Johnny Mac BROWN, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
AMERICAN HONDA MOTOR COMPANY, INC., Jеrry Felty, Defendants-Appellees,
Philip R. Hughes, Ashley D. Hughes, Hughes Auto Sales, Inc.,
Intervenors-Defendants.
No. 90-8487.
United States Court of Appeals,
Eleventh Circuit.
Aug. 23, 1991.
Thomas Broughton Branch, III, Branch, Pike & Ganz, Frank O. Brown, Jr., Atlanta, Ga., for plaintiff-appellant.
Dorothy Y. Kirkley, Paul, Hastings, Janofsky & Walker, Atlanta, Ga., J. Donald McCarthy, Lyon & Lyon, Los Angeles, Cal., Kevin C. Gallagher, Paul, Hastings, Janofsky & Walker, Atlanta, Ga., for defendants-appellees.
J. Edward Allen, Fortson, Bentley and Griffin, P.A., Athens, Ga., Ronald T. Coleman, Jr., Paul, Hastings, Janofsky & Walker, Atlanta, Ga., for intervenors-defendants.
Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Georgia.
Before KRAVITCH and COX, Circuit Judges, and RONEY, Senior Circuit Judge.
RONEY, Senior Circuit Judge:
Plaintiff Johnny Mac Brown brought suit under 42 U.S.C. Sec. 1981 alleging that American Honda Motor Company (Honda) rejected his bid to obtain a Honda dealership in Warner Robbins, Georgia, for racially discriminatory reasons. To succeed, plaintiff would have to show that Honda intentionally discriminated against him on the basis of race. See General Bldg. Contractors Ass'n v. Pennsylvania,
Although the plaintiff asserts that this case is important to the developing law of discrimination claims asserted under section 1981, we believe the case involves nothing more than the application of established law, about which the parties do not disagree, to the individual facts of this case. Although the facts of this case present a very close question, it presents a situation which has been addressed by a host of other courts. See, e.g., Williams v. City of Sioux Falls,
The triggering facts can be briefly stated. In early September of 1984, the plaintiff learned that Honda planned to open a new dealership in Warner Robbins, Georgia. At that time, plaintiff owned and operated a General Motors dealership in Warner Robbins and was anxious to expand his operations. Initially, he and two other white individuals submitted applications to Honda. The other two applicants also had existing dealerships in the Warner Robbins area. Honda then contаcted one of its own dealers, Phil Hughes, who ran a Honda dealership 120 miles away in Athens, Georgia. Allegedly, Honda encouraged Hughes, who is white, to submit an application and actively assisted in his efforts to obtain the contract. Hughes eventually received approval from Honda to open the dealership.
The plaintiff brought suit seeking both equitable relief and damages. District Judge Horace T. Ward bifurcated the proceedings and denied plaintiff's request for a preliminary injunction after a full evidentiary hearing. After further discovery, the defendant filed a motion for summary judgment which was granted.
The district court found these undisputed facts: four applications were submitted to American Honda by persons seeking to become the American Honda franchisee for Warner Robbins, Georgia. They were submitted by (1) plaintiff Johnny Mac Brown, (2) Philip and Ashley Hughes, (3) Dan G. Walton, and (4) Billy B. Butler. Johnny Mac Brown is black; Philip and Ashley Hughes, Dan G. Walter and Billy B. Butler are white. All of the applicatiоns met American Honda's minimum requirements. Of the four applicants, however, only the Hugheses had prior experience in the sales and service of Honda automobiles. In addition, only the Hugheses' application showed that they would sell exclusively Honda automobiles in the Warner Robbins market. Philip and Ashley Hughes were chosen by American Honda to receive the American Honda franchise in Warner Robbins.
Legal Standard
The plaintiff correctly notes that the basis for a federal race discrimination claim by a non-employee against a private company is under 42 U.S.C. Sec. 1981. Patterson v. McLean Credit Union,
Section 1981 requires proof of intentional discrimination. General Building Contractors Association v. Pennsylvania,
The initial burden rests with the plaintiff to demonstrate by a preponderance of the evidence a prima facie case of discrimination. Id. at 252-53,
District Court's Application of the Legal Standard
Following McDonnell Douglas and its progeny, the district court would have denied summary judgment for defendant insofar as it challenged plaintiff's prima facie case. The plaintiff is a member of a minority group, his proposal met the specifications required, and the franchise agreement was awarded to white applicants. The defendant does not argue that the court was incorrect in this determinatiоn.
The district court held, however, that to withstand a defendant's motion for summary judgment, a plaintiff had to do more than establish a prima facie case and deny the credibility of defendant's witnesses. Schuler v. Chronicle Broadcasting Co.,
The district court held that the two reasons articulated by defendants for not selecting either plaintiff's application or either of the other two applications were legitimate and nondiscriminatory. The case turns on whether these were the real reasons, or simply pretexts given for a decision that was actually based on race. On this point, not surprisingly, there is no direct evidence. As the plaintiff argues, seldom is there direct evidence of intentional racial discrimination. Grigsby,
The district court carefully examined the circumstantial evidence which plaintiff asserts demonstrates that these reasons are pretextual: differences in treatment between plaintiff and the Hugheses, defendants' failure to seriously consider plaintiff's application, selection of a less qualified white applicant over a more qualified minority applicant, deviations from the policy or practice of defendants regarding new dealerships, statistical evidence, and an asserted lack of credibility in the reasons asserted by defendant. Partially relying on the fact that two white applicants, both of whom had filed applications that satisfied Honda's minimum requirements, also did not receive the dealership, the district court ruled that the plaintiff's evidence was not sufficiently probative to create an issue of fact on the pretext issue. The plaintiff has failed to persuade us that the district court was wrong in this decision.
In addition to the material that is usually submitted on a motion for summary judgment, the district court had the advantage of a bench trial on the request for permanent injunction. After that trial, which lasted several days, the court made findings of fact, denied the injunction, and entered a declaratory decree that the Hugheses, who had intervened, were еntitled to become American Honda's Warner Robbins dealer.
The district court properly held that the defendants could not prevail on this motion for summary judgment simply because of the outcome of that proceeding. The parties stipulated that the findings of fact would have no preclusive effect on a jury's deliberations. The court could not take into consideration any facts then found which resolved disputed evidence. The court could, however, consider the record made at that time to determine whether there was sufficient evidence to present to the jury on the issue of pretext. Based on both the previous hearing and the evidence presented in this case, the district court concluded that the plaintiff had not demonstrated that the reasons Honda gave for denying Brown's application were pretextual.
Nondiscriminatory Rationales
Honda advanced two reasons for its decision to grant the dealership in Warner Robbins to the Hugheses. First, the Hugheses were existing Honda dealers with an excellent record and a familiarity with the company and its way of doing business. Honda's reasons for selecting Philip and Ashley Hughes were clearly legitimate and nondiscriminatory. It is not at all improper for an employer or a business contemplating a long-term association to prefer doing business with someone with whom they are familiar. The Hugheses had run what was by all accounts an exemplary business in Athens. They were familiar with the Hondа product line, its distribution and warranty systems, and managerial approaches to sales tactics and advertising techniques. On that basis alone, Honda could legitimately encourage them to apply and thereafter select them to run the new dealership in Warner Robbins. McMillian v. Svetanoff,
Although Brown questions whether the Honda system is really so complicated that an experienced dealer in another line would not be ablе to master it in short order, the court's responsibility was not to second guess the wisdom of Honda's reasoning, but to determine if the reasons given were merely a cover for a discriminatory intent. A contract may be granted "for a good reason, a bad reason, a reason based on erroneous facts, or for no reason at all, as long as it [ ] is not for a discriminatory reason." Nix v. WLCY Radio/Rahall Communications,
Second, Honda alleges that it based part of its decision on the fact that the Hugheses were the only applicants proposing to sell only Hondas in Warner Robbins. This, too, was a legitimate and nondiscriminatory justification for its decision. Honda could legitimately determine that a dealer that devotes its attention solely to the sale of Hondas would be preferable to one that attemptеd to sell several different car lines in the same geographic region. Not only would multiple lines distract the owner's managerial attention, but they would split the dealer's loyalties between the two or more lines. Even the plaintiff's expert admitted it would be preferable from the manufacturer's standpoint to have a dealer sell only one line in a geographic area.
Pretext
Plaintiff argues that he can prevail, however, if the reasons advanced by Honda are actually pretexts for an underlying discriminatory purpose, despite any facial appearance of neutrality. Initially, plaintiff notes that neither of the justifications espoused by Honda appear in Honda's own manual discussing the factors relevant to selecting new dealers. Oftentimes, departures from well established guidelines are indicative of attempts to conceal a discriminatory motive through the use of ad hoc criteria which allow the defendant to сloak a discriminatory intent in ostensibly neutral rationales. See Gibralter v. City of New York,
What the plaintiff ignores, however, is that each of the practices complained of affected the two white candidates in precisely the same manner that they affected the plaintiff. Neither Butler nor Walters were existing dealers nor did their applications suggest that they planned on selling only Honda vehicles in Warner Robbins. It is difficult to hold that a practice which affects applicants of all races in the same manner is actually designed to conceal a racially discriminatory motive. Giles v. Ireland,
Although Honda's expressed preference for existing dealers did not appear in the manual, Honda did demonstrate that 10 of the last 13 new sites were filled with existing dealers. Honda representatives in this corporate region have consistently demonstrated a preference for individuals with whom they arе familiar and who have a working knowledge of the company. Nothing in the Honda manual implies that the factors listed are the only basis on which a decision can be made. The evidence supports the defendant's assertion that this criteria has not been used subjectively to accomplish an illegal purpose. Conner v. Fort Gordon Bus Co.,
Plaintiff points out that out of approximately 860 Honda dealers nationwide only two are black. Statistical evidence is an appropriate method for demonstrating both a prima facie case of discrimination and pretext. McDonnell Douglas Corp. v. Green,
Statistics such as these, however, without an analytic foundation, are virtually meaningless. Wards Cove Packing Co. v. Atonio,
Although the statistics themselves may be insufficient to demonstrate that the reasons espoused by Honda are not legitimate, they take on a slightly more ominous hue when viewed in conjunction with the criteria used by Honda in this case. In addition to there being only two black Honda dealers nationwide, there are none in this particular corporate region. Plaintiff suggests that a criteria which favors existing dealers under these circumstances is inherently discriminatory in that all existing dealers are white. Moreover, Honda does not disseminate information concerning new dealerships throughout the automobile industry generally, but instead uses a word of mouth system which the plaintiff contends gives yet another advantage to company insiders, all of whom are white.
Were this a discriminatory impact case under Title VII, this argument, which maintains that factors or criteria which appear to be neutral actually have a discriminatory effect, might be controlling. Section 1981 requires specific proof of an intent to discriminate, however. Under this type of analysis it is not sufficient to show that the defendant was aware that the particular practice would have a discriminatory impact. Instead, the plaintiff must show that the defendant chose the policy for precisely this purpose. Forsberg v. Pacific Northwest Bell Telephone Co.,
Plaintiff argues his application and credentials were superior to those of the Hugheses. According to the plaintiff, his community contacts, net worth, proposed floor space, initial capital investment, and location presented a more fаvorable application package than that submitted by either the Hugheses or the other two candidates. See Smith v. American Service Co. of Atlanta,
Accepting plaintiff's conclusion that his application was superior to the Hugheses' in virtually every listed aspect does not compel a decision in plaintiff's favor. To rebut plaintiff's prima facie case, the defendant need not demonstrate that the individual or company selected was actually more qualified than the plaintiff, rather it must only show that it had a legitimate nondiscriminatory reason for its action. Crawford v. Western Electric Co.,
Plaintiff suggests that his applicаtion was not taken seriously and that he was treated differently in the application process from the white candidates. Nix,
A review of the record supports the decision that Honda selected the Hugheses not for any discriminatory purpose but because it knew them and had confidence in their abilities. Although the plaintiff has produced scattered pieces of circumstantial evidenсe, none of it, even taken as a whole, raises sufficient questions to undermine Honda's nondiscriminatory rationale.
Discovery Requests
It does not appear that the district court erred in denying plaintiff's motion to reopen discovery. Nearly a year after discovery closed, plaintiff requested that the district court reopen discovery to allow plaintiff to make inquiries into an EEOC agreement with the manufacturing component of Honda's American operations (HAM Inc.). The EEOC had chargеd HAM Inc. in that complaint with maintaining discriminatory hiring and promotion practices.
HAM Inc., however, is a separate corporation which operates on the opposite end of the industry spectrum. Absent a showing of "particularized need and relevance" plaintiffs may not compel discovery from related corporations or even separate units of the same corporation. Marshall v. Westinghouse Elec. Corp.,
Neither does it appear that the district court erred in denying plaintiff's motion to compel production of information by the defendant concerning all blacks who had communicated an interest in becoming a Honda dealer, concerning all Honda officers who had been informed of the present suit, and concerning all governmental or private organizations that have complained of discriminatory practices to Honda in the past. These matters are generally consigned to the discretion of the district court. Earley,
AFFIRMED.
