Plaintiff Martin I. Robin (“Robin”) filed charges of age, religion and disability discrimination against his former employer, Espo Engineering Corporation (“Espo”), *1086 under the Age Discrimination in Employment Act (“ADEA”), 29 U.S.C. § 621 et seq., Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 42 U.S.C. § 2000e et seq., and the Americans with Disabilities Act (“ADA”), 42 U .S.C. § 12101 et seq., respectively. After receiving a right to sue letter from the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (“EEOC”), Plaintiff filed suit in federal court on August 7, 1997. After discovery, the defendant filed a motion for summary judgment and the district court granted the motion on October 16, 1998. The plaintiff appealed. We Affirm.
I. BACKGROUND
Espo is owned and run by Eugene Esposito, Sr. (“Esposito Sr.”), CEO and majority owner, and his son, Eugene Esposito, Jr. (“Esposito Jr”). Engaged in the business of leasing temporary technical personnel, Espo has approximately 250 employees. In 1985, Esposito Sr. hired Robin, who is Jewish and was 50 years of age at the time, as an account executive. Espo account executives are basically salespeople and are required to solicit from an assigned client list of 100 businesses. While Robin was employed at Espo, account executives who had been employed for more than two years were considered “senior” and had an annual sales quota of one million dollars; account executives employed less than two years were considered “junior.” From 1987 until his discharge, Robin was classified as a senior account executive.
Defendant acknowledges that Robin’s sales performance from 1985 to 1992 was more than satisfactory. In fact, Robin ranked first in sales production for 1989, 1990 and 1992 with $1,446,503.00, $1,432,-656.00 and $1,389,197.00 in sales, respectively. In 1993, Robin’s sales dropped below one million dollars to $763,727.00 due to the loss of one of his major clients to competitive bidding, dropping him to last place among senior account executives. As a result, Robin received a negative performance review from Esposito Sr., which criticized his disappointing sales figures. The following year, Robin increased his sales to $1,039,468.00 and did not receive a performance review even though his sales figures remained last among senior account executives.
In July 1995, Robin informed Esposito Sr. that he had been diagnosed with colon cancer and would be off work for a period of time recuperating from surgery. On July 28, 1995, Robin underwent surgery followed by chemotherapy treatment, necessitating his absence from work (with salary and commissions) for approximately four weeks until September 1995. Beginning that month and continuing for one year, Robin left work early once a week for chemotherapy treatment. Despite his absence and treatment, by the end of 1995, Robin had achieved $1,076,920.00 in sales, an amount slightly greater than the previous year but considerably less than his performance in 1989,1990 and 1992.
On December 29, 1995, Esposito Sr. met with Robin and said, “Marty, you’re not the same man you were six months ago,” and offered Robin a paid leave of absence until September 1996, the anticipated completion of his chemotherapy. Under Esposito Sr.’s leave offer, Robin would have received full wages and benefits while on leave; however, his return to Espo as an account executive would depend on whether Esposito Sr. considered him 100% capable of performing his duties. Under the terms of the proposed leave, upon his return, Robin would be entitled to receive full commission on only 16 specified “old” accounts, while commission from his remaining 84 accounts would be “negotiated.” Further, he would not be entitled to a commission on any account that produced new business during his absence. Robin asserts that he viewed Esposito Sr.’s leave offer as a veiled attempt to terminate his employment and turned it down. In a memo dated January 17, 1996, Robin wrote, “I am presently fully qualified to continue my duties with Espo Engineering as a capable and productive ‘Account Executive.’ ” Later that month, Robin received his “1995 Annual Review,” *1087 revealing that Robin placed last among all account executives, junior and senior, in the number of in-person calls made, number of customers visited, percentage of client list solicited, number of new customers and number of sales closed. The 1995 review, signed by Harry Lenza (“Lenza”), vice-president of sales, as the preparer of Robin’s review and Esposito Sr., as approving the review, also indicated that even though Robin placed fifth out of seven in sales volume, the only salespersons he out-performed were two junior account executives with only one year of experience. The review further cautioned Robin that if he lost any one large account, his sales would be inadequate and thus concluded, “This is a very poor performance from a Senior Account Executive. You barely met the minimum requirement in a great market.”
Robin’s 1995 review also proposed a number of solutions: make more personal sales calls; cut lunches back to one per week, eliminate tardiness and be ready to start at 8 A.M.; stop long non-business related conversations with co-workers; and because “[i]n 1992 you sold 1.4 million, in 1996 we expect a minimum of 1.5 million.” Although phrased more positively, the 1995 annual reviews for other senior account executives also contained sales expectations: Espo expected that Hugh Dunbar increase his sales to $3.2 million, Tom Reicher and Kurt Mills top two million and Steve Clodfelter, a first-year account executive, “do a million and a quarter.”
During the first three quarters of 1996, Robin’s sales were last among senior account executives and on pace to fall well below his $1.5 million sales goal. By the end of the third quarter, Robin had $572,-943.00 in sales while the other three senior account executives each had sold in excess of $1.5 million. On September 27, 1996, Esposito Sr. met with Robin to offer a buy-out of his employment contract in exchange for a waiver of any legal claims against Espo. Robin refused and Esposito fired him, justifying the discharge on Robin’s poor sales performance and the virtual impossibility that he would be able to meet the $1.5 million sales goal set out in his 1995 annual review.
The plaintiff claims that Esposito Sr. and Esposito Jr. made various discriminatory remarks toward him during his employment. Sometime during 1994, Robin contends that Esposito Sr. referred to him as “getting too old” and an “old S.O.B.” Robin also alleges that when he was undergoing chemotherapy treatments in 1995, Esposito Jr. stated to another employee, “We cannot just let him [Robin] go or we will get in trouble.” Further, Robin claims that in 1996, Esposito Sr. told an employee that Espo could not get rid of Robin because he was sick.
On January 6, 1997, Robin filed a charge against Espo with the EEOC claiming that he was discriminated against on account of his age, religion and disability when he was discharged. Upon the issuance of a right to sue letter, Robin filed his action in federal court. Following discovery, Espo filed a motion for summary judgment contending that Robin had not set out a prima facie case of unlawful discrimination because he was not meeting Espo’s legitimate performance expectations. The district court granted Espo’s motion for summary judgment on October 16,1998. Plaintiff appealed.
II. ISSUES
On appeal, Plaintiff-Appellant argues that the district court erred in granting summary judgment to Defendant because his performance met Espo’s legitimate expectations and the evidence is sufficient to establish pretext or, alternatively, a convincing mosaic of circumstantial evidence of discrimination.
III. DISCUSSION
We review a district court’s decision to grant summary judgment de novo.
See Hoffman v. MCA, Inc.,
Plaintiff claims that he can sustain his intentional discrimination case under both the direct and indirect methods of proof. However, Plaintiffs religious discrimination claim that he pursued before the district court was not raised in his briefs submitted on appeal, and is thus abandoned.
1
See Libertyville Datsun Sales, Inc. v. Nissan Motor Corp. in U.S.A.,
A. Direct Method
Under the direct proof method, Robin must demonstrate that Espo’s decision to discharge him was motivated by an impermissible purpose: Robin’s age or disability.
See Hoffman,
When proceeding under the direct proof method, in order for allegedly discriminatory remarks to “qualify as direct evidence of discrimination, the plaintiff must show that the remarks were related to the employment decision in question.”
Fuka v. Thomson Consumer Elecs.,
Likewise, Esposito Sr.’s and Esposito Jr.’s comments that if they fired Robin while he was sick, they would get into trouble, is insufficient to create a triable material issue of fact because mere awareness of one’s legal obligations can offer no inference of intentional discrimination.
See Partington v. Broyhill Furniture Indus. Inc.,
B. Indirect Circumstantial Evidence
To survive summary judgment, we require sufficient “evidence from which
*1090
a rational trier of fact could reasonably infer that the defendant had fired the plaintiff because [he] was a member of a protected class.”
Troupe,
At the outset, this Court’s inquiry into the issue of legitimate expectations is more aptly characterized as “simply
bona fide
expectations, for it is no business of a court in a discrimination case to decide whether an employer demands ‘too much’ of his workers.”
See Coco v. Elmwood Care, Inc.,
Plaintiff initially contends that he met Espo’s expectation for senior account executives by selling more than one million dollars in 1995. Indeed, Robin’s 1995 annual review noted that his sales had met the minimum requirement of one million dollars. However, it seems evident from our review of the record that the one million dollar sales quota represented only the minimum required of senior account executives, and Espo’s expectations of Robin were based on the relative perior *1091 manees of other senior account executives and his status as an 11 year account executive veteran. With that in mind, Robin does not contest that he failed to clear one million dollars in sales in 1993, and despite satisfying the minimum requirement in 1995, he ranked last among fellow senior account executives in the areas of in-person customer calls, number of customers visited, percentage of client list covered, new customers and sales closed.
Further, Robin does not deny that he failed to meet Espo’s expectation that his sales exceed 1.5 million dollars in 1996; rather, he argues that he was not given an opportunity to satisfy the expectation because he was fired at the end of the third quarter. By the end of third quarter, however, Robin’s sales were on pace to fall far below 1.5 million dollars. Robin does not dispute that at the time of his discharge on September 27, 1996, he had sold only $572,943.00, more than one million dollars less than each of his fellow senior account executives and almost one million dollars below his assigned goal for the year. Nor does Robin challenge that he would have had to achieve more than $900,000.00 in sales in the remaining three months, almost double what he had sold to date. In all likelihood and according to projections, Robin was going to fall well short of his sales requirement; indeed, “an employer does not have to wait until its bottom line is affected to discipline an employee whose work is found wanting.”
Leffel,
We now turn to whether 1.5 million dollars in sales was a
bona fide
expectation. Robin contends that Espo set him up for a fall with the $1.5 million sales quota because Robin had never reached that amount even in his best year and Espo knew that his clientele base, which was based in engineering firms, would not be able to accommodate such a lofty goal. Again, however, our role is not to second guess the business decisions of a company and inquire as to whether the goals set by management demand “too much” from its employees,
see Coco,
Plaintiff also points to the punitive tone of his performance goal as evidence that Espo’s expectation was illegitimate. Although this difference in tone can be attributable to Robin’s recent history of weaker sales performance relative to other senior account executives, again, we are in no position to measure, or much less evaluate, whether an employer speaks to its workers too harshly. Finally, Robin claims that the $1.5 million expectation is illegitimate considering his debilitating chemotherapy treatment and recovery. Certainly, such cancer treatment is enormously traumatic for any employee and, we would hope and expect, should engender leniency, compassion and help from a considerate and caring employer. Indeed, we are confident that many employers would have given Robin a reasonable amount of time to recoup his strength and a temporary alternative sales expectation to reflect his difficult physical and emotional predicament. Even Defendant’s offer of a leave of absence to Robin, subject to Esposito Sr.’s sole determination of
*1092
whether he would be capable of returning, falls well short of applaudable employer compassion. However, despite Defendant’s questionable treatment of Robin and our views toward ideal employer and employee relationships, we are “empowered to decide legal issues” alone, and not the “troubling social as well as ethical questions that go well beyond the legal issues” raised by Espo’s conduct.
See Fuja,
Accordingly, because Plaintiff does not contest the accuracy of his sales figures and the sales performances of other senior account executives, both of which form the basis of the $1.5 million sales expectation, we conclude that Robin has not presented sufficient evidence to establish that Espo’s expectations were made in anything less than good faith. As such, we further conclude that Robin was not meeting his employer’s bona fide expectations at the time of his discharge. For us to consider Robin’s evidence of pretext, he has to establish a prima facie case of discrimination, which he has failed to do. 5
IV. CONCLUSION
We agree with the district court’s granting of summary judgment in Defendant’s favor. Judgment of the district court is Affirmed.
Notes
. Even if Robin had claimed religious discrimination on appeal, he failed to present sufficient evidence to establish a prima facie case. Before the district court, Robin alleged that a fellow senior account executive said, "Jewish bastard,” in Esposito Sr.'s presence. This statement alone, without other evidence demonstrating that the statement was related to the decision to discharge Robin or that Esposito Sr. was tainted by such statement, is insufficient to allow a rational jury to reasonably conclude that Espo discriminated against Robin on the basis of his religion.
. Duston Focht, a former recruiter at Espo, testified at deposition that he heard Esposito tell Lenza that Robin was "getting too old" during a conversation about sales.
. As a threshold matter, to preclude summary judgment, a plaintiff must establish that he was within the protected class for age (over 40) and a qualified individual under the ADA. The ADA prohibits discrimination by a covered entity only “against a qualified individual with a disability.” 42 U.S.C. § 12112;
see Nowak,
. Robin believed that Espo’s proposed leave of absence was a veiled attempt to push hint out, and consequently wrote in January 1996 that he was "fully qualified to continue in [his] duties ... as a capable and productive executive."
. As evidence of pretext, Robin offers essentially the same evidence that he presented in support of his claim that the $1.5 million sales expectation was illegitimate: statements made by Esposito Sr. and Esposito Jr. about his age and illness; the 1993 and 1995 reviews; the leave of absence agreement; and assignment of a higher quota despite his debilitating disease. This evidence fails as either evidence of pretext or evidence that creates a convincing mosaic of discrimination because of the aforementioned reasons and significant evidence in the record of legitimate, performance related employment reasons for the discharge. Thus, even if we were to consider Robin's pretext arguments, we conclude that a rational jury could not reasonably find that Robin was discriminated against on the basis of his age or disability.
