Josephine Mora (“Plaintiff’) sued her former employer, Jackson Memorial Foundation (“Defendant”) for wrongful termination under the Age Discrimination in Employment Act (“ADEA”). 29 U.S.C §§ 621-34. The district court granted summary judgment to Defendant because the court concluded that Defendant would prevail under a “same decision” affirmative defense. After Plaintiff filed her appeal, the Supreme Court’s ruling in
Gross v. FBL Financial Services,
— U.S.-,
I. Background
Plaintiff, who was 62 at the pertinent time, worked for Defendant as a fundraiser. She initially worked under Ms. Chea in the International Kids Fund (“IKF”), a division of the Defendant, where she conducted media relations in addition to soliciting donors. Chea grew dissatisfied with Plaintiffs work and recommended to Defendant’s chief executive Mr. Rodriguez that Plaintiffs employment be terminated. According to his affidavit, Rodriguez agreed, but later decided to give Plaintiff a different position in his own office “where he could observe her more closely.” Rodriguez did not inform Plaintiff that she had been terminated from her position at IKF. *1203 Plaintiff worked with Rodriguez for a month, and more errors and professionalism issues supposedly arose.
Plaintiff contends that Rodriguez called her into his office at the end of the month and fired her, explaining that “I need someone younger I can pay less ... I need an Elena [Quevedo, a 25 year old employee].” Another coworker and former Jackson Memorial Foundation employee, D. K., alleges that she heard this conversation, adding that she heard Rodriguez say to Plaintiff “... you are very old, you are very inept. What you should be doing is taking care of old people. They really need you. I need somebody younger that I can pay less and I can control.” M. L., another former Foundation employee, stated that Rodriguez explained to her and Quevedo that “[Plaintiff] is too old to be working here anyway.” Rodriguez denies that he made the discriminatory-sounding statements, and Quevedo substantiates Rodriguez’s version of events.
Defendant moved for summary judgment, arguing that even if it had not discriminated against Plaintiff, her employment would still have been terminated for poor job performance. The district judge agreed, concluding that Defendant met its burden of persuasion under the “same decision” affirmative defense.
II. Discussion
We review the grant of a motion for summary judgment
de novo
and resolve all reasonable factual doubts in favor of the non-movant.
Van Voorhis v. Hillsborough County Bd. of County Comm’rs,
A. Procedural Background and Gross
The district court considered the Defendant’s motion for summary judgment under the burden-shifting standard set out in
Price Waterhouse v. Hopkins,
Defendant argued in district court that summary judgment was appropriate pursuant to this “same decision” affirmative defense. It contended that, given Plaintiffs poor work, more than a preponderance of evidence showed that Defendant would have fired her, regardless of a discriminatory motive. Plaintiff countered by contending that the burden of persuasion in a motion for summary judgment — that no reasonable juror could find in the nonmovant’s favor — was inconsistent with the Price Waterhouse preponderance standard.
The district court disagreed with Plaintiff and concluded that no reasonable juror would dispute that Defendant had met its affirmative defense burden. The district judge wrote that Defendant had demonstrated that Plaintiffs termination was inevitable, given the number and severity of her workplace problems.
After Plaintiff appealed, the Supreme Court in
Gross
clarified the nature of ADEA claims. The Supreme Court concluded that ADEA claims are not subject to the burden-shifting protocol set forth for Title VII suits in
Price Waterhouse. Gross,
Because the Supreme Court has excluded the whole idea of a “mixed motive” ADEA claim — and the corresponding “same decision” defense — we need not consider the district court’s analysis of Defendant’s affirmative defense. Instead, we look at Defendant’s motion for summary judgment in accord with the “ordinary default rule that plaintiffs bear the risk of failing to prove their claims.” Id. at 2351. Making all reasonable inferences in Plaintiffs favor, we look to determine whether a material factual question exists on this record about whether Defendant discriminated against her. We say “Yes.”
B. Direct or Circumstantial Evidence of Discrimination
A plaintiff in an ADEA claim may “establish a claim of illegal age discrimination through either direct evidence or circumstantial evidence.
1
”
Van Voorhis,
The resolution of this case depends on whose account of the pertinent conversations a jury would credit. We conclude that a reasonable juror could accept that Rodriguez made the discriminatory-sounding remarks and that the remarks are sufficient evidence of a discriminatory motive which was the “but for” cause of Plaintiffs dismissal. Summary judgment for Defendant was therefore incorrect.
We have considered cases factually similar to Plaintiffs. In
Van Voorhis, we
concluded that statements from a county official who “didn’t want to hire any old pilots” were direct evidence of discrimination and that the burden should therefore shift to the defendant-employer.
Van Voorhis,
While these cases were litigated under the now-defunct ADEA mixed motive theory, they remain instructive. Plaintiffs situation is similar. A reasonable juror could find that Rodriguez’s statements should be taken at face value and that he fired Plaintiff because of her age. For us to conclude otherwise would be to deny Plaintiff the benefit of resolving all reasonable inferences in her favor as the nonmoving party. Given the disputed question of material fact, Defendant was unentitled to a summary judgment. So we VACATE the judgment and remand for further proceedings. 2
VACATED and REMANDED.
Notes
. Both parties spent considerable time debating whether Plaintiffs retelling of her termination constitutes "direct” or "circumstantial” evidence. Because Plaintiff's account of her termination is at least circumstantial evidence of discrimination, we need not determine if it is direct evidence on this appeal.
. We deny Mora’s request that this case be reassigned to a different judge on remand. Reassignment is unnecessary.
