Lead Opinion
Affirmed by published opinion. Senior Judge CYNTHIA HOLCOMB HALL wrote the opinion. Judge KING wrote an opinion concurring in part and dissenting in part. Judge WILLIAMS wrote an opinion dissenting in part and concurring in part in the judgment.
OPINION
Appellant/Cross-Appellee Columbia Colleton Medical Center (“Colleton”) em
I.
In May 1996, Dennis was employed by Colleton as a part-time emergency room registration clerk. At the time she was hired, Dennis was a 19-year-old high school graduate who had worked a number of service jobs and was enrolled in an Emergency Medical Services (“EMS”) training course. On January 20, 1997, Dennis transferred to a full-time position as a technician in the Labor and Delivery Department. On March 30, 1997, Dennis returned to the emergency room as a full-time registration clerk. For the roughly 15 months that she worked at the hospital, Dennis was a diligent and hardworking employee who generally earned positive assessments for her work.
At the time of Dennis’ transfer back to the emergency room, management of the Registration Department was in a state of some disarray. Either during or soon after her return, a new registration supervisor was hired. The supervisor had difficulty coping with the position and abruptly resigned on June 15, 1997, leaving the department without a supervisor. During an approximately eight week period when the department was without a formal supervisor, Dennis would periodically carry out some supervisory duties, including training new employees and fielding operational questions.
Dennis applied for the position of registration supervisor once it was formally opened. On June 20, 1997 she interviewed with Jennifer Wray, the decision-maker normally responsible for filling this position. During the interview, Wray made an inappropriate comment suggesting that although she would personally like to promote her, Dennis would not get the promotion due to an affair she was rumored to be having with a doctor. Dennis denied the affair and complained to Jimmy Hiott, Colleton’s chief financial officer and Wray’s direct superior. After consulting with colleagues in senior management, Hiott chose to reprimand Wray and take over the selection process himself.
The process that Hiott applied was peculiarly informal. Hiott reviewed Dennis’ initial application to the hospital, but did not personally interview her. Nor did he inquire into her experience since joining the hospital or check her references or evaluations. Hiott did however interview Bridge, a 32-year-old who was at that time working full-time as a transportation and computer manager at Clean Management-Environmental Group. Bridge’s wife had worked at Colleton in data processing and was acquainted with Hiott. Bridge himself also had some extremely limited experience at Colleton working as a part-time “PRN PBX operator,” which entailed operating the PBX switch-board system nights and weekends on an “as needed” basis. Because the PBX was physically near Registration, he also received some registration training and worked a few shifts in Registration on an informal basis.
In addition to Dennis and Bridge, the record also offers disputed evidence of a third candidate, Tonya Williams, who was then working at Colleton’s business office. Williams, an African-American woman, had roughly seven years experience working in Registration, a degree in computer technology and, unlike either Dennis or Bridge, met the formal requirements for the supervisory position. Hiott claimed that he was never made aware of Williams’ application, and Colleton offered supporting evidence that it may have been submitted or at least discovered by the head of human resources after the position was already filled. However, the date on William’s transfer request form was timely, and the director of human resources testified at deposition that she had forwarded the application to Wray. Although she later claimed that this was after the position was already filled, Wray did know about Williams’ interest in the position before Hiott took over the hiring process because she conducted an interview with her on the same day that she interviewed Dennis.
In any event, Hiott awarded the position to Bridge. His proffered explanation was that he selected Bridge for his management and computer skills. Hiott claimed at trial that at the time of the decision he was aware that Registration needed someone with such skills in order to reform a badly disorganized department and oversee a planned change in computer systems. He asserted that he had posed various hypothetical problems to Bridge during his interview and had been highly impressed by his answers. Based on this favorable impression and his prior knowledge of Bridge’s affinity for computers, he offered him the job.
Dennis was not as impressed. After learning of the promotion decision, she quit her position at Colleton and filed an EEOC charge and subsequent suit alleging discriminatory failure to promote as well as defamation. Colleton moved for summary judgment on all causes of action, and the motion was granted on April 6, 2000. However, Dennis filed a motion for reconsideration on June 23, 2000, based on the Supreme Court holding in Reeves v. Sanderson Plumbing Products, Inc.,
The case was then tried to a jury except the issues of compensatory front pay and back pay, which the parties agreed to have tried separately before the district court judge. After Colleton’s motion for judgment as a matter of law was denied, the jury found in favor of Dennis on the discrimination claim and awarded $25,000 in compensatory damages for emotional distress. After a separate hearing, the district court awarded $31,302 in back pay. It also granted $104,765.80 in attorney’s fees and costs.
Following the trial, Colleton filed a renewed motion for judgment as a matter of law and a motion for a new trial. The district court denied both motions, but granted a request to nullify the jury’s $25,000 award for emotional distress.
II.
A. MOTION FOR JUDGMENT AS A MATTER OF LAW
Colleton appeals the district court’s denial of its motion for judgment as a matter of law. A Rule 50(b) motion for judgment as a matter of law follows the same standard as a Rule 56 motion for summary judgment. When reviewing a district
1. Qualifications
Colleton first argues that Dennis failed to offer sufficient evidence to make out a prima facie case of gender discrimination. We begin by noting that while this argument is couched in terms of the burden shifting framework of McDonnell Douglas Corp. v. Green,
We disagree. It is true that Dennis did not satisfy all of the criteria in the written job description for the registration supervisor’s position. But, like Dennis, Bridge also lacked certain formal qualifications. Colleton listed the education and experience requirements for the position as follows:
A. Education
1. High School graduate.
2. Preferably courses in medical terminology management, or comparable experience.
3. College business courses and/or courses in a medically related field preferred.
Experience PQ
Minimum three years experience in a hospital business office setting.
Management experience preferred.
Minimum three years experience in third party reimbursement requirements (i.e., Medicare, Medicaid, Champús, HMO’s, PPO’s, and Commercial).
Excellent communication skills.
Basic knowledge of computers re-
Prefer ICD-9 coding knowledge. CS
H-BOSS experience highly desirable. -q
It is undisputed that neither candidate satisfied all of these requirements. Neither had three years experience in a hospital business office or in third party reimbursement requirements. Neither had college business courses or courses in medical terminology management, although Dennis did have EMS training.
The fact that Bridge was hired despite himself lacking several formal qualifications listed as required demonstrates that they were not mandatory in the actual case. Rather, the job description was at most treated as a list of desirable qualifications. Because Dennis demonstrated that she satisfied this aspirational list at least as well as Bridge, she produced sufficient evidence for a reasonable jury to conclude that she was qualified for the job.
2. Pretext
Colleton’s primary argument is that the case presented by Dennis was based solely on prima facie evidence of the candidates’ qualifications and evidence tending to disprove Hiott’s claimed reasons for hiring Bridge. Colleton claims that this was insufficient evidence for a reasonable jury to find discrimination. Again, we disagree.
Under the McDonnell Douglas framework, once an employer has met its burden of producing a legitimate nondiscriminatory explanation for its decision, the plaintiff is afforded the “opportunity to prove by a preponderance of the evidence that the legitimate reasons offered by the defendant were not its true reasons, but were pretext for discrimination.” Texas Dept. of Community Affairs v. Burdine,
Dennis did provide sufficient evidence of falsity. First, she provided evidence that Hiott offered inconsistent justifications for his promotion of Bridge. At deposition, Hiott claimed that it was only Bridge’s managerial experience that made him a superior candidate.
Equally importantly, Dennis’ evidence of the unequal way in which Hiott conducted the promotion process could have persuaded the jury that Bridge did not give Dennis fair consideration but ráther discriminated against her. While Hiott appeared to take the initiative with Bridge, seeking out his candidacy and intensively interviewing him, he did not even look into Dennis’ in-house work experience, training or evaluations. Hiott claimed to dismiss Dennis’ application for lack of management experience without knowing the full extent of that experience. Dennis also presented evidence tending to suggest that the other female applicant, Williams, may have been denied fair consideration despite the fact that she was the only candidate possessing all of the written job qualifications. In light of this evidence, the jury could reasonably have concluded that Hiott never gave Dennis fair consideration because he had. already decided for other reasons not to promote her, and ■ that his proffered explanations for his choices were merely post-hoc pretexts covering a predisposition favoring Bridge as a male.
Finally, Dennis also presented sufficient evidence for the jury to have concluded that Bridge’s management and computer skills were overplayed by Hiott. Bridge’s only verified management experience consisted of managing a small Family Dollar store for eleven months more than four years earlier. He received an “F” in the only computer course he ever took. While it is certainly possible, as Colleton argued, that this grade was not reflective of his computer knowledge at the time he was hired, this was an issue for the trier of fact. On review, we are limited to concluding that the jury could have determined based on the facts at trial that Hiott did not hire Bridge due to his allegedly superi- or skills.
The second thrust of Colleton’s argument is that even if the jury could disbelieve Hiott’s explanations, Dennis’ evidence — limited as it was to her prima facie case and facts tending to discredit those explanations — was still insufficient to support her ultimate burden of demonstrating discrimination.
In analyzing this issue, we are guided by the Supreme Court’s decision in Reeves, which holds that “[i]n appropriate circumstances, the trier of fact can reasonably infer from the falsity of the explanation that the employer is dissembling to cover up a discriminatory purpose.”
At the same time, while not exhaustive, the examples provided in Reeves do preclude us from ordering judgment as a matter of law when a defendant has merely made a lesser evidentiary showing of the very same factors they include. That is, such a judgment requires a more conclusive evidentiary showing by Colleton than the mere presentation- of circumstances suggesting possible alternatives to both discrimination and its proffered nondiscriminatory reason for preferring Bridge. They also require more than the mere presentation of less than “abundant” and “uncontroverted” evidence that discrimination did not occur in combination with a weak showing of pretext by Dennis. To grant judgment as a matter of law
In light of this guidance, we conclude that Colleton does not satisfy the threshold for judgment as a matter of law. The circumstances of Dennis’ case suggest some possible alternatives to both Hiott’s explanation and gender discrimination; namely that Dennis’ reputed affair actually did block her promotion as Wray warned it would, or that Hiott’s relation to Bridge’s wife played a prominent role in his decision.
B. MOTION FOR A NEW TRIAL
Colleton next appeals the district court’s denial of its motion for a new trial. Unlike the procedure under Rule 50(b), on a motion for a new trial under Rule 59(e) a district court is permitted to weigh the evidence. Bristol Steel & Iron Works, Inc. v. Bethlehem Steel Corp.,
Colleton’s argument on appeal for a new trial largely mirrors that of its appeal for a judgment as a matter of law. In addition to repeating its arguments about the insufficiency of the evidence, it also attacks the district court’s instructions to the jury. Specifically, it would have us find the instructions on pretext, which included language taken directly from Reeves, insufficient because they did not include: 1) an instruction that Dennis was required to establish her superiority as a candidate and including the “slap in the face” test, and 2) a “counterbalancing” instruction emphasizing that the jury was not required to conclude Colleton had discriminated when other alternatives to its proffered explanation were available.
The instructions stated:
If you find that the defendant has stated a valid reason, then you must decide in favor of the defendant unless the plaintiff proves by a preponderance of evidence that the stated reason was not the true reason but it is only a pretext or excuse for discriminating against the plaintiff because of her sex.
*651 A pretextual reason could be a “sham” reason; a reason that is false or a reason that is true, but not the real reason. While the jury’s rejection of defendant’s legitimate, nondiscriminatory reason for its action does not compel judgment for the plaintiff, in appropriate circumstances, the jury can reasonably infer from the falsity of explanation that the employer is hiding the truth in order to cover up intentional discrimination. The plaintiffs prima facie case combined with sufficient evidence to find that the employer’s asserted justification is false, may permit the jury to conclude that the defendant unlawfully discriminated.
The fact that you might think that the employer misjudged the qualifications of the applicants does not in and of itself expose the defendant to Title VII liability, although this may be probative of whether the employer’s reasons are pretext for discrimination.
As we found no basis in the evidence for ruling that the jury’s findings were unreasonable, we also find that the district court did not abuse its discretion in preserving that ruling and denying Colleton’s motion for a new trial. The jury instructions were not improper because they clearly and correctly stated the law and made clear that the jury could, but did not have to, infer discrimination if it disbelieved Colleton’s explanation for Hiott’s decision.
C. BACKPAY
Colleton also claims that the district court’s award of back pay should be reversed ■ because Dennis voluntarily quit her job immediately after being denied promotion. In the alternative, Colle-ton argues that the amount of back pay awarded should have been calculated from the day Dennis left Colleton to January 1, 1998, when Bridge was transferred and the supervisor position again became open. The award granted by the district court calculated back pay from the day Dennis was denied promotion to roughly the date of the final judgment. We review the decision to award back pay for abuse of discretion. Maksymchuk v. Frank,
As a general rule, back pay is to be awarded to successful Title VII plaintiffs. See Albemarle,
In reviewing awards of back pay, the Fourth Circuit does not apply the “constructive discharge rule” denying such pay to persons who leave an employer who has committed intentional discrimination unless it is under conditions of a constructive discharge. See Spagnuolo v. Whirlpool Corporation
In this ease, Dennis reasonably mitigated Colleton’s damages even though she left its employ. Because she was at a low paying job, she could be reasonably certain of finding equivalent pay elsewhere. After
As to Colleton’s claim that the back pay period should have been tolled when the supervisor’s position once again became open, there is no compelling reason to assume that Dennis would have received the job. There is no precedent suggesting that the reopening of a position that was the subject of a discrimination case would toll a back pay period, and we decline to establish such a rule here.
D. ATTORNEY’S FEES
42 U.S.C. § 2000e-5(k) permits a court to award attorney’s fees to the prevailing party in a Title VII suit. The purpose of awarding fees is to encourage attorneys to prosecute cases that vindicate the objectives of Title VII though they might be economically unattractive under a contingency fee arrangement. See Daly v. Hill,
In calculating attorney’s fees, the Fourth Circuit employs the “lodestar” formula, multiplying the number of hours reasonably expended by counsel by a reasonable hourly rate. In making the reasonableness determinations, a court is to use the twelve factor test articulated in Johnson v. Georgia Highway Express, Inc.,
In its order, the district court correctly applied the lodestar methodology and explicitly documented its consideration of each of the Johnson factors in determining reasonable hours and fees. While Colleton disputes the district court’s judgment in applying several of the Johnson factors, none of the court’s assessments were outrageous or provide a basis for a finding of abuse of discretion.
Colleton also appears to dispute the finding that Dennis satisfied the requirement that she be a “prevailing party,” arguing “Dennis” extremely limited success on her Title VII claim should be tempered by her lack of success on her defamation and constructive discharge claims as well as her lack of success against named defendants other that Colleton.” However, Dennis was clearly a “prevailing party” under controlling Court precedent. See Farrar v. Hobby,
Colleton’s appeal may alternatively be read to imply that the district court’s calculation of what constituted reasonable hours should have been reduced in recognition that Dennis did not win on all her claims. It is true that “when successful claims are unrelated to unsuccessful claims, it is not appropriate to award fees for the latter.” Brodziak,
E. EMOTIONAL DISTRESS
Lastly, we address Dennis’ cross-appeal contesting the district court’s grant of Colleton’s Rule 59(e) motion to alter the judgment by nullifying the jury award for emotional distress. The court nullified the damage award on the basis that Dennis had provided no evidence of emotional distress other than conclusory statements that she was “devastated” and “humiliated” by the events that transpired against her. Dennis claims that she produced adequate evidence with testimony describing the circumstances at Colleton that she found to be distressful and humiliating, the degree of her anticipatory reliance on getting the pay raise associated with the promotion, the added strain felt by her and her family after she left Colleton, and the fact that she was less able to spend time with her child after leaving Colleton due to the fact that she had to take multiple jobs. We review the district court’s ruling granting Colleton’s Rule 59 motion for abuse of discretion. EEOC v. Lockheed Martin Corp., Aero & Naval Sys.,
We find that the district court has not abused its discretion. In Price v. City of Charlotte,
Though Dennis explained the circumstances of her injury in the sense that she described the reasons she felt upset and humiliated, she provided no demonstrable evidence of distress such as testimony of a physical symptom or a doctor’s diagnosis. Moreover, most of the distress to which she testified related to the consequences of her decision to leave Colleton and her probably exaggerated expectation of receiving promotion rather than discrimination itself. The district court was thus correct in finding that Dennis did not meet the legally necessary requirements set out in Price.
III.
For the foregoing reasons, the district court’s denial of Colleton’s renewed motion for judgment as a matter of law and mo
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. When asked if there were “any other qualities that you thought that he had that were superior to Ms. Dennis?” Hiott answered “no.” (Tr. of Trial Vol. I. at 253).
. Contra the dissent, we do not say that Hiott’s emphasis on management experience to the exclusion of other job criteria listed in the posted job description was alone probative of pretext. It is the fact that Colleton’s proferred explanation for promoting Bridge over Dennis exhibited inconsistencies is probative. We agree that the business world is a “dynamic” one in which the relative importance of various job qualifications may change over time. However, we also recognize the reality that an employer asked to justify its actions after the fact has an incentive to claim that the “real” criteria were those on which the chosen employee happens to perform best relative to the plaintiff.
In this case there was sufficient evidence for the jury to reach this conclusion. In addition to the inconsistent justifications noted above, the jury was entitled to find Hiott’s proffered explanation that he deviated from the formal job requirements due to a special concern for the need for a strong manager inconsistent with evidence produced by Dennis that Hiott exhibited little concern for or knowledge of how the department was being managed either before or after the hiring decision. (Tr. of Trial Vol. II 477-478, 485-488).
. The dissent asserts that Hiott’s determination that Bridge possessed superior management experience as compared to Dennis is unassailable. Not so. At a minimum, the jury could reasonably have concluded that any superiority was marginal and viewed this ■ fact as probative of the veracity of Hiott’s claim that he was looking for a strong manager to stem a state of chaos in the registration department or of his explanation for his decision to interview Bridge but not Dennis.
Viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to Dennis, Hiott knew only that Bridge had managed a small Family Dollar store in Hampton, 'South Carolina for less than a year. This was the only management experience that Hiott recalled hi his deposition or at trial. The dissent would make much of the fact that Bridge listed "transportation manager" and "marketing coordinator" in the employment section of his application to work as a PBX operator. However, the full record indicates that neither of these were management jobs and there is no indica- ■ tion that Hiott understood them as such. Un
The dissent also cites the testimony of Dr. Ann Jonason, a director at Colleton, as independent evidence of Bridge's superior management skills. Dr. Jonason testified that she interviewed Bridge prior to his promotion. However, Dr. Jonason's testimony about her impression of Bridge is irrelevant because she was not the decision maker. Hiott testified that he did not recall asking Jonason to interview Bridge or consider any input from her in making his decision. (Tr. of Trial Vol. II at 457-459).
. While claiming to adhere to the framework mandated in Reeves, the dissent would require more of plaintiffs by requiring them to meet the test specified in the pre-Reeves case of Evans v. Techs. App. & Serv. Co., 80 F.3d 954, 960 (4th Cir.1996). In Evans, this circuit held that plaintiffs such as Dennis are required to establish that they are better qualified for the position sought than those to whom the position is actually given. Reeves
Indeed, this is often the only way a plaintiff can reasonably be expected to show pretext. Employers are free within certain bounds to choose the criteria by which they may legitimately assess employees. In comparing any two employees, it is often the case that each is superior on at least a few of the possible criteria that could be used in assessing their qualifications. Given these facts, it is not farfetched to suppose that discriminatory employers might be likely to choose to emphasize at trial those characteristics on which their chosen candidates were superior in order to construct pretextual explanations that are as plausible as possible. If plaintiffs were required to show they were superior on the criteria chosen at trial by their employers, rather than being free to show that the criteria were not the ones actually used, the McDonnell Douglas frame-work would become a shield for employers rather than a tool to frame the factual issue with sufficient clarity so that the plaintiff will have a full and fair opportunity to demonstrate pretext. See Burdine,
. We note that a decision not to promote Dennis because of an allegation that she was involved in an extramarital affair might, but need not, itself reflect gender bias depending on how a man would be treated in the same circumstances. However, this was not an issue developed in the record and we do not consider it here.
Concurrence in Part
concurring in part and dissenting in part:
I agree entirely with my distinguished colleague that we should affirm the denial of Colleton’s motion for judgment as a matter of law, as well as its motion for a new trial. I also agree that the district court’s award of front and back pay to Dennis was appropriate, as was its grant of attorney’s fees. I part company with Judge Hall’s excellent opinion solely with respect to Colleton’s Rule 59(e) motion attacking the award of $25,000 for compensatory damages, and the district court’s reduction of this sum to zero.
I.
A jury award of compensatory damages is only to be set aside when it is “against the clear weight of the evidence, or based upon evidence which is false, or will result in a miscarriage of justice.” Hetzel v. County of Prince William,
In assessing whether sufficient evidence supports the compensatory damages award, the court was constrained from substituting its judgment for that of the jury or from making credibility determinations. Price v. City of Charlotte,
II.
This is not a case in which the only evidence of demonstrable emotional distress came from Dennis’s own testimony. Corroborating evidence exists, namely the testimony of Terry Lance Dennis, Dennis’s ex-husband. At trial, Mr. Dennis testified that his ex-wife “was devastated” and that she “was very upset” at not receiving the position of Registration Supervisor at Colleton Medical Center. He further related that Dennis “couldn’t believe” that Bridge had been awarded the position, especially because Colleton expected her to train Bridge for the position that she had sought.
Terry Dennis’s testimony not only establishes that Dennis expexienced emotional distress because of Colleton’s discriminatory conduct, but it also is entirely consistent with Dennis’s own account of the emotional toll that Colleton’s unlawful gender discrimination had upon her. In that connection, Dennis testified that she “was very
In Price, we recognized that “a plaintiffs testimony, standing alone, may support a claim of emotional distress.”
In this situation, the jury award to Dennis constituted an entirely modest sum, given this evidence and the serious emotional distress she suffered because of Colleton’s illegal conduct. As such, I find nothing in the record to suggest that this aspect of the verdict is excessive or otherwise not proportional to the injury incurred. I would therefore reverse the district court on this point.
In addressing the question of excessiveness, we Eire obliged to.look to a number of factors, including: any medical attention sought; the degree of mental distress experienced; the factual circumstances that emotional distress developed under; any corroborating testimony; any mitigating circumstances; any physical injuries caused by the emotional distress; and any economic loss. Knussman v. State of Maryland,
Concurrence in Part
dissenting in part and concurring in part in the judgment:
For the reasons set forth below, I respectfully disagree with the conclusion that there is sufficient evidence demonstrating that Columbia Colleton Medical Center’s legitimate, non-discriminatory justification for promoting Johnny Bridge instead of Joyce Dennis was pretext for gender-based discrimination. Because Dennis failed to produce sufficient evidence of pretext to sustain the jury’s verdict and, therefore, failed to meet her burden of establishing the ultimate issue of discrimination vel non, Colleton was entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Moreover, insofar as Dennis failed to establish the prerequisites for Title VII liability, she did not introduce sufficient evidence to support the jury’s award of emotional distress damages. Accordingly, I dissent from Parts A. through D. of Section II. of the majority opinion and concur in the judgment of Part E. of Section II.
I.
We review de novo the district court’s denial of judgment as a matter of law, viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to Dennis, as the non-moving party. Lytle v. Household Mfg., Inc.,
“To defeat an employer’s motion for [judgment as a matter of law] as to liability in a discrimination suit, the plaintiff must present substantial evidence to support as a reasonable probability, rather than as a mere possibility, that her employer discriminated against her because of a protected characteristic.” DeJarnette v. Corning, Inc.,
A.
As the majority notes, Colleton’s primary argument on appeal is that Dennis failed to introduce sufficient evidence of pretext to sustain the jury’s finding on the ultimate issue of discrimination vel non. Colleton presented evidence that Bridge was promoted instead of Dennis because Colleton perceived Bridge as having been more qualified than Dennis for the registration supervisor position. Where an employer has asserted that relative employee qualifications constituted the non-discriminatory justification for the promotion decision, “the plaintiff must establish that she was the better qualified candidate for the position sought” to meet her burden of proving that the company’s explanation is pretextual and that she was the victim of intentional discrimination. Evans v. Techs. App. & Serv. Co.,
Dennis concedes that at the time of the promotion decision, she did not meet all of the posted qualifications for the position. She had worked in a hospital business office setting for fourteen months,
It being established that neither candidate fully met the posted job qualifications,
Dennis did not introduce any evidence discrediting Hiott’s perception that Bridge had more management experience than Dennis. Bridge’s employment application, which the undisputed evidence established that Hiott consulted prior to interviewing Bridge, indicated that the vast majority of Bridge’s employment history involved managerial positions. Bridge’s employment application states that he served as a transportation manager at Clean Management Environmental from January 1994 until July 1997, when he was awarded the registration supervisor position, served as the store manager for the Family Dollar from February 1993 until January 1994, and served as a marketing coordinator at Coastal Electric Coop from January 1988 until February 1993. The only nonman-agement-related job in Bridge’s employment history was his earliest job, which was selling insurance.
Dennis’s employment application, on the other hand, established that she had been out of high school for two years, had been employed in various cashier and secretarial positions, and had one year of experience as an assistant manager of Showtime Video & Music. Dennis also had acted as de facto manager of the Registration Department during the eight weeks in which the Department was without a manager. Based upon this evidence, and even viewing the record in the light most favorable to Dennis, Hiott’s determination that Bridge possessed superior managerial experience as compared to Dennis is unassailable.
Indeed, at the summary judgment stage, the district court granted summary judgment in favor of Colleton because the un-contradicted evidence demonstrated that Dennis was not more qualified for the promotion than Bridge, (J.A. at 44-53), but the district court later reversed this ruling after the Supreme Court’s subsequently-issued decision in Reeves v. Sanderson Plumbing Prods., Inc.,
B.
The majority asserts that “the jury’s finding of pretext does not stand or fall” on the relative qualifications of Bridge and Dennis but instead rests upon other types of circumstantial evidence. Ante at 648. In detailing this alleged circumstantial evidence, the majority categorizes Colleton’s explanation of the importance placed upon prior managerial experience as a “post-hoc rationalization! ]” that is probative of pretext because managerial experience was listed in the posted job description as being a “preferred” qualification, as opposed to a “required” qualification.
The majority next contends that alleged inconsistencies between Hiott’s trial and deposition testimony regarding his reason for promoting Bridge instead of Dennis are probative of pretext. I do not find that the record reveals any of the alleged inconsistencies. When asked at trial why he did not feel Dennis was qualified for the promotion, Hiott stated that he had reviewed her application and determined that she lacked “the management skills necessary for the position,” whereas Bridge’s application indicated that he possessed the requisite management experience. (J.A. at 244-45.) The majority asserts that Hiott testified at trial that computer experience was one of the decisive factors weighing in favor of Bridge in making the promotion decision, but, as noted in note 3, supra, Hiott’s testimony does not appear to support this characterization. At best, Hiott’s testimony could be read as indicating that he believed that Bridge’s computer experience was a factor weighing in favor of Bridge in the promotion decision, but not that he believed Bridge to be more qualified than Dennis with respect to computer experience. Such testimony is entirely consistent with his deposition testimony, where he testified that Bridge possessed the requisite degree of computer knowledge for purposes of the promotion. (Deposition of James O. Hiott at 97, lines 16-23; J.A. at 183). Contrary to the majority’s assertion, Hiott never testified that managerial experience was the “only” reason for the promotion decision. Instead, Hiott testified that “management experience was the biggest quality that I was looking for in the — in the individual and what the hospital needed.... ” (Deposition of James O. Hiott at 85, lines 19-25; J.A. at 177 (emphasis added).) At trial, Hiott took precisely the same position, testifying again that management experience was the most important factor weighing in favor of Bridge in the promotion decision. Accordingly, the record does not reveal any inconsistency between Hiott’s trial and deposition testimony that is probative of pretext.
Finally, the majority notes that another female applicant, Tonya Williams, was not interviewed for the promotion, which it
Even assuming the evidence regarding Williams could be viewed as probative of pretext, Dennis presented, at best, extremely weak evidence that Colleton intentionally discriminated against her because of her gender, and statistical evidence provides independent support for Colleton’s proposition that it was not engaging in gender discrimination by failing to promote her. See, e.g., Reeves,
II.
After reviewing all of the evidence in the light most favorable to Dennis, I am convinced that there was insufficient evidence to support the jury’s finding that Colleton’s legitimate, non-discriminatory reason for promoting Bridge instead of Dennis was false. Without sufficient evidence of pretext, no rational juror could have determined that Dennis met her burden of establishing the ultimate issue of discrimination vel non.
. Dennis began working at Colleton on May 1, 1996 as a part-time emergency room registration clerk. Dennis's resignation letter, which was dated July 9, 1997, stated:
To Whom It May Concern:
I would like to notify you of my resignation of my full-time postion [sic] here at Colleton Reigonal [sic] Hospital. Although I am requesting to stay as PRN help. I feel as though this was warrented [sic] due to the internal conflicts that closely effects' [sic] my job. I have enjoyed working here full-time, and have made many new friends. I am gratefull [sic] for the experience I have gained, and hope in the future if needed I will have employment oppertunities [sic] here at CCMC.
(J.A. at 353.)
. In suggesting that Bridge's superior managerial experience was "over-played” by Hiott, the majority states that Bridge's "only verified management experience consisted of managing a small Family Dollar store more than four years earlier,” but it makes no reference to Bridge's employment application. Ante at 647. Instead, the majority would have us review evidence regarding the nature of Bridge’s past employment that was not known to Hiott at the time he made the promotion decision and ignore Bridge's employment application itself, which was indisputably reviewed by Hiott prior to the promotion decision, and further ignore the corroborating testimony of the other person who participated in the decision-making process, Dr. Jonason.
. In suggesting that Reeves overruled Evans, ante at 648-49 n. 4, the majority misapprehends the nature of the Reeves holding and fails to reconcile its position with that of the Eleventh Circuit, which has continued, post-Reeves, to hold that the employee has an obligation, at the pretext stage, to make an evi-dentiary showing that her qualifications are superior to those of the person selected for the promotion. Lee v. GTE Fla., Inc.,
. The majority asserts that because computer expertise deviates from the posted job qualifications, it also has the "flavor of [a] post-hoc rationalization! ].” Ante at 647. I do not find support in the record for the majority's characterization of the evidence presented to the jury regarding the role of computer expertise in the promotion decision. Hiott testified that he was impressed with Bridge's computer expertise, which Hiott believed would be helpful in light of the hospital's upcoming computer systems upgrade. Additionally, Jo-nason testified that she considered computer qualifications an important criteria for the promotion decision. She testified that during the interview, she "asked [Bridge] rather intensely about his information system background, his computer expertise, because at that particular time we were getting ready to initiate a new computer system.” (J.A. at 224.) She further testified that she was "very impressed with ... his knowledge of comput
. Logically, if a qualification is "preferred,” it can be decisive when choosing between two candidates. Consequently, I do not perceive any inconsistency between the emphasis placed upon management experience in the job description and Colleton’s proffered emphasis on management experience in making its promotion decision. Indeed, if a qualification in the posted job description could never support a decision between two candidates, one wonders why it is included in the posted job description at all. By suggesting that a jury is entitled to find the ultimate issue of discrimination any time an employer "picks one of a list of posted job qualifications and . claims that it was actually decisive without regard to the others,” ante at 657 n. 2, and by further suggesting that the employee no longer bears the burden of proving that she possessed superior qualifications as compared to the person selected for the promotion, ante at 658 n. 4, the majority thrusts this court and juries into the role of super-personnel officers and permits juries to simply second-guess an employer’s hiring and promotion decisions. This approach relieves the plaintiff of her burden of proving the ultimate issue of discrimination vel non, a result that is not mandated by Reeves and constitutes a significant departure from this circuit’s Title VII jurisprudence.
. To the extent the majority suggests that Hiott's failure to recall certain aspects of the interviewing process during the deposition, compared with his greater recall at trial, is probative of pretext, this does not meet the requisite level of proof necessary to defeat Colleton's motion for judgment as a matter of law. DeJarnette v. Corning, Inc.,
. At trial, Dennis argued that Hiott eliminated her from the selection process prematurely, in that Hiott reviewed the application that she submitted when she first began working at Colleton fourteen months earlier but did not review her most recent application, which reflected the experience she gained while employed at Colleton. If Hiott had reviewed her most recent application, he would have discovered that Dennis had worked as a de facto manager in the Registration Department for several weeks. Even considering her work as a de facto manager, however, Dennis did not establish that she had more managerial experience than Bridge. Thus, Hiott's failure to consider her most recent application, while possibly a poor management decision, is not probative of pretext or gender discrimination.
. The majority also speculates that the true reason for Colleton's promotion decision was because of Dennis's reputed affair with one of the doctors or because of Hiott’s friendship with Bridge’s wife. Ante at 650. Colleton has never asserted either of these theories as a justification for its promotion decision, and, as the majority concedes, neither justification, had it been asserted, would have been probative of gender discrimination.
. Because I believe Colleton was entitled to judgment as a matter of law, I do not address its alternative argument that it was entitled to a new trial. Moreover, insofar as I would not have found Dennis to have been the prevailing party, I do not join in the majority’s affirmance of the attorney's fee award or back pay award in her favor.
. I note that, even if I were to conclude that Dennis met the prerequisites for Title VII liability, I would hold that the district court did not abuse its discretion in setting aside the jury verdict in favor of Dennis for emotional distress damages because Dennis failed to put forth sufficient evidence of emotional distress to support the jury’s verdict pursuant to the standard set forth in Price v. City of Charlotte,
