Plaintiff-appellant Maryann E. Lawton alleges that her former employer, defendant-appellee State Mutual Life Assurance Company of America, discriminated against her on account of her gender, in violation of both federal and state law.
See
42 U.S.C. § 2000e-5 (1994); Mass. Gen. L. ch. 151B, § 4(1) (1996). The district court granted summary judgment in the employer’s favor.
See Lawton v. State Mut. Life Assur. Co.,
We have long proclaimed that when a lower court produces a comprehensive, well-reasoned decision, an appellate court should refrain from writing at length to no other end than to hear its own words resonate.
See, e.g., Ayala v. Union de Tronquistas,
First:
The plaintiff claims that her dismissal on August 23,1991, after more than four years in State Mutual’s employ, constituted a discriminatory act. In order to prevail on such a claim in an abolition-of-position case — here, the defendant contends that its business plan changed, rendering the management post that Lawton occupied anachronistic — an ousted employee must adduce
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some proof that the employer did not treat gender neutrally in arriving at the challenged employment decision.
See Vega v. Kodak Caribbean, Ltd.,
This argument confuses prunes with pomegranates. Assuming, arguendo, that the statistician’s affidavit is probative at all, 1 it proves only that men, on average, earn more in the defendant’s employ than women, and that men, on average, are more likely to be promoted than women. Even if these aspersions are taken as true (and, thus, east certain of the defendant’s employment practices into disrepute), salary level discrimination, in and of itself, is not probative of discrimination in layoffs. Indeed, a coldly calculating employer might well seek to dismiss its higher-paid employees while retaining their lower-paid counterparts. Therefore, the court did not err in granting summary judgment on the abolition-of-position claim.
Second:
Prior to filing a Title VII action in a federal district court, a plaintiff must exhaust her administrative remedies. Tight time limits constrain this protocol. Lawton worked in Massachusetts, and Massachusetts is a so-called “deferral jurisdiction” — the commonwealth has its own civil rights statute and agency — so exhaustion depends on the filing of a charge with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission within 300 days of the purported discriminatory act.
See
42 U.S.C. § 2000e-5(c) (1994);
see also Mack v. Great Atl. & Pac. Tea Co.,
In this case the plaintiff contends that, in addition to unlawfully cashiering her, the defendant also refused to promote her on several occasions due to her gender. She filed an administrative complaint attacking both the discharge and the failure to promote on February 17,1992. The first of the withheld promotions took place in 1987, and the other two occurred in 1990. 2 Since all the promotions transpired prior to April 24, 1991, more than 300 days elapsed between the last of them and the date of the administrative filing. Thus, they all fell outside the applicable limitations period.
The plaintiff tries to detour around this temporal barrier. She clings to the notion that her case presents a “continuing violation,” thereby allowing her to reach back beyond the normal limitations period to the earlier promotions.
See, e.g., Sabree v. United Bhd. of Carpenters and Joiners,
In general, continuing violations arise in one of two incarnations. The first incarnation encompasses serial violations, that is, violations which comprise a number of discriminatory acts emanating from the same discriminatory animus, each of which constitutes a separate wrong actionable under Title VII.
See Jensen,
Lawton cannot clear this hurdle: as we already have indicated, the foregone promotions all occurred more than 300 days before she initiated agency-level proceedings. Her firing (which took place within the 300-day period) does not fill the void: that act is of a wholly different character, and, moreover, it has not been traced to any discriminatory animus. See supra. Common sense teaches that a plaintiff cannot resuscitate time-barred acts, said to be discriminatory, by the simple expedient of linking them to a non-identical, non-discriminatory, non-time-barred act.
The other method by which a plaintiff can establish a continuing violation is by demonstrating the existence of a systemic violation. “A systemic violation has its roots in a discriminatory policy or practice; so long as the policy or practice itself continues into the limitation period, a challenger may be deemed to have filed a timely complaint.”
Jensen,
First and foremost, the plaintiff never articulated any particular discriminatory policy or practice in the district court. In the absence of such an articulation, her systemic violation claim fails.
See Mack,
Confronted with this omission at oral argument before us, the plaintiff’s attorney, in what amounts to confession and attempted avoidance, defined the alleged discriminatory policy as “the practice of not open-posting those jobs which are gateways into the mainstream career path [at State Mutual], with the result that those are reserved for the domain of men making decisions about men.” This rhetorical flourish comes too late, for the plaintiff did not enunciate the supposed policy in the proceedings below (administrative or judicial). No precept is more firmly settled in this circuit than that theories not squarely raised and seasonably propounded before the trial court cannot rewardingly be advanced on appeal.
3
See, e.g., Teamsters, Chauffeurs, Warehousemen & Helpers Union, Local No. 59 v. Superline Transp. Co.,
In all events, the late-blooming articulation offers too little substance; the stated policy, even if fully considered, would not support the weight of Lawton’s case. The record is devoid both of evidence that might explicate the parameters of the policy (e.g., there is no proof as to which positions are “gateways” or how one might distinguish “mainstream career paths”), and of evidence that might show the continued existence of the policy during the limitations period. What is more, there is no evidence that Lawton herself was injured by any such policy during the 300 days preceding her initiation of administrative proceedings. Consequently, she has not established the kind of systemic violation which would permit her to evade the time bar that blocks her path.
Third: The plaintiffs fallback position is that the district court acted precipitously. She asseverates that her claims should not have been adjudicated on summary judgment, but, at the very least, ought to have gone to trial. This asseveration lacks merit.
The proper province of summary judgment “is to pierce the boilerplate of the pleadings and assay the parties’ proof in order to determine whether trial is actually required.”
Wynne v. Tufts Univ. Sch. of Med.,
The district court faithfully applied these tenets in determining that no genuine issue of material fact loomed in respect to either the abolition-of-position or failure-to-promote claims. Although Lawton labors to show discrepancies here and there, “genuineness and materiality are not infinitely elastic euphemisms that may be stretched to fit whatever pererrations catch a litigant’s fancy.”
Blackie v. State of Me.,
Mindful of the district court’s more exegetic treatment of these, and other, matters, we need go no further.
Affirmed.
Notes
. State Mutual hotly contests not only the expert's conclusions, but also his methodology and the adequacy of his data base. We need not resolve this contretemps.
. The plaintiff makes a halfhearted effort to implicate a fourth (more recent) promotion but, as the district court pointed out, her- belated reliance on this incident — involving a promotion for which she never applied — came too late because, among other things, she never included any reference to it in her administrative complaint.
See Lawton,
. For that matter, the plaintiff did not enunciate the policy in her appellate briefs. This, too, is a disqualifying factor.
See Sandstrom v. Chem-Lawn Corp.,
. When, a defendant moves for summary judgment based in part on a plausible claim that the plaintiff's suit is outlawed by the passage of time, "the onus of identifying a trialworthy issue customarily falls on the plaintiff."
McIntosh,
