OPINION
In this appeal from judgment following a court trial of a claim under the Minnesota Human Rights Act, the employer asserts that the district court erred by finding discrimination on the basis of pregnancy. Because the district court’s findings are insufficient to permit reasoned appellate review, we reverse and remand for further findings.
FACTS
Gopher Company, Inc. employed Elizabeth Friend as a receptionist from October 2004 until August 2005. Jason Brouwer owns Gopher and made both the decision to hire Friend and to terminate her employment.
Friend’s primary responsibility at Gopher was to answer the phones, a task that required her to be present in the office. Gopher did not have a written attendance policy at the time of Friend’s employment. Employees understood, however, that regular attendance was expected and that they were to call Brouwer on his cell phone if they were unable to report to work.
Soon after Friend began working for Gopher, Brouwer noted problems with Friend’s attendance — “either showing up late or not showing up at all.” Gopher’s office administrator testified that Friend was sometimes absent two or three times a week and characterized her attendance as “by far the worst [he had] seen since [he had] worked there.” Another employee testified that Friend missed work approximately one time a week. Several employees testified that they had to answer phones when Friend was absent; and the added job responsibilities interfered with completing their own work. Brouwer’s wife, who handles payroll for Gopher, testified that Friend worked 1,500.89 of 1,728 scheduled hours during her employment with Gopher.
Many of Friend’s absences were related to an ongoing medical problem that was ultimately diagnosed and treated. But the evidence also included absences that were not attributable to medical reasons. Brou-wer testified to his recollection of Friend being absent from work once because she missed the bus and once because she was moving. He testified that sometimes Friend gave no explanation at all for her absences. Brouwer also testified that sometimes Friend did not call when she missed work. Friend conceded that she did not have a doctor’s appointment on all of the days that she missed work.
Brouwer testified that he had regular conversations with Friend about her poor attendance and that he “told her the importance of her job, the importance of being to work on time, and if she continued to be late or even not to show up, [he] was going to have to make a change.” According to Brouwer, Friend’s attendance improved after their discussions, but then deteriorated again: “It would go in spurts. I mean, she would be good for, you know, a number of weeks and then it would fall back off, and it was pretty irregular.”
Brouwer testified that, toward the end of June, he discussed Friend’s attendance
At the beginning of August 2005, Friend learned that she was pregnant. Friend shared her news with her co-workers. Brouwer learned of the pregnancy, but it is disputed whether Friend told Brouwer directly. Friend testified that she told Brouwer and that he said “congratulations” and immediately told her to get back to work.
Concerned about the impact that Friend’s pregnancy would have on the business, Brouwer discussed the situation with his wife. Brouwer’s wife worked full-time for Gopher until the birth of their first child, took six months off, and then came back to work approximately one day a week. No witness could identify any other employee who continued working at Gopher following a pregnancy, but no evidence indicated the number of individuals who had become pregnant while employed by Gopher. Testimony established that a telemarketer left while pregnant, but Gopher’s marketing director testified that he was considering terminating that employee based on problems with her attendance and attitude.
Brouwer testified that he considered options including “putting] [Friend] in one of the back rooms and allowing] her to do paperwork back there and bringing] somebody else in to be the receptionist or tryting] to get a replacement in the morning ... [since] she usually was in by 10 or - 11.” Brouwer also approached another Gopher employee about the possibility of job-sharing with Friend. Brouwer never discussed with Friend how the pregnancy might impact her ability or desire to work.
Friend had good attendance the first two weeks of August 2005. But on August 16, 2005, Friend experienced “very extreme stomach pain,” and feared a miscarriage. Friend called Brouwer to advise him that she intended to go to the emergency room and would not be in to work that day. Friend spent most of the day at the hospital; physicians ran several tests and instructed Friend to follow up with her regular doctor the next day. Friend called Brouwer to advise him that she would not be at work until after she saw her doctor the next day. According to Friend, Brouwer told her that “he had talked to his wife and that stomach pains were a normal part of pregnancy” and that he expected her to report for work the next day.
Friend saw her doctor at 9 a.m. on August 17, 2005. When she returned home, there was a message on her answering machine from Brouwer telling her that she no longer had a job and could pick up her belongings the following day. Friend called Brouwer and said she “suppose[d she did]n’t have a job anymore,” and Brou-wer told her that was correct. Friend brought this action against Gopher and Brouwer (collectively Gopher) for pregnancy discrimination.
Through written findings of fact and conclusions of law, the district court held Gopher liable for pregnancy discrimination. The district court acknowledged Friend’s attendance issues — finding that she missed more than two weeks of work and worked only eighty-six percent of her scheduled hours between October 11, 2004 and February 4, 2005 — but nevertheless found that while “[Friend] had been missing work occasionally, ... her pregnancy
In addition to challenging the district court’s liability findings, Gopher disputes the damages amount for emotional distress and the inclusion of a mediation fee in the allocation of costs. By notice of review, Friend challenges the calculation of back-pay and the amount allocated for attorneys’ fees.
ISSUE
Did the district court err by finding that Gopher terminated Friend’s employment because of her pregnancy?
ANALYSIS
The Minnesota Human Rights Act (MHRA) prohibits an employer from discharging an employee on the basis of sex, Minn.Stat. § 363A.08, subd. 2 (2008), which is expressly defined to include “pregnancy, childbirth, and disabilities related to pregnancy or childbirth.” Minn.Stat. § 363A.03, subd. 42 (2008). Friend asserted her discrimination claim under a disparate-treatment theory, which required her to prove that her pregnancy “actually motivated” Gopher’s decision to terminate her employment.
Goins v. West Group,
In an appeal from judgment following a court trial, we defer to the district court’s findings of fact unless clearly erroneous. Minn. R. Civ. P. 52.01;
Hubbard v. United Press Int’l, Inc.,
Employment-discrimination claims asserting disparate treatment proceed under one of two evidentiary frameworks.
See, e.g., Goins,
Under the second framework for proving a disparate-treatment claim, the plaintiff relies on “direct evidence” that discrimination was the basis for the employment decision.
Goins,
635 N.W.2d at
The primary difficulty in this appeal is determining under which framework the district court found Gopher liable. The district court’s decision recites the
McDonnell Douglas
test for discriminatory discharge, which requires a plaintiff to show that (1) she was a member of a protected class; (2) she was qualified for the position from which she was discharged; and (3) she was replaced by a nonmember of the protected class.
Hoover,
Typically, the absence of express findings required under the
McDonnell Douglas
test dictates remand to the district court.
See Sigurdson,
Neither the Minnesota Supreme Court nor this court has addressed the type of evidence that is required for proof under a direct-evidence framework. When statutory text and purposes are aligned, we may derive guidance for applying the MHRA from federal caselaw interpreting Title VII.
Compare Anderson,
Until recently, federal appellate courts disagreed on the nature of evidence neces
Three years before the
Price Water-house
decision, the Minnesota Supreme Court declined to adopt in MHRA cases the same-decision analysis that the federal appellate courts had been applying in mixed-motive cases under Title VII.
See Anderson,
The
Price Waterhouse
decision led to a dozen years of debate among the federal appellate courts over the type of evidence a plaintiff was required to present in order to proceed under a direct-evidence framework.
See Desert Palace, Inc. v. Costa,
We conclude that the U.S. Supreme Court’s holding in
Desert Palace
should apply with equal force under the MHRA. Like Title VII, the MHRA includes no statutory language limiting the types of evidence that may be used to prove a discrimination claim. And like the federal common law cited in
DeseH Palace,
Minnesota law “makes no distinction between circumstantial and direct evidence as to the degree of proof required.”
State v. Armstrong,
Unfortunately, our conclusion that a discrimination claim can be pursued under the direct method using circumstantial evidence does not resolve the issue in this case because we remain uncertain whether the district court intended to proceed under that framework. Our review is further hampered by the absence of credibility findings or other findings that resolve or weigh the conflicting testimony at trial. Thus, we conclude that the findings are insufficient to permit effective appellate review and we remand for the district court to make further findings. In those findings, the district court should expressly identify the evidentiary framework under which it is evaluating Friend’s claims and make all findings requisite to the identified framework. Given the need for further findings, we do not, at this point, determine the sufficiency of the evidence to support a claim under either framework.
See Whitaker v. 3M Co.,
Our remand for further findings makes it unnecessary for us to reach the remaining issues raised by Friend and Gopher, including the challenges to the district court’s determinations on damages and attorneys’ fees. Nevertheless, we make the following observations to aid the district court and the parties in resolving these issues without the need for additional appeal and possible remand. Principally, we note the district court’s broad discretion in determining appropriate damages.
Holiday Recreational Indus., Inc. v. Manheim Servs. Corp.,
DECISION
Because the district court did not make sufficient findings to facilitate appellate review under either a McDonnell Douglas or direct-evidence framework, we remand for further findings consistent with this opinion.
Reversed and remanded.
Notes
. This debate was altered but not extinguished by the passage of the Civil Rights Act of 1991, which amended Title VII to provide for liability in mixed-motive cases, but limited the remedies available in same-decision cases.
See Desert Palace,
