This case is before us on remand from the Supreme Court.
See Gross v. FBL Financial Servs., Inc.,
—— U.S. -,
I.
Jack Gross sued his employer, FBL Financial Group, Inc. (“FBL”), alleging that FBL violated the Age Discrimination in Employment Act (“ADEA”) and the Iowa Civil Rights Act (“ICRA”) by demoting him because of his age in 2003. The case was tried to a jury, and the district court gave one marshalling instruction that applied to both causes of action. The jury returned a verdict in favor of Gross, and awarded him damages of $20,704 in lost past salary and $26,241 in lost past stock options, for a total of $46,945 in lost compensation. The jury awarded no damages for emotional distress, and found that FBL’s conduct was not “willful.” After trial, the district court denied FBL’s motion for judgment as a matter of law based on sufficiency of the evidence, and denied FBL’s motion for new trial based on alleged evidentiary errors. The court also denied Gross’s motion for attorney’s fees. Both parties appealed.
We reversed and remanded for a new trial based on an erroneous jury instruction.
Gross v. FBL Financial Servs., Inc.,
We held that the jury instruction impermissibly shifted the burden of persuasion to FBL to prove that age was not the determining factor in its employment deci
The Supreme Court granted Gross’s petition for a writ of certiorari, and held that the burden of persuasion never shifts to the party defending an alleged mixed-motive discrimination claim brought under the ADEA. Gross, 129 S.Ct. at 2348. Our opinion had assumed that the burden of persuasion would shift if the plaintiff presented “direct evidence” of age discrimination, so the Court vacated our opinion and remanded the case for further consideration. The parties have filed supplementаl briefs addressing how the case should be resolved on remand.
II.
We conclude that FBL is entitled to a new trial on Gross’s claim under the ADEA. Gross has not disputed our conclusion that the jury was likely to interpret the final instruction to shift the burden of persuasion to FBL if Gross proved by a preponderance of the evidence that age was a motivating factor in FBL’s decision to demote him. The Supreme Court has clarified that the burden of persuasion never shifts to the defendant in an ADEA case. The final instruction in this case was therefore erroneous. The jury should have been instructed, in substance, that Gross retained the burden of persuasion on his ADEA claim to establish “by a preponderance of the evidence (which may be direct or circumstantial) that age was the ‘but-for’ cause of the challenged employer deсision.”
Gross,
Gross contends on remand that even if a new trial is required on the ADEA claim, the jury instruction was a correct statement of the law under the Iowa Civil Rights Act, and that the jury’s verdict should stand with respect to the state law claim. He relies on a recent decision of the Supreme Court оf Iowa in
Deboom v. Raining Rose, Inc.,
DeBoom
involved an action under the ICRA alleging discrimination based on sex and pregnancy. The trial court in
DeBoom
correctly charged the jury that the plaintiff must prove that sex and pregnancy “was a determining factor” in the employer’s decision to discharge the plaintiff.
Gross reads DeBoom to mean that once a plaintiff establishes that age was a motivating factor in an employer’s adverse action, the employer is liable for age discrimination under the ICRA. In other words, as we understand his supplemental brief, Gross suggests that even if the jury is convinced that the employer would have taken the same adverse action in the absence of an impermissible motive, the plaintiff nonetheless establishes a violation of the statute if the jury believes that age was “a motivating factor.” On that view, it does not matter whether the district court shifted the burden of proof to FBL to establish that Gross would have been demoted regardless of his age, because Gross need not exclude this possibility, and there is no such defense to liability. We are not convinced that DeBoom transforms Iowa law in this manner.
First, such an interpretation of
DeBoom
would conflict with the analytical framework for age discrimination cases that the Supreme Court of Iowa has declared for cases in which there is an assertion that the employer was influenced by mixed motives. In
Landals v. George A. Rolfes Co.,
DeBoom
did not disavow these cases. To the contrary, it cited
Vaughan
as a correct statement of the burden of proof in a discrimination case.
DeBoom,
Second, Gross’s reading of
DeBoom
is an unlikely outcome in view of the text and purpose of the ICRA. A comparison of Title VII of the federal Civil Rights Act and the ICRA illustrates the point. The federal statute, as amended by the Civil Rights Act of 1991, says that an unlawful employment practice is established when a plaintiff “demonstrates that race, color, religion, sex, or national origin was a motivating factor for any employment practice,
even though other factors also motivated the practice,”
42 U.S.C. § 2000e-2(m) (emphasis added), and provides an affirmative defense that restricts remedies, but not liability, if the employer “would have taken the same action in the absence of the impermissible motivating fаctor.”
Id.
2000e-5(g)(2)(B). By contrast, the Iowa statute, like Title VII before 1991 and the ADEA, makes it illegal to discriminate
“because of”
various factors, including the age of an employee. Iowa Code § 216.6(l)(a). In
DeBoom
itself, the Supreme Court of Iowa repeated that the purpose of the Iowa legislature in banning employment discrimination (there, based on sex) was “to prohibit conduct which, had the victim been a member of the opposite sex,
would not have otherwise occurred.”
Third,
DeBoom
was not a mixed-motive case, and the Supreme Court of Iowa had no occasion to address the appropriate jury instructions in such a case.
DeBoom
was a so-called “pretext case,” in which the employer presented a non-discriminatory reason for terminating the plaintiff, and the plaintiff urged that the employer’s proffered reason was a pretext fоr discrimination.
See DeBoom,
None of the opinions in
Gross
or
Price Waterhouse
— majority, plurality, concurring, or dissenting — concluded that an employer is liable for acting “because of’ age оr sex, if the jury finds that the employer would have taken the same action in the absence of the impermissible motive.
See Gross,
FBL suggests that the Supreme Court of Iowa will follow the reasoning of the Supreme Court of the United States in
Gross
that “because of’ age means that age was a “but-for” cause of the employer’s action, and hold that the burden of persuasion never shifts to the defendant under the ICRA. To decide this appeal, we need not predict whether the state supreme court will apply the reasoning of
Gross
to the comparable language in the Iowa statute. Under existing Iowa precedent, the burden of persuasion does not shift to the defendant in a mixed-motive case unless the plaintiff shows by direct evidence that age was a motivating factor in the employer’s decision.
Vaughan,
The parties disagree about the appropriate scope of a new trial. FBL argues that the trial should be limited to the question of liability for age discrimination and damages for lost wages, because Gross did not cross-appeal the jury’s findings that FBL’s conduct was not willful and that Gross proved no emotional distress dаmages. Gross counters that it would be unfair for FBL to obtain a new trial on the issues decided in favor of Gross, but not to allow Gross a new trial on issues decided in favor of FBL. We conclude that the new trial should be limited to the issues of liability and damages for lost compensation.
Gross failed to cross-appeal those portions of the judgment in favor of FBL, and the general rule is that a party must file a cross appeal if he seeks to enlarge his rights beyond the district court’s judgment.
United States v. Am. Ry. Exp. Co.,
There is no per se prohibition on a partial new trial. Whether to limit a new trial to certain issues depends on whether injustice would result from the limitation.
See Gasoline Prods. Co. v. Champlin Refining Co.,
Here, Gross did not file a protective cross-appеal to urge that a new trial on liability and damages for lost compensation would necessitate a new trial on emotional distress damages and willfulness. His supplemental brief suggests incorrectly that FBL actually appealed portions of the judgment in its favor. Gross argues generally that a partial new trial would be “unfair,” but presents no convincing reason to believe that the jury’s decision on liability and lost сompensation was interwoven with its decision on emotional distress and willfulness. Our review of the record leads us to think that compromise is an unlikely explanation for the verdict. It seems more likely, on this evidence, that the jury reached independent decisions on the several issues presented, and simply found that Gross failed to prove willfulness
III.
We briefly address other instructional and evidentiary issues raised by FBL, because they may recur in a new trial.
See Andrews v. Neer,
FBL requested that the district court give a final instruction to the jury that included this sentence: “Defendant is entitled to make its own subjective personnel decisions, absent intentional age discrimination, even if the factor motivating the decision is typically correlated with age, such as pension status, salary or seniority.” The court’s final instruction included only the first half of this sentence, omitting the italicized clause.
We do not think the district court’s instruction on this point was an abuse of discretion. “The form and language of jury instructions are committed to the sound discretion of the district court so long as the jury is correctly instructed on the substantive issues in the case.”
White v. Honeywell, Inc.,
FBL next appeals the district court’s decision to exclude testimony from FBL’s vice president of claims, Andy Lifland, about complaints that he heard from Gross’s coworkers about Gross’s performance in the workplace. In a post-trial order, the court agreed with FBL that our precedent allows testimony about such complaints when the employer shows that it took action on the bаsis of the information.
See Crimm v. Mo. Pac. R.R. Co.,
FBL also contends that the district court should have granted judgment as a matter of law in its favor. Because we remand the case for a new trial, we need not consider whether there was sufficient evidence for a hypothetical jury, properly instructed, to return a verdict in favor of Gross.
See Dennis v. Dillard Dept. Stores, Inc.,
For the foregoing reasons, we reverse and remand for a new trial on the issues of liability for age discrimination under the ADEA and the ICRA and damages for lost compensation. The district court also may consider issues relating to attorney’s fees.
