DaimlerChrysler Corporation, formerly known as Chrysler, appeals from the judgment entered against it awarding Gerald Salitros $100,000 in punitive damages and $445,516 in front pay on his claim that Chrysler retaliated against him for exercising his rights under the Americans With Disabilities Act. Chrysler also appeals the district court’s award to Salitros of $128,268.52 in attorney’s fees and costs. Chrysler contends that the evidence was not sufficient to support the retaliation claim or the award of punitive damages, and that the punitive damages award cannot stand because the jury failed to award compensatory damages. Chrysler also contends that the district court abused its discretion in awarding front pay and in fixing the amount of the attorney’s fee award. We affirm the district court’s judgment and fee award.
We recite the facts in the light most favorable to the jury’s verdict. Salitros started work at the Chrysler Parts Distribution Center in Minneapolis in 1988, at the age of 46. He worked as a stock-keeper, putting away the merchandise coming into the warehouse. In February 1989, he injured his back in an accident at work in which he fell eighteen and a half feet and landed on his back and neck on cement. When he came back to work after the accident, he had difficulty finding work he could do at the warehouse without aggravating his injuries. He had medical restrictions on the amount of weight he could lift and the range and repetitiveness of movements he could perform. He found that he could work in the Materials Return Area, putting away miscellaneous parts that dealers returned to the warehouse, because the parts were returned in
For the next eight years, Salitros and Chrysler were in regular conflict over what duties Salitros could perform without exceeding his medical restrictions. The ongoing dispute about Salitros’s restrictions was accompanied by personal animosity. Salitros’s union representative, Mark Stone, testified that he heard one of Chrysler’s supervisors refer to Salitros’s grievances as “a big joke,” and he heard them say, “[Sjhould we fuck with Gerry today or leave him alone?” The strain wore heavily on Salitros, who was sometimes. reduced to tears, and who looked “sad all the time” and was “aging rapidly.”
On January 23, 1997, Mark Stone told Salitros that another worker, with similar medical restrictions to Salitros’s and more seniority, had bid on the Materials Return Area job and that Chrysler was going to give the job to the other employee. In fact, Richard Haynes, Chrysler’s Parts Distribution Center manager, testified that he had decided informally that Salitros ought to be able to keep the job, but the decision was not to be announced until the official date for reassignments. • In the meantime, Haynes planned to allow the other employee to try the job for four hours on January 24, with Salitros assigned to other duties that day. When Salitros heard from the union representative that the other employee was going to get the Materials Return job and then was told at the warehouse office that the employee would be doing the Materials Return job the next day, he became very upset. He called his doctor and went by the warehouse office to announce that he wouldn’t be in the next day because he was going to see his doctor and file an EEOC charge. He did both.
Three days later, on January 27, Salit-ros’s doctor sent a fax to the union benefits representative at Chrysler stating that Salitros was off work indefinitely. Salit-ros also called the union benefits representative to make sure he delivered the fax to Chrysler management. Chrysler received the fax, but took the position that it was insufficient to satisfy the notice requirement in the Chrysler-UAW collective bargaining agreement. The collective bargaining agreement provided that an employee could be fired if he was absent for five days without notifying the plant in accordance with the procedure set out in the local agreement. The local agreement described the procedure for reporting absences as follows:
It is expected and appreciated that employees who are absent from work call the warehouse phone number during the first two hours of their starting time on the day of their absence. Absences and tardiness may be reported by telephone or by a fellow employee, but this does not constitute an excused absence.
The union representative phoned Salitros on January 31 and told him that Chrysler was taking the position that the fax was not sufficient notification and that Salitros had to call personally and talk to a supervisor. While Salitros was on the phone with the union representative, he heard Robert Schulte, the warehouse manager, come in and speak to the representative, saying, “[T]hat son of a B, ah, filed another EEOC charge.” Salitros also heard Schulte say he was going to fire Salitros. Salitros testified that he did not feel capable of speaking to his supervisors at that point, and he had been told earlier by the union benefits representative that fax notice was telephone notice. He did not telephone the plant. Schulte sent him a letter that very day terminating his employment for failure to give notice of his
The union filed a grievance regarding the termination, and as a result of the grievance, Chrysler reinstated Salitros on April 8, 1997, retroactive to January 24. At the same time, Chrysler notified Salit-ros that it had placed him on medical leave. Salitros never returned to work, but remained on medical leave through the date of trial. His doctor testified that he was not able to return to work at Chrysler because the stress he experienced there aggravated his physical symptoms. His vocational rehabilitation expert opined that, other than employment with Chrysler, Salitros’s job opportunities would probably be only “intermittent and insubstantial.” He received disability payments, which were substantially less than he would have made had he been able to work.
Salitros brought this suit alleging Chrysler violated the Americans with Disabilities Act, both by failing to make reasonable accommodation for Salitros’s disability and by retaliating against Salitros for asserting his rights under the Act. He also alleged obstruction of his attempts to obtain workers’ compensation benefits and intentional and negligent infliction of emotional distress. 1
The case was tried to a jury, which found that Chrysler did not discriminate against Salitros on the basis of his disability or fail to make reasonable accommodation for his disability and that Chrysler did not intentionally inflict emotional distress. The jury did, however, find that Chrysler had retaliated against Salitros for exercising his rights under the Americans with Disabilities Act. The jury found that Salit-ros had no lost wages or benefits through the date of the verdict, and no other actual damages, but it awarded him $100,000 in punitive damages.
The issue of front pay being reserved for the court, the district judge ruled that Salitros was entitled to front pay of $445,416. He also awarded Salitros attorney’s fees and costs of $107,779.25 and $20,489.27, respectively.
I.
A.
Chrysler first contends that there is insufficient evidence to support the jury’s verdict that it engaged in retaliation against Salitros for exercising his rights under the Americans with Disabilities Act and that the district court should have granted its motion for judgment as a matter of law.
We review de novo the district court’s denial of a motion for judgment as a matter of law.
Stauch v. City of Columbia Heights,
To prove his claim for retaliation, Salitros had to show that he engaged.in activity protected under the Americans with Disabilities Act, that he suffered an adverse employment action, and that there is a causal connection between the protected activity and the adverse action. 42 U.S.C. § 12203 (1994);
Schoffstall v.
Henderson,
Chrysler first contends that Salitros did not produce evidence that he engaged in a protected activity under the Americans with Disabilities Act. At trial, Salitros testified:
Q: And did you file a charge with the EEOC?
A: Yes, I did.
Q: When did you file the charge?
A: I believe, ah, January 30th.
Chrysler did not object to this evidence, and the admission of it is not plain error. Moreover, the EEOC charge was only one incident in a long history of assertions by Salitros of his rights under the Americans with Disabilities Act, as our statement of facts shows. There is evidence of protected activity.
Next, Chrysler contends that there was no evidence the reason Chrysler fired Sal-itros was because of his exercise of statutory rights and that there was unrebutted evidence that the real reason for the firing was the inadequacy of Salitros’s notice of absence, Salitros testified that when he was on the telephone with Mark Stone on January 31, he heard Robert Schulte speaking to Stone, and that Schulte said, “[T]hat son of a B ... filed another EEOC charge.” Salitros’s testimony was corroborated by Stone, who ■ said that Schulte walked into Stone’s office with an EEOC charge in his hand and made that statement. The jury could consider the use of this language in reporting the filing of the EEOC charge relevant to the motivation for firing Salitros the same day.
See Foster v. Time Warner Entm’t Co.,
Moreover, there was other evidence that Chrysler’s managers were impatient with Salitros’s insistence that he could only do the Materials Return Area job. For instance, according to Mark Stone, one supervisor called one of Salitros’s grievances concerning work outside his restrictions “a big joke.” Even -though the jury found that Chrysler did not violate Salitros’s right to reasonable accommodation, it could consistently find that Chrysler retaliated against Salitros for his assertion of a good faith, reasonable belief that he was entitled to greater accommodation than Chrysler was affording him.
See Buettner v. Arch Coal Sales Co.,
There was also abundant evidence from which the jury could have inferred that Chrysler’s reliance on inadequacy of the faxed notice was pretextuab First of all, Chrysler had actual notice before firing Salitros that he would be absent from work for medical reasons, since Salitros stopped by the warehouse office before leaving on January 23 and announced that'
We conclude that there was sufficient evidence to support the verdict finding retaliation.
B.
Chrysler also argues that there was no evidence to support the award of punitive damages under the standard adopted for liability under 42 U.S.C. § 1981a(b)(l) in
Kolstad v. American Dental Association,
II.
Chrysler asks us to reverse the district court’s award of front pay in the amount of $445,516, representing seven years worth of wages and benefits, up to September 8, 2007, Salitros’s anticipated retirement date. Both the district court’s decision to award front pay and its decision as to the amount of front pay are subject to review only for abuse of discretion.
Mathieu v. Gopher News Co.,
As a threshold matter, Chrysler complains that the district court awarded front pay without an evidentiary hearing, relying on documents that had never been entered into evidence and on which Chrysler had no opportunity to cross examine
Even though front pay is an equitable remedy,
see Excel Corp. v. Bosley,
In a similar case, the Seventh Circuit held the district court did not err in granting front pay on the basis of documents that had been submitted to the court after trial, but never introduced into evidence.
Downes v. Volkstwgen of America, Inc.,
Downes raised the issue of front pay in the complaint and VW discussed the issue in its trial brief. If, after notice of this sort, VW nonetheless considered Downes’ post-trial submission of front pay evidence to be prejudicial or a surprise, VW could have requested an evi-dentiary hearing or additional time to respond to Downes’ post-trial motion. VW did neither....
Id.
at 1142. Similarly, in this case, Chrysler had the chance to cross examine Salit-ros’s expert on the methodology that was used on both the back pay and front pay issues. Chrysler neither filed a motion for evidentiary hearing nor made any other objection to the procedure used by the district court until after the district court had ruled on Salitros’s motion. We conclude that the district court did not err in deciding the front pay issue on the record before it.
Cf. Moysis v. DTG Datanet,
Chrysler argues that the district court erred in awarding front pay when Chrysler had already reinstated Sal-itros. Reinstatement is the preferred remedy for unlawful employment discrimination, and front pay is the disfavored alternative, available only when reinstatement is impracticable or impossible.
Kucia v. Southeast Ark. Cmty. Action Corp.,
Chrysler also argues that Salitros cannot receive front pay for any period in which he was unable to work. Chrysler’s argument depends on its assertion that it did nothing to cause Salitros to go on medical leave. This assertion is contrary to findings of the district court:
The jury’s finding of retaliation supports the Court’s conclusion that it was defendant’s retaliatory acts which drove plaintiff to sick leave. Defendant cannot use the sick leave, engendered by its own conduct, to deny plaintiff front pay. If defendant w^ere allowed to profit from its illegal retaliation, the result would directly contradict the ADA’s purpose.
The district court found that Salitros was not physically unable to work, but psychologically unable to return to a hostile workplace. These findings are not clearly erroneous' and they distinguish Salitros’s ease from the principle Chrysler relies on, that “an employer who has discriminated need not reimburse the plaintiff for salary loss attributable to the plaintiff and unrelated
to the employment discrimination.” Starceski v. Westinghouse Elec. Corp.,
Chrysler argues that the award of front pay is contrary to the jury’s verdict exonerating Chrysler on Salitros’s
Chrysler also argues that the award of front pay conflicts with the jury’s finding that Salitros suffered no lost wages and benefits. Determination of front pay is entrusted to the district court’s discretion,
Excel Corp. v. Bosley,
Chrysler also attacks the amount of front pay awarded by the district court. First, Chrysler contends that the award should be reduced by the workers’ compensation, social security payments and disability payments that Salit-ros receives. Our circuit has treated the reduction of pay awards by other benefits as a legal question, rather than as something entrusted to the district court’s discretion.
See Arneson v. Callahan,
The district court held, “Defendant cannot use the sick leave, engendered by its own conduct, to deny plaintiff front pay.” Under the collateral source rule, an employer is entitled to no credit for moneys paid to the injured employee by third parties.
Gaworski v. ITT Commercial Fin. Corp.,
Chrysler also contends that the front pay award improperly included compensation for benefits that Salitros already receives as a Chrysler employee on disability. However, Salitros’s expert at tidal indicated that his account of damages did not include benefits that Salitros was receiving while on disability. The chart on which the court based the front pay award is evidently based on the same methodology. This argument has no merit.
III.
Chrysler attacks the jury’s award of punitive damages on several grounds. First, Chrysler contends that punitive damages could not be awarded at all because the jury did not award compensatory damages.
The federal courts are split several ways over the issue of whether federal law generally, and 42 U.S.C. § 1981a specifically, allow an award of punitive damages without a supporting award of actual or nominal damages.
The most austere position is that taken by the Fourth Circuit in a Fair Housing Act case, that an award of punitives cannot stand without compensatory damages.
People Helpers Found. v. Richmond,
Other courts have held that only where there has been a violation of
constitutional
rights, may punitive damages be awarded without an award of compensatory or nominal damages. In
Louisiana ACORN Fair Housing v. LeBlanc,
In the First and Eleventh Circuits, punitive damages may be awarded under section 1981a if there was an award of backpay, but no compensatory or nominal damages.
EEOC v. W & O, Inc.,
The most liberal position is that section 1981a does not require any other sort of damages to be awarded as a prerequisite to punitive damages. The Seventh Circuit held that section 1981a permits award of punitive damages without compensatory damages or back pay, reasoning from “federal common law” in section 1983 cases.
Timm v. Progressive Steel Treating, Inc.,
We need not decide whether an award of punitives could stand without any award of compensatory or nominal damages, because the award of front pay in this case serves the purpose of compensating Salitros for economic losses resulting from the retaliation. We agree with the First and Eleventh Circuits that the common law policy prohibiting punitive damages where the plaintiff has not shown any harm is not implicated where the plaintiff has shown wage.loss.
See Provencher,
Chrysler further argues that, if punitive damages can be awarded at all without an award of compensatory damages, then the $100,000 award in this case did not bear a rational relationship to the jury’s finding of no actual damages. Therefore, Chrysler contends, the punitive award was unconstitutional under the principles of
Pacific Mutual Life Insurance Co. v. Haslip,
IV.
In something of a scattershot approach, Chrysler raises various eviden-tiary issues, which we review only for abuse of discretion,
Williams v. City of Kansas City, Mo.,
V.
Chrysler appeals from the award of attorney’s fees and costs to Salit-ros, contending that the district court should not have held Salitros to be the prevailing party, that his attorney’s fees should have been reduced to account for partial success, and that both fees and costs should have been reduced because of inadequate record-keeping. The Americans with Disabilities Act permits the court to award fees and costs to the prevailing party. 42 U.S.C. § 12205 (1994). The fees and costs motion was referred to a magistrate judge, who considered all the arguments that Chrysler makes before us and who gave reasoned and persuasive explanations for the amount of fees he arrived at. The district court reviewed the magistrate judge’s recommendation de novo and adopted it. We review fee awards for abuse of discretion, and we review de novo the determination of whether a litigant is a prevailing party.
Jenkins v. Missouri,
Chrysler contends that Salitros was not the prevailing party, but this clearly is not the case, since Salitros received relief on the merits of his retaliation claim.
See Buckhannon Bd. & Care
We affirm the judgment of the district court and the award of fees and costs imposed.
Notes
. The obstruction of workers' compensation benefits and negligent infliction of emotional distress claims were dismissed by Salitros.
. In
Hicks v. Brown Group, Inc.,
