Plaintiff-appellant Anthony Mauro appeals from a judgment entered on April 16, 1999, granting summary judgment in favor of defendant-appellee Southern New -England Telecommunications, Inc. (“SNET”) on Mauro’s claims of age discrimination, public policy wrongful discharge, and breach of contract.
See Mauro v. Southern New England Telecomm.,
I.
Anthony Mauro worked at SNET from 1977 until his retirement in 1996. In 1994,
In February 1995, Hampton implemented a reorganization of SNET Real Estate that eliminated Mauro’s, Grasso’s and Els-don’s positions. Mauro, who up until that point had been working in a “Level Two” job, moved into a design position that paid the same salary as his former position but was classified as a “Level One” position. Mauro testified that his supervisor, Susan Augustyniak, informed him that the company would consider him for Level Two jobs as they became available. Although two such jobs opened up over the next year, SNET hired two other individuals for the positions. Mauro—who was 56 at the time—claims that both of these employees, Nancy Symons and Kathy Scappini, were younger than he was. In April 1996, Mauro accepted an early retirement package and left SNET.
On June 6,1996, Mauro filed a complaint with the Connecticut Commission on Human Rights and Opportunities, claiming that SNET had discriminated against him based on his age by failing to promote him to the two Level Two positions that became available following his transfer to a Level One job. Mauro subsequently filed the instant action in federal court, claiming that the defendant had discriminated against him in violation of the ADEA. Mauro’s complaint also alleged that SNET discharged him in retaliation for reporting Elsdon’s wrongdoing and that, under Connecticut law, such treatment constituted both “public policy wrongful discharge” and a breach of its employment contract with Mauro. On April 16, 1999, the district court granted summary judgment to SNET on all claims. This appeal followed.
II.
We review a district court’s grant of summary judgment
de novo. See Distasio v. Perkin Elmer Corp.,
In this case, the record suggests that Mauro clearly indicated his interest in a promotion to a Level Two position and that SNET promised him that he would receive a Level Two job as soon as one became available. The record also indicates, however, that when two Level Two jobs opened, SNET hand-picked individuals to fill those positions without informing Mauro that the jobs were available. SNET acknowledges that it never posted one of the two positions, which, according to Hampton, the company created for a particular employee to prevent her layoff from the company. With respect to the other position, because the record reveals a genuine factual dispute as to whether SNET did in fact post the job when it became available, for the purposes of summary judgment we must assume that SNET failed to post the second job as well.
See Distasio,
This case thus presents the factual scenario that Brown itself suggested might suffice to relieve the plaintiff of the burden of showing that he applied for the promotion at issue. See id. (“[The plaintiff] does not charge, for example, that [the defendant] refused to accept individuals for positions or hand-picked individuals for promotion to a position without considering applicants.”) Accordingly, we hold that Mauro’s failure to apply for promotion following his transfer to a Level One job in 1995 would not have precluded him, as a matter of law, from establishing a prima facie case of age discrimination.
Assuming
arguendo
that Mauro has met the remaining elements of his prima facie case, we nonetheless find that summary judgment was appropriate on his failure to promote claim under the ADEA.
2
In response to Mauro’s claim of age discrimination, SNET proffered legitimate, non-discriminatory reasons for placing both Symons and Scappini into their respective Level Two jobs. Specifically, Hampton testified that Symons’s job, which involved consolidating SNET’s training centers, required “someone with expertise in planning and utilizing property, space, and resources,” and that Symons had extensive experience in this area. With regard to Scappini’s position, which
III.
The district court also granted summary judgment in favor of SNET on Mauro’s state law claims of public policy wrongful discharge and breach of contract. On appeal, Mauro argues that the court erred in exercising supplemental jurisdiction over these claims and that, on the merits, summary judgment was improper because the record reveals a genuine factual dispute as-to whether SNET retaliated against him, in violation either of public policy or an employment contract, for reporting Elsdon’s wrongdoing. We review a district court’s exercise of supplemental jurisdiction for abuse of discretion,
see Purgess v. Sharrock,
On the merits of Mauro’s state-law claims, we affirm the grant of summary judgment in favor of SNET for substantially the reasons stated by the district court: namely, that Mauro has not produced evidence showing that SNET retaliated against him for reporting Elsdon’s wrongdoing.
See Mauro,
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the decision of the district court granting summary judgment to SNET on all claims.
Notes
. After SNET moved for summary judgment, Mauro also claimed in his opposition papers that SNET had failed to hire him for a third Level Two position that opened .up in September 1997, more than a year after Mauro resigned from SNET. Because Mauro did not include this claim in his complaint, the district court refused to consider it. We will not disturb this decision on appeal. Although Mauro could not have known about the September 1997 position when he filed this lawsuit in August 1996, he never moved to amend his complaint to add this new claim. Moreover, even after the court's decision on summary judgment alerted him to the fact that his pleadings were deficient in this regard, he did not raise the issue in a motion for reconsideration. In these circumstances, the district court did not err in refusing to consider any claim relating to the third Level Two job.
Cf. Grain Traders, Inc. v. Citibank N.A.,
. Although the district court did not consider other grounds for granting summary judgment, " '[w]e may, of course, affirm on any basis for which there is a record sufficient to permit conclusions of law, including grounds upon which the district court did not rely.’ ”
Name.Space, Inc. v. Network Solutions, Inc.,
. Although Mauro relies on
Burnham v. Karl and Gelb, P.C.,
