Case Information
*1 Before COLLOTON, SHEPHERD, and KELLY, Circuit Judges.
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KELLY, Circuit Judge.
Mary Doucette brought suit in Minnesota state court, alleging that her discharge by Morrison County constituted discrimination based on her sex and her age, in violation of the Minnesota Human Rights Act (MHRA), and that it was in reprisal for filing a discrimination complaint under the MHRA. She also claimed the County retaliated against her after she took leave under the federal Family Medical Leave Act (FMLA). The County removed the case to federal court and moved for summary *2 judgment on all claims. The district court [1] granted summary judgment to the County оn Doucette’s FMLA retaliation claim and her two MHRA discrimination claims. The district court denied summary judgment on Doucette’s MHRA reprisal claim but, declining to exercise supplemental jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1367(c), remanded this claim to state court. Doucette only appeals the court’s grant of summary judgment on her MHRA discrimination claims, not on her FMLA claim. Since Doucette’s evidence does not create a genuine issue of material fact as to whether her discharge was motivated by discrimination, we affirm. [2]
I. Background [3]
Doucette worked for Morrison County for thirty years, including seventeen years as the assistant jail administrator. The County fired her in November 2011 for repeated record-keeping errors. Doucette asserts her record-keeping duties comprised just a small part of her job: she maintained the jail’s records and accounts, oversaw jail staff and operations, and supervised inmate programming and services. At the times most relevant to her сlaims, Doucette was supervised by jail administrator Lieutenant Michael Monnier and by Sheriff Michel Wetzel.
For several years as the assistant jail administrator, Doucette had only minor performance issues. In 2007, however, Doucette began to accrue disciplinary citations, the details of which are set out in the district court opinion. She received verbal reprimands in January and March 2007 regarding billing errors. For over two years thereafter, there were no documented incidents. Doucette’s employee evaluation *3 in October 2009 rated her as “meet[ing] expectations” in most categories and noted improvement over the previous year in her billing accuracy. In November 2010, Monnier issued a letter of reprimand to Doucette. The letter noted repeated billing errors that had continued even after he met with her in September 2010 to discuss previous errors and the importance of accurate billing. Doucettе was placed on a six- month corrective action plan, requiring her to take additional steps to verify and obtain approval of the jail’s billing statements before mailing invoices. The corrective action plan ended in May 2011.
One of Doucette’s duties was to conduct monthly reconciliations of inmates’ commissary accounts, in accordance with a September 2010 recommendation from a state auditor. No one was assigned to complete these reconciliations while she was on vacation from late January through late February 2011. In May 2011, Monnier asked Doucette about the status of the reconciliations, and she falsely said she had completed them; she later testified she wanted to “get him off [her] back” while she resolved discrepancies between their computer records and bank records. One month later, the two met again, and Doucette told him about the discrepancies for the first time. Monnier and Doucette then met with Wetzel, and Doucette said only three reconciliations had been done since September 2010. Monnier noted an error with one of the reconciliations and another incorrect bill, and he subsequently placed Doucette on a three-day suspension. After a meeting in July 2011 to discuss two more billing errors, Doucette was suspended for five days.
Doucette took FMLA leave in August 2011. Just before she left, she filed a union grievancе regarding her five-day suspension, and she submitted a complaint to the County alleging sex and age discrimination. She returned to work in October 2011. Since Doucette had attributed her errors in part to her workload, Monnier suggested that co-workers assume some of her non-billing responsibilities. Doucette contends that upon her return, the County harshly scrutinized her work and gave confusing directions about a new policy to be implemented. In November 2011, she *4 made two more billing mistakes: overcharging the County by $15 to $20 for an inmate’s medication, and neglecting to include a particular document when submitting an invoice to Monnier. She was fired shortly thereafter. She was 55 years old at the time. Doucette asserts her discharge was due to her age and her sex, rather than due to the billing errors.
II. Discussion
Doucette appeals the district court’s grant of summary judgment on her claims
of sex and sex-plus-age discrimination under the MHRA. Minn. Stat. § 363A et seq.
We review de novo a grant of summary judgment. Torgerson v. City of Rochester ,
A. Sex Discrimination Claim
Doucette contends the County fired her based on her sex, not on the billing
errors outlined above, in violation of Minn. Stat. § 363A.08(2). “Employment
*5
discrimination may be established under either a disparate impact or disparate
treatment theory.” Goins v. West Group,
At step two of McDonnell Douglas, the County rebuts Doucette’s prima facie
case by contending she was fired for repeatedly making billing errors, after she had
beеn reminded of the importance of accuracy and received accommodations for her
workload. A legitimate reason for discharge may include the plaintiff’s lack of
improvement “in the specific areas in which she was counseled.” Cherry, 361 F.3d
at 479. Doucette does not dispute that she made these errors; nor does she deny that
she misrepresented the status of the reconciliations. Instead, she argues that the errors
were expected and fixable in the context of her job and did not damage the County’s
reputation. However, “[w]e do not sit as super-personnel departments reviewing the
wisdom or fairness of the business judgments made by employers, except to the extent
that those judgments involve intentional discrimination.” Elam,
*7
Because the County offered a “non-discriminatory, legitimate justification for
its conduct,” Elam,
As an additional way to demonstrate pretext, Doucette contends she was treated
differently from similarly situated male employees. See Lake,
First, Doucette notes that Monnier rated a crew leader, age 49, as deficient for three years with respect to intake processing standards. [8] The crew leader also violated safety standards by allowing inmate crews to work without protective gear, and he worked for an extended period without a professional certification that was purportedly necessary for his job. Doucette contends these errors “indicate[ his] chronic failure to follow safety and other jail policies”—and while Monnier was aware of these issues, the crew leader was never disciplined. Second, Doucette asserts that Monnier received several reports that a correctional officer, age 54, had mistreated inmates. Monnier gave the correctional officer a notice of performance deficiency for inmate supervision and communications at his annual review in 2011, but Doucette contends he, too, was never disciplined.
*9 Although Doucette and her co-workers were all supervised by Monnier, Doucette faces particular difficulties in meeting her burden to demonstrate that other employees were similarly situated. No one else had a similar job, so none of her co-workers made easily comparable mistakes. It is possible that the correctional officer’s alleged mistreatment of inmates, though different in kind from Doucette’s billing errors, would merit greater punishment. See id. (“[D]emanding that the compared employeеs have engaged in precisely identical conduct would make an employee’s conduct which was more serious than that of the plaintiff irrelevant to the analysis. Common sense as well as our case law dictates that we reject such an approach.” (quotation omitted)). Nevertheless, even if Doucette’s co-workers’ misconduct need not be identical to hers, their actions—apparent noncompliance with certain jail safety poliсies and mistreatment of inmates—are too “different in type” to be probative of pretext at this stage. Id.
Doucette also has not provided enough information regarding her two male
co-workers that, if true, would give rise to a genuine issue of material fact. We gauge
the seriousness of misconduct in part based on its frequency, and Doucette has not
indicated how many times these asserted comparators engaged in the misconduct for
which she asserts they should have been disciplined. See Elam,
B. Sex-plus-Age Discrimination Claim
Doucette also appeals the district court’s grant of summary judgment on her
claim of sex-plus-age discrimination under the MHRA. “‘Sex-plus’ discrimination
occurs when employees are classified on the basis of sex plus one other seemingly
neutral characteristic.” Knott v. Mo. Pac. R. Co., 527 F.2d 1249, 1251 (8th Cir.
1975). Doucette claims the County discriminated against her as an older woman.
Although the Minnesоta Supreme Court has not had occasion to recognize a claim for
sex-plus-age discrimination under the MHRA, the Minnesota Court of Appeals has
done so. See Pullar v. Indep. Sch. Dist. No. 701,
Doucette offers both direct and indirect evidence of sex-plus-age
discrimination. Direct evidence may include “remark[s] by a decisionmaker [that] . . .
show a specific link between a discriminatory bias and the adverse employment
action, sufficient to support a finding by a reasonable fact-finder that the bias
motivated the action.” Torgerson,
At her deposition, Doucette said that Wetzel “made a comment where he was
at one of our staff meetings that women—or not women, that old people shouldn’t be
working in our profession because they get injured.” She then clarified that by “our
profession,” she meant “law enforcement.” Wetzel’s audiеnce was older women, but
complaint alleged that younger, male colleagues were treated differently than she was,
and she included MHRA claims for both sex and age discrimination. See Gorzynski,
there is no evidence he meant older women were particularly prone to injury or should take greater care than men to avoid injury by not working in law enforcement. Wetzel’s comment was gender-neutral; even if taken to apply to his audience, Doucette has not demonstrated this remark, while made by a “decisionmaker,” was connected to “the decisional process itself.” Id.
Doucette also cites a question by Monnier to her daughter, Tracy LeBlanc, as
evidence that he wanted her to retire. Though LeBlanc’s and Monnier’s reports of the
conversation differ, we take the facts in the light most favorable to Doucette, the
nonmoving party. In her declaration, LeBlanc wrote that while Doucette was on
vacation, “Mike Monnier approached me an[d] asked whether my mother, Mary
Doucette[,] was planning on retiring. I responded to Mike that mom had no intention
of retiring.” Although retirement inquiries may be “so unnecessary and
excessive—that is, unreasonable—as to constitute evidence of discriminatory
hаrassment,” asking a question about someone’s retirement plans is not inherently
discriminatory. Cox v. Dubuque Bank & Trust Co.,
As indirect evidence, Doucette provides substantially the same proof for this claim as for her sex discrimination claim. She fails to demonstrate that the County’s asserted cause for terminating her was pretextual for the same reasons. Based on the record Doucette has presented, we cannоt infer discriminatory intent motivated her termination, as her two male co-workers of comparable age did not engage in sufficiently similar misconduct or have a similar disciplinary history. In addition, she contends a younger female employee had received more favorable treatment. After Doucette complained to Monnier that the younger woman was taking excessive breaks, Monnier instituted a uniform policy regarding the duration of lunch and other breaks. Hоwever, there is no evidence that this policy was enacted in a punitive way, and absent more, it does not reflect discriminatory treatment of Doucette as an older *13 woman. In sum, Doucette has not presented evidence sufficient to create a genuine issue of material fact as to her sex-plus-age discrimination claim.
III. Conclusion
For the reasons above, we affirm the district court’s grant of summary judgment on both claims.
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Notes
[1] The Honorable Ann D. Montgomery, United States District Judgе for the District of Minnesota.
[2] We exercise appellate jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291.
[3] We recite the facts in the light most favorable to Doucette, the nonmoving
party. O’Brien v. Dep’t of Agric.,
[4] “Except when based on a bona fide occupational qualification, it is an unfair employment practice for an employer, because of race, color, creed, religion, national origin, sex, marital status, status with regard to public assistance, familial status, membership or activity in a local commission, disability, sexual orientation, or age to . . . discharge an employee.” We note “familial status” was added effective May 12, 2014.
[5] “When interpreting cases under the MHRA, Minnesota courts give weight to
federal court interpretations of Title VII claims because of the substantial similarities
between the statutes.” Hunter v. United Parcel Serv., Inc.,
[6] At the prima facie stage, we apply a “low-threshold standard.” Wimbley v.
Cashion,
[7] Doucette offered six comparators at the district court; on appeal, she focuses her argument on two of them. The district court discounted evidence related to these two employees, finding Doucette had not corroborated their alleged misconduct beyond her own deposition and declaration. We note that Doucette may support her argument as to the existence of a disputed fact with materials in the record that include depositions and declarations. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(c)(1)(A). As the County does not argue this point on appeal, we assume Doucette has cited sufficient evidence for us to consider these two сomparators.
[8] The parties designated certain portions of the record as confidential in accordance with the district court’s protective order. To continue to protect the privacy of County employees not directly involved in this case, we have omitted the names of Doucette’s proffered comparators and have only provided the factual background necessary for our analysis.
[10] We assume without deciding that Doucette’s sex-plus-age discrimination claim was adequately pled for purposes of our summary judgment review. Her
