Holly Cox, Appellee, v. Dubuque Bank & Trust Company, Appellant.
No. 98-1477
United States Court of Appeals FOR THE EIGHTH CIRCUIT
Submitted: October 15, 1998; Filed: December 22, 1998
Before BOWMAN, Chief Judge, HANSEN, Circuit Judge, and VIETOR, District Judge.
Holly Cox sued her former employer, Dubuque Bank and Trust (“DB&T” or “the Bank“), alleging the Bank had discharged her on the basis of her age and sex in violation of the Age Discrimination in Employment Act (“ADEA“),
I.
Because the Bank has appealed on the grounds it was entitled to judgment as a matter of law, we recite the facts of this case in the light most favorable to the jury verdict. See Newhouse v. McCormick & Co., 110 F.3d 635, 639 (8th Cir. 1997). Ms. Cox was born on June 20, 1943, and started working for DB&T as a teller at its Main Bank in July 1968. She received a series of promotions, and in 1984 transferred from the Main Bank to serve as a loan officer and branch manager at the Plaza Branch, one of DB&T‘s four branches. Subsequently, the Bank made a number of changes to its organizational structure that affected Ms. Cox‘s title and duties. The Bank stopped designating individuals as branch managers, and it converted its loan officers into financial service counselors, who, in addition to lending responsibilities, had deposit duties and actively attempted to sell the Bank‘s retail services to deposit customers. By 1994, when the Bank discharged Ms. Cox, she was working as a loan officer and financial service counselor at the Plaza Branch.
In 1987, while she was working at the Plaza Branch, Ms. Cox became engaged to and subsequently married Don Cox. Mr. Cox served as an agency manager for State Farm Insurance Company and did considerable work with DB&T. Mr. Cox also
On June 21, 1994, one day after Ms. Cox turned fifty-one years old, DB&T officers informed her that the Bank, based on responses to a customer survey, would close the Plaza Branch in November 1994. The Bank also informed Ms. Cox that it would have no position for her after the branch closed. However, the Bank did relocate all other Plaza Branch employees, including two tellers, a teller-supervisor, and nineteen or twenty employees from the Bank‘s Trust Department, which had been located in a storefront next to the Plaza Branch.
Ms. Cox timely filed a claim with the Iowa Civil Rights Commission and the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission. Upon receiving a right-to-sue letter, Ms. Cox filed suit against DB&T, alleging it had discriminated against her on the basis of her age and sex in violation of the ADEA and Title VII. To prove her age discrimination claim, Ms. Cox offered evidence that can be grouped in five categories. First, Ms. Cox introduced evidence that she, a member of the class protected by the ADEA, was the only Bank employee working at the Plaza Branch who was not offered another position at DB&T when it closed the branch. Second, Ms. Cox introduced evidence that, after she became engaged to Mr. Cox, she repeatedly had been referred to as a “short-timer” and asked by her co-workers and supervisors if she intended to retire at the same time as her husband. Third, Ms. Cox introduced evidence that in March 1994 DB&T hired two financial service counselors younger than Ms. Cox, and, after closing the Plaza Branch, retained both these employees instead of Ms. Cox,
After a three-day trial, a jury returned a verdict finding the Bank had violated the ADEA by discriminating against Ms. Cox on the basis of her age when it discharged her. (The jury found for DB&T on the sex discrimination claim and a sex-and-age discrimination claim; these findings are not appealed.) The jury awarded Ms. Cox $20,000 in back pay. The District Court added $69,498.31 in front pay, $52,805.50 in attorney fees, and $4,246.12 in costs. DB&T moved for a judgment as a matter of law or a new trial. When the District Court denied this motion, DB&T appealed.
II.
DB&T first argues that the evidence of age discrimination presented at trial was not sufficient to sustain a verdict in Ms. Cox‘s favor, and that the District Court erred when it denied the Bank‘s motion for judgment as a matter of law. This Court reviews de novo a district court‘s denial of judgment as a matter of law. See Cross v. Cleaver, 142 F.3d 1059, 1066 (8th Cir. 1998). Applying the same standard as the district court, this Court must determine whether Ms. Cox presented evidence sufficient to allow a reasonable jury to find that the Bank had discriminated against her on the basis of her
After viewing the facts of this case in the light most favorable to Ms. Cox, this Court cannot conclude that no reasonable juror could find in her favor. After showing that she was a member of the class protected by the ADEA, Ms. Cox presented evidence that she was the only Bank employee not retained when DB&T closed the Plaza Branch. The Bank had found positions for all the other Plaza Branch employees, but said it could not find a position for her, an experienced and competent financial service counselor, despite the fact that it anticipated finding positions for two new, younger, unassigned financial service counselors. In addition, Ms. Cox presented evidence that Bank employees and officers, including those with decision-making authority regarding her employment, repeatedly asked Ms. Cox when she would retire and indicated they expected her to retire soon. Ms. Cox also presented testimony from which a reasonable juror could find that Ms. Cox‘s immediate supervisor, Lisa Stevenson, showed animosity toward Ms. Cox on the basis of her age, and that this age-based animosity might have been a cause for Ms. Cox‘s discharge.
This Court has some doubts regarding the sufficiency of Ms. Cox‘s evidence, particularly since two of the employees relocated by DB&T after the closing of Plaza Branch were older than Ms. Cox and one of the new, younger financial service counselors was only two years younger than Ms. Cox. However, we cannot conclude that no reasonable juror could find that DB&T had discriminated against Ms. Cox on the basis of her age when it discharged her. This Court therefore finds there is sufficient evidence to uphold the jury‘s verdict, and affirm the District Court‘s denial of the Bank‘s motion for judgment as a matter of law.
III.
Since this Court has found the evidence sufficient to uphold the jury‘s verdict, and thus cannot grant DB&T judgment as a matter of law, we must next determine if the District Court properly instructed the jury. At the instructions conference, DB&T asked the District Court to instruct the jury regarding an employer‘s right to make reasonable inquiries into an employee‘s retirement plans. The Bank proposed the following instruction: “You are specifically instructed that neither the state nor the federal law prohibits an employer from asking the retirement plans of an employee if reasonable under the circumstances.” Trial Tr. at 569. The District Court omitted this proposed instruction from the charge based on its belief that “the defendant‘s proposed instruction on this issue was tantamount to saying that there was nothing wrong with repeated retirement inquiries” asked of an employee “after she stated that she was not interested in early retirement.” Cox v. Dubuque Bank & Trust Co., No. C96-1004, slip op. at 5-6 (N.D. Iowa Jan. 13, 1998) (Order).
When a party claims a district court erred in refusing to give a proposed jury instruction, this Court applies a deferential standard, reversing only for an abuse of discretion. See Thomlison v. City of Omaha, 63 F.3d 786, 790-91 (8th Cir. 1995). In Thomlison, this Court adopted a standard of review that divides the inquiry of whether the district court abused its discretion when it refused to adopt a proposed instruction into three parts: the proposed instruction must (1) correctly state the applicable law; (2) address matters not adequately covered by the charge; and (3) involve a point “so important that failure to give the instruction seriously impaired the party‘s ability to present an effective case.” Id. (quoting Wood v. President & Trustees of Spring Hill College, 978 F.2d 1214, 1221 (11th Cir. 1992)). The third part of this test, that failure to give the proposed instruction must have “seriously impaired the party‘s ability to present an effective case,” incorporates this Court‘s requirement that failure to give a proposed instruction must result in prejudice to the requesting party before a new trial will be ordered. See, e.g., Walker v. AT&T Techs., 995 F.2d 846, 849 (8th Cir. 1993).
Finally, this Court concludes that the failure to give the proposed instruction seriously impaired the Bank‘s ability to present an effective case. Ms. Cox relied heavily on evidence regarding repeated retirement inquiries and Bank employees’ beliefs she would soon retire to prove that DB&T had violated the ADEA. During her opening statement, the plaintiff mentioned Bank employees’ inquiries about her retirement plans at least six times. See Trial Tr. at 19 (promising the jury the plaintiff would “present evidence about the many, many times Holly [Cox] was asked if she was retiring“); id. at 22 (relating that Bank employees asked Ms. Cox “point blank, ‘Are you going to retire now that you are married?‘“); id. at 23 (saying one of Ms. Cox‘s supervisors said, “‘Holly, we need to know your retirement plans.‘“); id. at 26 (saying Ms. Cox “continue[d] to be asked, ‘When will you retire?‘“); id. at 27 (“She was telling them ‘I‘m not retiring. Why do you keep asking me[?]’ but it seemed to be going over everybody‘s head.“); id. at 28 (saying that when Ms. Cox met with her supervisors to learn she was discharged, “The . . . first words out of anybody‘s mouth come from [the Bank‘s president,] ‘Holly, what are your retirement plans?‘“); see also id. at 25, 30 (discussing Bank employees’ beliefs that Ms. Cox would soon retire). Twelve witnesses--most of the witnesses called at trial--also testified regarding inquiries or comments made to Ms. Cox about her retirement or Bank employees’ beliefs that she would retire soon.3 Furthermore, Elizabeth Creger, the Dubuque Human Rights
