Appellants Joel Arnold (“Arnold”) and Allen McDaniel (“McDaniel”) appeal the district court’s ruling as a matter of law that neither of them was entitled to compensatory damages on their claims for gender discrimination brought pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-5. They also complain that the trial court erred when it granted the United States Department of the Interior’s (“DOI”) motion for summary judgment on their retaliation claim. We affirm.
I. Factual and Procedural Background
Arnold and McDaniel, along with Bobby Maxwell (“Maxwell”), ah worked in the Dallas Compliance Division of the Mineral Management Service (“MMS”), a division of the DOI. Each applied for a GS-14 position as Supervisory Auditor in the Oklahoma City office, and each was placed on the “best qualified list.” On the basis of the numerical assessments of the candidates on the “best qualified” list (which numbers themselves had been derived from objective criteria), Gary Johnson (“Johnson”), the Chief of the Dallas Compliance Division of the MMS, interviewed Pam Reiger (“Reiger”) and Maxwell, who had the highest and second-highest scores respectively. On December 30, 1994, Johnson hired Reiger, who was an Asian-American woman.
Arnold, Maxwell, and McDaniel, all white men over the age of forty, filed administrative complaints on February 2, 1995, March 7, 1995, and March 8, 1995, respectively. They each alleged that race, gender, and age discrimination prevented their being hired for the Supervisory Auditor position. After a hearing on April 29-30, 1996, the administrative judge issued an opinion on June 10, 1996 concluding that Arnold, Maxwell, and McDaniel had presented direct evidence of gender discrimination: to wit, Johnson had marching orders to hire a woman.
By letter dated August 14, 1996, the MMS announced its final agency decision. It adopted the administrative judge’s finding with respect to gender discrimination, but rejected its holding on the race and age discrimination claims, deciding that the evidence was insufficient. The MMS determined that Arnold, Maxwell, and McDaniel were entitled to compete in an unbiased selection process and resolved to reconduct the job search.
Arnold, McDaniel, and Maxwell filed suit on November 13, 1996. Sometime thereafter, Reiger requested and received a transfer. Johnson selected Maxwell to replace Reiger. 1 Johnson then penned a justification memorandum, which Jim Shaw (“Shaw”), the Associate Director for Royalty Management, approved. Despite his promotion, Maxwell remained a plaintiff in the current suit.
Subsequent to Maxwell’s promotion, two of the four Supervisory Auditors in the Dallas Compliance Division of the MMS *195 retired. After each retirement, Johnson elected to eliminate the position, as opposed to hiring a successor. Johnson’s decision in this regard was consistent with agency-wide down-sizing and streamlining, and Johnson confirmed with Lucy Qu-erques-Dennet, Shaw’s replacement, that realignment in this manner was wholly within his discretion. Johnson also obtained the unanimous approval of the remaining Supervisory Auditors (including Maxwell) when he decided to reduce the total number of Supervisory Auditors.
Convinced that this realignment was actually a form of retaliation against them, Arnold and McDaniel amended their complaint to state a claim for retaliation. The trial court granted summary judgment to the DOI on the retaliation claim on July 26, 1997. And at a pretrial hearing on April 14, 1999, the district court determined that neither Arnold nor McDaniel could present evidence at trial supporting their claim for compensatory damages because Maxwell’s promotion precluded both Arnold and McDaniel from proving that they would have netted the job “but for” the discrimination. After a trial ending on April 23, 1999, the jury found in favor of Arnold, McDaniel, and Maxwell on their race and gender discrimination claims and awarded Maxwell $300,000 in compensatory damages. 2 The jury specifically rejected the DOI’s defense that it would have failed to hire Arnold and McDaniel even if gender had not been a consideration. The district court awarded attorneys’ fees and costs to the plaintiffs.
Arnold and McDaniel, though not Maxwell, timely filed this appeal.
II. Standard of Review
Both the decision that, as a matter of law, Arnold and McDaniel could not prove that they would have obtained the job “but for” the discrimination and the grant of summary judgment on the retaliation claim are issues of law to which we apply
de novo
review.
See Hall v. Thomas,
The district court should grant summary judgment where “the pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories, and admissions on file, together with the affidavits, if any, show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” Fed. R. Civ. Proc. 56(c);
see also Christopher Village, LP v. Retsinas,
III. Compensatory Damages
Arnold and McDaniel argue that the district court erred when it forbade them from presenting evidence on their claim for compensatory damages and refused to submit the same to the jury. Specifically, Arnold and McDaniel assert that, because the jury rejected the DOI’s mixed motive defense, they are therefore entitled to compensatory damages.
The DOI retorts that the district court acted properly because compensatory damages are not available to plaintiffs who *196 cannot show that discrimination was the “but for” cause of the failure to hire. The DOI further argues that the jury verdict, coming as it did on the heels of the district court’s dismissal of Arnold and McDaniel’s claims for compensatory damages, is a nullity.
Title 42 U.S.C. § 1981a(a)(l) states “In an action brought by a complaining party under ... [§ 2000e-5] against a respondent who engaged in unlawful intentional discrimination ... prohibited under ... [§ 2000e-2] ..., the complaining party may recover compensatory and punitive damages ..., in addition to any relief authorized by ... [§ 2000e-5(g) ].” This is the language that Arnold and McDaniel claim presumptively entitles them to compensatory damages.
3
They also urge us to follow
Willson v. Shannon,
However, what
Willson
does not even mention (indeed
Willson
cites no law in support of its position), and what the DOI highlights, is § 2000e-5(g)(2)(B)(ii), which states: “On a claim in which ... the respondent demonstrates that [it] would have taken the same action in the absence of the impermissible motivating factor, the court .... shall not award damages[.]” This section establishes what is known as “the mixed motive defense.” The DOI insists that this language absolves it of liability for compensatory damages to Arnold and McDaniel because the DOI would not have hired Arnold and McDaniel regardless of their gender for the simple reason that it promoted Maxwell instead.
*197
The DOI also relies on
De Volld v. Bailar,
It must be kept in mind that only one person could be promoted to the position in question. Both Mexican-American clerks [Trevino and De Volld] were con-cededly treated discriminatorily in that both were passed over because of their national origin. But the blunt fact remains that only one of the two if either could receive the promotion. When the Civil Service Commission determined that the deserving candidate was Trevino ..., it became indisputable that whatever discrimination [De Volld] suffered because of her national origin, that discrimination no longer kept her from the promotion. Put another way, whatever motives the Commission may have had in choosing between two people of the same ethnic origin, discrimination cannot have been among them.... In this case the administrative award to [Trevino] removes any possibility that [De Volld] can prove that her situation is due to discrimination against her as a Mexican-American.
Id.
at 1164-65;
see also Pollard v. Grinstead,
The statutory language and the case law set forth the rule plainly enough: among multiple job applicants who fail to secure the position because of discrimination, only those who can prove that they would have gotten the position but for the discrimination can recover compensatory damages. Arnold and McDaniel are not candidates who, but for the discrimination, would have received the Supervisory Auditor position for the following reasons: (1) only one position was open; (2) Johnson considered only Arnold, McDaniel, and Maxwell in selecting Reiger’s replacement; and (3) neither Arnold nor McDaniel contend that a discriminatory motivation tainted Johnson’s selection of Maxwell. Moreover, it flies in the face of all reason that all three would have been chosen for only one position. For these reasons, Arnold and McDaniel cannot show that they would have garnered the job but for the discrimination and consequently cannot demonstrate that they are entitled to compensatory damages. Therefore, the district court did not err.
Arnold and McDaniel emphasize the jury’s special finding that the DOI would have hired them if gender had not been a motivating factor precludes the DOI’s reliance on the mixed motive defense. The jury’s special interrogatory, however, is not determinative of this issue. Whether Arnold and McDaniel could recover compensatory damages “was a matter of statutory interpretation ... properly decided by the court[.]”
United States v. Nolan,
We therefore find that the district court did not err in ruling, as a matter of law, that Arnold and McDaniel could not recover compensatory damages.
TV. Retaliation
Arnold and McDaniel identify the realignment as a form of retaliation because it foreclosed promotion opportunities for *198 them, and it increased their workload. The DOI counters that the realignment is not an ultimate employment decision, and therefore, not an adverse action sufficient to state a prima facie claim for retaliation. Moreover, the DOI urges that no causal link exists between Arnold and McDaniel’s protected activity and the realignment.
To state a claim for retaliation, a plaintiff must prove that: (1) he engaged in protected activity pursuant to Title VII; (2) he suffered an adverse employment action; and (3) a causal nexus exists between the protected activity and the adverse employment action.
See Messer v. Meno,
V. Conclusion
Because we find that the plain language of § 2000-e5(g)(2)(B)(ii) forbids an award of compensatory damages to a job applicant who, despite unlawful discrimination, still would not have received the job, we hold that the district court did not err when it ruled as a matter of law that Arnold and McDaniel were not entitled to compensatory damages.
We further hold that Arnold and McDaniel did not demonstrate a causal link between their protected activity and the realignment that foreclosed their opportunities for promotion. The district court therefore did not err when it granted the DOI’s motion for summary judgment on the retaliation claim.
AFFIRMED
Notes
. Counsel for the DOI admitted at oral argument that Johnson considered only Arnold, McDaniel, and Maxwell in selecting Reiger’s replacement.
. The jury had actually awarded Maxwell $450,000, but the district court capped that amount pursuant to Title VII’s limitations on damages.
. Arnold and McDaniel also rely on three EEOC agency decisions.
See Miller v. Babbit,
"An agency's construction of a statute it is charged with enforcing is entitled to deference if it is reasonable and not in conflict with the expressed intent of Congress.”
United States v. Riverside Bayview Homes, Inc.,
. Even were
Willson
persuasive, it is not binding for four reasons. First, though
Will-son
was affirmed in part in an unpublished opinion, pursuant to Local Rule 47.5.3, "[unpublished opinions issued before January 1, 1996 .... should normally be cited only when the doctrine of res judicata, collateral estop-pel or law of the case is applicable.” None of those doctrines is relevant here. Second, the unpublished affirmance did not discuss
Will-son 's
reasoning, but instead merely found the denial of a motion for new trial to be not plain error. Third,
Willson
itself is factually distinguishable, involving, as it appears to, successive denials of an open job position to female applicants. Finally, as is detailed below,
Willson
conflicts with language in
De Volld v. Bailor,
