¶ 2. The record discloses the following undisputed facts; additional material facts will be set forth in the discussion which follows. Plaintiff voluntarily resigned from her position as a state trooper in February 2002, and was rehired in August 2003. In October 2004, following an internal investigation, plaintiff admitted that she violated state police policy by filing a report concerning a high-speed chase that contained factual errors and inaccuracies. She accepted a letter of reprimand. Shortly thereafter, plaintiff became the subject of a second internal affairs investigation stemming from a traffic stop and drug-seizure that had occurred about a year earlier. The issue came to light when a deputy state’s attorney learned of discrepancies between plaintiffs affidavit and deposition testimony and a police videotape of the incident. The state’s attorney informed plaintiffs supervisor. Plaintiff was suspended with pay pending the investigation, and the following day asked a fellow officer to dispose of some marijuana
¶ 3. In July 2005, plaintiff received a letter of dismissal from the Commissioner of Public Safety. The Commissioner cited the prior reprimand and the “overwhelming evidence” in support of the additional charges. Plaintiff thereafter filed a complaint with the Vermont Human Rights Commission but ultimately withdrew the charge and filed suit against the State, alleging she was discharged because she was a “single woman and single mother,” in violation of the Vermont Fair Employment Practices Act, 21 V.S.A. §§ 495-496 (FEPA) and Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 42 U.S.C. §§ 2000e-2000e-17.
¶ 4. The State moved for summary judgment, asserting that plaintiff failed to adduce evidence sufficient to show that gender was a motivating factor in her discharge, or to support such an inference. Plaintiff opposed the motion, claiming that she had adduced direct evidence of discrimination by the State — principally statements attributed to her supervisor, Lt. Harrington, following her discharge to the effect that plaintiff was “a single mother and continually had problems with day care,” that she had been compelled “to call in late due to issues with daycare availability,” and that she was “sometimes not... available for call outs because of this need to care for her child.” Plaintiff also alleged that she had adduced evidence of disparate treatment and a hostile work environment.
¶ 5. The trial court issued a written ruling in March 2011. The court concluded that plaintiff’s evidence, at best, “eonstitute[d] weak circumstantial evidence” and was insufficient to show that gender bias was a motivating factor in the State’s decision. Moreover, even if sufficient to establish a prima facie case of discrimination, the court found that the State had produced ample evidence of nondiscriminatory grounds for plaintiffs termination and that plaintiff, in turn, had not shown that the State’s grounds were pretextual. Accordingly, the court granted the motion, and entered final judgment in favor of the State. Plaintiffs motion for reconsideration was denied. This appeal followed.
¶ 6. We review summary judgments under the same standard as the trial court, affirming when there is no genuine issue of material fact and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Campbell v. Stafford,
117. Plaintiff contends the trial court erred in concluding that the evidence was insufficient to establish “mixed motive” discrimination entitling her to a trial on the merits. The claim implicates settled standards that govern the burdens of proof under FEPA and Title VII. See Robertson v. Mylan Labs, Inc.,
¶ 8. This standard has traditionally been distinguished from the three-part burden-shifting framework established in McDonnell Douglas Corp. v. Green,
¶ 9. As noted, plaintiff rests her claim on the mixed-motive Price Waterhouse framework and maintains that her evidence was sufficient to show that gender was a motivating factor in her discharge. Although plaintiff makes several valid preliminary points, the claim is ultimately unpersuasive. Thus, we agree at the outset that characterizing evidence as circumstantial, as the trial court did below, is unimportant in determining whether it is sufficient to show improper motive. See In re McCort,
¶ 10. Plaintiff’s difficulty here is that her evidence, whether characterized as direct or circumstantial, was insufficient to support a finding that gender or gender stereotyping was a motivating factor in her termination. “Remarks at work that are based on sex stereotypes do not inevitably
¶11. In opposing the motion for summary judgment, plaintiff also relied to a lesser extent on evidence allegedly showing that the state police treated similarly situated officers more favorably than plaintiff. Upon examination, however, the evidence does not support the claim of improper gender-based discipline. Plaintiff contended, for example, that two other officers — a state trooper and a municipal police officer — involved in the same vehicle stop that resulted in the second disciplinary investigation made similar inconsistent statements about the incident, but were not similarly disciplined. As the trial court found, however, nothing in the record showed that the complaining prosecutor was either aware of the other state trooper’s alleged misstatements or referred the matter to Lt. Harrington for investigation. The second officer was female and not employed by the state police, but by a municipal police department, and so presented no evidentiary value for purposes of finding disparate treatment by the State.
¶ 13. Plaintiff also cited an incident of another trooper referred to Lt. Harrington by the state’s attorney’s office for sworn misstatements that did not result in similar discipline. The trial court found plaintiffs evidentiary support lacking, however, noting that the claimed referral was not in evidence, and the court later rejected ■— as filed too late — the deputy’s affidavit in support of plaintiffs motion for reconsideration. The court was fully entitled to reject the supplemental evidence as untimely. See Bostock v. City of Burlington,
¶ 14. Plaintiff also claimed disparate treatment in being disciplined for asking another officer to dispose of the marijuana in her desk. Plaintiff relied on testimony from a state police sergeant that it was a common practice among troopers not to follow protocol in the disposal of small amounts of seized drugs. As the trial court found, however, the issue was not whether other troopers failed to follow the rule, but “how they were treated” where, as here, the violation was reported by a fellow trooper. Furthermore, the sergeant acknowledged that the circumstances were distinguishable where, as here, plaintiff was specifically directed by her supervisor to “follow-up” on the case in question and “[i]f a smaller amount of marijuana is involved and you can apply for a search warrant, do so.” Accordingly, we discern no error in the trial court’s finding that the evidence failed to support plaintiff’s claim that her termination was motivated by gender.
1115. Lastly, plaintiff faults the trial court’s refusal to consider the allegations in her complaint to the Human Rights Commission because she had not sworn to the truth of its contents. Notably absent from her argument on appeal, however, is any claim that the alleged error was prejudicial. See Boehm v. Willis,
¶ 16. To be clear, we agree with plaintiff’s assertion that a factually-established pattern of disparate treatment and gender stereotyping may circumstantially support an inference that a specific employment decision was improperly motivated. See, e.g., Costa v. Desert Palace, Inc.,
Affirmed.
Notes
Our holding in McCort essentially forecast — and is entirely consistent with — the U.S. Supreme Court’s holding in Desert Palace, Inc. v. Costa,
Like the trial court here, we assume without deciding that any discriminatory animus by Lt. Harrington — plaintiffs supervisor who filed the complaints — could be attributable to the ultimate decisionmaker. See Staub v. Proctor Hosp.,_U.S._,_,
Plaintiff’s complaint to the Commission contained numerous unsupported allegations of hostile work environment and disparate treatment. In this regard, she alleged — without adducing and citing specific evidence — that she was denied the opportunity afforded other troopers to share “on call” duty; that she was denied leave to work toward a college degree, in contrast to a male trooper who “used to do” college worthwhile on duty; that she was publicly reprimanded for offenses that were dealt with privately for male troopers; and that rumors of disputed origin about sexual affairs made her working conditions formal and stilted. Also in the complaint were hearsay allegations that she was told by another trooper to “fly low” because “they” were “gunning” for her; that two sergeants advised her that she was “in the Lieutenant’s cross-hairs,” and that she had heard of, but had not seen, an email by the lieutenant intended to portray her in a bad light by “saying something to the effect of ‘let bygones be bygones.’ ” The complaint related further, but without any particularized gender-based context, that her supervisors asked whether she was afraid while on duty and that her training officer described another female trooper who had children as “not a team player.” The complaint further alleged that, in response to her concerns, Lt. Harrington told plaintiff that he had contacted the personnel department’s sexual harassment liaison to report that he may have been creating a hostile work environment and he directed plaintiff to talk to the liaison. Lt. Harrington acknowledged the self-report in his deposition testimony. The trial court found, however, that the request for an investigation did not establish that a hostile environment existed or was fueled by gender prejudice, and plaintiff has not shown that this finding was erroneous.
