ON PETITION FOR REHEARING
(Opinion Dec. 15, 1992, 5 Cir., 1992,
Thе Hamilton plaintiffs request a rehearing on our ruling in
Britt v. Grocers Supply Co., Inc.,
The district court held that the plaintiffs failed to establish a prima
facie case,
and dismissed the case after the close of plaintiff’s case-in-chief. Our decision affirmed the district court’s decision; however, we affirmed on the grounds that the plaintiffs failed to show that the defendant’s artiсulated nondiscriminatory reasons for refusing to rehire plaintiffs constituted pretexts. The Hamilton plaintiffs argue that
McDonnell Douglas Corp. v. Green,
The standard of review for a directed verdict is the same as that for review of a summary judgment.
Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc., 477
U.S. 242,
To establish a violation under the ADEA, the plaintiffs must show some adverse employment action by the defendant.
See Young v. Houston,
The plaintiffs voluntarily went оn strike, forcing the company to hire replacements. The replacements were eventually made permanent, and few of the striking workers were ever recalled. The plaintiffs claimed adverse treatment based on two of Grocers’ employment decisions: (1) the decision to permanently replace the striking workers and (2) the failure to recall the strikers as positions became available. They contend that these decisions were motivated by age discrimination because the replacemеnt workers as a group were younger than the striking workers as a group.
1
Relying on
Metz v. Transit Mix,
This Court has held that the plaintiff “must show that [the employer] gave preferential treatment to a younger employee under ‘nearly identical’ circumstances.”
Little,
The plaintiffs failed to meet the test set out by the district court. They failed to establish that the company refused to consider recall applications of protected employees over age forty. The record indicates that of the 34 strikers who were returned to work prior to the end of the strike, 20 were age forty or ovеr. All of the remaining strikers, regardless of age, were permanently replaced. Pursuant to the recall agreement, the defendant made 120 recall offers. The average age of the strikers to whom these оffers were made was 49.4 years old. Of the 120 offers, 104 went to persons age 40 or over, while only 16 went to persons under age 40. In light of the lack of evidence showing that younger strikers were more favorably treated than оlder strikers, we conclude that the plaintiffs have not established a prima facie ease.
*100 For the foregoing reasons, the request for rehearing is DENIED.
Notes
. Members of the plaintiffs’ group include workers under 40 years old.
