. Merle C. Bradford and 25 co-plaintiffs filed suit against their employer in January 1992, alleging discriminatory practices in violation of the Age Discrimination in Employment Act (ADEA), 29 U.S.C. §§ 621-34, and the
I.
Norfolk Southern is an integrated railway system whose revenue accounting department is headquartered in Atlanta, Georgia. In August 1990, rate clerks in Norfolk Southern’s St. Louis office were offered a separation package composed of a $40,000 lump sum distribution, medical benefits for those 55 years old and older, and relocation expenses to anywhere in the continental United States. Twenty-two employees accepted this offer. In October 1990, Norfolk Southern announced its intention to move its rate work from St. Louis to Atlanta because the St. Louis office was going to close. The union resisted this move, contending that it would violate the terms of numerous protective agreements afforded employees as a result of Norfolk Southern’s historic mergers and consolidations. Norfolk Southern eventually yielded and withdrew its proposed Atlanta transfer. In December 1990, however, Norfolk Southern notified the St. Louis office rate clerks that their work was being transferred to Roanoke, Virginia, the historic headquarters of the Norfolk & Western Railway. The union did not contest this move. The clerks were given the option of following their work to Roanoke, receiving a separation package of approximately $40,000, or bumping (i.e., displacing an employee with less seniority) into another position in St. Louis in accord with their seniority rights. Nine of the clerks transferred to Roanoke, one was able to bump into another position in St. Louis, and the remaining twelve accepted the separation package.
The clerks who transferred to Roanoke testified that the working conditions in Roanoke were considerably less pleasant than those they were accustomed to in St. Louis. There was a shortage of telephones and tariff books. The room the clerks were placed in was in disrepair and was furnished with antiquated furniture. The supervision was also somewhat disorganized because the supervisors commuted from Atlanta. Norfolk Southern, however, viewed these conditions as temporary because it was constructing a new office building in downtown Roanoke, where some of the clerks now work, and was also planning to eventually consolidate all the rate work in Atlanta. In January 1992, Norfolk Southern announced this work transfer, thereby eliminating the need to retain any rate clerks in Roanoke. The clerks were again presented the options of transferring, bumping into another position, or accepting a separation agreement of $35,000 plus medical coverage for those aged 55 and older. This time, eight of the clerks bumped into different positions in Roanoke, with one accepting the separation package. No clerk who transferred to Roanoke lost any benefits, and several of the clerks actually received slight pay increases.
The clerks’ theory at trial was that the series of moves was merely an attempt to get rid of older employees that Norfolk Southern knew would not follow the work around the country. The elerks proceeded under the McDonnell Douglas Corp. v. Green,
II.
A. Evidentiary Exclusions
The clerks seek to supplement the record on appeal with those evidentiary exhibits that were excluded by the district court. Norfolk Southern does not contest this motion. We grant the motion and deem the additional materials submitted with the case.
The clerks claim that' the district court erred in excluding testimony about personal circumstances that made it difficult for the clerks to move to Roanoke. Although under an appropriate set of facts a showing of personal circumstances could conceivably be relevant to a determination of constructive discharge, there was no showing that Norfolk Southern possessed any knowledge of the clerks’ personal circumstances or that they were a factor in Norfolk Southern’s decision to consolidate work and transfer employees. Accordingly, the clerks’ personal circumstances do not support their claim of constructive discharge. Smith v. Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co.,
Despite the court’s ruling, the clerks repeatedly sought to introduce testimony, from both those St. Louis clerks who separated and those who followed their work to Roanoke, about the personal calculus their decisions entailed. Understandably, such a long distance transfer was no doubt a major disruption, particularly for those with longtime ties to the community. Absent some relevant legal basis for allowing the testimony of personal circumstances, however, of which we find none present here, the district court properly limited such testimony. Relevance is not defined by what is designed to evoke a jury’s unfettered sympathies; rather, it is limited to that which makes the existence of a fact in issue more or less probable. Fed.R.Evid. 401. The clerks failed to show how their proffered evidence would have either aided in developing a prima facie case under McDonnell Douglas or tended to beget an inference of discrimination. Likewise, the district court did not err in excluding cumulative testimony about the working conditions actually experienced in Roanoke by those clerks who transferred, for they made no claim of constructive discharge, and such cumulative testimony would have added nothing to the development of their
The clerks next contend that the district court abused its discretion in excluding evidence of a 1987 consolidation of rate work from Roanoke and Cleveland to St. Louis and the transfer of employees from Cleveland to St. Louis. The clerks also sought to introduce evidence of the average ages of the Cleveland employees and other circumstances surrounding that move, contending that because some older clerks did not transfer to St. Louis from Cleveland, Norfolk Southern knew that work transfers would result in attrition of older employees.
A number of clerks did testify that they had worked in Cleveland and transferred to St. Louis in 1987. The clerks, however, failed to develop further any competent evidence showing the relevance of this transfer to their claims. The clerks preferred no competent testimony regarding the circumstances surrounding the transfer or the extent of the transferees’ collective bargaining rights. See Fed.R.Evid. 602 (personal knowledge requirement for testimony); see also McCrary-El v. Shaw,
The clerks also sought to introduce evidence of the ages of the Roanoke clerks as support for the claim that management treated this younger
Although the clerks make much of a letter from Norfolk Southern to the union stating that the 1990 transfer would be much like that in 1987, we conclude that this evidence also fails to provide an inference of discrimination. The 1987 transfer was premised on the authority of an arbitration ruling. When the union balked at the proposed transfer to Atlanta in 1990, both sides subsequently agreed that a transfer to Roanoke was permissible, much as was the 1987 transfer. Reference to this letter shows merely that Norfolk Southern was acting pursuant to a pre-established authority that was accepted as legitimate by the union. Although discrimination under the pretext of a lawful business decision is still unlawful discrimination, see Neufeld, v. Searle Labs., 884 F.2d
Evidence of other employer actions is admissible when it supports an inference of discrimination. E.g., Phillip v. ANR Freight Sys. Inc.,
The clerks also contest the exclusion of a list of the St. Louis clerks that delineates their age, race, gender, and seniority. Although the list permits an inference that Norfolk Southern was aware of the demographic data relevant to the St. Louis clerks at the time it decided to consolidate the rate work, we cannot say that the district court abused its discretion in excluding it. On the facts before us, we find this list substantially more prejudicial than probative. See Fed.R.Evid. 403; see also Stokes v. City of Omaha,
Finally, the clerks contend that, aside from the individual rulings, the totality of the evidentiary exclusions was prejudicial to their ease because they necessarily relied entirely on circumstantial evidence. See Phillip,
1. adverse employment action
The clerks contend that despite the evidentiary exclusions, their remaining evidence makes out a sufficient prima facie case of discrimination to preclude judgment as a matter of law. We disagree. Those clerks who separated have no claim of constructive discharge as an adverse employment action. As discussed above, constructive discharge occurs when an employer intentionally renders working conditions so intolerable that an employee is essentially forced to leave the employment. Smith,
A choice between separation “or continuing to work under intolerable conditions” may give rise to a claim of constructive discharge. Id. There may be situations in which a transfer to another location is so intolerable when viewed in the light of the attendant circumstances that a finding of constructive discharge is warranted. See, e.g., Christensen v. Equitable Life Assur. Soc’y,
Although those clerks who did transfer to Roanoke may have been dissatisfied by the working conditions they found there, none of them left the company as a result. Further, they retained the same responsibilities and compensation. See Crady v. Liberty Nat’l Bank and Trust Co.,
2. disparate treatment
“[T]he law protects all older employees ... from being treated more harshly than they would have been if they were young,” Neufeld,
The ADEA does not protect against the imposition of any employment hardship on those over the age of 40. Rather, the law is designed to prevent age-based discrimination. Therefore, the clerks’ “mere membership in the protected class does not permit an inference of age discrimination.” Serben v. Inter-City Manuf. Co.,
The clerks point to statements by their supervisor George Hassen to the effect that the August 1990 voluntary separation program and later transfer of employees must have been premised on the potential attrition of older employees. This speculation is not only highly prejudicial, but also not at all probative of the actual legal issues involved. Hassen had no direct knowledge of managerial intent and was not involved in the consolidation decisions in any capacity. Even assuming that Hassen did make the statements attributed to him, his personal opinion, without more, is insufficient to allow a reasonable jury to infer discrimination on the part of Norfolk Southern. See United States v. Doe,
At first blush, it may appear odd that Norfolk Southern shifted work away from Roanoke and then three years later changed its position and sent the same or comparable work back to Roanoke, along with the clerks responsible for that work. This decision, however, is explained by the interaction of the labor-management relationship .in the context of Norfolk Southern’s history of mergers and consolidations. Further, Atlanta is the headquarters of Norfolk Southern’s revenue accounting department, and the desirability of consolidating all rate work there is not a matter calling for judicial oversight. Jorgensen v. Modern Woodmen of America,
No doubt a number of the clerks faced a difficult situation when confronted with the prospect of a job transfer, and we do not minimize the personal trauma attendant upon being faced with the choice of transferring or separating from employment, but even giving their evidence the benefit of all reasonable inferences, we still must conclude that the clerks established no prima facie inference of discrimination.
The judgment is affirmed.
Notes
. The Honorable Jean C. Hamilton, United States District Judge for the Eastern District of Missouri.
. These totals reflect the number of clerks who are current parties to the litigation, not the total number of clerks involved in the transfer.
. The Roanoke clerks were on average 42 years old, whereas the St. Louis and Cleveland clerks averaged ages 53 and 54 respectively.
. The clerks tell us that "the cold transcript pages cannot recreate the atmosphere of sheer terror that the court's repeated admonitions and threats of mistrial and extraordinary costs created for plaintiffs and their counsel.” Appellant’s Brief at 18. As indicated above, however, our reading of the transcript satisfies us that the district court showed great patience with the clerks' counsel, denying some eleven separate motions for mistrial made by Norfolk Southern during the course of the trial. Our first inclination was to let the clerks' hyperbolic characterization of the district court's rulings pass unmentioned as the reaction of disappointed litigants, but in fairness to the district court we feel compelled to respond to what we conclude is an entirely unwarranted aspersion on the district court's conduct of the trial.
