Wаyne Davis, a State Trooper in Indiana, resigned when 42 years old to take another job. Two months later he decided that he had made a mistake and asked for his old job back. The State Police said no, telling Davis that he was too old — for ex-troopers seeking reinstatement must “meet all the requirements for police employees as specified in ... 240 IAC 1-4-3”. 240 Ind. Admin. Code § 1-4 — 18(b)(4). Among the requirements in § 1-4-3 is that the applicant be at least 21, and under 40, when hired. Davis contends in this suit that, by holding his age against him, Indiana violatеd the Age Discrimination in Employment Act, 29 U.S.C. §§ 621-33a.
EEOC v. Wyoming,
Davis does not contend that Indiana’s rules, which predate EEOC v. Wyoming, are “subterfuges” to evade the Act. Instead he contends that the decision not to rehire him is not one “pursuant to a bona fide hiring ... plan”. His principal argument is that Indiana’s system is not “bona fide” because it is senseless; a fallback argument is that the decision not to rehire him, in particular, was not made “pursuant to” the state’s age limits.
Indiana allows state troopers to work until age 65. Davis asks why a 2-month break in employment at age 42 should make him a pariah, when he would have been acceptable at age 43, 45, 50, 55, and 60 had he just stayed put. It is a good question, but not one for the federal judiciary. All § 623(j)(2) requires is that the plan be “bona fide” and not a “subterfuge” to evade the ADEA. Whether a state’s plan is
wise
is not material to the application of § 623(j)(2). A plan is “bona fide” when it is real rather than a fable spun for the occasion.
Kopec,
In arguing that, to be bona fide, a plan must be sensible, Davis is asking the court to assume a managerial role that is аlien to the idea of an anti-discrimination norm. As we say frequently in suits under employment-discrimination statutes: “No matter how medieval a firm’s practices, no matter how high-handed its decisional process, no matter how mistaken the firm’s managers, [federal law does] not interfere.”
Pollard v. Rea Magnet Wire Co.,
Davis equates “bona fide” with “rationally related to a legitimаte objective” and in the process conflates statutory with constitutional criteria. Asked at oral argument whether he was challenging Indiana’s rules under the equal protection clause of the fourteenth amendment, Davis’s lawyer gave a negative answer.
A plan is “bona fide” when it sets out the real rules of decision, but Davis does not want Indiana to stand on rules. Instead he contests the very idea of rules. A fit person at age 41 is better suited to be a trooper than a flabby person at age 39. But problems of this kind are endemic to rules. As Justice Holmes put it, “[w]her-ever the law draws a line there will be cases very near each other on opposite sidеs.”
United States v. Wurzbach,
A two-month break is short, and a state could choose to overlook it, but a federal doctrine converting a straightforward age line to a standard of reasonableness can’t be limited to two-month breaks in employment. What of a six-month break? One year? Two years? How about a persоn who reaches age 65 but says that he is as fit and alert as the average 60-year-old trooper; may Indiana nonetheless end his employment? There is no one “right” rеsponse to such questions, certainly none to be located in
*763
§ 623(j)(2). Congress could displace the state’s choices (as the ADEA does for most jobs), but § 623(j)(2) does not cоmpel a state law-enforcement agency to make reasonable (or any) exceptions to an age-based plan. Nor does equal-protection analysis require exceptions for special circumstances; governments may base rules on the usual situations without exceptions for the unusual ones. Sеe, e.g.,
Vance v. Bradley,
Davis’s request fоr an exception is in tension with his second (and better) argument: That the statute forbids exceptions, or at least limits exceptions to those that are explicit pаrts of the plan. Section 623(j)(2) requires the state to act “pursuant to a bona fide hiring ... plan” (emphasis added). It is not enough to have a plan.
Section 1^1-18, which spells out the procedure if a fоrmer trooper applies for reinstatement, has some curious language:
The applicant shall meet all the requirements for police employees as specified in 240 IAC 1-4-2 and 240 IAC 1-4-3 subject to the approval of the superintendent and the board.
240 Ind. Admin. Code § 1 — 4—18(b)(4). What does “subject to the approval of the superintеndent and the board” mean? It could mean that the superintendent and board must decide whether the applicant satisfies the two listed sections; that would be unproblеmatic. Another possibility, however, is that the phrase means something like “if the superintendent arid the board decide to enforce those rules.” A power to set the plan aside at will — to reject Davis as too old at age 42 while rehiring other ex-troopers at age 45 or 50 — would mean that the decision is not pursuant to the age rules specified in § 1-4-3. (We do not have a situation in which the plan itself creates exceptions.)
When dismissing Davis’s complaint, the district court did not mention the requirement that'the employer’s decision be “pursuant to” the plan; the judge asked only whether Indiana has a bona fide plan. Having a bona fide plan is not enough; that plan must be аpplied to yield the contested decision.
Defending its judgment on appeal, the employer contends that Davis’s complaint does not adequately plead that the decision was not made “pursuant to” the plan. But a complaint need not plead this; it is enough to plead the
claim
(here, that the state held Davis’s age against him, and that he was at least 40 years old and thus protected by the ADEA). Section 623(j) affords the state an affirmative defense; on this subject Indiana bears the burdens of both рroduction and persuasion. Cf.
Meacham v. Knolls Atomic Power Laboratory,
— U.S. —,
Becausе this complaint was dismissed under Rule 12(b)(6), the record is silent on whether the state understands (and applies) 240 Ind. Admin. Code § 1-4-18(b)(4) to permit exceptions to the maximum-age-at-rehire requirement. Davis is entitled to collect and present evidence on that question and to contend that, if the Indiana State Police sometimes rehires peoрle at age 40 and above, the decision not to rehire him was not made “pursuant to” a bona fide plan.
The judgment of the district court is vacated, and the case is remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
