Eugene Goodman brought this action under the Age Discrimination in Employment Act (ADEA), 29 U.S.C. § 621 et seq. (1976), alleging that his employer, appellant Heu- *129 blein, Inc. and Heublein International Division of Heublein, Inc. (hereafter collectively “Heublein”), failed to promote him to vice-president because of his age, and precipitated his discharge by ordering him transferred out of the country in retaliation for his pressing his age discrimination claim. After a jury trial in the District Court for the District of Connecticut (T. Emmet Clarie, Chief Judge), the jury awarded Goodman $226,200 in compensatory damages plus $226,200 in liquidated damages. Heublein appeals the judgment entered pursuant to this verdict, raising numerous contentions. We affirm.
The evidence presented fair jury questions both as to age discrimination on two occasions in denying promotion to different offices at the level of vice-president and as to a retaliatory discharge. Since the sufficiency of the evidence is not challenged on appeal, it need not be detailed.
Heublein challenges the award of liquidated damages on the ground that such damages may not be awarded unless the court determines that the employer was not acting in good faith. This contention is based on the interrelationship between the ADEA and two other federal statutes. Section 7(b) of the ADEA, 29 U.S.C. § 626(b) (1976), incorporates the “powers, remedies, and procedures” of the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA), as set forth in FLSA §§ 11(b), 16(bHe), and 17, 29 U.S.C. §§ 211(b), 216(b)-(e), and 217 (1976). As enacted, § 16(b) of the FLSA had mandated awards of liquidated damages, equal in amount to wages due, but Congress ameliorated this requirement in 1947 by providing, in § 11 of the Portal-to-Portal Act (PPA), 29 U.S.C. § 260 (1976), that in an FLSA action the court has discretion to disallow all or part of the liquidated damages if it finds that the employer acted in “good faith.” Heublein contends that § 7(b) of the ADEA, by incorporating FLSA procedures, also incorporates this procedural aspect of the PPA. We disagree.
In
Lorillard v. Pons,
Heublein contends ’ that the instructions to the jury were erroneous in several respects. First, the claim is made that the charge placed the burden of proof upon Heublein when the jury was told that Heublein had to “produce evidence which shows or demonstrates some legitimate and non-discriminatory reason for its employment decisions concerning the plaintiff, and that age was not a determinative factor.” Under
McDonnell Douglas Corp. v. Green,
The
McDonnell
procedure was developed in the context of Title VII court trials, and, as the First Circuit has observed, it may not necessarily be helpful to bring it to the attention of the jury.
Loeb v. Textron, Inc., supra,
Second, Heublein challenges the instruction that permitted the jury to consider, as part of recoverable incidental damages, the interest that would have been earned on savings Goodman alleged he was obliged to spend because of his discharge. This instruction related to damages the jury was *131 entitled to award only if it did not find Heublein’s discrimination to have been willful. Since the jury awarded liquidated damages, which it was instructed were allowable only upon a finding of willfulness, it is clear that no damages for lost interest were included in the verdict.
Heublein raises three additional challenges to the charge, none of which was presented to the District Court: failure to instruct that Goodman was required to prove, in establishing his
prima facie
case, that he applied for the position of vice-president,
4
failure to include “intentional” in the definition of willfulness,
5
and failure to require the jury to consider separately the willfulness of each act of discrimination. We decline to consider these contentions, raised for the first time on appeal, Fed.R.Civ.P. 51;
Levitt v. Desert Palace, Inc.,
Heublein next questions the adequacy of Goodman’s compliance with the administrative procedures required by the ADEA, because Goodman did not file a claim with the Connecticut Commission on Human Rights and Opportunities (CHRO) concerning his retaliation charge, after he filed his initial claim concerning denial of promotion. Although § 14(b) of the ADEA, 29 U.S.C. § 633(b) (1976), requires a claimant to file a complaint with the appropriate state agency before proceeding in a federal court,
Oscar Mayer & Co. v. Evans,
Finally, Heublein contends that the District Court erred in permitting Goodman to assert claims arising more than 180 days prior to the filing of the notice of intent to
*132
sue, which is required to be filed with the Secretary of Labor 60 days prior to filing an ADEA lawsuit. ADEA § 7(d), 29 U.S.C. § 626(d) (1976). Section 7(d)(1) bars claims filed more than 180 days prior to such notice, but § 7(d)(2) extends this period to 300 days in any case to which § 14(b), 29 U.S.C. § 633(b), applies. This latter provision, applicable in so-called “deferral states,” /. e., those, like Connecticut, having an age discrimination law, requires an ADEA plaintiff to wait 60 days after proceedings under the state law have been “commenced” before filing his lawsuit in federal court. Goodman commenced a proceeding before the Connecticut CHRO, but his complaint was untimely under state law. Heublein contends that a late state filing renders § 14(b) inapplicable and is therefore ineffective to give an ADEA plaintiff the benefit of the 300-day period established by § 7(d)(2). However, the Supreme Court, construing § 14(b), has held that an ADEA plaintiff’s state filing need not be timely under state law in order to permit him to proceed in federal court.
Oscar Mayer & Co. v. Evans, supra,
Heublein urges that the Ninth Circuit’s reasoning has been impaired by
Mohasco Corp. v. Silver,
The judgment is affirmed. 7
Notes
. “Willfulness” is also pertinent to ADEA suits in another respect. Section 6 of the PPA, 29 U.S.C. § 255, extends the two-year statute of limitations for FLSA suits to three years for “willful” violations; § 7(e) of the ADEA, 29 U.S.C. § 626(e), specifically incorporates § 6 of the PPA. The Fifth Circuit has held, in an FLSA suit, that an employer can act willfully for purposes of the three-year statute of limitations and still be in good faith for purposes of mitigating liquidated damages.
Coleman
v.
Jiffy June Farms, Inc.,
. Prior to
Lorillard
uncertainty existed as to whether the trier of fact in an ADEA case would be the jury (unless waived).
Compare Pons v. Lorillard,
. For example, the jury was told that the “burden of convincing you as to what happened is always on the plaintiff,” the “defendants’ burden is limited to going forward and stating reasons for the action that it did or did not take,” and the “plaintiff has the burden of convincing you with his evidence that he did not get these two promotions to vice-presidency .. . because of his age.”
. Trial counsel objected to the charge for its inclusion of the McDonnell procedure, including the element of a prima facie case, but did not contend that the content of the McDonnell discussion was deficient.
. Trial counsel objected to the charge of willfulness only because the explanation of willfulness at one point included but at another point omitted from the definition of willfulness that Heublein acted in reckless disregard of whether its conduct violated the ADEA. Trial counsel suggested this left the definition “ambiguous,” but did not ask that the definition include “intentional,” the point now urged on appeal.
. In finding, under proper instructions, that Heublein had denied Goodman a promotion
because of
age, the jury necessarily concluded that Heublein’s action was intentional. In a discriminatory treatment case, such as this, an employer’s action, if taken
because of
an impermissible factor such as age, cannot be the result of negligence, mistake, or other innocent reason. On the other hand, in a discriminatory impact case, where an employer acts on the basis of some standard that is shown, in practice, to have a disproportionate impact on some group identifiable by a characteristic such as age, a finding of liability will not inevitably mean that the employer discriminated intentionally.
Cf. Geller v. Markham,
. While this appeal was pending, Goodman filed a motion with this Court, asking that the judgment be modified to provide for interest on the jury’s award from the date of the verdict until the date of the judgment. Without intimating any views on the merits of this claim, we deny the motion without prejudice to renewal before the District Court, which has not yet been afforded an opportunity to consider either the merits of the claim or whether the additional relief has been sought too late. See generally, Comment, Interest on Judgments In the Federal Courts, 64 Yale L.J. 1019 (1955).
