In this appeal, we review for the second time Gary McKnight’s claim that he should be reinstated to his employment at General Motors Corporation (“GM”). We first reviewed his claim in 1990, after he won a jury verdict on a 42 U.S.C. § 1981 claim and a judgment under Title VII.
McKnight v. General Motors Corp.,
We reversed the verdict under § 1981 in light of
Patterson v. McLean Credit Union,
On remand, the district court reconsidered its reinstatement order, and again declined to order GM to reinstate McKnight or to award front pay. The court also denied McKnight’s motion to reconsider that decision. Written opinions on both decisions were published in
McKnight v. General Motors Corp.,
Reopening the Record
We do not believe the district court abused its discretion in declining to reopen the record or in refusing to order reinstatement or front pay. In its initial opinion, McKnight I, the district court stated that reinstatement was not appropriate in this case because the relationship between McKnight and GM was acrimonious, and because McKnight preferred not to be reinstated in his former position, but in a corporate finance or banking position. Reinstatement was also inappropriate, it found, because
It is clear that in the instant case the plaintiff has been fully compensated and thereby made whole by the award of compensatory damages, and the defendant has been properly punished by the award of punitive damages. Complete justice requires no more in the context of the remedial purpose of Title VII.
Because we struck the punitive and compensatory damages, we ordered the district court to reconsider its refusal to order McKnight’s reinstatement, or in lieu thereof, to award front pay. Contrary to McKnight’s present contention however, we did not order the court to reopen the record and gather new evidence on McKnight’s employment status. Our opinion was silent as to whether the record should be supplemented. That decision, together with the decision on the merits, was left to the sound discretion of the trial judge. “A discretionary order will only be set aside if it is clear that no reasonable person could concur in the trial court’s assessment.”
Tennes v. Commonwealth,
The district judge declined to reopen the record for several reasons. He noted correctly that our opinion did not require it.
McKnight III,
McKnight’s reliance on
Grafenhain v. Pabst Brewing Co.,
Similarly, in
Welborn,
the Eleventh Circuit reversed the district court’s judgment that the plaintiff had failed to establish a
prima facie
case of discrimination.
In this case, our remand was not based upon a reversal of the district court’s evaluation of the facts at trial. Rather, because we vacated the § 1981 damages and questioned the completeness of the district court’s explanation of its decision to deny reinstatement, we asked the district court to reconsider whether McKnight needed to be reinstated or given front pay to be made whole. This ruling did not require the district court to reopen the record, and we do not believe the court abused its discretion in refusing to do so.
Reinstatement & Front Pay
As to the merits of the district court’s refusal to reinstate McKnight, or to award front pay, we again note that this decision is consigned to the sound discretion of the district court.
Tennes v. Commonwealth,
Although reinstatement is usually the preferred remedy, reinstatement is not always required. The decision regarding reinstatement is within the discretion of the district court, and several factors may persuade the district judge after careful consideration in a particular case that the preferred remedy of reinstatement is not possible or is inappropriate.
Coston v. Plitt Theatres, Inc.,
The jury refused to award McKnight damages for “loss of future earning capacity” caused by GM’s discrimination.
See
Special Verdict at 2, Rec. Doc. 83. A jury’s verdict, when § 1981 and Title VII claims are tried simultaneously, binds the judge on factual issues common to both claims.
Daniels v. Pipefitters Association,
The trial court held that reinstatement was not appropriate because McKnight asked for a “completely different job and to be relocated in a new city.”
McKnight III,
McKnight relies on
Ellis v. Ringold School District,
In
Ellis,
after her discharge the plaintiff, a school teacher, worked for higher pay in a munitions factory for two years, then taught for a semester at a private school, and finally took a job as a janitor.
Further, in this case, the district court did consider and deny McKnight’s request for reinstatement, and McKnight did more than take a job in an unrelated field. He testified at trial that he had become a stockbroker, and in his post-trial pleadings requesting reinstatement, expressed a preference for a job in his new field. The district court denied front pay on remand in part because the jobs McKnight held after his discharge from GM paid more.
See
Damages in employment discrimination cases are not intended to insure a plaintiff’s future financial success. “Damages should ordinarily extend only to the date upon which ‘the sting’ of any discriminatory conduct has ended.”
Smith v. Great American Restaurants, Inc.,
A proper cutoff time for a damage assessment in this case should be the day when the wounds of discrimination should have healed. In this case it is certain that the sting of any discriminatory conduct ended, or should have ended, substantially in advance of the date the trial on damages commenced.
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Based oh this evidence, the court could have found that the sting of discrimination had ended by the time of trial. In any event, the jury did find that McKnight’s future earning ability was not impaired. The district court also looked to this evidence when he denied reinstatement and front pay. He explained that “it is arguable that Mr. McKnight presented a ‘success’ story to the jury — electing to impress the jurors with his entitlement to large damages, 'both compensatory and punitive. He now would reverse his field and seek to demonstrate his impoverished condition at a reopened trial.”
McKnight III,
We also note that when a party fails to provide the district court with the essential data necessary to calculate a reasonably certain front pay award, the court may deny the front pay request.
Coston,
Given the speculative nature of front pay in this case, together with McKnight’s trial strategy and post-discharge’ employment history, we do not believe the district court abused its discretion in declining to order his reinstatement or to award front pay.
Prejudgment Interest
McKnight also challenges the district court’s refusal to order GM to pay prejudgment interest on his back pay award. “An award of prejudgment interest lies within the discretion of the trial court.”
Kossman v. Calumet County,
Here, McKnight did not ask for prejudgment interest until after we remanded the case and the district court entered its decision and order on remand on July 15, 1991.
See
Plaintiff’s Motion for Order Requiring Payment of Partial Post-Judgment Interest & Pre-Judgment Interest, dated August 1, 1991, Rec.Doc. 147. This request came almost three years after the district court entered its first judgment, and much later than the plaintiff’s request in
Brooms.
McKnight provides no explanation for his tardy motion. This case is clearly distinguishable from
Williamson v. Handy Button Machine Co.,
Attorneys’ Fees
GM asks us to set aside the attorneys’ fees award entered by the district court. The parties stipulated to the amount of fees prior to the first appeal in this case, and the district court’s judgment is based on this stipulation. The district court was entitled to hold GM to the stipulation, absent “manifest injustice” to the parties.
See Grafenhain,
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the district court is
Affirmed.
Notes
. When we evaluate the relief awarded by the district court, we may look to both Title VII and ADEA (Age Discrimination in Employment Act) cases. As we pointed out in
Syvock v. Milwaukee Boiler Manufacturing Co., Inc.,
