Kathleen Sariah Perkins filed a wrongful termination action against Silver Mountain Sports Club & Spa, LLC, alleging she was fired because she was pregnant and requested leave. After trial in the district court, a jury returned a verdict finding Silver Mountain had violated Perkins’s rights under the Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA) and Title VII.
On appeal, Silver Mountain argues the district court erred by excluding after-acquired evidence of misconduct by Perkins during her employment. Silver Mountain
We have jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1291, and finding no error, we AFFIRM.
I. Background
Silver Mountain is a health club located in Park City, Utah. Perkins is a resident of Park City and was employed by Silver Mountain until September 2005. Although she was initially hired as a part-time front-desk clerk, Perkins was promoted several times; first to the position of “Manager on Duty,” then to “Front Desk Manager and Membership Director,” and finally to an accounting position. R. Vol. I at 71.
In August 2005, when Perkins was approximately five months pregnant, she inquired into Silver Mountain’s maternity leave policies and prepared for her impending absence. A month later, Silver Mountain terminated Perkins’s employment. Perkins then filed suit alleging Silver Mountain terminated her because she was pregnant, and in doing so, had violated her Title VII and FMLA rights. Perkins also asserted a cause of action for defamation and alleged Silver Mountain slandered her by accusing her of embezzling company funds. However, Perkins voluntarily withdrew this particular claim before trial.
Silver Mountain disputed her allegations and claimed Perkins had in fact been terminated for a litany of reasons unrelated to her pregnancy. Among other reasons, Silver Mountain contended it was reorganizing, that Perkins’s job description was changed as a result of the reorganization, and that Perkins’s job performance was sub-par.
Additionally, Silver Mountain alleged Perkins was terminated because she had been “repeatedly caught embezzling funds and services.” R. Vol. I at 41. Silver Mountain claimed in its answer to the complaint that Perkins, in April 2005, paid an $818.55 cellular telephone bill using company funds without authorization. This bill included both personal and business telephone calls. Perkins subsequently repaid approximately $270, the amount which comprised her personal use, and was informed she was not permitted to use company funds to pay her phone bill in the future without authorization. Silver Mountain, however, did agree to pay $35 of her cellular phone bill every month to cover business-related phone call expenses. After Perkins was terminated, Silver Mountain allegedly discovered that her August 2005 phone bill, in the amount of $73.22, was again paid with company funds. Nevertheless, Silver Mountain later dropped its contention Perkins was fired for embezzlement. Finally, Silver Mountain asserted several counterclaims, including a claim Perkins converted company funds and services, which were later dismissed before trial on summary judgment.
After a three-day trial, the jury returned a verdict in Perkins’s favor, finding Silver Mountain had (1) terminated Perkins due to her request for leave under the FMLA, (2) discriminated against Perkins because of her status as a pregnant woman, and (3) acted maliciously or with reckless indifference to Perkins’s rights. The jury awarded $20,000 in lost wages and benefits and $30,000 in punitive damages. Silver Mountain timely appealed.
II. Discussion
Silver Mountain challenges on appeal two evidentiary rulings by the district court. First, it contends the district court erred by excluding after-acquired evidence of alleged misconduct by Perkins in making an August 2005 cell phone payment with company funds; and, second, the district court improperly prevented it from
A. After-Acquired Evidence
1. Background
Both parties sought pre-trial guidance on how the district court planned to address after-acquired evidence.
Perkins first filed a motion in limine asserting two separate bases for excluding the after-acquired evidence of alleged misconduct during her employment. First, she argued any after-acquired evidence was irrelevant and substantially more prejudicial than probative under Federal Rules of Evidence 402 and 403 because Silver Mountain had conceded it was not aware of the alleged misconduct at the time it terminated Perkins’s employment. Second, Perkins argued that any discussion of the August 2005 payment might be used to impermissibly argue she acted in conformance with a propensity or character trait.
Silver Mountain argued in response, without specifying any particular basis for admissibility, that any after-acquired evidence of misconduct by Perkins during her employment was relevant and could be considered by the jury under controlling Supreme Court precedent,
McKennon v. Nashville Banner Publishing Co.,
In
McKennon,
the Supreme Court considered what role evidence discovered by an employer, after it had already terminated an employee in violation of the Age Discrimination in Employment Act of 1967 (ADEA), plays in the determination of liability and damages for that wrongful termination.
According to the Court, because Congress had designed the ADEA as part of a broader remedial framework to eliminate discrimination in the workplace, “[i]t would not accord with this scheme if after-acquired evidence of wrongdoing that would have resulted in termination operates, in every instance, to bar all relief for an earlier violation of the Act.”
Id.
at 358,
In applying
McKennon,
the district court considers a two-step process. First, the employer must establish “that the wrongdoing was of such severity that the employee in fact would have been terminated on those grounds alone if the employer had known of it at the time of the discharge.”
McKennon,
Before the court ruled on Perkins’s motion in limine, Silver Mountain filed its own motion in limine to establish McKennon as the law of the case. In particular, Silver Mountain contended McKennon mandates the trial court admit after-acquired evidence of an August 2005 cell phone payment as a limitation on back pay and compensatory damages and it need not prove that Perkins had in fact made the payment with company funds. Perkins, in turn, argued the motion was premature and Silver Mountain was required to make an offer of proof at trial before any after-acquired evidence would be admissible.
As to liability, the district court ruled that “post-discovered” events were not relevant to that question. Accordingly, the district court held the August 2005 cell phone payment would not be admissible as a justification for terminating Perkins’s employment. But as to damages, the court reserved ruling on the application of McKennon, directing Silver Mountain to make an offer of proof of what evidence it wished to proffer as a part of its defense to Perkins’s damages claim. 1
Silver Mountain now argues the district court erred by failing to allow it to introduce evidence at trial of the August 2005 cell phone payment as after-acquired evidence of misconduct by Perkins under McKennon.
2. Standard of Review
Before addressing the merits of the court’s rulings, we first address the proper standard of review. Ordinarily, we consider evidentiary questions under the familiar abuse of discretion standard.
E.g., Abuan v. Level 8 Commc’ns, Inc.,
Rule 103 of the Federal Rules of Evidence provides: “[ejrror may not be predicated upon a ruling which ... excludes evidence unless ... the substance of the evidence was made known to the court by offer or was apparent from the context within which questions were asked.” Fed.R.Evid. 103(a)(2). Two deferential standards of review apply to a district court’s decision to exclude evidence pursuant to Rule 103. If the proponent of the excluded evidence or testimony made an adequate offer of proof, the trial judge’s decision to exclude the evidence is reviewed for an abuse of discretion.
Polys v. Trans-Colorado Airlines, Inc.,
Similarly, if the proponent of the excluded evidence failed to meet the requirements of Rule 103 for an offer of proof, we can reverse “only in instances of plain error that affected appellant’s substantial rights.”
United States v. Adams,
3. Analysis
To answer the standard of review, we must first determine whether Silver Mountain made the requisite offer of proof. An offer of proof is necessary to permit the trial judge to make an informed evidentiary ruling as well as “to create a clear record that an appellate court can review to ‘determine whether there was reversible error in excluding the [testimony].’ ”
Id.
at 1406-07 (alteration in original) (quoting
New Mexico Sav. & Loan Ass’n v. United States Fid. & Guar. Co.,
We agree the district court did not err in excluding the evidence. While given ample opportunity, Silver Mountain failed to make an adequate offer of proof concerning the content and admissibility of the August 2005 cell phone payment, so plain error review governs. 4 Several reasons support this conclusion.
First,
Silver Mountain failed in its motions to demonstrate how it would comply
And while Silver Mountain is correct that evidence of a terminable offense may “bar[ ] Perkins from calculating damages,” id., beyond the time of discovery by Silver Mountain, it failed several basic foundational requirements under the rules of evidence. No single form governs how a court must receive a proffer of evidence to resolve a McKennon allegation. At the very least, the court must be given enough information to determine admissibility of the evidence, to resolve other evidentiary questions relating to Rules 402 and 403 regarding relevancy and prejudice, and to determine the existence of a question of fact for the jury on the severity of the employee’s misconduct and damages. Thus the district court did not err in choosing to reserve ruling on the McKen-non question until an appropriate time at trial.
Second, Silver Mountain failed to supplement its motion in limine and make a proper offer of proof at trial. For example, at the end of the first day of trial Silver Mountain again raised the McKennon issue. The judge clarified the form and manner of what he expected Silver Mountain to proffer:
And then you get into the interesting question of the question we reserved upon, as to the duty of a defendant to demonstrate, ordinarily outside the presence of the jury, that there is justification for dealing with a $35 bill as something that’s extraordinary, as something that is justification for bringing the question up at all. Now if we’re talking about somebody running off with thousands of dollars, maybe that burden would be a little less daunting.... I’m concerned about the fact — and I’ll lay it out — if somebody is going to plead embezzlement, they darn well better be in a position to demonstrate it. And if you don’t have a modicum of evidence, if you don’t have a sufficient basis, then you better take a hard look at Rule 11.
Id. at 475-77. Similarly, during the second day the judge reminded counsel that the matter was still on reserve until “we get to a point where it may be pertinent.” R. Vol. II at 537. Nevertheless, Silver Mountain never made any attempt to meet its burden by sufficiently outlining the content of any after-acquired evidence and the grounds for its admissibility under McKen- non, 5
In this case, for example, to make a proper
McKennon
proffer at trial, Silver Mountain, among other things, could have demonstrated: (1) a basis for authenticating the $73 August 2005 payment record; (2) the payment was unauthorized; (3) Perkins was in fact responsible or credibly thought to be responsible for the payment; (4) the unauthorized payment would have
Silver Mountain never made such a showing at trial, telling the court what witnesses and other evidence would support its McKennon argument. In short, the trial court could not have determined whether McKennon would apply unless Silver Mountain offered sufficient admissible evidence to satisfy the McKennon analysis. Recognizing this, the district court was within its discretion to exclude the August 2005 evidence as it related to liability and properly reserved ruling on whether McKennon applied until Silver Mountain made a sufficient offer of proof during the case on damages. Silver Mountain never did so. 7
In summary, the district court did not commit plain error in its evidentiary ruling at trial. The district court had no obligation to automatically admit the evidence concerning the August 2005 cell phone payment. In fact, the court properly concluded the after-acquired evidence was irrelevant to the issue of liability and reserved a final determination of admissibility until it became relevant to the question of damages. Under McKennon, the district court was not required to consider after-acquired evidence until Silver Moun-taba provided sufficient admissible evidence that Perkins’s misconduct — had it been known — would have justified termination. Nor was it error for the district court to require the proffered evidence to be submitted initially outside the presence of the jury.
Consequently, the district court did not err because it was never given the opportunity to evaluate the evidence Silver Mountain claims satisfies McKennon.
B. Evidence Concerning Withdrawn or Dismissed Claims and Counterclaims
Silver Mountain also contends the district court improperly prevented it from (1) eliciting rebuttal testimony concerning a defamation claim that Perkins had originally asserted against it but had withdrawn prior to trial, and (2) explaining the basis of its embezzlement counterclaim against Perkins that became the basis of some testimony at trial. We find no error by the district court.
By way of background, Perkins’s original complaint asserted a defamation cause of action against Silver Mountain on the basis of claims it made that Perkins embezzled funds by paying her private cell phone bill with company funds. Silver Mountain in turn had originally asserted counterclaims alleging Perkins had converted company funds and services.
8
The
Immediately before trial, the district court granted Silver Mountain’s motion and found the withdrawn or dismissed claims were “simply not part of what remains for decision.” R. Vol. I at 275, ¶¶ 4-5. The district court, however, expressly stated neither party was precluded from introducing relevant factual inconsistencies contained in the earlier pleadings.
During trial, Perkins referred to Silver Mountain’s embezzlement allegations in her opening statement, in direct examination of several witnesses, as well as in her closing. At each of these instances, Perkins discussed these allegations to demonstrate inconsistent factual assertions by Silver Mountain concerning its justification for terminating Perkins’s employment. Although Silver Mountain objected, the district court held these references were admissible:
Well, the question of the reasons given for the termination is a question involving shifting positions. And one is entitled to demonstrate that at one point in time, there was an assertion that the reason for the termination consisted of reason A, and then it became reason B, and then it became reason C. Then the question is really one of whether the reason ultimately cited is inconsistent with the reasons originally given in the written document filed with the court.... [T]he reasons given early, purportedly, are different than the reasons given later. And it’s perfectly permissible for counsel for plaintiff to point out the inconsistency.
R. Vol. II at 537.
Silver Mountain now argues the district court erred in permitting Perkins to “portray Silver Mountain as an oppressive litigant using retaliatory and shifting pleading tactics” while at the same time preventing it from responding. Aple. Br. at 29. Silver Mountain contends the district court improperly prevented it from eliciting rebuttal testimony concerning Perkins’s withdrawn defamation claim as well as its reasons for alleging embezzlement in its own Answer and Counterclaim. We disagree.
As an initial matter, Silver Mountain contends that we should review the district court’s refusal to permit rebuttal testimony for an abuse of discretion.
See, e.g., Koch v. Koch Indus.,
We agree with Perkins, although the district court did not err under either standard. As we stated above, “[i]n order to qualify as an adequate offer of proof, the proponent must, first, describe the evidence and what it tends to show and, second, identify the grounds for admitting the evidence.”
Adams,
We find no error here. First, Silver Mountain never demonstrated to the district court how or what evidence it intended to present that would have demonstrated a factual inconsistency in Perkins’s testimony or court filings.
9
Thus, any error by the district court was not plain or obvious. Second, even on appeal Silver Mountain has yet to demonstrate any admissible purpose for the excluded rebuttal testimony. The fact a defamation claim was made does not obviously demonstrate an inconsistency with trial testimony, but more importantly, Silver Mountain never explained to the court how it would do so in conformance with the court’s pre-trial rulings.
10
Finally, because Silver Mountain has not shown the rebuttal evidence would have affected the outcome of the proceedings, it has failed in its burden to show how the exclusion affected any of its substantial rights under our plain error standard. Therefore, there was not error sufficient to warrant the “extraordinary remedy” of reversal.
Polys,
Nor does Silver Mountain demonstrate the district court abused its discretion to create a “manifest injustice” in the presentation of evidence. Silver Mountain simply did not show how the proposed rebuttal testimony complied with the court’s pretrial order or explain — unlike Perkins— how the testimony would show factual inconsistencies with the dismissed or withdrawn claims.
In sum, the district court did not err when it precluded Silver Mountain from presenting rebuttal testimony on the dismissed or withdrawn claims and counterclaims.
III. Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, we AFFIRM the district court’s rulings.
Notes
. Although the district court did not make the offer of proof requirement entirely clear when it reserved ruling on the motion, it did articulate this requirement during the course of trial. The court placed the duty on Silver Mountain to demonstrate, outside the presence of the jury, the substance of any after-acquired evidence and the grounds for admitting such evidence.
. Silver Mountain argues for a de novo standard of review, claiming the district court committed legal error. As we explain more fully below, the court correctly recognized that McKennon might apply to the question of damages, and properly reserved ruling on the evidentiary question until later in the trial.
. Silver Mountain argues that this court should review the “trial court’s decision to disregard the rule of law established by McKennon ” de novo. Aplt. Br. at 20 (arguing that determinations on questions of law are subject to de novo review). However, the issue actually centers around Silver Mountain's failure to comply with Rule 103 requirements for an offer of proof and the resulting decision by the district court to exclude the after-acquired evidence of misconduct on the issue of damages.
. We have applied a three-part test to determine “whether a party must renew a motion in limine by a contemporaneous objection at trial to preserve an issue for appeal.”
Pandit v. American Honda Motor Co., Inc.,
. Silver Mountain correctly states that the question of whether the misconduct was severe enough to justify termination, when that would have occurred, and the amount of damages are questions for the jury.
Ricky,
. As discussed above, Silver Mountain’s motion in limine did not adequately address these requirements. It should have made an adequate offer of proof at trial to preserve the issue for appeal, especially in light of Perkins’s objections to the accuracy of the allegations of misconduct. See Fed.R.Evid. 103(a).
. Silver Mountain raised this issue once again after the jury had already returned a verdict and had been dismissed by the court. Because Silver Mountain failed to make an adequate offer of proof, the district court judge was left with no choice but to finally deten-mine that the post-termination evidence was "irrelevant under the circumstances." R. Vol. II at 906.
.Additionally, Silver Mountain's first Answer and Counterclaim asserted an affirmative defense to Perkins's wrongful termination claims alleging Perkins was "repeatedly caught embezzling funds and services” from Silver Mountain and had "volunteered to terminate her employment” as a result. R. Vol. I at 41. Subsequent pleadings by Silver Mountain omitted any direct references to ‘ 'embezzlement.
. Silver Mountain failed to make any offer of proof concerning its purported "rebuttal” evidence. It only made one attempt to introduce such evidence — during cross-examination of Silver Mountain’s owner. When the court cut off the inquiry into the timing of Silver Mountain's embezzlement allegations, Silver Mountain did not explain what factual inconsistency it was going to show nor how such testimony may be relevant to liability or damages. Additionally, Perkins was called as a witness during trial on two separate occasions and Silver Mountain never questioned her regarding her withdrawn defamation claim.
. Unlike Silver Mountain, Perkins introduced evidence relating to Silver Mountain's embezzlement allegations to show Silver Mountain’s shifting justifications for terminating her employment. Despite Silver Mountain’s perfunctory claims on appeal, it was not prevented from presenting an arguable factual inconsistency in Perkins's claims.
