Carl W. Walton commenced this action in July 1996, claiming that McDonnell Douglas Corporation (“MDC”) violated the Age Discrimination in Employment Act, 29 U.S.C. §§ 621
et seq.
(“ADEA”), and the Missouri Human Rights Act, Mo.Rev.Stat. §§ 218.010
et seq.
(“MHRA”), when it terminated him in April 1995 as part of a reduction in force (hereafter referred to as a “RIF”). The district court
2
granted summary judgment in favor of MDC, concluding that Walton failed to establish either the elements of a prima facie case of age discrimination in the context of a RIF, or that MDC’s proffered reason for the termination was pretextual. Walton appeals. After reviewing the grant of summary judgment
de novo,
viewing the facts in the light most favorable to Walton, the non-moving party, we affirm.
See Hutson v. McDonnell Douglas Corp.,
Decreased defense spending and increased competition- caused MDC to implement large RIFs in the 1990s. To implement the RIFs, MDC developed a Relative Assessment Scoring procedure under which immediate supervisors were asked to evaluate and rank the relative skills of MDC employees.
See Hutson,
Walton held a number of positions during his thirty-three years with MDC. His last position was inspection foreman in the Flight Ramp area of the Quality Assurance Division. In July 1994, MDC conducted a Relative Assessment of employees in the Flight Ramp area. For this purpose, Walton was grouped with the seven other inspection foremen on the Flight Ramp. Walton was fifty-four years old at the time. Three of the other seven were older. Walton’s supervisor, Don Rogers, completed Relative Assessment Forms ranking Walton and three other inspection foremen in over fifty skill categories. Rogers based the relative skill scores on his experience in supervising the four foremen. Another supervisor ranked the other four inspection foremen in this Flight Ramp group. Walton’s overall score placed him sixth of the eight Flight Ramp inspection foremen. Richard Skaggs, the oldest in the group at age 59, received the highest Relative Assessment score.
*426 In early 1995, MDC implemented a RIF affecting the Quality Assurance Division. Two inspection foremen in the Flight Ramp group' were laid off. Division management used the 1994 Relative Assessment rankings as the starting point in selecting who to lay off. Robert Baker, the lowest ranked individual, avoided termination by transferring to another position within MDC. One other inspection foreman, Gerald Fulton, ranked lower than Walton, but their respective Relative Assessment scores were so close that MDC treated them as equally qualified and referred to upper management the decision who to lay off. After further evaluation, the Manager of the Quality Assurance Division selected Walton. He did not find another position within the company and was terminated. 3
To support his ADEA claim, 4 Walton does not dispute that MDC adopted and used a facially objective Relative Assessment Scoring procedure in selecting employees to lay off in the RIF. Nor does Walton complain that upper management discriminated in selecting him rather than Gerald Fulton for layoff. Rather, Walton argues that supervisor Rogers was guilty of intentional age discrimination in his ranking of four inspection foreman in Walton’s Relative Assessment group. In opposing MDC’s motion for summary judgment, Walton offered the following evidence in support of this contention: in 1993, inspection foreman Bobby Western, then 50 years old, asked Rogers, then 61 years old, whether Western should accept a transfer out of the Flight Ramp. Rogers responded that there would probably be a RIF in the Flight Ramp and if so; “I have to take care of my kids.” Western took the transfer. A few months later, Walton began reporting to Rogers, and Rogers told Walton he intended to “protect” two younger inspection foreman, Kevin Fuhr (then age 34) and Benjamin Wenger (then age 39). In his subsequent Relative Assessment of four Flight Ramp inspection foremen, Rogers gave higher scores to Fuhr and Wenger than to Walton and the fourth inspection foreman, who was then 53 years old. Moreover, Rogers offered faltón no suggestions for improving his assessment scores, nor did Rogers modify his ratings after Walton worked for a month in a special assignment that allowed him to develop additional skills. Finally, at his deposition, Rogers could not identify any specific observations or experiences to justify his comparatively low rating of Walton’s skills.
Walton first argues that summary judgment was improper because Rogers’s statement that he must “take care of my kids” is direct evidence of unlawful age discrimination that defeats MDC’s motion for summary judgment.
See Price Waterhouse v. Hopkins,
Walton next argues that he presented sufficient circumstantial evidence of age discrimination to avoid summary judgment under the more common burden-shifting framework of
McDonnell Douglas Corp. v.. Green,
It is undisputed that Walton was laid off during a bona fide RIF. Therefore, to establish a prima facie case, Walton must show: (1) he was at least forty years old, (2) he met MDC’s applicable job expectations, (3) he was laid off despite meeting these job expectations, and (4) “some additional showing” that age discrimination was a factor in his termination.
See Holley v. Sanyo Mfg., Inc.,
We agree with the district court that Walton failed to satisfy this fourth element. Again, Walton relies primarily on Rogers’s statements that he had to “protect” and “take care of’ his “kids.” Rogers made no reference to
Walton’s
age.
See E.W. Blanch Co. v. Enan,
We likewise agree with the district court that Walton failed to present sufficient evidence of pretext. Walton argues that Rogers’s statements “create a trialworthy issue” of pretext. However, stray remarks of this kind that are remote in time do not support a finding of pretext for intentional age discrimination.
See Hutson,
The judgment of the district court is affirmed.
Notes
. The Honorable Donald Stohr, United States District Judge for the Eastern District of Missouri.
. In June 1996, MDC rehired Walton for three months during a strike. In September 1997, at age 56, he was hired by a MDC contractor to work at MDC facilities. His $70,000 salary from the contractor and $31,400 pension from MDC provide Walton nearly twice his pre-termination annual compensation.
. The MHRA is interpreted to mirror federal law, including the ADEA.
See Kneibert v. Thomson Newspapers, Mich. Inc.,
