56 Fair Empl.Prac.Cas. 1246,
James G. ELROD, Plaintiff-Appellee,
v.
SEARS, ROEBUCK AND COMPANY, a New York corporation,
Defendant-Appellant.
James G. ELROD, Plaintiff-Appellee, Cross-Appellant,
v.
SEARS, ROEBUCK AND CO., a New York corporation,
Defendant-Appellant, Cross-Appellee.
Nos. 89-3563, 90-3416.
United States Court of Appeals,
Eleventh Circuit.
Aug. 30, 1991.
Tracey I. Arpen, Jr., Marks, Gray, Conroy & Gibbs, P.A., Jаcksonville, Fla., R. Lawrence Ashe, Jr., Paul, Hastings, Janofsky & Walker, Kelly J. Koelker, Atlanta, Ga., for defendant-appellant.
Ann Elizabeth Reesman, McGuiness & Williams, Washington, D.C., for Equal Employment Advisory Council, amicus curiae.
William G. Cooper, Coker, Myers, Schickel, Cooper & Sorenson, P.A., Jacksonville, Fla., David M. Lipman, Lipman & Weisberg, Miami, Fla., for plaintiff-appellee.
Appeals from the United States District Court for the Middle District of Florida.
Before FAY and DUBINA, Circuit Judges, and ESCHBACH*, Senior Circuit Judge.
ESCHBACH, Senior Circuit Judge:
Sears, Roebuck and Company ("Sears") claims it fired James Elrod ("Elrod") because Sears believed hе had been guilty of sexual harassment of female employees in its Jacksonville Credit Central Office ("Jacksonville Office"). Elrod thought he was fired because of his age. We must decide whether Elrod presented sufficient evidence that Sears' asserted justification was pretextual. If not, Sears was entitled to judgment notwithstanding the jury's verdict in Elrod's favor. The District Court concluded the evidence supported the verdict and denied Sears' motion for JNOV. We now reverse.
Elrod became the manager of the Jacksonville Office in 1982. The Jacksonville office formed one portion of a larger Sears territory that was based in Atlanta (the "Atlanta Territory"). In February 1986, Frank Malone ("Malone"), the Atlаnta Territorial Personnel Director, received an anonymous letter allegedly sent by an employee in the Jacksonville Office. The letter complained that Elrod had been humiliating and degrading female employees with vulgar and obscene conversations and gestures. Malone passed the letter on to Elrod's immediate supеrvisor, J.D. Merrill ("Merrill"), the Atlanta Territorial General Credit Manager. Merrill informed Elrod of the anonymous charges against him and then directed Dorothy Rives ("Rives"), Personnel Manager of the Jacksonville Office, to see if there was any merit to the allegations.
Rives then interviewed several employees in the Jacksonville Office--some were chоsen randomly, some had volunteered to speak to Rives, and some were selected because the Rives investigation revealed that they might have witnessed or been the victim of harassment. Her questions of the interviewees were non-directive. For example, Rives did not ask if Elrod had been harassing employees but instead asked what thе employee being interviewed thought of Elrod. After conducting her investigation, Rives reported to Merrill great concerns of sexual harassment in the Jacksonville Office. Her memorandum informed Merrill that she had interviewed a cross-section of employees almost all of whom had been a party to Elrod's numerous sexually related remarks.1 Merrill and Malone then discussed Rives' findings and agreed that Elrod should publicly apologize to the employees in the Jacksonville Office and that Merrill should conduct a Deficiency Interview with Elrod. During this interview, Elrod signed without objection a Memorandum of Deficiency Interview that read:
Inquiries from credit central employees directed to the Tеrritorial Office and to the Jacksonville Personnel Department in recent weeks indicated that a serious problem existed in the Jacksonville Credit Central.Extensive personal interviews with representative employees of the credit central confirmed the following:
Mr. Elrod has on occasion displayed extremely poor judgmеnt and engaged in conduct which was very distasteful to female employees. His language has been described as vulgar and suggestive to the point of causing embarrassment and humiliation. Some of the employees have been made to feel that their jobs are threatened and many of them feel that Mr. Elrod seeks revenge against any еmployee who may have expressed concern about the current situation in the unit.
Mr. Elrod clearly understands that the unsatisfactory conduct in which he has engaged is a very serious violation of company policy and will not be tolerated. He agrees to conduct himself as a gentleman and to fulfill his management duties in complete conformance with company policy. He will make every effort to be sincerely courteous and friendly within the framework of his assignment as unit manager.
Mr. Elrod also understands that any future repetition of unsatisfactory behavior on his part will result in immediate termination.
But shortly after Elrod apologized to his employees, Merrill and Malone were again alerted to a problem in the Jacksonville Office. Rives phoned Merrill and Malone that one of the managers under Elrod had confirmed reports that Elrod was displaying a vindictive attitude to those employees who he believed had squealed on him. The manager had reported to Rives that Elrod had threatened to "get thоse bitches" and had even insinuated that there were certain women in the Jacksonville Office he would like to kill. Within three days of receiving this latest news, Merrill traveled to Jacksonville where he fired Elrod. Similar to the Deficiency Interview, Elrod did not object to the latest charges against him. Elrod was fifty-one years old when he was terminated.
At or abоut the time of Elrod's dismissal, Sears announced it was closing its Atlanta Territorial Office. The effect was to displace several hundred employees in Atlanta, most of whom were transferred to Sears' Headquarters in Chicago. But one manager who was younger than Elrod was transferred to Jacksonville where he became the new manager оf the Jacksonville Credit Central Office.
Elrod filed this suit, claiming he was fired because of his age. The jury agreed and awarded back pay. The District Court denied Sears' motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict and Sears appeals from the denial of that motion.
ANALYSIS
We review the District Court's decision denying a motion for judgment notwithstanding the jury's verdict de novo. See Carter v. Miami,
Elrod's suit clаims that Sears' decision to fire him violated the Age Discrimination in Employment Act ("ADEA"), 29 U.S.C. Sec. 621 et seq. His proof at trial relied upon the four-pronged test established for proving discrimination in Title VII cases in McDonnell Douglas Corp. v. Green,
Elrоd has met his initial burden of establishing a prima facie case. Elrod was 51 years old when he was fired, his replacement was younger, and Elrod's 22 1/2 years of service coupled with his favorable employment reviews are sufficient evidence that he was qualified for the job to meet the first McDonnell Douglas hurdle. But Sears has articulated a legitimate nondiscriminatory reason for firing Elrod--that Sears believed he had been sexually harassing female employees. The burden then becomes Elrod's to show that this reason is pretextual.
We must make an important distinction before proceeding any further. Much of Elrod's proof at trial centered around whether Elrod was in fact guilty of the sexual hаrassment allegations leveled at him by his former co-workers. We can assume for purposes of this opinion that the complaining employees interviewed by Rives were lying through their teeth. The inquiry of the ADEA is limited to whether Rives, Malone and Merrill believed that Elrod was guilty of harassment, and if so, whether this belief was the reason behind Elrod's discharge.2 See Hawkins v. Ceco Corp.,
Elrod has offered no evidence to show that Sears' justification is unworthy of credence. Certainly Sears is permitted to discipline an employee it believes to be guilty of sexual harassment. If Sears does nothing in the face of such a belief, Sears runs a serious risk of incurring Title VII liability to those employees harassed. See Steele,
Nor has Elrod offered any substantially probative evidence that age more likely than not motivated his discharge. Elrod faces a difficult burden here, because all of the primary players behind his termination--Rives, Malone and Merrill--were well over age forty and within the class of persons protected by the ADEA. These three are more likely to be the victims of age discrimination than its perpetrators. Elrod has attempted to carry this burden by pointing to the closing of the Territoriаl Office in Atlanta. He claims that this closing forced Sears to find credit central manager positions for those younger Atlanta employees who were on a "career path." For evidence that his termination was one segment of a larger pattern to discriminate, he looks to the Sears Credit Central Office in Tampa ("Tampa Office"). Around the same time as Elrod's discharge, Sears replaced an older manager of the Tampa Office with a younger person transferred from the closing Atlanta Territory Office. Sears passed over an allegedly more qualified and older Tampa employee in filling the Tampa Office position. Elrod argues that Sears wаs discriminating based on age in Tampa, and that this alleged discrimination shows a pattern of age discrimination on Sears' part in relocating Atlanta Territory employees.
But Elrod's proof falls far short of the mark. First, the older manager who was replaced in Tampa had received a lucrative promotion to a much larger crеdit central office. So there was only an opening to fill in Tampa because of Sears' favorable treatment of an older employee. Second, absolutely no evidence was admitted that indicates Sears chose the younger Atlanta employee over the older Tampa candidate based upon age. There is neither any direct evidence of age discrimination nor any indirect evidence, such as proof backing up the allegation that the older candidate was more qualified for the position. Finally, the closing of the Atlanta Territory affected hundreds of positions. Yet Elrod argues the placement of two managers in the Jaсksonville and Tampa Offices is evidence of a grand scheme to discriminate. Elrod's proof of the Tampa incident boils down to one isolated case where Sears chose a younger employee for a manager's position. This is hardly sufficient to prove any pattern in the Atlanta Territory closing.
Elrod has offered no prоbative evidence to challenge Sears' claim that Elrod was fired because of charges of sexual harassment. "Conclusory allegations of discrimination, without more, are not sufficient to raise an inference of pretext or intentional discrimination where [an employer] has offered ... extensive evidence of legitimate, non-discriminatory reasons for its action." Carter,
Notes
Honorable Jesse E. Eschbach, Senior U.S. Circuit Judge for the Seventh Circuit, sitting by designation
The many remarks reported are far too numerous to detail here, but a small sampling will afford the reader a glimpse of the atmosphere reported in the Jacksonville Office. Elrod had volunteered to one female employee who wished to have children that he would act as a "stand in" for her husband if she wanted to become pregnant. Another female employee, after receiving assortments of red and yellow roses, was аsked by Elrod which arrangement she received for the "better performance." Elrod was overheard speaking about another young female employee, "I bet she is good." Elrod commented to yet another employee about her new dress that she must have "gotten her a sugar daddy." The Rives investigation indicated that Elrod's antics aрparently were not limited to off color remarks, however. He purportedly had once followed an employee for several paces while cupping his hands a few inches beneath her buttocks
Rives, Merrill and Malone were the only Sears employees acting within the scope of their actual or apparent authority who were primarily involved in Elrod's discharge. Sears can only be liable for a discriminatory motive harbored by one of these three agents. See Jones v. Gerwens,
Elrod claims that his favorable reviews through the years show lack of credence. But the fact that Elrod's supervisors had never observed him harassing female employees in the past is not evidence that Sears did not believe the current allegations of harassment that purportedly occurred when Elrod's supervisors were not around to see it. Elrod also points to an employee attitude survey that might be interpreted as indiсating Elrod's employees had no morale problems while at work. But that dog won't hunt because Rives, Malone and Merrill had not seen the results of the employee attitude survey when Sears made the decision to fire him. If they were unaware of the results of the survey, the survey could not have alerted them that the findings of the Rives investigation were incorrect
