Charles Riley appeals from the order of the District Court 1 grаnting summary judgment to Lance, Inc., on Riley’s claim of age discrimination. We affirm.
Lance, headquartered in Charlotte, North Carolina, produces and distributes snack foods. Lance hired Riley in 1974 as a salesperson, and he worked for the company as an at-will employee until he was terminated in 2004. At the time of his termination, his position was district account manager (DAM) for the Kansas City district. The district sales manager (DSM) was Riley’s supervisor. That position was held by Chuck Windham until August 2003, when Windham was terminated.
In November 2003, Lawrence Dumas replaced Windham as Riley’s supervisor. A short time later, on December 4, Dumas sent Rilеy a memorandum that noted a 19.9% decrease in third-quarter sales for the accounts for which Riley was responsible, notwithstanding Riley’s projection, made at the end of 2002, of a sales increase of 10.9% for 2003. In his memorandum, Dumas iterated the importance of setting and attaining goals to improve sales numbеrs and listed eight such goals for Riley, most with January 2004 due dates. Dumas wrote, “The goal here is to keep increasing your activity until we are up to standard performance.... Please be assured that" we will have success, and there can be no thought of failure.” Memorandum from Lawrence Dumas to Charles Riley 2 (Dec. 4, 2003). On December 8, Dumas e-mailed Riley a “forced ranking” of sales districts that showed Riley’s year-to-date sales (through the end of November) as third from last (out of eighteen) with negative 7.4% growth. Riley’s performance by year-end was improved, but his annual sales were still not up to his projections for 2003 and were down from 2002.
On January 15, 2004, Dumas met with Riley to discuss a memorandum from Dumas to Riley that set forth a performance development program (PDP). The memorandum noted that Riley’s performance was lacking and that he would be required to meet certain targets with 100% compliance within sixty days or face termination. Aсcording to the terms of the PDP, the goals were not beyond ordinary day-today requirements of the DAM position, but Riley had failed to date to achieve them. On March 11, 2004, Dumas met with Riley and presented him with a termination letter that noted Riley had not made acceptable progress toward meeting the objеctives set out in the PDP. Riley’s employment was terminated effective immediately. He was fifty-eight years old and had nearly thirty years as a Lance employee.
Riley filed age-discrimination charges with the United States Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) and the Missouri Commission on Human Rights (MCHR). After Riley received right-to-sue letters from the EEOC and the MCHR, he filed suit against Lance in state court in May 2005 alleging violations of the Missouri Human Rights Act (MHRA), including a claim of age discrimination, and making a claim under the common-law doctrine of promissory estoppel. The case was removed to federal court based on diversity jurisdiction, and on September 21, 2006, the District Court granted summary judgment to Lance on the claim of age discrimination. 2 Riley appeals.
To make out a prima facie case and get past step one of the
McDonnell Douglas
analysis, Riley must be able to show the following: that he was a member of a protected class when he was terminated, that he was otherwise qualified for the position from which he was terminated when he was terminated, that Lance terminated him, and that his “discharge occurred in circumstances giving rise to an inference of unlawful discrimination.”
Arnold,
In its decision on Lance’s motion for summary judgment, the District Court collapsed the prima facie case into the
McDonnell Douglas
framework (as have many courts in the past — including this one). That is, at step two of the prima facie case analysis, the District Court required Riley to show a genuine issue of fact as to whether “he was performing his job at the level that met the employer’s legitimate expectations.” Order of Sept. 21, 2006, at 4 (citing
Calder v. TCI Cablevision of Mo., Inc.,
Our de novo review of the record in this case, however, leads us to conclude that the District Court’s error is not reversible.
See Bass v. SBC Commc’ns, Inc.,
As we understand Riley’s argument on appeal, he believes the need for the PDP was “contrived,” and in any event, he met the “legitimate” PDP targets. Br. of Appellant at 36.
4
He contends that he has shown genuine issues as to whether Lance lied about the need for the PDP and terminated him for failure to meet PDP targets that were not legitimate. Riley argues that the District Court did not fulfill its obligation under the summary judgment standard to view the evidence in the light most fаvorable to him and to give him the benefit of all reasonable inferences to be drawn from the evidence. Indeed, Riley should receive the benefit of all reasonable inferences that can be drawn from the evidence, but only if those inferences can be drawn “without resort to speculation.”
Johnson v. Ready Mixed Concrete Co.,
Riley argues that Lance’s assertions of poor sales performance were false and that the need for a PDP in the first place therefore was fabricated. “In appropriate circumstances, the trier of fact can reasonably infer from the falsity of the explanation that the employer is dissembling to cover up a discriminatory purpose.”
Reeves,
Riley points out that he received fourth-quarter sales bonuses and suggests that he would nоt have received such rewards had he been underperforming. But he testified in his deposition that both the district sales bonuses and the regional bonuses were based on the overall performance of the entire district and region, respectively, not on his individual performance. In these circumstanсes, the bonuses do not show a genuine issue as to whether Riley’s performance was meeting Lance’s expectations. Likewise, Riley’s reliance on previous positive performance evaluations in support of his argument is misplaced. Past performance evaluations — especially where, as here, they were given by different supervisors — cannot be used to show that Riley was meeting Lance’s expectations a year or more later when Riley was terminated. See id.; Fisher v. Pharmacia & Upjohn, 225 F.3d 915, 920 (8th Cir.2000).
We conclude that Riley has not shown a genuine issue as to whether the PDP was “contrived” by management. That is, when the PDP was implemented, Riley was not meeting Lance’s legitimate expectations, and no reasonable jury could find otherwise.
See Bass,
There were four categories of requirements set out in the PDP, and Lance argues that Riley fell short on all of them. First, Lance asserts that Riley did not meet the “work-with” requirements of the PDP. Three times a week, Riley, as DAM, was to take a branch manager with him on sales calls “so that the branch manager has the opportunity to see how sales presentations should be done” and so that the DAM can check to be sure “that particular stores are in compliance with any existing sales agreements or promotions.” Br. of Appellee at 3-4. In his deposition, Riley admitted that he failed to meet this requirement for at least one week during the time the PDP was in place but blames Dumas for giving another assignment to the branch manager with whom Riley had planned to work that week. Riley’s attеmpt to justify his failure does not create a genuine issue as to the legitimacy of the requirement. Presumably there were other branch managers with whom Riley might have worked, and Dumas’s uncon-troverted deposition testimony was that he did not restrict Riley’s discretion in deciding which managers to work with and what stores to visit. Rilеy’s justification for his failure to meet this PDP requirement is not evidence that creates a genuine issue as to whether the requirement was legitimate in the first instance.
See Grey v. City of Oak Grove, Mo.,
The second and third targets of the PDP required Riley to increase the distribution of certain product lines at five specified accounts and to increase overall sales to those same accounts. Lance contends that Riley fell short on at least one of these accounts. Riley argues that these were not legitimate targets because the account in question, Falley’s Food 4 Less, was not an active account. He рointed this out to Dumas at the meeting where they reviewed the PDP, but Dumas told him that
Finally, the PDP required that Riley ensure that all of his stores were in compliance with corporate marketing agreements (CMAs) previously entered into. Basically, CMAs awarded product discounts to corporate customers if all of their stоres satisfied certain in-store marketing requirements. Dumas testified that early in 2004, he personally visited several stores that were Riley’s responsibility and observed that those stores were not in compliance with their corporate parents’ CMAs. Riley does not address this testimony and has pointed to nothing in the rеcord that might raise a genuine issue on this fact.
The record shows more than one unmet PDP requirement for which Riley can show no genuine issue as to legitimacy. In these circumstances, we must conclude that summary judgment for Lance was proper. Lance’s expectations for Riley’s performance, as reflected in the PDP, were legitimate, and Riley failed to meet those PDP targets by the deadline given. Riley cannot show otherwise, that is, he cannot show that the reason Lance gave for his termination — his failure to meet the terms of his PDP — was pretextual.
The judgment of the District Court is affirmed.
Notes
. The Honorable Dean Whipple, then Chief Judge, United States District Court for the Western District of Missouri.
. The District Court also granted summary judgment to Lance on Riley’s claim for delib
.
McDonnell Douglas Corp. v. Green,
. Riley has not made it easy for us to review the parts of the record that he contends supрort his arguments. The first twenty-two pages of the Joint Appendix he filed with this Court are not sequentially paginated, and almost none of his citations to that appendix provide support for what he says in the corresponding text of his brief. Some of his citations are to page numbers beyond the last numbered рage in the single-volume appendix that he filed. We have no idea what appendix he has actually cited, but it is not the Joint Appendix he filed with this Court." Indeed, it appears that many of the documents to which Riley intended to cite are not included anywhere in the Joint Appendix that we have. See Brief of Appellant at 17-18 and citations to Joint Appendix therein for numerous examples.
