Plaintiff Charles R. Carlton, formerly employed as director of marketing by defendants Mystic Transportation, Inc., Mystic Bulk Carriers, Inc. and Leonard Bal-dari, appeals from a grant of summary judgment in favor of defendants entered July 10, 1998 in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of New York (Trager, J.). Carlton asserts he was fired on account of his age, but defendants declare plaintiffs discharge occurred as part of a company-wide reduction-in-force and because of his mediocre job performance.
One of the arguments the employer raises in this employment discrimination case is the “same actor inference.” The premise underlying this inference is that if the person who fires an employee is the same person that hired him, one cannot logically impute to that person an invidious intent to discriminate against the employee. Such an inference is strong where the time elapsed between the events of hiring and firing is brief. Here it is not. And, the enthusiasm with which the actor hired the employee years before may have waned with the passage of time because the relationship between an employer and an employee, characterized by reciprocal obligations and duties, is, like them, subject to time’s “wrackful siege of battering days.” William Shakespeare, Sonnet LXV, in The Complete Works of William Shakespeare, (W.J. Craig ed., Oxford Univ. Press 1928).
In reviewing a grant of summary judgment for an employer, we examine the record to see if any genuine issues of material fact exist regarding whether the non-discriminatory reasons the employer advanced for the employee’s discharge were instead a pretext for intentional age discrimination. Because we find several unresolved issues of material fact in this record, we reverse and remand.
BACKGROUND
Mystic Transportation, Inc. is a trucking company that delivers heating oil within the New York metropolitan area, and Mystic Bulk Carriers, Inc. transports gasoline, asphalt, cement, and jet fuel in the same market. The two companies have consolidated financial statements and are inextricably intertwined. Leonard Baldari is Mystic’s president and sole shareholder. *133 The defendants will be collectively referred to as Mystic.
In August 1988, at age 49, plaintiff Carlton was hired as a salesman by Baldari, who shortly thereafter appointed him as director of marketing. The principal duties of that position included soliciting new accounts with the aim of increasing his employer’s delivery income. Mystic’s delivery income increased each year that Carlton was employed, and nearly doubled overall from $12,485,480 in 1989 to $23,-622,567 in 1994. Carlton also brought in 65 new accounts.
Due to a mild winter in 1995, Mystic’s profits dropped $1,400,000 in that year’s first quarter from those the company had enjoyed in the first quarter of 1994. In April 1995 Carlton, then 56 years old, was terminated. He alleges that during a meeting regarding his discharge, Baldari suggested he should “retire.” Ten other employees were also discharged in early 1995.
One year prior to plaintiffs dismissal, Mystic hired Lydia Gounalis (age 38) to assist with marketing. Immediately after plaintiff was fired, Gounalis assumed his position as director of marketing. Three months later, Mystic hired a former employee, John Oravets (age 31), to work in marketing. Oravets’ previous employment with defendant had been terminated in 1993 for insubordination. After he was rehired, Oravets took over the director of marketing position in June 1996.
Carlton filed an age discrimination complaint with the EEOC on September 25, 1995. Mystic stated in response that it had a deficit of $1.5 million in the first quarter of 1995 — it turned out Mystic actually had an operating profit of $584,108 during that quarter, but it was about $1.4 million less than the previous year’s profits for the same period. Mystic also stated that Carlton’s performance was not a factor in its decision to discharge him. After its investigation, the EEOC issued a determination in defendants’ favor.
On August 19, 1996 Carlton commenced the instant action in the Eastern District alleging a violation of the Age Discrimination in Employment Act of 1967 (ADEA), 29 U.S.C. § 621 et seq. (1994); the New York State Human Rights Law, N.Y. Exec. Law § 296(l)(a) (McKinney Supp. 1999); and the Administrative Code of the City of New York § 8-101. In contrast to the EEOC proceeding, Mystic averred in the district court that it discharged Carlton not only as part of a reduction-in-force due to the economic downturn it experienced, but also because of his poor performance. The district court granted Mystic’s motion for summary judgment finding that plaintiff had failed to establish a pri-ma facie case of age discrimination. It further stated that even assuming arguen-do that plaintiff had made out a prima facie ease, he did not adequately demonstrate that his employer’s purported reasons for discharging him were a pretext for age discrimination.
This appeal followed.
DISCUSSION
I Legal Principles
A. Summary Judgment
We review a district court’s grant of summary judgment
de novo, see D’Amico v. City of New York,
Because this is a discrimination case where intent and state of mind are in dispute, summary judgment is ordinarily inappropriate.
See Gallo,
B. The ADEA and the Burden of Proof
The ADEA provides that it is “unlawful for an employer ... to discharge any individual or otherwise discriminate against any individual with respect to his compensation, terms, conditions, or privileges of employment, because of such individual’s age.” 29 U.S.C. § 623(a)(1). This protection extends to employees who are at least 40 years old.
See id.
§ 631(a). Plainly, the purpose of the ADEA is to prohibit discrimination in employment on account of age. As Judge Learned Hand explained, “statutes should be construed ... with some imagination of the purposes which lie behind them.”
Lehigh Valley Coal Co. v. Yensavage,
In an employment discrimination case, the plaintiff has the initial burden of “proving by the preponderance of the evidence a prima facie case of discrimination.”
Texas Dep’t of Community Affairs v. Burdine,
If the plaintiff establishes a
pri-ma fade
case, a rebuttable presumption of discrimination arises.
See Stratton v. Department for the Aging,
If the employer articulates a non-discriminatory reason for its employment decision, the presumption of discrimination raised by the
prima facie
case
*135
“simply drops out of the picture.”
St. Mary’s Honor Ctr.,
Direct evidence of discrimination is not necessary,
see Luciano v. Olsten Corp.,
II Analysis
A. Plaintiffs Prima Facie Case
Carlton has established the first three elements of his prima facie case. At age 57 when he was terminated, he was a member of the protected class and qualified for his position. The only remaining question is whether plaintiff showed that his discharge occurred under circumstances giving rise to an inference of age discrimination.
The proof on that issue reveals that upon Carlton’s termination his duties were transferred in part to Gounalis, a coworker, who was 18 years younger than Carlton, and his remaining duties were given to Oravets, an employee 25 years younger, who was hired three months after Carlton was discharged. Generally, a plaintiffs replacement by a significantly younger person is evidence of age discrimination.
See O’Connor v. Consolidated Coin Caterers Corp.,
Carlton also alleges that Baldari suggested, during the meeting regarding his termination, that he should “retire,” and that this constitutes additional evidence of age discrimination. Although evidence of one stray comment by itself is usually not sufficient proof to show age discrimination, that stray comment may “bear a more ominous significance” when considered within the totality of all the evidence.
Danzer v. Norden Sys., Inc.,
In light of the foregoing, we think plaintiff demonstrated circumstances giving rise to an inference of discrimination, and conclude that Carlton established a prima facie case.
B. Mystic’s Defense
After a plaintiff demonstrates a
prima facie
case -of age discrimination, the defendant must produce evidence “which,
taken 'as true,
would
permit
the conclusion that there was a nondiscriminatory reason for the adverse action.”
St. Mary’s Honor Ctr.,
C. Pretext for Age Discrimination
Even within the context of a legitimate reduction-in-force, however, an employer may not discharge an employee “because” of his age.
See Gallo,
Several questions arise regarding Mystic’s assertion that Carlton was fired as part of a necessary reduction-in-force. In spite of the company’s purported need to downsize, Gravets, who was 25 years younger than the plaintiff, was hired to fill Carlton’s position as director of marketing only three months after plaintiff was discharged, tending to refute the reduction-in-force reason for plaintiffs discharge.
See Oxman v. WLS-TV,
*137
Defendants’ assertion that Carlton was terminated in part because of poor performance also appears questionable. In its response to the EEOC, Mystic cited its decline in profits as the only reason for Carlton’s dismissal, and expressly stated that job performance was not a factor. In fact, Mystic noted in its November 3, 1995 letter to the EEOC that Carlton “was let go for economic reasons. The issue of performance wasn’t addressed nor was age the reason for the separation.” Yet, in interrogatory responses and depositions taken for the district court litigation, Mystic declared that Carlton was fired for poor job performance. The inconsistency between the justifications offered for Carlton’s dismissal in the two proceedings raises a genuine issue of material fact with regard to the veracity of this non-discriminatory reason.
See EEOC v. Ethan Allen, Inc.,
Moreover, during his employment with Mystic, Carlton never received a negative written performance evaluation or formal warning, nor is there any writing whatsoever criticizing his job performance, indicating that as a reason for his firing poor job performance was an afterthought. Although Baldari insists that he was unhappy with Carlton’s performance for years, Mystic continued to employ him. Objective evidence indicates that plaintiff was performing his job adequately. He had primary responsibility for increasing delivery income and soliciting new accounts, and with his assistance Mystic’s delivery income nearly doubled between 1989 and 1994. He also brought 65 new accounts to his employer.
Defendant responds to plaintiffs arguments by maintaining that it never completes written performance evaluations of its employees, and thus the lack of written evidence is unremarkable. We think there is evidence of inconsistency in defendant’s handling of supposedly underperforming employees. For example, when Oravets was terminated from his first term of employment with Mystic in 1993, the employer filled out a pre-printed form that stated that Oravets’ termination was for “insubordination.” No such form exists for Carlton. Again, when Oravets was performing poorly during his prior term of employment, his salary was reduced. If Carlton’s performance had declined, as defendant insists, it seems surprising that there was no contemporaneous proof of that fact.
Cf. Greenway v. Buffalo Hilton Hotel,
In light of the dispute in the proof on these issues, a rational jury could reject both of Mystic’s non-discriminatory reasons. The conflict between plaintiffs evidence establishing a
prima facie
case and Mystic’s proof in support of its non-discriminatory reasons creates genuine issues of material fact that can only be decided by a factfinder after trial.
See Cronin,
D. Same Actor Inference
Mystic nonetheless contends that summary judgment properly issued because Carlton’s evidence of discrimination is undermined by the “same actor inference.” When the same actor hires a person already within the protected class, and then later fires that same person, “it is difficult to impute to her an invidious motivation that would be inconsistent with the decision to hire.”
See Grady v. Affiliated Cent., Inc.,
However, the inference is less compelling when a significant period of time elapses between the hiring and firing.
See Buhrmaster v. Overnite Transp. Co.,
CONCLUSION
In sum, we find that Carlton has established a prima facie case of age discrimination and that genuine issues of material fact exist regarding the non-discriminatory reasons Mystic has advanced for its decision to discharge him. As a result, summary judgment was wrongly granted. Accordingly, that judgment is reversed and the case remanded to the district court with instructions to reinstate plaintiffs complaint and to conduct further proceedings on the merits of Carlton’s ADEA claim consistent with this opinion.
