damages and $10,000 in punitive damages on his failure to promote claim. It awarded him an additional $50,000 in compensatory damages and $10,000 in punitive damages on his discriminatory assignment or transfer claim. The district court ordered the Defendants to recalculate Fox’s retirement and other benefits as if he *7 had been appointed to an unclassified captain position on March 1, 1993.
7. Captain Gary Gettis - The jury found that Gettis was not appointed to the unclassified positions of captain or major due to his race. The jury concluded that in the absence of discrimination, Gettis would have been appointed to an unclassified captain position in June 1993, and awarded him $10,000 in compensatory damages and $10,000 in punitive damages. The district court also awarded Gettis $2,290.59 in back pay, the amount he would have received had he been appointed to an unclassified captain position in June 1993, and ordered the Defendants to recalculate Gettis’ retirement and other employee benefits as if he had been appointed to an unclassified captain position on June 1, 1993.
8. Corporal Sara Henderson - The jury found that Henderson was not considered for appointment to the unclassified positions of captain or major on account of her race. However, the jury found against Henderson on her claim that she was denied promotions to the positions of classified corporal and sergeant in 1993 because of race. The jury did not award her any damages.
9. Sergeant Kathy Jones - The jury found that Jones was denied transfers outside the Jail because of race and awarded her $10,000 in compensatory damages and $5,000 in punitive damages. The district court declined to award injunctive relief to Jones.
10. Lieutenant Carolyn Masson - The jury found that Masson was not considered or selected for appointment to the unclassified positions of captain or major due to her race and that she was also discriminated against with regard to assignments or transfers because of her race. As for not selecting her to an unclassified position, the jury concluded that Masson should have been appointed to an unclassified captain position in June 1993 and awarded her $10,000 in compensatory damages and $10,000 in punitive damages. As for its findings concerning the assignments or transfers, the jury awarded Masson an additional $50,000 in compensatory damages and $10,000 in punitive damages. The district court also awarded Masson $5,412.99 in back *8 pay to compensate her for wages she would have received had she been appointed to the position of unclassified captain in June 1993. The court also ordered the Defendants to provide Masson with the pay grade, employee benefits, and seniority she would have earned had she been appointed to the position of captain on June 1, 1993. 11. Corporal Donnie McBee - Although the jury found for McBee on his claim that he was not considered for appointment to the unclassified positions of captain or major because of his race, it found his failure to be selected for these positions was not on account of his race. The jury also concluded McBee had not been discriminated against with respect to assignments or transfers. Accordingly, the jury did not award McBee any damages.
12. Corporal Guerry “Bubba” Moore - The jury found that Moore was not considered for appointment to the unclassified positions of captain or major because of race, but found that his failure to be selected for appointment to these positions was not on account of race. The jury did find, however, that Moore had been discriminated against on the basis of race with regard to assignments or transfers and awarded him $10,000 in compensatory damages and $5,000 in punitive damages. The district court entered judgment in these amounts but declined to enter any individual injunctive relief. 13. Sergeant James NeSmith - The jury found for NeSmith on his claims that he was discriminated against because of race with regard to promotions, assignments or transfers, and discipline. The jury awarded him $10,000 in compensatory damages and $10,000 in punitive damages on his unclassified position non-selection claim. The jury also awarded him $40,000 in compensatory damages and $8,000 in punitive damages on his discriminatory assignment or transfer claim, and an additional $30,000 in compensatory damages and $7,000 in punitive damages on his discriminatory discipline claim. The district court also awarded NeSmith $2,156.83 in back pay to compensate him for wages he would have received had he been promoted to the position of unclassified captain in March 1993, and ordered the Defendants to provide NeSmith with the pay grade, *9 employee benefits, and seniority he would have earned had he been promoted to the position of unclassified captain on March 1, 1993. 14. Sergeant Joan Paschal - The jury found for Paschal on her claim that she was not considered for appointment to the unclassified positions of captain or major due in whole or in part to her race, but it awarded her no monetary relief, and the district court ordered no injunctive relief.
15. Sergeant Heidi Schaefer - The jury found that Schaefer was not considered for appointment to the unclassified positions of captain or major on account of her race and that she was discriminated against because of race with respect to assignments or transfers. The jury also concluded that Schaefer had not been permitted to compete in the promotional process for the rank of classified lieutenant in 1993 because of her race. Accordingly, the jury awarded Schaefer $10,000 in compensatory damages and $5,000 in punitive damages for the assignment or transfer claim, and an additional $10,000 in compensatory damages and $5,000 in punitive damages for the promotional process claim.
16. Sergeant Robert Smith - The jury found that Smith was not reclassified as a classified sergeant until July 1994, and was not permitted to compete in 1993 in the promotional process for the position of classified lieutenant because of his race. Although the jury found that Smith was the victim of discrimination when he was not considered for appointment to the unclassified positions of captain or major, it concluded that his failure to be selected was not the result of discrimination. The jury also determined that Smith was not discriminated against with respect to assignments or transfers. As for his reclassification claim, the jury found that Smith should have been reclassified as a classified sergeant in November 1992 and awarded him $10,000 in compensatory damages and $0 in punitive damages. As for his promotional process claim, the jury awarded Smith $10,000 in compensatory damages and $5,000 in punitive damages. Finally, the district court ordered the Defendants to provide Smith with the pay grade, employee benefits, and seniority he would have achieved *10 had he been promoted to the rank of classified sergeant on November 1, 1992.
17. Sergeant Benjamin Steele - The jury found that while Steele was not considered for appointment to the unclassified positions of captain or major on account of race, his failure to be selected for these positions was not due to his race. The jury did find that Steele was discriminated against with respect to assignments or transfers but not with respect to reclassifications. Based on finding discrimination on Steele’s assignment or transfer claims, the jury awarded Steele $10,000 in compensatory damages and $5,000 in punitive damages. 18. Corporal Robert Upshaw - Finally, the jury found that while Upshaw was not considered for appointment to the unclassified positions of captain or major because of his race, his failure to be selected for these positions was not on account of race. The jury did find, however, that Upshaw’s rank of classified lieutenant was not restored after his voluntary demotion to deputy because of his race. As for this claim, the jury awarded Upshaw $20,000 in compensatory damages but no punitive damages. The district court also ordered Defendants to promote Upshaw to the rank of classified lieutenant retroactive to March 1, 1993, and to adjust his pay grade, employee benefits, and seniority accordingly.
The district court decertified the class after trial observing that because of the different types of discrimination claims alleged, Plaintiffs did not satisfy the commonality and typicality prerequisites of a class action. The court also expressed doubt as to whether the members of the class were really so numerous as to warrant class certification. In January 1997, the district court denied the Defendants’ motion for judgment as a matter of law and entered final judgment for the Plaintiffs.
II.
A brief description of the structure, function, and hierarchy of the Fulton County Government offices at issue is necessary to understand the resolution of this appeal. We begin with Defendant Fulton County which is administered by the Fulton County Board of Commissioners (“Board”), in turn made up of seven Commissioners elected by the voters of Fulton County to four-year terms. The Board sets Fulton County governmental policy and approves departmental budget requests. Fulton County voters elect the Sheriff every four years. On December 14, 1992, defendant Jacquelyn Barrett took office as the Sheriff of Fulton County, Georgia. As of August 1993, the Fulton County Sheriff’s Department had 629 sworn law enforcement officers. Among those officers, 521, or 83%, were black.
The Sheriff’s Department, like all other Fulton County departments, uses the services of the Fulton County Personnel Department. The Personnel Board is appointed by the Board of Commissioners and is the major decision-making authority within the Personnel Department. The Personnel Department is responsible for the County’s human resources system, which designates the positions of Fulton County employees as being either “classified” or “unclassified.” Classified jobs comprise the vast majority of the jobs in the *12 Sheriff’s Department and are explicitly subject to civil service-type protections. [8] For those jobs, the Personnel Department advertises the positions available, noting the minimum qualifications required for each, and thereafter processes all applications. In reviewing them, the Board determines whether an applicant meets the “published” minimum requirements. If the applicant does not meet the requirements the Board notifies the applicant of this finding and the applicant is given thirty days to provide the Board with additional information and contest the finding. But, if the Personnel Board finds that an applicant meets the minimum qualifications, the applicant receives notification of the next scheduled promotions test. The Personnel Board then administers a written test. If an applicant passes that, he is eligible to take an oral examination given by high-ranking officers in the Sheriff’s Department. Thereafter, if an applicant passes both the written and oral tests, his name appears on a list of eligible applicants ranked by examination scores. When an opening for a classified position arises, the Sheriff promotes an individual from the list in rank designated order. Each list expires after six months, and the officers who are not promoted from the list but wish to be considered for future promotions must go through the entire process again.
Unclassified jobs, in contrast, are more like political appointments. In Sheriff Barrett’s administration, they consist of positions with the rank of captain or higher. Notably, a department head such as Sheriff Barrett with appointment authority does not have to advertise for open unclassified positions, is not required to employ the services of the Personnel Department, and can dismiss an unclassified employee at her pleasure.
The Personnel Board hears appeals of classified employees who have suffered demotions, suspensions, or dismissals when the employee alleges that the action was taken for personal, political, or religious reasons. The Personnel Board also considers “reclassification” applications. [9] The Grievance Review Committee hears classified and unclassified employees’ appeals of employment decisions made by superiors. Its review of classified employees’ grievances, however, is limited to cases not falling under the jurisdiction of the Personnel Board. This Committee is comprised of two Fulton County non-supervisory employees, two members drawn from
the supervisory ranks or management appointed by the Board of Commissioners, and one person who is not employed by Fulton County and who is selected by the *14 other members. According to Committee procedure, an employee’s chain of command first reviews and considers a grievance. If the employee cannot establish a satisfactory resolution through the chain of supervision, the grievance is passed to the Personnel Department which logs in the grievance. The Personnel Department then forwards the complaint to the Grievance Review Committee Chairperson who schedules a hearing. After the Grievance Review Committee conducts a hearing, the Committee may recommend settlement orders which are subject to approval by the County Manager. Elected officials such as Sheriff Barrett are not obligated to accept and implement the recommendations of the Grievance Review Committee, but, as a practical matter, they usually do.
Finally, the Fulton County Sheriff’s Department consists of several Divisions. The Jail Division runs the Fulton County Jail and administers prisoner transfers. The Jail Division is by far the largest of the Sheriff’s Departments, with over 500 employees. Next in size is the Court Services Division which provides security to Fulton County courthouses and individual courtrooms. Other Divisions include the Service Division, the Office of Professional Standards, and the Bonding Division. The Service Division, is responsible for the service of warrants and civil processes. The Office of Professional Standards handles investigations into alleged wrongdoings by Sheriff’s Department employees and conducts *15 background investigations on new applicants. The Bonding Division manages the Department’s interaction with bonding companies, as well as the whole bonding process.
Upon taking office, Sheriff Barrett created the Community Relations Division and the Research and Planning Division. The Community Relations Division performs various crime prevention activities, and serves as a liaison between the Sheriff and the community. The Research and Planning Division studies issue that the Sheriff believes will be important and prepares the Department’s Policy and Procedures Manual.
III.
On appeal we consider six broad challenges to the proceedings below: first, that the district court erred in denying qualified immunity to Sheriff Barrett; second, that it erred in concluding Fulton County is liable under section 1983; third, that the court should have granted Defendants’ motion to sever Plaintiffs’ individual claims; fourth, that the district court wrongfully admitted into evidence certain statistical and non-statistical evidence that was both irrelevant and unfairly prejudicial; fifth, that the court erred in its jury instructions; and finally, that the trial court erroneously denied Defendants’ motions for judgment as a matter of law *16 because the evidence was plainly insufficient to support any of the individual Plaintiffs’ claims. We consider each claim in turn.
A.
We examine first Sheriff Barrett’s belated argument raised for the first time in the Defendants’ motion for judgment as a matter of law that she is protected, in her individual capacity, from civil damages by the doctrine of qualified immunity because the Plaintiffs failed to demonstrate that her conduct violated their clearly established statutory or constitutional rights. [10]
We review de novo the district court’s denial of qualified immunity.
Belcher v. City of Foley,
In analyzing a defense of qualified immunity, we first consider whether
Sheriff Barrett was acting within the scope of her discretionary authority when the
alleged wrongful acts occurred. Evans v. Hightower ,
Cir. 1997). If Sheriff Barrett has met this burden, the Plaintiffs must then demonstrate that she violated clearly established law based upon objective standards. Id.
*18
On this record, it is undisputed that the Sheriff was acting within the scope
of her discretionary authority when she made the various employment decisions at
issue. Moreover, there can be no doubt that in December 1992, when Sheriff
Barrett assumed office, it was clearly established that intentional discrimination in
the workplace on account of race violated federal law. See Smith v. Lomax, 45
F.3d 402, 407 (11th Cir. 1995); Yeldell v. Cooper Green Hosp., Inc., 956 F.2d
1056, 1064 (11th Cir. 1992) (citing Washington v. Davis ,
Sheriff Barrett, however, relying on Foy v. Holston,
In this case, however, the jury squarely found that Sheriff Barrett
intentionally discriminated against many white law enforcement officers on
account of race, and, in so doing, unambiguously rejected her proffered non-
discriminatory reasons for her employment decisions. Foy, therefore, is inapposite.
Based on a painstaking review of this record, we are satisfied that a reasonable jury
could find Sheriff Barrett intentionally made race-based employment decisions in
violation of Plaintiffs’ clearly established rights. As a result, the district court
properly denied the Defendants’ motion for judgment as a matter of law because
of qualified immunity. See Von Stein v. Brescher,
B.
Next, the Defendants argue that the district court erred in denying their
motion for judgment as a matter of law as to Fulton County’s liability under
section 1983. Specifically, they claim that Sheriff Barrett did not have “final
policy-making authority” over personnel decisions and that Fulton County had no
“policy or custom” of employment discrimination, thereby foreclosing County
liability for any of the many challenged employment decisions. Whether the
County may properly be held liable under section 1983 makes no practical
difference to the outcome of the case for three independent reasons. First, to the
extent that Plaintiffs complied with Title VII’s preconditions to suit, the County
may properly be held liable under Title VII for all of the claims Plaintiffs press
under section 1983.
[12]
Second, none of the Plaintiffs’ total damages awards
*21
exceeded the relevant statutory limitation of $300,000 imposed by Title VII.
[13]
Therefore, we need not consider whether the awards would be permissible under
section 1983. Third, as Plaintiffs conceded before the district court, they may not
be awarded punitive damages against the County.
[14]
See Newport v. Fact Concerts,
Inc.,
C.
Defendants also broadly allege that the district court erred in so far as it
tried each of the Plaintiffs’ claims together. After discovery, Defendants moved to
*22
sever Plaintiffs’ individual claims of discrimination contending that the joint trial
of these claims would confuse the jury and unfairly prejudice their defense. The
district court rejected this motion. We review a district court’s joinder of
Plaintiffs’ claims and denial of severance for abuse of discretion. Nor-Tex
Agencies, Inc. v. Jones,
Among other things, the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure provide that “[a]ll
persons may join in one action as plaintiffs if they assert any right to relief jointly,
severally, or in the alternative in respect of or arising out of the same transaction,
occurrence, or series of transactions or occurrences and if any question of law or
fact common to all these persons will arise in the action.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 20(a).
See also Grayson v. K Mart Corp.,
In determining what constitutes a transaction or occurrence for the purposes
of Rule 20(a), courts have looked for meaning to Fed. R. Civ. P. 13(a) governing
compulsory counterclaims. See Mosley,
The second prong of Rule 20 does not require that all questions of law and
fact raised by the dispute be common, but only that some question of law or fact be
common to all parties. See Mosley,
On the other hand, the prejudicial effects of other witnesses’ alleged
discriminatory experiences may outweigh their probative value where, for
example, the alleged discrimination occurs during different time periods, see, e.g.,
Annis v. County of Westchester,
In this case, the district court did not abuse its discretion in finding that the
Plaintiffs satisfied both requirements for joinder. As for the first requirement, all
of the Plaintiffs’ claims stem from the same core allegation that they were subject
to a systemic pattern or practice of race-based discrimination against white law
enforcement officers by Sheriff Barrett in her first year in office. Plaintiffs all
seek relief based on the same series of discriminatory transactions by the same
decision-maker in the same department during the same short time frame. As for
the second requirement, the discriminatory character of Defendants’ conduct is
plainly common to each plaintiff’s recovery. The fact that the Plaintiffs suffered
different effects--in this case, discrimination in promotions, transfers, assignments,
or discipline--from the alleged policy of discrimination did not preclude the trial
court from finding a common question of law and fact. See Mosley,
Alternatively, the Defendants argue that even if the district court did not abuse its discretion in finding proper joinder under Rule 20(a), it did err in failing to sever the Plaintiffs’ cases for trial under Fed. R. Civ. P. 42(b). [16] Grayson, 79 *28 F.3d at 1097. As Rule 42(b) requires the district court to balance considerations of convenience, economy, expedition, and prejudice, the decision to order separate trials naturally depends on the peculiar facts and circumstances of each case. Again, we disturb a district court’s decision not to order separate trials only upon a showing of abuse of discretion. See Bailey v. Board of County Comm’rs, 956 F.2d 1112, 1127-28 (11th Cir. 1992). We can discern no abuse of discretion here.
Defendants suggest that there was no way to try together the individual claims of the eighteen Plaintiffs, each involving different work histories, employment decisions and prayers for relief, without unfairly prejudicing their defense and confusing the jury. While we acknowledge the real potential for confusion among jurors and for unfair prejudice to a defendant where there are large numbers of Plaintiffs, claims, and defenses, and urge care in joining together in one case multiple claims and multiple claimants, we conclude that in this case the potential for prejudice was minimized because of the core similarities in Plaintiffs’ claims. As we have stated, the claims all center on the core allegation of a systemic pattern of race-based discrimination against white law enforcement officers instigated by Sheriff Barrett during her first year in office. Moreover, the separate trials “to prevent delay or prejudice,” but this was not argued by appellants’ in their brief, and therefore we will not address that rule here.
Plaintiffs’ specific claims also overlap substantially. Each plaintiff, with the
exception of Major A.M. Alexander, challenged on the grounds of race
discrimination Sheriff Barrett’s alleged failure to consider him or her for
appointment to unclassified positions. Thirteen Plaintiffs claimed the Sheriff
discriminated against each of them in assignments or transfers. In addition to
these two main claims, three of the Plaintiffs alleged that they were discriminated
against with respect to reclassifications, two claimed that they were discriminated
against when Sheriff Barrett failed to restore their rank after voluntary demotions,
and two claimed they were disciplined in a discriminatory manner. Furthermore,
several of the claims --discriminatory denial of reclassification, discriminatory
denial of restoration of rank, and denial of promotion claims--logically relate or
overlap. Finally, each of the Plaintiffs’ claims and the evidence of discrimination
undoubtedly are relevant to every other plaintiff’s core allegation of systemic
discrimination. See Cooper v. Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond,
876,
336,
Given the common core of allegations, the substantial overlap of the particular claims, and the logical interconnection of several of the different forms the alleged discrimination took, we are satisfied that the district court did not abuse its discretion in finding that the efficiency of a consolidated trial outweighed the potential for unfair prejudice or jury confusion.
While the Defendants also claim that the verdict itself reflects that the joint
trial of the eighteen Plaintiffs hopelessly confused the jury, requiring remand and
severance, we cannot agree. The verdict actually delivered by the jury, when
considered in its entirety, suggests to the contrary that the jury discerned the
strengths and weaknesses of the claims of each individual plaintiff. Indeed, the
jury denied relief on all claims concerning promotion to unclassified major.
[17]
The
*31
jury also found against two of the four Plaintiffs who claimed that they should
have been reclassified,
[18]
and against five of the ten Plaintiffs who alleged that they
were not selected to unclassified captain positions due in part or in whole to their
race.
[19]
See United States v. Bermea,
D.
Next, the Defendants challenge the district court’s evidentiary rulings
concerning the admissibility of statistical evidence designed to show that white
officers were underrepresented in the Sheriff’s department, and non-statistical
evidence offered to show a custom or practice of discrimination against white
employees by Fulton County. Again, we review the district court’s evidentiary
rulings for abuse of discretion, see Judd v. Rodman,
Cir. 1997), and reverse only if the moving party establishes that the ruling resulted
in a “substantial prejudicial effect,” Piamba Cortes v. American Airlines, Inc., 177
F.3d 1272, 1305 (11th Cir. 1999) (citation and internal quotation marks omitted);
see also Fed. R. Evid. 103(a) (“Error may not be predicated upon a ruling which
admits or excludes evidence unless a substantial right of the party is affected . . .
.”); Fed. R. Civ. P. 61 (An erroneous evidentiary ruling is not subject to reversal
unless refusal to take such action is “inconsistent with substantial justice.”). When
employing an abuse of discretion standard, “we must affirm unless we at least
determine that the district court has made a clear error of judgment, or has applied
an incorrect legal standard.” SunAmerica Corp. v. Sun Life Assurance Co. of
Canada,
First, the Defendants challenge the district court’s decision to admit five pieces of statistical evidence: (1) testimony concerning and comparing the racial composition of the Sheriff’s Department to the general demographics of an eight- county Metropolitan Atlanta area; (2) evidence regarding changes in the overall racial composition of the Sheriff’s Department and the workforce in Fulton County over two decades; (3) evidence establishing the change in the racial composition of the general workforce of Fulton County government from the mid-1970's to the present; (4) testimony regarding the increase in the number of minority employees in Fulton County government from 1985 to 1995 and the concomitant decrease in the number of white employees; and finally, (5) evidence that the overall composition of the County workforce had increased from 22.1% minority in 1972 to 55.9% in 1989, that the percentage of black County Department Heads had increased from zero in 1972 to 40 to 50% in 1990, and that the number of black members of the Board of Commissioners had increased from zero of three to five of seven between 1972 and 1990.
We begin by considering the relevance of the first two pieces of evidence
generally comparing the racial composition of the Sheriff’s Department to the
*34
demographics of Fulton County and the eight-county metropolitan Atlanta area to
show discrimination by the Sheriff’s Department. On occasion, we have regarded
as probative of class-based disparate treatment statistics showing that a given
minority is “underrepresented” in the work force by comparison with the general
population. See, e.g., United States v. City of Miami,
In this case, the Plaintiffs consist of current or former sworn law enforcement officers in the Fulton County Sheriff’s Department. Plainly, these jobs are not entry level and are not of a “low skill level” within the meaning of *36 Teamsters and Hazelwood. The relevant labor pools undoubtedly are narrower than Plaintiffs’ vague comparison to general population figures would suggest, and the comparisons must be more subtle and nuanced. Indeed, for the unclassified captain and major positions, Sheriff Barrett appointed officers with the rank of classified sergeant or higher (in addition to some outside hires). The relevant labor market for these positions, therefore, consisted of all law enforcement officers with at least the rank of sergeant. For reclassifications, the relevant population was comprised of all law enforcement officers eligible for reclassification. For transfers and assignments, the relevant market consisted of all law enforcement officers eligible for the transfer or assignment in question. And for disciplinary actions, the relevant pool was made up of law enforcement officers who had committed the same or similar offenses as the officer who was subject to discipline. Because the general population is not readily qualified for the law enforcement positions at issue in the case, the Plaintiffs cannot show discrimination in hiring simply by comparing the percentage of white sworn officers in the Fulton County Sheriff’s Department with the percentage of white residents of Fulton County or metropolitan Atlanta. To show discrimination in hiring for these law enforcement positions, the Plaintiffs would instead have to show a disparity between the percentage of whites hired as law enforcement *37 officers and the percentage of whites in the relevant labor pool of qualified individuals. Because Plaintiffs’ statistical evidence attempts to show discrimination just by looking at the general population rather than at the relevant skilled labor pool, the evidence has no real probative value of whether, within the relevant labor pool, the Sheriff’s Department discriminated on the basis of race. As a result, we think the first two pieces of statistical evidence should have been excluded by the trial court.
The remaining three pieces of statistical evidence showing the increase in the number of minority employees of Fulton County government also are not relevant to the allegations that the Sheriff discriminated in this case. The evidence was offered to suggest the Sheriff’s Department was somehow influenced and encouraged by a larger County-wide policy of discriminating against whites. But this evidence is not probative of a custom or policy in the Sheriff’s department for two reasons. First, the statistical evidence reflecting the rising number of minority employees in the County workforce does not alone tend to establish that Fulton County officials initiated and maintained a custom of discrimination against their white employees. It does not ineluctably follow that a rise in the number or percentage of minority employees in the County was caused by a custom or policy of discrimination maintained by County officials. Second, even if a policy or *38 custom of discrimination by the County was somehow demonstrated or even suggested by the rising number of minorities in the County workforce, this evidence standing alone has no bearing on whether such a policy or custom of discrimination was also maintained by the Sheriff’s Department. Notably, the Plaintiffs have not shown that the County participated in any way in the employment decisions made by the Sheriff and therefore cannot establish any connection between the hiring decisions and policies of the County and those of the Sheriff’s Department. As a result, evidence of the racial composition of Fulton County government employees, even if it suggests a policy of racial discrimination by the County, does not make a similar pattern or policy of racial discrimination by the Sheriff’s Department against its employees any more or less likely.
Although we believe that the district court erroneously admitted the challenged statistical evidence, we are satisfied, after a thorough review of the record, that the error does not warrant reversal for two reasons. First, the district court adequately instructed the jury on the proper weight to be given to the evidence thereby ameliorating any prejudicial effect the evidence might otherwise have had. In instructing the jury on how to evaluate the statistical evidence, the district court stated: “[I]f you find that the Plaintiffs demonstrate a racial disparity, you may consider whether factors other than race account for the disparity and you *39 may consider whether such disparity, if any, caused the specific personnel decisions about which they complain.”
The district court’s instruction to consider whether factors other than race account for any statistical disparity, largely cures any error caused by admitting the first two pieces of evidence comparing the racial composition of the Sheriff’s Department with the non-relevant general populations of Fulton County and the Metropolitan Atlanta area. The instruction properly focused the jury on the question of whether the statistical disparities were the result of race-based discrimination in the Sheriff’s Department or the result of a racially skewed qualified labor pool. By focusing the jury on this critical question of whether the statistical disparities showed that similarly situated black and white individuals were treated differently by the Sheriff’s Department--a question in no way answered by the statistical evidence--- the district court ensured that the jury did not accord the statistical evidence weight it was not due.
Moreover, as for the remaining statistical evidence examining the racial composition of the Fulton County government workforce, we are satisfied that the district court’s instruction to the jury to consider whether the racial disparity reflected in the statistics caused the specific personnel decisions challenged in this case cured any potential injustice caused by the district court’s erroneous *40 admission of this evidence. Again, the district court’s instruction emphasized the need for the jury to find a causal link between the statistical disparities and the decisions made by Sheriff Barrett. No such causal link between the County and the Sheriff was presented. The district court’s instruction, by focusing the jury on the need to find such a link before giving the statistical evidence weight, again ensured that the jurors would not give the evidence weight it did not deserve.
Simply put, the district court “sufficiently instructed the jury so that the jurors understood the issues and were not misled” by the statistical evidence erroneously admitted. Carter v. DecisionOne Corp., 122 F.3d 997, 1005 (11th Cir. 1997) (citation omitted). See also Nettles v. Electrolux Motor AB, 784 F.2d 1574, 1581 (11th Cir. 1986) (holding that although the district court erroneously admitted certain evidence, the error was not grounds for reversal because the district court correctly focused the jury’s attention on the relevant issue making it “highly unlikely” that the jury gave the evidence undue consideration).
Second, although we do find the admissible evidence presented at trial was
insufficient to sustain several of the jury’s verdicts,
[20]
the verdicts that we do sustain
were the product of such one-sided evidence that we find it very unlikely, indeed
remote, that the jury could have been swayed erroneously by the wrongfully
*41
admitted evidence. See United States v. Mendez,
While we are honestly troubled by the district court’s erroneous admission of irrelevant statistical evidence, we conclude that in light of both the curative effect of the given jury instructions and the one-sidedness of the evidence presented on those claims whose verdicts we uphold, Defendants did not suffer substantial injustice as a result of the court’s evidentiary ruling. Accordingly, we decline to reverse on these grounds.
The Defendants also challenge the district court’s rulings on the admissibility of non-statistical evidence offered to establish “custom” under section 1983. Specifically, Defendants challenge the district court’s admission of testimony from Sam Brownlee, former County Manager of Fulton County from 1972-1990, and Alice Smith, former Clerk to the Board of Commissioners who left her position before Sheriff Barrett was elected. Brownlee testified as to four principal points. First, between 1978 and 1989 the Board of Commissioners engaged in public and private discussions about making a deliberate effort to increase minority hiring. Second, the dialogue regarding affirmative action *43 increased in the 1980's when five of the seven members of the Board of Commissioners were black. Third, during Brownlee’s time as County Manager, several commissioners told him they believed there were too few blacks at department head level jobs and that he should recommend only the appointment of minorities to these positions until the situation was improved. Finally, in the mid- to-late 1980's outside groups supposedly pressured the County Commission and others within Fulton County government to fill all appointments of any consequence with blacks. Alice Smith testified that Michael Hightower, a black Commissioner, told her she had to be replaced as Clerk with a black individual.
Defendants correctly argue that the admitted testimony is not sufficiently connected in time or subject-matter to the challenged personnel decisions to be admissible. Brownlee’s testimony is completely unrelated to Sheriff Barrett’s actions. His testimony stemmed back twenty years before Sheriff Barrett was even elected. Second, the composition of the Board changed between Brownlee’s tenure with the Board and Sheriff Barrett’s election. Third, there is no evidence that the County did anything to suggest that Sheriff Barrett engage in discrimination, let alone that it influenced or coerced her to do so. Smith’s testimony is similarly irrelevant to the question of whether Sheriff Barrett discriminated against Plaintiffs. Smith’s testimony did not pertain to actions by any Sheriff’s *44 Department employee. Moreover, the testimony related to a time period nine years prior to Sheriff Barrett’s election.
Although the non-statistical evidence at issue was improperly admitted by
the district court, we again conclude its admission did not result in a substantial
injustice to Defendants. First, because the anecdotal evidence admitted was so
completely unconnected to the question of Sheriff Barrett’s discriminatory
employment policies, and so unrelated in time to the conduct here at issue, it is
highly unlikely the jury would have given this evidence any weight. Second, the
district court’s jury instructions suggested that this evidence was of no real
moment by emphasizing that in order to find Defendants liable they had to find that
Sheriff Barrett, not some past and unrelated Board member, engaged in
discriminatory employment practices. The court instructed the jury: “The
Plaintiffs must show that Sheriff Barrett either encouraged the specific incidents
complained of by the Plaintiffs or in some way directly participated in them. At a
minimum, the Plaintiffs must prove that Sheriff Barrett at least officially
authorized, approved or knowingly acquiesced in the alleged discriminatory
conduct.” And third, as we have already said, the evidence offered in support of
the verdicts we uphold was so one-sided that there is no danger the jury was
unduly swayed in reaching these verdicts by the erroneously admitted evidence. In
*45
short, we decline the Defendants’ invitation to reverse the district court’s ruling on
this point.
[24]
Indeed, with regard to all of the erroneously admitted evidence, the
jury’s carefully considered mixed verdicts reflect that it was not unduly swayed by
the irrelevant evidence. See LaSpesa,
E.
Defendants also challenge on appeal three of the district court’s jury instructions: first, an instruction concerning the relationship between Plaintiffs’ claims and the scope of their EEOC charge; second, a charge as to what constitutes a “similarly situated” person for a discriminatory discipline allegation; and finally, the charge regarding when a local government can be held responsible for the acts *46 or statements of its employees. [25] We can find no reversible error in the challenged jury instructions.
Our review of a trial court’s jury instructions is limited. See Eskra v.
Provident Life & Accident Ins. Co.,
Cir. 1996). In short, we will reverse because of an erroneous instruction only if we
are “‘left with a substantial and ineradicable doubt as to whether the jury was
properly guided in its deliberations.’” Carter,
First, the Defendants challenge the district court’s charge concerning the relationship between the Plaintiffs’ Title VII claims and the scope of their EEOC charges. The district court instructed the jury in these terms:
Plaintiff is required to file charges of discrimination with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission or the EEOC and to receive from the EEOC a notice of the right to sue. An EEOC charge is sufficient when it identifies the parties and describes generally the complained of act or practice. While you may review the EEOC charges as evidence of Plaintiffs’ contentions at the time they were filed, the claims asserted in this case may encompass discrimination claims that are like the discrimination described in the EEOC charges, as well as claims that may reasonably be expected to grow out of the allegations in the EEOC charge during a reasonable investigation by the EEOC.
We can find no error in this charge, and conclude that it adequately stated the correct law.
The starting point of ascertaining the permissible scope of a judicial
complaint alleging employment discrimination is the administrative charge and
*48
investigation. See Griffin v. Carlin,
We observe at the outset that in class actions brought under Title VII, which
this case was before it was decertified after the jury had returned its verdict, it is
not necessary for all class members to have filed EEOC charges or to have
received notices of the right to sue in order to be represented by the class. See
Griffin v. Dugger,
In this case, every plaintiff alleged in his or her EEOC charge that he or she
was the victim of a pattern or practice of discrimination against white employees in
the Sheriff’s Department. The allegations ultimately leveled in the complaint filed
in the district court are either addressed in the collective EEOC charges or could be
reasonably expected to grow out of those administrative charges of discrimination.
Major Alexander’s EEOC charge of discrimination, for example, contains the
central claim that there was a general pattern or practice of race discrimination
against white employees of the Sheriff’s Department in hiring, promotions, job
assignments, and discipline. The other EEOC charges are not as specific as Major
Alexander’s; they are limited to allegations of discrimination in promotions to
classified and unclassified positions. It is true that several claims of racial
*50
discrimination asserted in Plaintiffs’ complaint--denial of access to promotional
exams, reclassifications, and transfers--were not specifically mentioned in the
EEOC charges. However, these claims are sufficiently similar to the promotions
and job assignment claims--all involve the allegedly race-based rejection of
Plaintiffs for desired positions within the Sheriff’s Department--to be fairly
characterized as arising out of similar discriminatory treatment to that specifically
alleged before the EEOC. Cf. Griffin v. Dugger,
Second, Defendants contend that the district court erred in charging the jury
that it could find discrimination where “another similarly situated employee, who
is not a member of the protected group, was not treated in a similar manner.”
Defendants claim that the term “similarly situated” is ambiguous, and that this
charge miscasts the governing law of this circuit, which they claim requires the
*51
“same or nearly identical conduct.” Again, we disagree. Although susceptible to
manipulation, the phrase “similarly situated” is the correct term of art in
employment discrimination law. See Olmstead v. Zimring,
Moreover, the law does not require that a “similarly situated” individual be one
who has “engaged in the same or nearly identical conduct” as the disciplined
*52
plaintiff. Instead, the law only requires “similar” misconduct from the similarly
situated comparator. See, e.g., Osram,
1540-41 & n.12.
Third, the Defendants argue that the district court erred when it charged the
jury that “a local government is responsible under [Title VII] for any of the acts
and statements of its employees which are made within the scope of their duties as
employees of the government.” The Defendants suggest that the jury could have
concluded that Fulton County was liable for any “stray remarks” made that were
unrelated to the employment decisions. This argument is unpersuasive for three
reasons: first, the Defendants failed to identify any “stray remarks” introduced into
the record that may have been misinterpreted by the jury; second, in the beginning
of the district judge’s instruction on Title VII, he specifically discussed the
statute’s coverage, which limits Fulton County’s liability to intentional acts of
discrimination by its employees affecting the Plaintiffs’ terms and conditions of
employment; and third, the gist of the district court’s instruction, even when
selectively quoted by Defendants, is correct. See, e.g., Restatement (Second) of
Agency § 219(1) (1958); see also Faragher v. City of Boca Raton,
S.Ct. 2257,
IV.
Finally, the Defendants broadly challenge the sufficiency of the evidence
presented to support the verdicts and damages entered against them. We review de
novo the district court’s denial of Defendants’ motion for judgment as a matter of
law, applying the same standards used by the district court. See Combs v.
Plantation Patters,
At various times in their briefs, the Defendants suggest that some of the
Plaintiffs failed to establish a “prima facie” case of discrimination. We need not
revisit this question however. “When the trier of fact has before it all the evidence
needed to decide the ultimate issue of whether the defendant intentionally
discriminated against the plaintiff, the question of whether the plaintiff properly
made out a prima facie case 'is no longer relevant.'" Richardson,
Ultimately, we must examine whether the evidence presented on behalf of each plaintiff was sufficient to sustain each of the jury’s verdicts. We note, however, that eighteen Plaintiffs brought this case alleging a broad based pattern and practice of discrimination, and the great bulk of the evidence presented was admissible as to each of the other Plaintiffs’ individual cases precisely because it points to such a pattern and practice. Consequently, although we analyze each aspect of the verdict separately and individually, we emphasize that the sum of the evidence presented additionally supports each of the individual verdicts of *56 discrimination. Thus, although a determination that a defendant may have engaged in a pattern and practice of discrimination is, standing alone, insufficient to support a claim of race discrimination in an individual case, if, as the jury plainly concluded, Sheriff Barrett racially discriminated against each of the eighteen Plaintiffs in various ways, this conclusion undoubtedly makes it more likely, in any given case, that Sheriff Barrett discriminated against a particular plaintiff.
After painstaking review of all the evidence presented we conclude: first, that there was sufficient evidence to sustain the discriminatory discipline claims of A.M. Alexander and James NeSmith; second, that there was sufficient evidence to sustain the verdicts in favor of Robert Fox, Gary Gettis, Carolyn Masson, and James NeSmith on their discriminatory failure to promote claims, but there was not
enough evidence to sustain the verdict in favor of Denise Brooks as to this charge; third, that there was sufficient evidence to support the jury verdict on the discriminatory transfer or assignment claim of Kathy Jones, but insufficient evidence to sustain the verdicts on the claims of Guerry Moore, Heidi Schaefer, Benjamin Steele, Denise Brooks, Robert Fox, and Carolyn Masson; fourth, that there was sufficient evidence presented to sustain the verdicts reached on the discriminatory reclassification claims of Jimmy Bolt and Robert Smith; fifth, that the evidence was insufficient on the discrimination in access to promotional *57 examinations claims of Joseph Bantin, Robert Smith, and Heidi Schaefer; and finally, that the evidence was insufficient to sustain the verdicts on the discriminatory failure to restore rank claims of Charles Alexander and Robert Upshaw.
For ease of analysis, we group the claims according to the type of employment discrimination alleged--discipline claims, failure to promote claims, assignment or transfer claims, reclassification claims, access to promotional examinations claims, and restoration of rank claims.
A. Discipline Claims
Major A.M. Alexander and Sergeant James NeSmith alleged that they were
disciplined more severely than were black officers who committed similar offenses
because of their race. To establish discrimination in discipline, just like showing
discrimination in hiring, a plaintiff must first make out a prima facie case
demonstrating: 1) that he belongs to a protected class under Title VII; 2) that he
was qualified for the job; and 3) that a similarly situated employee engaged in the
same or similar misconduct but did not receive similar discipline. See Lathem v.
Dep’t of Children and Youth Servs.,
Major Alexander claims that he was disciplined more severely than were similarly situated black officers who committed similar offenses on account of his race. Major Alexander was both suspended for fifteen days and transferred from his position in the Service Division after allowing a subordinate to drive several Department cars home in violation of Sheriff Barrett’s instructions. While Sheriff Barrett contended that the suspension and transfer of Alexander to Grady Hospital were appropriate disciplinary responses to Major Alexander’s transgression, Major Alexander presented evidence suggesting he was demonstrably treated more harshly than a black officer who committed exactly the same offense. Alexander claimed that Major Louwinski, a black officer, also allowed a subordinate law enforcement officer, Teresa Simon, to drive a car home in violation of *59 departmental policy but, unlike Alexander, he was not disciplined. While both Louwinski and Sheriff Barrett testified that Louwinski had received permission from the Sheriff before authorizing Simon to drive the car home, Alexander argued that this assertion was not worthy of belief. Neither Louwinski nor Sheriff Barrett could produce a copy of the memorandum Louwinski claimed that he wrote to Sheriff Barrett seeking permission to allow Simon to take home a Department vehicle. And, when pressed on cross-examination, Louwinski conceded that he could not even remember what the memorandum supposedly said. In addition, another officer, Barron Cole, testified that soon after Major Alexander left the Service Division and Louwinski took over, Louwinski allowed three more law enforcement officers to drive Department cars home, without the imposition of any sanctions. Neither Major Louwinski nor Sheriff Barrett submitted any evidence suggesting that Sheriff Barrett authorized Louwinski to allow any of those officers to take home Department cars, and none of their names appeared on a list of officers permitted to take home Department vehicles submitted into evidence by the Defendants. Based on all the evidence presented, we are satisfied the jury had sufficient basis to find that Alexander was treated more harshly than Louwinski because of his race. Accordingly, we uphold the jury’s compensatory damages award against Sheriff Barrett.
We must consider separately the appropriateness of the jury’s award of
punitive damages. Last term in Kolstad v. American Dental Ass’n.,
[t]here will be circumstances where intentional discrimination does not give rise to punitive damages . . . . In some instances, the employer may simply be unaware of the relevant federal prohibition. There will be cases, moreover, in which the employer discriminates with the distinct belief that its discrimination is lawful. The underlying theory of discrimination may be novel or otherwise poorly recognized, or an employer may reasonably believe that its discrimination satisfies a bona fide occupational qualification defense or other statutory exception to liability.
Id at 2125. The instant case, however, does not fall into this category of cases in
which intentional discrimination was shown but the appropriate state of mind for
punitive damages was not. The theory of discrimination at issue in this case, the
illegality of race-based employment decisions, is neither novel nor poorly
recognized. The question of race as a bona fide occupational qualification was
never suggested. Most importantly, however, Sheriff Barrett did not operate under
*62
any misapprehension about the legality of treating black and white law
enforcement officers differently. Indeed, Sheriff Barrett unambiguously testified
that she knew it was illegal to treat employees differently on account of race.
[28]
Given the jury’s amply supported finding that Sheriff Barrett intentionally
discriminated against Alexander on account of his race, in concert with Sheriff
Barrett’s self-professed understanding that such treatment deprives an employee of
his federal rights, a reasonable jury could conclude that Sheriff Barrett indeed
acted “in the face of a perceived risk that [her] actions [would] violate federal law.”
*63
Id. at 2125. See also Equal Employment Opportunity Commission v. Wal-Mart
Stores, Inc.,
Accordingly, we uphold the jury’s punitive damages award against Sheriff Barrett.
2. James NeSmith
Sergeant James NeSmith alleged that on two occasions he too was disciplined more severely than were similarly situated black employees. First, Sergeant NeSmith points to his receipt of a letter of reprimand from Chief Deputy Gregory P. Henderson for his role in releasing two female inmates from the Jail who were wanted by the Waycross, Georgia police. Sergeant NeSmith was working as the Relief Sergeant at the Booking Intake Area at the Jail when the two women, who were supposedly wanted by the Waycross Police Department, were brought in. After noticing discrepancies between the physical characteristics of the two women and the descriptions of the individuals wanted by the Waycross Police and after discussing the situation with a detective in the Waycross Police *64 Department and with Sergeant David Mosley, a black man who was in charge of the Booking Intake Area at the Jail, Sergeant NeSmith released the two women. Soon thereafter, Sergeant NeSmith learned that the women he had released were in fact the women who were wanted by the law enforcement authorities in Waycross. Indeed, Sergeant Mosley testified that he bore the greater responsibility for the decision to release the two women. Sergeant Mosley, however, received no reprimand for his role in the release.
Second, Sergeant NeSmith points to the discipline he received--being assigned to the “guard shack”--after a black prisoner was assaulted in his cell while NeSmith was on duty in the control tower. Sergeant NeSmith was working in a control tower in the Booking Intake Area when he observed Sergeant LeBarron Woodard and Officer Marvin Swint, both black officers, physically remove a combative prisoner from a police car. The officers put the prisoner in a padded cell which Sergeant NeSmith could not see from the control tower. Shortly thereafter, the prisoner was abused in his cell. While the charges of abuse were being investigated, NeSmith was assigned to the “guard shack,” a small building that controls the outer gate of the Jail, and a position not generally filled by a sergeant. The two black officers, Sergeant Woodard and Officer Swint, were not reassigned during the investigation.
Defendants did not present any non-discriminatory reason for why NeSmith received different treatment in both the booking and police brutality incidents than did the other officers who were more closely involved, except to say simply that NeSmith’s conduct merited the actions taken by the Department. Based on the evidence presented showing that NeSmith received punishment when black officers involved in the same incidents did not, we are satisfied that the jury had a reasonable basis to find that Sergeant NeSmith was twice disciplined on account of his race.
B. Failure to Promote Claims
In order to prevail on a discriminatory failure to promote claim, each
plaintiff must establish a prima facie case of race discrimination by showing that:
1) he is a member of a protected minority; 2) he was qualified and applied for the
promotion; 3) he was rejected despite his qualifications; and 4) other equally or
less qualified employees who are not members of the protected minority were
promoted. See Taylor v. Runyon,
In a failure to promote case, however, a plaintiff cannot prove pretext by
simply arguing or even by showing that he was better qualified than the officer
who received the position he coveted. A plaintiff must show not merely that the
defendant’s employment decisions were mistaken but that they were in fact
motivated by race. We have explained, “a plaintiff may not establish that an
employer’s proffered reason is pretextual merely by questioning the wisdom of the
employer’s reasons, at least not where . . . the reason is one that might motivate a
reasonable employer.” Combs,
Other circuits have more clearly articulated the evidentiary burden a plaintiff
must meet in order to prove pretext by showing he was more qualified than the
person promoted. In Deines, for example, the Fifth Circuit affirmed the district
court’s instruction to the jury stating that: “disparities in qualifications are not
enough in and of themselves to demonstrate discriminatory intent unless those
disparities are so apparent as virtually to jump off the page and slap you in the
face.”
Assessing whether the Plaintiffs have presented sufficient evidence to
sustain a verdict that they were denied a promotion because of race is particularly
difficult in a case such as this where the disputed positions are essentially political
appointments. While the usual disparate treatment case involves a position for
which the qualifications may be measured objectively, we anticipate that for
political appointments the qualifications required will be both subjective and
objective. We expect, for example, that an elected official may appoint a command
team, or a political staff, that not only is objectively qualified to handle its day-to-
day job duties, but that also shares a vision with and possesses a certain degree of
loyalty to the elected official who appoints them. See, e.g., Elrod v. Burns, 427
U.S. 347, 367 (1976) (recognizing that loyalty is a legitimate hiring criteria for an
elected official to use when selecting individuals to serve in policymaking
positions under him); Shahar v. Bowers,
thresholds [for eligibility] legally. R24-37-4253-4254.
limit the lawyers on his professional staff to persons in whom he has trust”). We add that it is not the court’s role to second-guess the wisdom of an employer’s decisions as long as the decisions are not racially motivated. We measure each claim against these standards.
1.Denise Brooks
Sergeant Brooks claimed that Sheriff Barrett failed to promote her to the unclassified position of captain because of race. Brooks suggested that she was more qualified than a black man, Greg Harmon, whom Sheriff Barrett did appoint to an unclassified captain position because, although both were sergeants, she had experience working in an administrative capacity in the Jail and Harmon did not.
At trial, Sheriff Barrett plainly articulated a legitimate, non-discriminatory
reason for appointing Harmon to the unclassified position, namely that Harmon
had been elected by his peers to lead the local union and could keep an open line of
communication between the rank-and-file officers and the Sheriff. But in
response, Brooks pointed to no evidence suggesting this legitimate race-neutral
reason was not the real reason Sheriff Barrett promoted Harmon and not Brooks.
See Nix v. Radio/Rahall Communications,
2. Robert Fox
Lieutenant Fox also alleged that Sheriff Barrett discriminated against him on the basis of race when she failed to promote him to the position of unclassified captain but instead promoted two black men to the unclassified position. Fox testified that he had more experience than either Greg Harmon or Edward McIver and had served as their supervisor before Sheriff Barrett appointed them to their unclassified captain positions. Sheriff Barrett’s legitimate non-discriminatory reason for promoting Harmon remains just as valid with respect to Fox as it was for Brooks. Sheriff Barrett, however, failed to identify any specific qualifications of McIver’s that explained his appointment. Indeed, the Sheriff offered no reason, let alone a legitimate race-neutral reason, to explain the promotion of McIver and not Fox. As a result, we conclude that a reasonable jury could find, as it plainly did, that the Sheriff promoted McIver and not Fox to the position of unclassified captain on account of race. Accordingly, we affirm the jury’s verdict in favor of Fox on his failure to promote claim.
3. Gary Gettis
Captain Gettis argued that he too was more qualified than both Harmon and Dorothy Walker who were selected to serve in unclassified positions. Gettis testified about his educational background and indicated that the fact that he passed the promotional examination for the rank of captain made him qualified for the equivalent unclassified position. Gettis also testified that he was more qualified than Dorothy Walker for this position because Walker regularly sought his assistance and advice with her duties and had difficulty understanding orders. Again, Sheriff Barrett’s legitimate non-discriminatory reason for promoting Harmon is valid and was in no way challenged as being pretextual. But, like with McIver, Barrett failed to identify what specific qualifications merited Dorothy Walker’s promotion. Because Sheriff Barrett failed to offer any legitimate non- discriminatory reason to explain why Dorothy Walker was promoted over Gettis, a reasonable jury could attribute the Sheriff’s failure to promote Gettis to race.
Gettis also testified, however, that he would not have accepted an unclassified position without written assurances of job security. All of the individuals Sheriff Barrett appointed to unclassified positions accepted the appointments without conditions and, on this record, the evidence is unrefuted that Sheriff Barrett would not have provided Gettis with the written assurance of job *74 security he desired. As a result, we are constrained to conclude that Gettis could not have suffered any pecuniary damages as a result of not being selected as an unclassified captain because he would not have accepted the position had it been offered. Gettis is therefore not entitled to the “make whole” relief of the benefits and the pay of a job he concededly would not have accepted. Accordingly, we reverse the district court’s entry of a back pay award as well as its order granting
individual injunctive relief to Captain Gettis requiring Defendants to recalculate his retirement and other employee benefits as if he had been appointed to an unclassified captain position on June 1, 1993. We leave intact, however, the compensatory damages award because there is competent testimony that he suffered emotional distress as a result of his non-selection to the unclassified position. Simply put, a reasonable jury could have found that even though Captain Gettis would not have accepted an unclassified appointment had he been offered one, he nonetheless experienced sufficient pain and suffering as a result of not being selected for the position because of his race to justify the $10,000 compensatory damages award he received. See Stallworth v. Shuler, 777 F.2d 1431, 1435 (11th Cir. 1985) (affirming compensatory damages award of $100,000 because of emotional distress and humiliation plaintiff suffered as a result of being denied promotions on account of race).
4. Carolyn Masson
Lieutenant Carolyn Masson alleged that she too was discriminated against on the basis of race by being overlooked for unclassified captain positions that were awarded by Sheriff Barrett to Harmon, McIver, Greg Walker, and Dorothy Walker. As stated above, Sheriff Barrett offered no specific explanation for her selection of either McIver or Dorothy Walker to unclassified positions. As a result, we are satisfied that the jury had sufficient evidence from which to conclude that Lieutenant Masson was more qualified than were McIver or Dorothy Walker and that they were promoted instead of her on account of race.
Like Gettis, however, Masson testified that she would not have accepted an unclassified appointment in the absence of written assurances that she would retain her unclassified position until she retired and that she would not be fired from that position when another Sheriff took office. Because Masson plainly would not have accepted the unclassified captain position had it been offered to her, again we conclude that Masson is not entitled to the equitable relief ordered by the district court of backpay, the pay grade, employee benefits, and seniority she would have received had she been appointed to the position of unclassified captain on June 1, 1993. As with Captain Gettis, however, she is entitled to the $10,000 in *76 compensatory damages the jury awarded her for the emotional distress she suffered as a result of her non-selection.
5. James NeSmith
Sergeant NeSmith argued that Sheriff Barrett discriminated against him by denying him a promotion to the position of unclassified captain granted to Harmon, Dorothy Walker, and Greg Walker. As discussed previously, Sheriff Barrett proffered legitimate, non-discriminatory reasons to explain Harmon’s promotion that the jury was given no reason to disbelieve. However, NeSmith testified that he was more qualified than Dorothy Walker because she never passed the lieutenant examination, and more qualified than Greg Walker because Walker had only previously served at the Jail commissary, whereas NeSmith had worked in several areas of the Jail, as well as in the Service and Court Services divisions. Based on this evidence, and particularly in light of Sheriff Barrett’s complete failure to explain why she appointed either Dorothy or Greg Walker to unclassified captain positions, we conclude that there was sufficient evidence for the jury to find that Sheriff Barrett did not select NeSmith for an unclassified captain position on account of his race.
Nevertheless, the Defendants urge us not to permit NeSmith to recover on this claim because, they contend, he testified that he too would not have accepted *77 an unclassified position without written assurances of job security. In reviewing the record, however, we find that NeSmith’s testimony is not at all clear on this point. [32] Because a reasonable jury could understand his testimony as allowing that NeSmith would have accepted an unclassified appointment, we uphold the jury’s award of compensatory damages and the district court’s individual injunctive relief.
6. Punitive Damages
As for the Plaintiffs whose liability judgments we have upheld--namely,
Fox, Gettis, Masson, and NeSmith--we are invited to examine whether the
evidence was sufficient to support the punitive damages awarded to each of them.
As we stated previously, see discussion supra section IV-A1, the appropriateness
of punitive damages rests on the defendant’s state of mind. In order to be liable
*78
for punitive damages an employer must act with “knowledge that it may be acting
in violation of federal law.” Kolstad,
In order to establish job discrimination in transfers and assignments, a
plaintiff must meet a burden similar to the one required for showing discrimination
in promotions. First, a plaintiff must make a prima facie case of discrimination by
showing that he was treated differently than were similarly situated black officers
with respect to transfers and assignments. See Baldwin v. Birmingham Bd. of
Educ.,
1. Kathy Jones
Sergeant Jones alleged that she was discriminated against in her request for transfers because of her race. Jones testified that she was denied transfers out of the Jail, where she had spent her entire career, when such transfers were given to similarly situated black employees. Jones specifically compared herself to *80 Sergeant Benita Wallace, a black woman, who was transferred from the Jail to the Community Relations Division, Sergeant Marcia Greenlee, a black woman who was transferred from the Jail to the Service Division, and Sergeant Earl Glenn, a black man who was transferred from the Jail to the Court Services Division. [34] Defendants explained that the transfers of the black officers out of the Jail was part of Sheriff Barrett’s cross-training program designed to give officers who had served exclusively in the Jail an opportunity to serve in other Divisions. Jones argued that this reason for the transfer of the other officers was wholly pretextual. Jones noted that while Sheriff Barrett said her cross-training program was aimed specifically at officers who had served exclusively in the Jail, Jones, who had served her entire eight-year career at the Jail, was not a beneficiary of the program. Furthermore, Jones pointed out that at least two black sergeants were transferred out of the Jail at a time when Sheriff Barrett testified that she needed additional sergeants in the Jail. The evidence is sufficient to sustain the jury’s verdict *81 regarding Sergeant Jones’s claim, and consequently, we affirm the district court judgment as it pertains to liability on Sergeant Jones’s claims.
Moreover, this evidence of intentional discrimination, combined with Sheriff Barrett’s stated understanding that race-based discrimination in employment violated federal rights, is sufficient to sustain the jury’s award of punitive damages for Jones. See discussion supra section IV-A1.
2. Guerry Moore
Corporal Moore also alleged that he was discriminated against by Sheriff Barrett because of his race when he was reassigned within the Court Services Division from the Superior Court to the Juvenile Court to operate the metal detector there. Moore was assigned to the Juvenile Court after being accused by an unknown person in the Sheriff’s Department of having used Department computers to review personnel records in connection with the instant lawsuit. Moore argued the position at the metal detector was tedious and beneath someone with his qualifications.
Considering all of the evidence and drawing all inferences in a light most
favorable to the non-moving party, we are constrained to conclude that the
evidence does not sustain Corporal Moore’s claim that Sheriff Barrett
discriminated against him on the basis of race when he was reassigned to work the
*82
metal detector. First, Corporal Moore himself did not attribute the reassignment to
racial discrimination, but rather to retaliation for his alleged improper use of
Department computers. Retaliation claims, however, are not part of this lawsuit.
Second, Corporal Moore did not present any evidence of a similarly situated black
comparator and therefore did not show that he was treated differently because of
his race. See Watkins v. Sverdrup Technology, Inc.,
3. Heidi Schaefer
Sergeant Schaefer alleged that her requests for transfers out of the Jail and
for reassignment within the Jail were denied on account of her race. Schaefer
testified that she had sought numerous transfers out of the Jail. According to the
record, however, all of Schaefer’s transfer requests were made in 1988, notably
four years before Sheriff Barrett took office and well outside the statute of
*83
limitations for Title VII (180 days) or section 1981 and section 1983 claims (two
years). Schaefer also testified that she was repeatedly rebuffed when she sought
reassignments within the Jail while Sheriff Barrett was in office. Schaefer testified
that she requested to work at Visitation, Intake Booking, and Medical, but that she
generally received assignments to work as a floor deputy. Schaefer claimed that
black officers were assigned to the areas she considered more desirable. Schaefer
did not however identify specifically which black officers were given the
assignments Schaefer desired, which positions they were assigned to, which
positions they were reassigned from, how long they had held their previous
assignments, or what their qualifications were for the new assignments. As such,
Schaefer has not satisfied her burden of showing that she was treated differently
than similarly situated black officers, much less has she shown that such disparate
treatment was because of race. See Holifield v. Reno,
Cir. 1997) (explaining that “[t]o make a comparison of the Plaintiffs’s treatment to
that of non-minority employees, the plaintiff must show that he and the employees
are similarly situated in all relevant respects”); Smith v. Stratus Computer, Inc., 40
F.3d 11, 17 (1st Cir. 1994) (noting that “for us to compare Smith’s treatment with
that of terminated or transferred male executives in a meaningful way, Smith
would have to show that she was similarly situated to those men in terms of
*84
performance, qualifications and conduct, ‘without such differentiating or
mitigating circumstances that would distinguish’ their situations”) (quoting
Mitchell v. Toledo Hosp.,
4. Benjamin Steele
Sergeant Steele alleged that his transfer and reassignment requests likewise were denied because of his race, however Steele too failed to show he was treated differently than a similarly situated black officer. In June 1994, Sergeant Steele requested in writing to his superior, Captain Nash, that he be permanently transferred from the Jail to the Training Division for firearms instruction. In July 1994, Sergeant Steele requested in writing a reassignment to the day shift. Both requests were denied. Sergeant Steele also argued that his temporary removal from participation in a rotation of firearm training instructors was motivated by race.
The evidence in the record is not sufficient to sustain the verdict as to any of
Steele’s claims. As for the transfer claim, the evidence reflects that only one
officer, a white man, was a permanent fire range instructor at the time in question.
Because there was only one such position and it was not held by a black officer,
there was no similarly-situated black comparator and no evidence that the denial of
*85
Steele’s transfer request was because of race. See Holifield,
5. Denise Brooks
Sergeant Brooks alleged discrimination in the denial of her requests for transfer or reassignment to different positions within and outside the Jail. Shortly after Sheriff Barrett took office, Brooks requested a transfer from the Jail to the Court Services Division. Her request was denied and she was informed that no transfers were being granted during the transition between the McMichael and *86 Barrett administrations. Brooks was also denied reassignment within the Jail to Central Control and Records. Brooks argued she was discriminated against on the basis of race because Antonio Johnson, a black man, was assigned to Central Control instead of her.
As for the transfer claim, Brooks conceded that no one was transferred
during the transitional period and that after the period ended both black and white
supervisors were transferred. Brooks did not produce any evidence showing that a
similarly situated black officer was permitted to transfer at the time when she was
not. As for the reassignment claim, Brooks could not recall when she had
requested assignments to Central Control and Records or who was the Sheriff at
that time. She therefore established no causal nexus between Sheriff Barrett and
the challenged employment decisions. See Burdine,
6. Robert Fox
Lieutenant Fox alleged that Sheriff Barrett transferred him from the Court
Services Division to the Jail in 1994 because of his race. Defendants contend that
at the time Fox was transferred to the Jail, a number of other lieutenants--white and
black alike--were also transferred from the Jail to other divisions, and from other
divisions to the Jail in furtherance of Sheriff Barrett’s policy of cross-training
officers. Fox failed to present any evidence that could cause a reasonable jury to
disbelieve Defendants’ proffered reason for Fox’s transfer, or to believe his
transfer was instead the product of race-based discrimination. See Holifield, 115
F.3d at 1565; Karazanos v. Navistar Int’l Trasp. Corp.,
7. Carolyn Masson
Lieutenant Masson alleged that she was discriminated against on the basis of race when she was reassigned from the Female Detention Unit to the Superior Court and then reassigned back to the Female Detention Unit five months later after an incident involving a subordinate. Masson argued that while she repeatedly asked to be reassigned from her position at the Female Detention Unit to another *88 division in the Court Services, her reassignment to work the metal detector at the Superior Court was beneath her and was the product of race-based discrimination, as was her reassignment back to the Female Detention Unit five months later.
Masson testified that she did not know of any other lieutenant who was assigned to work the metal detector at the Superior Court. While this may be true, the record reflects that Major Jones assigned Masson to operate the metal detector in the mornings because Masson requested a workday from 7:30 to 3:30 p.m. In order to accommodate this request, Major Jones explained to Masson that she would need to assist with the metal detectors in the mornings and Masson agreed. Masson offered no evidence suggesting the transfer was discriminatory.
Defendants also presented evidence showing that Masson was reassigned to the Female Detention Unit because she had failed to adequately supervise a subordinate at the Superior Court metal detector and had allowed weapons to be brought into the courthouse. Defendants also introduced testimony from Masson’s supervisor, Captain Arndt, that Masson often complained about and questioned assignments he gave her and had personality conflicts with several of the deputies.
Based on review of all of the evidence presented, there is no basis for a reasonable jury to conclude that Masson’s assignment to the metal detector at the Superior Court or her subsequent reassignment to the Female Detention Unit was *89 made on account of race. Defendants proffered legitimate, non-discriminatory reasons for each employment decision, which remain undisputed. We therefore reverse the jury verdict rendered for Lieutenant Masson.
D. Reclassification Claims
According to Fulton County employment practices, a Department head may seek an upward reclassification of an employee’s classified position when the supervisor believes the employee is performing the duties of a higher level position. From the beginning of her tenure on December 14, 1992, to the advent of this lawsuit in April 1994, Sheriff Barrett reclassified four sworn officers, all of whom were black. The jury determined that Sheriff Barrett did not reclassify Plaintiffs Sergeant Bolt and then-Acting Sergeant Smith in whole or in part because of their race.
Bolt argued that Sheriff Barrett discriminated against him on the basis of race by not reclassifying him as a lieutenant despite the fact that he performed the tasks of a lieutenant for thirteen months after the retirement of Lieutenant Hicks. Smith too alleged that Sheriff Barrett discriminated against him by not reclassifying him to the position of sergeant even though he became an acting *90 sergeant in 1991, carried out the responsibilities of a sergeant, and received the Sergeant-of-the-Year Award. [35]
Defendants offered two non-discriminatory reasons for not reclassifying Bolt. Defendants contended that Bolt presented no evidence that Sheriff Barrett knew of his desire to be reclassified, and that Bolt did not complete the lieutenant’s exam. Defendants’ explanation that Bolt failed to inform Sheriff Barrett of his desire to be reclassified could be a legitimate, non-discriminatory reason for failing to reclassify him if the sworn officers who were reclassified had informed the Sheriff of their desire to be reclassified. However, the record does not demonstrate that those four reclassified officers expressed any interest to Sheriff Barrett in being reclassified. Defendants’ other proffered explanation for failing to reclassify Bolt also is inadequate. Bolt’s failure to complete the lieutenant’s exam affects only his eligibility for promotion to the position of classified lieutenant; it does not alter his eligibility for reclassification, which is based solely on his performance of the duties of the higher position, and does not require completion of the formal requirements for promotion. A reasonable jury could have disbelieved these reasons and found the real reasons for the failure to reclassify to be race-based discrimination. As stated previously, the evidence of Sheriff Barrett’s intentional *91 race discrimination against Bolt, combined with evidence of Barrett’s understanding that such discrimination violated federal law, is sufficient to sustain the jury’s award of punitive damages as well. A reasonable jury could have concluded that Sheriff Barrett intentionally discriminated against Bolt with knowledge that doing so violated Bolt’s federally protected rights. See discussion supra section IV-A1.
As for Smith, the Defendants argue that the jury in its special verdict form concluded that Smith should have been reclassified as of November 1992, before Sheriff Barrett assumed office. They contend, therefore, that Sheriff Barrett cannot be held liable for Smith’s not being reclassified. Defendants’ argument is unpersuasive. The fact that the jury determined that Smith should have been reclassified as of November 1992, does not mean that the jury could not also have reasonably found that Sheriff Barrett should have reclassified him upon taking office soon thereafter. The jury could have concluded that because Smith was qualified for reclassification in November 1992, Sheriff Barrett should have known this fact when she took office in December and should have reclassified him as soon as she had the power to do so. Accordingly, we affirm the entry of the jury’s verdict of compensatory damages and injunctive relief for Smith but order that *92 Smith’s backpay be recalculated from December 14, 1992, when Sheriff Barrett took office, instead of from November 1992. [36]
E. Promotional Examination Claims
The fifth type of employment discrimination involved allegations that the Defendants prevented three of the Plaintiffs from taking promotional examinations. Sergeants Bantin, Smith, and Schaefer alleged they were not permitted to sit for the lieutenant’s examination because of their race. The Personnel Board administers the eligibility requirements for taking a promotional examination for a classified rank within the Sheriff’s Department. In order to take the promotional examination for the rank of lieutenant, the applicants had to submit an application showing, among other things, that they had two years of experience at the rank of sergeant or its equivalent. All three Plaintiffs received notices of ineligibility for the examination from the Personnel Board because they did not have the required experience. Plaintiffs argued that three black deputies were permitted to sit for the examination even though they had served less time as sergeants than had the Plaintiffs. None of the jury verdicts against either Sheriff Barrett or Fulton County withstand appellate review.
With respect to Sheriff Barrett, the Plaintiffs have failed to demonstrate the
required causation because they presented no evidence indicating that Sheriff
Barrett or the Sheriff’s Department played a role in designating Bantin, Smith, and
Schaefer ineligible to take the promotional examination for the position of
classified lieutenant. Moreover, as we have explained previously, Sheriff Barrett is
not the “final policymaking authority” for employment decisions related to
classified positions generally or for decisions related to eligibility to take
promotional exams for classified positions more specifically. Notably, in Fulton
County, applicants for classified positions are recruited and screened by the
Personnel Department and classified employees enjoy civil-service type
protections. See Scala v. City of Winter Park,
G. Restoration of Rank Claims
The final jury verdicts Defendants challenge pertain to the restoration of rank claims of Sergeant Charles Alexander and Corporal Robert Upshaw. Both Alexander and Upshaw voluntarily accepted reductions in rank in order to be transferred out of the Jail. Both accepted demotions to the position of deputy and were transferred to the Court Services Division prior to the Barrett regime. [37] They argued they were treated differently with regard to the restoration of their rank than was Sergeant Barbara Woodward, a black officer, who also voluntarily surrendered her rank in order to be transferred from the Jail but later had her rank restored.
As Sheriff Barrett argued, however, Woodward was not similarly situated to Alexander and Upshaw because she left the Jail due to a medical condition and contested her loss of rank with the Grievance Review Committee, which then recommended that she be restored to the rank of sergeant. Neither Alexander nor Upshaw sought relief for giving up their rank, even though they knew of the existence of the Grievance Review Committee. In addition, both Alexander and Upshaw failed to present any evidence showing that Sheriff Barrett had any personal involvement in the failure to have their ranks restored. On this record, we *95 conclude, that no reasonable jury could find the failure of Sheriff Barrett to restore the ranks of Alexander and Upshaw was the result of race-based discrimination. Defendants are, therefore, entitled to judgment as a matter of law on these claims.
V.
In sum, we affirm the district court’s denial of qualified immunity to Sheriff Barrett, the denial of the Defendants’ motion for judgment as a matter of law as to Fulton County’s liability under section 1983, the denial of the Defendants’ motion for severance of the Plaintiffs’ individual claims of discrimination, and its jury instructions. We also find that the Defendants did not suffer substantial injustice as a result of the court’s erroneous evidentiary rulings. With respect to the Defendants’ challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence, we hold that the evidence was sufficient to support the jury’s verdict on the following claims: the discriminatory discipline claims of A.M. Alexander and NeSmith; the failure to promote claims of Fox, Gettis, Masson, and NeSmith; the discriminatory transfer claim of Jones; and the reclassification claims of Bolt and Smith. However, we are constrained to find that the evidence was insufficient to support the jury’s verdicts on the following claims and awards: Brook’s failure to promote claim; the transfer and assignment claims of Brooks, Fox, Masson, Moore, Schaefer and Steele and their punitive damages awards for those claims; the promotional examination *96 claims of Bantin, Schaefer, and Smith and their punitive damages awards for those claims; and the restoration of rank claims of Charles Alexander and Upshaw. We also reverse the district court’s grant of back pay and individual injunctive relief to Gettis and Masson. Finally, we instruct the district court to recalculate Smith’s back pay and benefits from December 14, 1992.
In short we AFFIRM in part, REVERSE in part, and REMAND for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
[*] Honorable James H. Hancock, Senior U.S. District Judge for the Northern District of Alabama, sitting by designation.
[1] The Plaintiffs are: Major A.M. Alexander, Sergeant Charles “Tony” Alexander, Sergeant Joseph Bantin, Sergeant Billy Bolt, Sergeant Denise Brooks, Lieutenant Robert Fox, Captain Gary Gettis, Corporal Sara Henderson, Sergeant Kathy Jones, Lieutenant Carolyn Masson, Corporal Donnnie McBee, Corporal Guerry “Bubba” Moore, Sergeant James NeSmith, Sergeant Joan Paschal, Sergeant Heidi Schaefer, Sergeant Robert Smith, Sergeant Benjamin Steele, and Corporal Robert Upshaw.
[2] Section 1981 provides in pertinent part: “All persons within the jurisdiction of the United States shall have the same right in every State and Territory to make and enforce contracts, to sue, be parties, give evidence, and to the full and equal benefit of all laws and proceedings for the security of persons and property as is enjoyed by white citizens, and shall be subject to like punishment, pains, penalties, taxes, licenses, and exactions of every kind, and to no other.”
[3] Section 1983 provides, in relevant part, that “[e]very person who, under color of any statute, ordinance, regulation, custom, or usage, of any State . . . subjects, or causes to be subjected, any citizen of the United States . . . to the deprivation of any rights, privileges, or immunities secured by the Constitution and laws, shall be liable to the party injured in an action at law, suit in equity, or other proper proceeding for redress . . . .”
[4] 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-2 provides in relevant part: a) Employer practices It shall be an unlawful employment practice for an employer– (1) to fail or refuse to hire or to discharge any individual, or otherwise to discriminate against any individual with respect to his compensation, terms, conditions, or privileges or employment, because of such individual’s race, color, religion, sex, or national origin . . . . Certain Plaintiffs also claimed employment discrimination on the grounds of age, disability,
[7] Unclassified positions are like political appointments; they are appointed by the Sheriff and can be terminated at will. Classified positions are explicitly subject to civil service-type protections and comprise the vast majority of jobs in the Sheriff’s Department. See discussion infra section II.
[8] The highest-ranking classified position is captain.
[9] Generally, a department head seeks reclassification of a subordinate’s classified rank when she believes the employee is performing the duties of a higher-ranking position than the one actually held. An employee may also request that her department head seek reclassification on her behalf, but Department sponsorship is generally required for successful reclassification.
[10] Qualified immunity is an affirmative defense which must be pled by the defendant. Gonzalez
v. Lee County Housing Auth., 161 F.3d 1290, 1294 (11th Cir. 1998). Here, Sheriff Barrett
adequately pled the defense of qualified immunity in the Defendants’ answer to Plaintiffs’
complaint, but notably did not pursue the defense further by either a pretrial motion to dismiss or
for summary judgment, thereby losing the protection from litigation, including discovery and trial,
qualified immunity may afford government actors. See Hill v. DeKalb Regional Youth Detention
Center,
[11] The plaintiffs were married couples who belonged to Christ Temple Church and lived in “The Holyland”-- property owned by the Church.
[12] As we have noted previously, the jury did not specify on which theory of liability it grounded its award of damages.
[13] 42 U.S.C. § 1981a(b)(3)(D) provides that the total amount recoverable for each complaining party under Title VII for compensatory and punitive damages shall not exceed $300,000, where the employer has more than 500 employees. Here, the Sheriff’s Department employs greater than 500 employees, and the highest damages award was $300,000 for Major Alexander, $250,000 in compensatory damages and $50,000 in punitive damages. Compensatory damages do not include backpay or any other relief authorized under section 706(g) of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-5(g). See 42 U.S.C. § 1981a(b)(2).
[14] Plaintiffs also cannot recover punitive damages against Sheriff Barrett in her official capacity,
see Colvin v. McDougall,
[15] The Eleventh Circuit has adopted as precedent the decisions of the former Fifth Circuit
rendered prior to October 1, 1981. Bonner v. City of Prichard,
[16] Rule 42(b) provides in full: “The court, in furtherance of convenience or to avoid prejudice, or when separate trials will be conducive to expedition and economy, may order a separate trial of any claim, cross-claim, counterclaim, or third-party claim, or of any separate issue or of any number of claims, cross-claims, counterclaims, third-party claims, or issues, always preserving inviolate the right of trial by jury as declared by the Seventh Amendment to the Constitution or as given by a statute of the United States.” The trial court likewise has discretion under Rule 20(b) to order
[17] While the jury found that all Plaintiffs, except for Major Alexander, were not considered for promotion to the unclassified position of major because of race, it rejected all of their claims that they were not actually selected for the position because of race.
[18] The jury found in favor of Jimmy Bolt and Robert Smith, and against Joseph Bantin, and Benjamin Steele.
[19] The jury found in favor of Denise Brooks, Robert Fox, Gary Gettis, Carolyn Masson, and James NeSmith. The jury found against Charles Alexander, Joseph Bantin, Jimmy Bolt, Benjamin Steele, and Robert Upshaw.
[20] See infra section IV.
[21] This was the case with the discriminatory discipline claim of James NeSmith, the failure to promote claims of Robert Fox, Gary Gettis, Carolyn Masson, and James NeSmith, and the discriminatory reclassification claim of Robert Smith. See discussion infra sections IV-A2, IV-B2-5, and IV-D.
[22] This was the case with the discriminatory reclassification claim of Jimmy Bolt. See discussion infra section IV-D.
[23] This was the case with the discriminatory discipline claim of A.M. Alexander and the discriminatory transfer clam of Kathy Jones. See discussion infra sections IV-A1 and V-C1.
[24] Defendants also challenge the admission of Fulton County’s 1978, 1989, and 1990 affirmative action plans. They claim there was no evidence that Sheriff Barrett saw any of the plans at the times she made the determinations at issue in this case, and, thus, these plans could have no relevance to this action. With respect to the 1978 and 1989 plans, there is clearly no temporal relevance, and the district court abused its discretion in admitting them. Indeed, both plans were no longer in effect when Sheriff Barrett took office. As for the 1990 plan, Plaintiffs failed to demonstrate that Sheriff Barrett took the plan into account when she engaged in any of the challenged actions. However, for the reasons we have previously stated, we can discern no prejudicial effect stemming from the admission of these plans.
[25] Defendants also contest the district court’s charge that, under Georgia law, Sheriff Barrett had the final decision-making authority in employment matters in the Sheriff’s Department, and the instruction on statistical evidence. These challenges are addressed in separate discussions devoted to section 1983 liability and admission of statistical evidence. See discussion supra sections III-B and III-D.
[26] Title VII’s punitive damages provision was based on §§ 1983 and 1981 standards. See, e.g.,
Kolstad,
[27] The Supreme Court in Kolstad relied primarily on its earlier case of Smith v. Wade, 461 U.S. 30 (1983), which described the standard for awarding punitive damages in § 1983 cases, to illuminate the meaning of the terms “malice” and “reckless indifference” as used in the parallel standard for awarding punitive damages under Title VII. Smith, like Kolstad, emphasized that malice or an intent to injure was not required for an award of punitive damages, but only reckless indifference which, the Court suggested, entailed a “criminal indifference to civil obligations” or a “subjective consciousness of risk of injury.” Id. at 37 n. 6, 41, 51.
[28] The relevant portion of the transcript is as follows: Q: Well, it wouldn’t be--would you agree that it would be permissible to terminate people because of their race? A: Would I agree--I’m sorry. Q: Does any reason include race? A: It wouldn’t for me. . . . Q: So when you say that they are terminable at will or could be fired for any reason, you are not asserting that it would be okay to fire someone because of their race? A: I would never assert that, no. . . . Q: . . . Although no one has a right to a classified job, people do have a right to be considered for those jobs independent of their race. Would you agree? A: Certainly. R3-16-216-217.
[29] Sheriff Barrett promoted five individuals to unclassified captain positions over Plaintiffs: Greg Walker, Gary Harmon, Dorothy Walker, Edward McIver, and Mark Calloway. All of these individuals except for Mark Calloway are black.
[30] The ten promotions to unclassified positions made by Sheriff Barrett went to Lafayett Briggs, David Louwinski, Michael Cooke, Gary Harmon, Edward McIver, Riley Taylor, Dorothy Walker, Edgar Hillsman, and Greg Walker, twice. Greg Walker was promoted first to unclassified captain on February 25, 1993, and then to unclassified major on May 11, 1994. Of these individuals only Riley Taylor is white.
[31] Sheriff Barrett testified at trial that there were no formal hiring requirements by which she was bound in promoting individuals to unclassified positions. According to Sheriff Barrett: I know that I’m not held on the unclassified service to what is listed [as the minimum qualifications for jobs in the County job descriptions]. . . . I’m also saying I’m not held to these documents on the unclassified service. . . . I’m free to make those appointments based on my best judgment of a person’s ability to perform whatever function it is that I’m asking them to perform. . . . I don’t know there are any thresholds for eligibility as required by law. I think that maybe common sense might dictate that I do something like make certain that a person I want to appoint as captain is, in fact, a peace officer. But I don’t even know that I have
[32] The relevant testimony is as follows: Q: If you had been offered the captain’s position awarded to Gary Harmon, would you have accepted it knowing it was an unclassified position? A: That’s a hard question. At that time? Q: Yes, at that time. A: I’m not really sure. That is a hard question to answer. Knowing what I know now, no. R3-16-300.
[33] Transfers denote movement between divisions within the Department, while assignments refer to a change of job responsibility within a division.
[34] Defendants contend, and Jones agreed, that none of these transferred co-workers wore her rank. Wallace was transferred from the Jail to the Community Relations Division upon her promotion to the position of sergeant, but she had applied for the opening in Community Relations while she was still working at the Jail as a deputy. Greenlee was a deputy at the time of her transfer to the Service Division, but became a sergeant shortly thereafter. Glenn was transferred from the Jail to the Court Services Division on the day of his promotion to sergeant. Since these co-workers of Jones’ were promoted to sergeant and transferred at roughly the same time, we believe there is a sufficient basis for comparison between Jones and Wallace, Greenlee, and Glenn.
[35] Smith was reclassified as a classified sergeant in July 1994.
[36] The jury did not award punitive damages to Smith.
[37] While at Court services in 1993, Alexander successfully competed for promotion to the rank of sergeant, and was promoted to that rank on October 12, 1993. Presumably, therefore, Alexander is claiming that Sheriff Barrett discriminated against him by not restoring his rank between December 14, 1992, the first day of Sheriff Barrett’s tenure, and October 12, 1993, the date of his promotion.
