Case Corporation (formerly J.I. Case Corp.) is one of the world’s leading producers of construction and agricultural machinery. Selling in a global market, Case has been under intense competitive pressure, and its older facilities have not flourished. The plant in Wausau, Wisconsin, had been shrinking steadily when in June 1991 management told Ray Watson, the Controller at Wausau, that he would have to make do with two cost accountants rather than five. Dale Gehring was among the three Watson picked to let go. Gehring had been a supervisor until 1988, when an earlier reduction in force returned him to a line position. Watson believed that Gehring had not adjusted well and was reluctant to do the drudge work of ordinary cost accountancy. Gehring believes that his age (52 at the time) rather than his attitude accounts for the decision, but the jury believed Watson’s explanation and returned a verdict for Case. Gehring asks us to award him another trial. (The Wausau plant closed in October 1993, but Gehring could recover for wages lost between June 1991 and October 1993 if his age led to the earlier discharge.)
The district judge curtailed discovery from Case’s personnel files, and Gehring believes that this unduly hampered his case. Gehring was not trying to show that the reduction in force had a disparate impact on Case’s older employees — a theory of age discrimination that is unavailable in this circuit,
EEOC v. Francis W. Parker School,
*343
Gehring’s other arguments concern the jury instructions. He wanted the judge to walk the jury through the paradigm established by
McDonnell Douglas Corp. v. Green,
One of Gehring’s arguments gives us pause, however. Not only the lawyers but also the judge repeatedly used the words “determining factor.” The special verdict forms called on the jury to decide whether Gehring’s age was “a determining factor in the defendant’s decision to terminate his employment?” The instruction defining this term reads:
You are instructed that in answering Question No. 1 on the special verdict form, you must decide whether plaintiff has shown by the greater weight of the credible evidence that he would not have been let go had it not been for his age. If your answer to this question is yes,- then you have found that plaintiffs age was a determining factor in the termination of his employment and you should answer “yes” to Question No. 1 on the verdict. If you decide that the plaintiff has not shown by the greater weight of the credible evidence that he would have been let go had it not been for his age, then you have found that age was not a determining factor in the termination of his employment and you should answer “no” to Question No. 1 on the verdict.
After deliberating for a while, the jury asked the judge to clarify what it means for age to be “a determining factor ... Is it the only determining factor or one of the determining factor?” [Sic.] Gehring asked the judge to reply that there may be more than one “determining factor” and that it should decide in his favor if age was among them. Instead the judge told the jury:
The question asks about a determining factor. By a determining factor, I mean the plaintiff must prove that he would not have been selected for layoff but for'his age.
Gehring insists that both the original instruction and the response to the jury’s question are error.
How “determining factor” entered the vocabulary of age discrimination is a mystery. The term does not appear in the Age Discrimination in Employment Act, and the Supreme Court has never used it in a case under the ADEA. True, the Court once quoted from a legislative report that contains the term, see
Western Air Lines, Inc. v. Criswell,
The legal question is straightforward and may be explained without reference to words such as “determining factor.” Hart & Hon-oré found it possible to plumb the depths of causation without employing these words; juries, too, can dispense with them. They must decide whether age accounts for the decision — in other words, whether the same events would have transpired if the employee had been younger than 40 and everything else had been the same.
Hazen Paper Co. v. Biggins,
— U.S. -, -,
To say that jury instructions ought to avoid legalistic and ambiguous terms is not to say that an instruction including them is reversible error.
Mayall v. Peabody Coal Co.,
What the jury needs to know can, and should, be expressed in simple language. Here is one attractive formulation: “You must decide whether the employer would have fired [demoted, laid off] the employee if the employee had been younger than 40 and everything else had remained the same.” Such an instruction uses simple and familiar words, avoids double negatives, and can be tailored to the circumstances of the claim. It tells the jury what to do if it finds that the employer took more than one thing into account. Suppose the employer considered four things in sacking an employee: age, skills, attendance, and attitude. If any two of these (mediocre skills and bad attitude, for example), would have been enough to produce a discharge, then there has been no age discrimination, and a jury asking the question as we have phrased it would give the right answer. If, however, all four in conjunction brought about the discharge — if the employee would have been retained had he been younger, or more punctual, or more *345 skilled, or more enthusiastic — then age tipped the balance, and the employee should prevail, and would do so under the instruction we suggest. Similarly, if the employer would not have discharged the employee without the presence of three factors, and the jury disbelieves the employer’s position on one of them (concludes, say, that the employee’s attitude was fine), then under this formulation the jury will return a verdict for the plaintiff.
Other cases suggest variations, which although a little more complex provide the same information. See
Glover v. McDonnell Douglas Corp.,
AFFIRMED.
