Hilbum Joe Neely, born in October 1940, appeals from a judgment n.o.v. entered by the trial judge,
The governing law is familiar. We are to sustain the judgment n.o.v. if, considering all of the record evidence, and viewing it most favorably to the party opposing the motion for judgment n.o.v., the evidence and inferences from it point so strongly in favor of the motion that reasonable jurors could not have arrived at a contrary verdict.
Boeing Company v. Shipman,
Defendant Delta manufactures building bricks from clay. Appellant Neely went to work at its brickyard, then owned by a predecessor in interest, as a shipping clerk when he was 18. Around 1977, after rising through a series of jobs, he became plant superintendent at age 37 — a position that he held for six years. At that time, in 1983, he was demoted to a series of lesser positions, although retaining his superintendent’s salary. At last, in April 1984, Neely was discharged at age 43 and replaced by another 40-odd year old slightly younger than he.
Neely was his own, sole fact witness, testifying to the foregoing and adding that his file contained no written reprimands. In addition, he asserted that on the occasion of his termination, he was told by the bearer of bad tidings that Delta was bringing in new people and younger people. 1
Delta responded with proof that Neely had failed to supervise employees properly, had falsified gas records, had mismarlced and miscounted bricks, and had burned sev *1226 eral loads of bricks because of improper temperature settings. None of this evidence was specifically rebutted; nor was testimony that written warnings were not used for salaried workers such as Neely.
The sole evidence, even from Neely, supporting his claim that age played any part in his discharge was weak, vague, and flatly denied. We agree with the trial judge, who heard the evidence and whose conclusions regarding it merit deference, that reasonable persons could not conclude, in the face of the unrebutted evidence of Neely’s poor performance, that his comparatively youthful age played any part in his discharge. Indeed, it seems doubtful that his self-serving and uncorroborated statement would satisfy even the scintilla rule, were that still our law.
Boeing
assumes that some evidence may exist to support a position which is yet so overwhelmed by contrary proof as to yield to a directed verdict; it is not necessary that the evidence be no more than a scintilla or amount to a claim that frogs fly or stones levitate.
See Ralston Purina v. Hobson,
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. It is not contended that Barrett, the messenger, made the decision to discharge Neely; and Barrett strenuously denied having made the remarks that Neely attributed to him.
