The plaintiff, a former mathematics teacher at Wellesley High School,
The case was submitted tо the jury on special questions as to liability and damages. The jury returned a verdict in the
The issues in this age discrimination case are whether the trial judge erred in (1) denying the town’s motion for directed verdict and motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict or, in the alternative, for a new trial; (2) precluding the town from having one of the plaintiff’s former colleagues testify as a rebuttal witness; and (3) denying the plaintiff’s motion for reinstatement to his former teaching position.
1. The facts.
The plaintiff began his teaching career in 1964. He had a master’s degree in mathematics from Wesleyan University, with thirty credits beyond that degree. He worked as a high school math teacher for eleven years. In 1980 he accepted a nonteaching job in the private sector; however, he returned to teaching in 1985. After being laid off as a high school math teacher, the plaintiff taught math at a middle school, but returned to teaching at the high school level in 1987. After two years at Hull High School, the plaintiff was interviewed for a position at Wellesley High School (Wellesley High) tеaching advanced calculus to seniors and other math courses.
At the time, the plaintiff realized that the position was a one-year position. His salary was $48,000 to $49,000 for the 1989-1990 academic year, and the head of the math department, Jim Sullivan, gave the plaintiff very positive feedback. The plaintiff proceeded to teach a second year (1990-1991) at Wellesley High on a reduced schedule, for three-fifths of the salary.
During the plaintiff’s second year teaching at Wellesley High, Sullivan left Wellesley High and was replaced by Dr. Steve Rumsey, who, at one point, told the plaintiff that he was doing a very gоod job.
During his second year teaching at Wellesley High, the plaintiff complained to Rumsey about a teacher who worked as the plaintiff’s assistant. The plaintiff testified that he “thought that the place to go was to Mr. Rumsey [to discuss this] because [Rumsey] was [his] superior.” The plaintiff also complained to Rumsey that another math teacher, with whom he shared the responsibility for making up exams, had created an exam that contained typographical errors and other problems. At the time, Rumsey did not tell the plaintiff that this discussion about the plaintiff’s colleagues was inappropriate.
At the end of the second year, the plaintiff was laid off when the number of classes did not support his employment. In November, 1991, Dr. Paul Ash, the assistant superintendent, discussed the plaintiff’s recall rights with him over the telephone. The plaintiff testified that Ash assured him that even though the school system was not obligated to extend recall rights to him that they felt he had done a good job and there was a very likely possibility that a job would be opеning soon because another teacher, Gerard Wichura, would be requested to leave mid-semester.
When the position to teach again at Wellesley High was offered to the plaintiff in December, 1991, he had to sever, prematurely, his ties with Middlesex Community College, where he had been teaching, rаther than risk losing the job at Wellesley High. The plaintiff took over Wichura’s classes and Rumsey subsequently informed him that he did a good job taking over a class mid-year. In March, 1992, three months after the plaintiff took over for Wichura, both the Wellesley High principal, Mary Hayes, and Rumsey, informed the plaintiff that he would not bе granted tenure and that his appointment would not be renewed. The reason they gave for not calling him back was that he “would have been tenured if [he] came back, and [he] had not been there long enough for them to make such an important decision.”
The plaintiff was replaced at Wellesley High by Kim More-head, a woman who was thirty-five years of age. She was paid approximately $20,000 less than the plaintiff was receiving.
2. Judgment notwithstanding the verdict.
“The standard for reviewing the denial of a motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict is ‘whether “anywhere in the evidence, from whatever source derived, any combination of circumstances could be found from which a reasonable inference could be drawn in favor of the plaintiff.” ’ Boothby v. Texon, Inc.,
3. Age discrimination claim.
In analyzing claims of discrimination brought under the Massachusetts antidiscrimination statute, G. L. c. 151B, § 4, we look to the familiar three-stage order of proof paradigm articulated in McDonnell Douglas Corp. v. Green, 411 U.S.
“In stage one, the plaintiff bears the initial burden of establishing a prima facie case of discrimination. In stage two, the burden shifts to the employer to articulate a legitimate nondiscriminatory reason for its actions. Finally, in stage three, the burden shifts back to the plaintiff to show that the emрloyer’s articulated reason is not the true reason, but rather a pretext” (citations omitted). Powers v. H.B. Smith Co.,
A. Prima facie case.
The plaintiff met his initial burden of establishing a prima facie case. See Blare v. Husky Injection Molding Sys. Boston, Inc., 419 Mass, at 441.
The plaintiff showed that (1) he was a membеr of a class protected by G. L. c. 151B, § 4 (he was fifty when he received a letter informing him that he would not be reappointed in Wellesley); (2) he performed his work at an acceptable level; (3) he was not reappointed; and (4) there was testimony that the town sought to hire another individual with similar qualifications to fill the plaintiff’s position. (On cross-examination, Rumsey testified that he did not have any idea of the sex or age of the person who would replace the plaintiff.) The plaintiff presented sufficient evidence on each of the required elements.
B. Town’s articulated reason.
The town asserts that the plaintiff was not reаppointed because of concerns about the plaintiff’s ability to work with his colleagues.
C. Evidence of pretext.
In order to prevail at this final stage, the plaintiff “must persuade the faсt finder by a fair preponderance of the evidence that the [town’s] asserted reasons were not the real reasons [for the plaintiff’s discharge].” Blare v. Husky Injection Molding Sys. Boston, Inc., supra at 443, quoting from Brunner v. Stone & Webster Engr. Corp.,
Here, the jury heard testimony that Rumsey praised the plaintiff for his work as a math teacher; Rumsey could not remember what specifics he shared with the plaintiff concerning strаtegies to “vent his frustrations”; Hayes could not recall the specifics of any conversations she had with other teachers about working with the plaintiff; two of the three teachers tenured
“The employer’s reasons need not be wise, so long as they are not discriminatory and they are not pretext.” Tardanico v. Aetna Life & Cas. Co.,
We think the instant circumstances are controlled in material respects by the reasoning of Wooster v. Abdow Corp.,
In summary, the plaintiff’s proffer of evidence to support his claim of discrimination consists of (1) his age (fifty) at the time of the adverse decision and “replacement” by a thirty-five year old woman and (2) statistical evidence that in the three years he was employed by the town, two teachers were denied tenure, himself and a forty-four or forty-five year old woman, and three teachers were granted tenure, two thirty-six year old persons and a forty-four year old. On this evidence the jury could not reasonably have concluded that age was a factor in Wellesley’s failure to reappoint the plaintiff, let alone that the town’s reasons for doing so were a pretext,
The case is remanded to the Superior Court for the entry of judgment for the town.
So ordered.
Notes
The plaintiff taught mathematics at Wellesley High School full-time in 1989-1990, part-time in 1990-1991, and full-time for the later half of the 1991-1992 term.
Bruce was born on November 24, 1941, and was forty-seven years old when he was initially hired by the defendant.
The plaintiff’s schedule was reduced because another teacher who had left to earn his master’s degree returned to Wellesley High and began teaching the advanced calculus class that the plaintiff taught the previous year.
Bruce left Lynn because his job was taken by someone who had more seniority in the Lynn school system than he did.
The salaries at Wellesley are set by union contract.
Wellesley presented evidence that the reasons the plaintiff was not retained included the following: (1) Rumsey’s evaluations indicated concern about the plaintiff’s collegiality; (2) Rumsey and Hayes jointly recommended to the superintendent that the plaintiff not be reappointed on the ground that he lacked collegiality with his colleagues; (3) other teachers in the math depart
The plaintiff acknowledged that the decision makers assured him that they were satisfied with his teaching and that thеy were denying him tenure simply because “they had not observed him long enough and were not comfortable in granting him tenure.”
In Harrison, a race discrimination case, the court recognized that “subjective conditions have been acknowledged as suspect by a number of courts, deserving of close scrutiny ‘beсause of their capacity for masking unlawful bias.’ ”
A special education teacher, aged forty-four, was granted tеnure.
The record is silent as to the ages of the persons in the applicant pool for the plaintiff’s replacement. See in this regard Goldman v. First Natl. Bank of Boston,
In Blare, in addition to the prima facie evidence, the evidence that “the three remarks made by Blare’s supervisor regarding the ability of Blare to work considеring his age, and the evidence that other workers not in the protected category who committed similar errors were not terminated was sufficient to raise a genuine issue of material fact as to whether the defendants discriminated against the plaintiff on the basis of his age.” 419 Mass, at 447 (footnote оmitted).
The record also reflects that the age issue did not surface at any of the meetings the plaintiff had with the school principal or superintendent relative to his reappointment.
Nor has it been made to appear that defendant’s reasons were a “pretext for actual discrimination.” Blare, 419 Mass, at 447. See Matthews v. Ocean Spray Cranberries, Inc., 426 Mass, at 128. Cf. Handrahan v. Red Roof Inns, Inc.,
Although we do not have to rely on this point, we are even more confident that nothing has been made to appear in the record that suggests that age-related factors were used in evaluating the plaintiffs job performance relative to the denial of tenure. Cf. Brunner v. Stone & Webster Engr. Corp., 413 Mass, at 704.
Deciding as we do, we have no occasion to reach the other issues raised on appeal by the parties.
