OPINION
Wackenhut appeals the district court’s denial of its motion for renewed judgment as a matter of law, or in the alternative a new trial, following a jury verdict in favor of Lisa Lulaj on a claim of sex discrimination. Lulaj cross-appeals the district court’s decision to reduce the jury’s determination of damages. Both pax-ties appeal the amount of attorney’s fees awarded. We AFFIRM.
I
Lulaj began work at Chrysler as a fire security officer in 2000. In early 2004, Chrysler outsourced its fire security operations to Wackenhut, and proceeded to transition its various facilities. Lulaj continued working through the transition as a Wackenhut employee in the same position she had occupied with Chrysler, helping to train new personnel. However, she remained only because of the promise of a promotion, to a Supervisor position at a-different facility in Auburn Hills. She testified that without the promise of a promotion, she would not have stayed because a lateral transition to Wackenhut meant a significant decrease in her overall benefits package. In particular, she lost health care and tuition reimbursements. The Supervisor position she was promised did carry those benefits.
Lulaj had numerous conversations with managers Larry Payne, Sean Joyce, and Gary Snyder, during which she was assured of a position as a Supervisor in the *764 Auburn Hills facility. Payne had the ultimate power to make promotion decisions at Wackenhut, though he claimed that in general he followed the wishes of his customer (in this case Chrysler). Joyce and Snyder were Wackenhut managers for the Chrysler contract. Lulaj did not apply for other supervisory positions during the transition time in 2004 because it was understood by both her and her superiors that she would be going to Auburn Hills.
On April 26, 2004, Lulaj filled out forms notifying Wackenhut that she was pregnant, and requesting a new uniform that would fit her. She specifically told Corey Tetrev (her immediate supervisor) and Snyder (a higher-level manager) of her pregnancy. Wackenhut officials testified that all promotion decisions for the Auburn Hills facility were made by May 1. On May 7, Tetrev came to speak with Lulaj to offer her a promotion to “Super G” (a promotion from her current position, but significantly inferior to the promised Supervisor position). Lulaj testified that Tetrev “looked at me and he looked at my stomach, and he said you should consider this position considering your position.” Lulaj was upset and attempted to contact Payne, but he never returned any of her calls.
Lulaj began maternity leave on June 21, which was to extend until September 20. In September she again tried to contact Payne without success, demanding that she be placed in a Supervisor position. Wackenhut requested that she return to work after September 20, but Lulaj never responded and never returned to work. Lulaj testified that when she wrote the letter demanding her supervisory position, she did not intend to return to Wackenhut because they had lost her trust.
Lulaj filed suit in Wayne County Circuit Court under the Elliot-Larsen Civil Rights Act. Mich. Comp. Laws AnN. §§ 37.2101-37.2804 (2007). Wackenhut removed the case to district court on December 28, 2004, and the ease was tried to a jury on April 4-6, 2006. The jury returned a verdict for Lulaj. It found that Lulaj had been denied promotion because of her pregnancy but that there was no constructive discharge. The jury awarded damages: $75,788 for back pay, $67,340 for future lost wages, $11,160 for medical bills, and $45,712 for noneconomic losses. Wackenhut moved for judgment as a matter of law, a new trial, or remittitur. Lulaj moved for costs and attorney’s fees. The district court denied both Wáckenhut’s motion for a new trial and judgment as a matter of law, but reduced the damages award. Because the jury had found no constructive discharge, the judge eliminated the future lost wages, and limited back pay to $960 (representing the $6/hour difference in pay for the period between when the promotions occurred and when Lulaj left work). The court also held that there was no basis on which to calculate medical expenses and reduced that award to zero. Finally, the court granted Lulaj’s motion for attorney’s fees at a rate of $165 per hour totaling $49,500.
II
A. Lulaj’s Prima Facie Case for Discrimination
Wackenhut first argues that Lulaj has not made out a case for discrimination, and therefore it is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. This Court reviews
de novo
the district court’s decision to grant or deny a judgment as a matter of law.
Anchor v. O’Toole
A discrimination case based on circumstantial evidence requires a showing that (1) Lulaj was a member of a protected class, (2) she suffered an adverse employment action, (3) she was qualified for the position, and (4) the adverse action occurred under circumstances that gave rise to an inference of unlawful discrimination.
Lytle v. Malady,
It is undisputed that Lulaj is a member of a protected class (pregnant women) and that she is qualified for the supervisor job. We therefore consider only whether she suffered any adverse action and whether there was any nexus to discrimination.
Denial of a promotion is an adverse employment action.
Williams v. Pharmacia,
The adverse action must occur under circumstances that give rise to an inference of unlawful discrimination.
Lytle,
In response to this preliminary showing of discrimination, Wackenhut offered two legitimate, non-discriminatory reasons for its decision to promote others to the Supervisor position at Auburn Hills. All of the supervisors there had additional fire specialist certifications and had personal knowledge of that particular facility. Lulaj had neither.
Having articulated a non-discriminatory reason for its actions, Lulaj must produce evidence to “raise a triable question of fact that [the adverse action was] motivated by gender discrimination,” and not the proffered legitimate reason.
Lytle,
B. Reduced Damage Award
The Seventh Amendment guarantees that “no fact tried by a jury, shall be otherwise reexamined in any Court of the United States, than according to the rules of the common law.” U.S. Const, amend. VII. This has long been held to preclude a court from substituting “its own estimate of the amount of damages which the plaintiff ought to have recovered, to enter an absolute judgment for any other sum than that assessed by the jury.”
Kennon v. Gilmer,
In this case, the district court reduced two distinct portions of the jury award: front pay and back pay (including medical expenses). The district court reduced front pay to zero because the jury determined that Lulaj was not constructively discharged, and therefore, as a matter of law, front pay cannot be awarded. We find no error in this holding. “In a promotion case, the period of liability will end if plaintiff voluntarily quits his employment with the defendant absent a constructive discharge.”
Equal Employment Opportunity Comm’n v. Monarch Mach. Tool Co.,
The jury found that Lulaj was not constructively discharged. Voluntarily quitting her job tolls Lulaj’s claims for back pay as a matter of law. Thus the district court was correct to reduce, as a matter of law, the jury award for front pay to zero to conform to its finding of no constructive discharge.
Similarly, the district court held that back pay was due only for the period between the denial of Lulaj’s promotion and her decision to quit. Per our analysis of front pay, this decision was correct as a matter of law. Lulaj contends that the district court erred in reducing the back pay award to $960—representing the difference in pay between the two positions over the period between her denied promotion and her voluntary departure— because it failed to consider the value of other benefits, such as medical insurance, provided to Supervisors but not to her. It is true that benefits are considered part of the overall compensation package in determining lost back pay.
Gutzwiller v. Fenik,
C. Attorney’s Fees
An award of attorney’s fees is reviewed for abuse of discretion.
Meyer v. City of Center Line,
Ill
For the foregoing reasons we AFFIRM the district court’s judgment.
Notes
. The language of the Michigan act parallels that of 42 U.S.C. § 2000e, and where the two acts are similar, Michigan courts treat federal precedents as “persuasive, albeit not binding, authority.”
Pena v. Ingham County Road Com’n, 255
Mich.App. 299,
