Case Information
*1 Before LOKEN and BEAM, Circuit Judges, and PERRY, District Judge. [1]
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PERRY, District Judge.
*2 Gage Hunter filed this lawsuit claiming that defendant United Parcel Service, Inc. discriminated against him based on his gender, sexual orientation, and disability when it failed to hire him as a part-time package handler. Hunter appeals the district court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of UPS. After [2]
reviewing the grant of summary judgment de novo , and considering the facts in the light most favorable to Hunter, we affirm. Yon v. Principal Life Ins. Co., 605 F.3d 505, 509-10 (8th Cir. 2010) (standard of review).
I. BACKGROUND
United Parcel Services, Inc., is a parcel delivery company with facilities nation-wide and internationally. In Minneapolis, UPS receives between 200 and 300 applications monthly for the part-time package handler position, and it hires an average of 40 of those applicants each month. The position requires employees to load up to 1300 packages per hour and lift up to 70 pounds. Although part- time, the position comes with medical benefits and tuition reimbursement. An applicant is required to do two things before being granted an interview: (1) complete the online application and (2) tour a sorting facility to observe the type of labor the position requires.
Interviews for the part-time package handler position last between seven and fifteen minutes. Interviewers focus on whether the candidate is likely to stay with the company because of the expense and frequency of turnover. Interviewers look at the applicant’s interest in the benefits package, the applicant’s job history, and the applicant’s interview responses. Interviewers also routinely ask applicants why they are interested in the position and whether they are able to perform the job functions. After the interview, the interviewer codes the application indicating that the applicant should receive a second interview or one of several pre-established summary conclusions, like “poor interview responses” or “poor job history,” to indicate that the applicant should not receive a second interview. The interviewer can only use one code, even if more than one applies.
*3 Gage Hunter was born female, but has identified as male since he was a child. Hunter first submitted an application for employment with UPS in 2006. At the time of his 2006 application, Hunter was presenting himself as female and submitted his application under his birth name, Jessica Axt. He was offered a position, but declined it because he was interested in a position with a different employer. This case arises out of another application Hunter submitted, in 2008, again with the name Jessica Axt, for a part-time package handler position. At that time, Hunter had begun presenting himself as male. Hunter had not yet had any surgical procedures related to gender reassignment, but he had recently begun wearing a “binder” to bind his breasts and had started taking male hormones. Hunter was also receiving social security disability benefits based on a psychological disorder that only allowed him to work part-time.
In March of 2008, a UPS recruiter, David Weinstein, sent Hunter an email about open positions. Weinstein testified that UPS routinely contacts previous applicants to see if they are still interested in working for UPS. Hunter and Weinstein had some conversation via email where Hunter stated that he was having trouble with the online application. Weinstein told Hunter that he could get help with his application when he toured the packaging facility.
On April 2, 2008, Hunter participated in a tour of the packaging facility led by Brad Trendle. Hunter attempted to sign up for an interview time after the tour, but Trendle told Hunter that his name was not on the list. On April 11, 2008 and April 16, 2008, Hunter came back to interview, but he was again told he was not on the interview list. Hunter then explained to Trendle that he was having trouble completing his online application and Trendle adjusted a setting that allowed Hunter to complete the application. On April 23, 2008, the next time Hunter came back, he was granted an interview.
Trendle interviewed Hunter for eight minutes. In addition to the binder used to bind his breasts, Hunter wore clothing he had purchased from the men’s department: a brown long sleeved, button down shirt, brown pants, and dress shoes. Hunter also had a short haircut. Hunter told Trendle he was interested in the position and would like to work for UPS. Trendle asked Hunter why he wanted to work part-time, and Hunter said he could only work part-time because he received social security. Trendle showed Hunter the job description and asked Hunter whether he would be able to perform the job functions. Hunter indicated that he could perform the job functions. Trendle also asked Hunter whether he was interested in the benefits the job offered, i.e., medical benefits and tuition reimbursement. Hunter indicated that he already received social security disability benefits.
At the end of the interview, another individual came in and whispered something in Trendle’s ear, then Trendle told Hunter that UPS was not hiring. Trendle coded Hunter’s application as “poor interview answers.” Trendle testified that Hunter’s job history was also problematic. Hunter’s application showed he had four jobs in less than three years. One of the positions was a job as a package handler at Federal Express, which Hunter quit after one year to take a lesser paying job. Trendle testified that he thought the history suggested that Hunter did not like this kind of work. Hunter testified that he left FedEx for a better paying job, but when that job fell through he was forced to take a lesser paying job.
On June 26, 2008, Hunter emailed Weinstein saying he was still interested in working for UPS, he had gone on a tour of the packaging facility, and Trendle told him UPS was not hiring. Weinstein responded with inquiries about Hunter’s location and hour preferences; he then set Hunter up for another tour on July 10, 2008. At the end of that tour, Hunter was told he could not sign up for another interview because he had already interviewed.
The evidence shows that, during March, April, and May 2008, Trendle hired several applicants with sporadic or no job history. For example, he hired a man who had held only one job for two months before applying to UPS, a man who had held five jobs in four years, a man who had held six jobs in less than four years, a woman who held three jobs in a little over a year, and three men with no job history. The three applicants with no job history were all students, but two other students with no job history were not hired and their rejections were coded as “poor job history.” UPS also hired an applicant who held a job as a package handler at a competitor for just three months, but it did not hire a different applicant who held a job as a package handler at a competitor for six months. The applicant who was hired, though, was not interviewed by Trendle and stated on his application that he quit the previous job because there was not enough work.
Hunter asserts that UPS discriminated against him based on his gender, sexual orientation, and disability, in violation of the Minnesota Human Rights Act, Minn. Stat. § 363A.01 et. seq .; Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 42 U.S.C. § 2000e et seq .; and the Americans With Disabilities Act, 42 U.S.C. § 12101 et seq . On July 22, 2011, the district court granted UPS’s motion for summary judgment. Hunter then requested the district court’s permission to bring a motion for reconsideration, and, on August 30, 2011, the court entered an Order denying Hunter’s request. [3]
II. DISCUSSION
Title VII makes it “an unlawful employment practice for an employer . . . to
fail or refuse to hire . . . or otherwise to discriminate against any individual . . .
because of such individual’s . . . sex.” 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-2(a)(1). Gender
stereotyping can violate Title VII when it influences employment decisions. Price
Waterhouse v. Hopkins,
When interpreting cases under the MHRA, Minnesota courts give weight to
federal court interpretations of Title VII claims because of the substantial
similarities between the statutes. Wayne v. MasterShield, Inc.,
A. Gender Non-Conformity
Hunter’s primary argument on appeal is that he was discriminated against based on his non-conformity to gender stereotypes or his being perceived as transgendered. The district court found that Hunter had failed to establish a prima facie case of discrimination because there was no evidence that Trendle knew Hunter was transgendered or perceived him as transgendered and discriminated against him on that basis. We agree.
Hunter argues that plaintiffs alleging discrimination should not be required
to prove an interviewer’s subjective awareness of a protected class. He claims,
citing Goins v. West Grp.,
In some cases, the claimant’s protected status is obvious and it is reasonable
to assume the employer was aware of such status, for example, if a woman is nine
months pregnant with a protruding stomach she makes no attempt to conceal,
awareness can be presumed. See Geraci v. Moody-Tottrup, Int’l, Inc.
At the time of the interview, Hunter had not undergone any surgical
procedures related to gender reassignment. There is no evidence that he had any
facial hair, that he told Trendle he identified as male or transgendered, or that
Trendle engaged in any dialogue or action that suggested he was aware of
Hunter’s protected status. Instead, the evidence shows that Hunter applied to UPS
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using the name Jessica Axt, yet came to the interview with his breasts bound, a
short haircut, and wearing clothing and shoes he purchased from the men’s
department. None of these facts, even when taken together and even when viewed
in the light most favorable to Hunter, are exclusive to transgendered or gender
non-conforming individuals. Many fashion trends have called for women to wear
short haircuts, men’s clothes, or men’s shoes. To hang a rule of law on fashions
that may change with the times would create an unworkable rule. Although there
is no particular type of evidence that is required to establish a prima facie case of
gender or sexual orientation discrimination, some evidence that Trendle was aware
of Hunter’s protected status was required. The district judge applied the correct
test: whether UPS refused to hire Hunter
because of
his gender or sexual
orientation. See Harrison,
B. Pretext
Even if a jury could find that Trendle inferred that Hunter was transgendered or gender non-conforming at the time of the interview, UPS provided a legitimate non-discriminatory reason for not hiring Hunter. UPS contends both that Hunter gave poor interview responses and that he had a poor job history. Specifically, Trendle asked Hunter whether he was interested in the benefits the job offered, i.e., medical benefits and tuition reimbursement. Hunter testified that he told Trendle he already received social security disability benefits. As to job history, Hunter’s job application showed he had four jobs in less than three years. One of the positions was a job as a package handler at FedEx, which Hunter quit after one year and then took a lesser paying job. Hunter testified that he left FedEx for a better paying job, which fell through, so he was forced to take the lesser paying job, but there is no evidence that anyone at UPS was made aware *10 of that explanation, and Trendle testified that he thought the history suggested Hunter did not like being a package handler. UPS articulated legitimate, non- discriminatory reasons for not hiring Hunter which would have satisfied its burden at the second stage of the McDonald Douglas analysis on Hunter’s gender discrimination claim, sexual orientation discrimination claim, and even the faintly discussed disability discrimination claim. The burden then shifts to Hunter to prove those reasons were a pretext for discrimination.
Hunter argues that a genuine issue of fact exists as to whether UPS’s stated reasons for the adverse action was pretextual because he was turned away twice when he came in for interviews he had scheduled, Trendle falsely told him UPS was not hiring, the objective criteria of job history was not the initial reason given for not hiring him, the code Trendle used to eliminate him from consideration for the job was a subjective criteria, and the objective criteria of job history was not evenly applied to all applicants. We disagree.
Hunter was turned away for the first two scheduled interviews because he had not completed an online application, which is required before an applicant can receive an interview for the part-time package handler position. The very next time Hunter came to UPS after filling out his online application, he was granted an interview. This is not evidence of discrimination.
Trendle’s having lied to Hunter is likewise insufficient evidence to create a
genuine issue of material fact in this case. When an employer’s stated reason for
not hiring an applicant or firing an employee is false, an inference of
discrimination may potentially be created. Loeb v. Best Buy Co., Inc., 537 F.3d
867, 873 (8th Cir. 2008). Although Trendle lied to Hunter at the interview, the
false reason was not noted on any of the internal UPS documents, nor has UPS
ever argued that it rejected Hunter because it was not hiring. At all stages of this
litigation, UPS has conceded that it was hiring and has turned over comparative
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evidence showing it was hiring. Further, while an employer’s offering shifting
reasons for not hiring an individual could potentially create an inference of
discrimination, Lake v. Yellow Transp., Inc.,
Additionally, an interviewer’s evaluation of interview responses, although
subjective, does not, in and of itself, create an inference of discrimination.
Employers are entitled to compare applicants’ performance during interviews.
Tyler v. Univ. of Ark.,
Finally, while the uneven application of objective criteria might warrant an
inference of discrimination, Torgerson v. City. of Rochester,
The judgment of the district court is affirmed.
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Notes
[1] The Honorable Catherine D. Perry, Chief Judge, United States District Court for the Eastern District of Missouri, sitting by designation.
[2] The Honorable Ann Montgomery, United States District Judge for the District of Minnesota.
[3] UPS’s argument that this appeal was not timely filed need not be addressed
in detail. See DuBose v. Kelly,
