Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge ROGERS.
The principal issue in this appeal is whether Lisa K. Russell presented a prima facie case of reverse discrimination by alleging an adverse employment action under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 42 U.S.C. § 2000e
et seq.
Russell alleged that the Department of Veterans Affairs engaged in reverse discrimination in violation of Title VII by awarding her a lower performance rating and a smaller cash bonus than her similarly-situated coworker. In
Brown v. Brody,
I.
Lisa K. Russell, a GS 13 procurement analyst, sued the Department of Veterans Affairs for reverse discrimination after her work performance for the period 1992-93 was rated “excellent” and she received a bonus of $807, while Sherry Patton, her coworker, was rated “outstanding” and received a bonus of $1,355. Russell is Caucasian; Patton is African American. “Outstanding” was the highest of five possible ratings; “excellent” was the second highest rating. The size of the bonus was tied to the rating. Russell alleged that her work performance and qualifications were superior to those of Patton, and that her supervisors had engaged in a pattern of preferential treatment of Patton based on her race. Russell further alleged that her “excellent” rating was adverse because it damaged her chances for promotion and provided her with less protection “against being laid off during a government ‘reduction in force,’ or RIF, pursuant to a formula outlined by the Office of Personnel Management.” The parties filed cross motions for summary judgment, and the district court granted summary judgment for the Department on the ground that Russell had not made out a prima facie case of disparate treatment discrimination under Title VII, as stated in Brown. The district court ruled that neither Russell’s performance rating nor her bonus, even if lower than she allegedly deserved, could be considered adverse actions. As to her promotion claim, the district court noted that Russell had not offered any evidence that she was denied a promotion opportunity or that the performance rating would have affected her current grade and step position. The district court also rejected Russell’s RIF argument as moot as of the time of its ruling on summary judgment, because only Russell’s last three performance evaluations could affect how she would fare during a RIF.
II.
Applying the familiar test of
McDonnell Douglas v. Green,
411 U.S.
*818
792, 802,
The Supreme Court has described the concept of a “tangible employment action” as “a significant change in employment status, such as hiring, firing, failing to promote, reassignment with significantly different responsibilities, or a decision causing a significant change in benefits.”
Burlington Indus., Inc. v. Ellerth,
The Department nonetheless suggests that Brown controls because Russell’s “excellent” rating and $807 bonus, although both lower than Russell believed she deserved, were “not adverse in an absolute sense.” Id. at 458. Because we do not equate performance evaluations and monetary bonuses, the Department’s reasoning fails. Furthermore, the logic of an action that is “adverse in an absolute sense” fits poorly with employment decisions involving bonuses. The denial of a bonus, or the award of a lesser bonus for discriminatory reasons, could never be considered “adverse in an absolute sense.” A performance evaluation can drop below an average, but a bonus cannot be negative. The perverse logical conclusion of the Department’s reasoning is that an employer could award $500 bonuses to all white employees and $1 bonuses to all similarly situated black employees without running afoul of Brown, because under such a discriminatory scheme no employee would be worse off in an absolute sense. We decline to extend Brown in this manner. Rather, we view Brown’s language about absolute deprivations as simply stating that in most circumstances performance evaluations alone at the satisfactory level or above should not be considered adverse employment actions.
The Department also urges us to rely on
Rabinovitz v. Pena,
In
Brown,
the court had no occasion to address whether a performance rating accompanied by a bonus differential was actionable.
Brown
can properly be understood, therefore, as citing
Rabinovitz
only to “refute[] the notion that formal criticism or poor performance evaluations are necessarily adverse actions.”
Brown,
For these reasons, we hold that summary judgment was inappropriate because Russell presented a prima facie case of reverse discrimination under Title VII based on an adverse employment action. To the extent, however, that Russell relies on her temporary exposure to a higher risk of RIF, we hold that such an unrealized risk of a future adverse action, even if *820 formalized, is too ephemeral to constitute an adverse employment action; as the district court noted, “while the disputed rating might have affected [Russell’s] chances of being ‘[RIF]ed’ at an earlier date, it cannot affect her chances now.”
III.
Russell also challenges a series of orders by the district court for which our review is for abuse of discretion.
See Shepherd v. Am. Broad. Cos.,
Insofar as Russell contends that the district court erred in not awarding costs and attorneys fees after directing the Department not to destroy records, she has misconstrued the district court’s ruling. The district court’s statements provide no basis to conclude that the district court made the necessary predicate finding of bad faith. The district court judge stated: “Although I don’t think it is necessary, I will direct the Government not to destroy any documents that are relevant to this case.” Russell’s counsel indicated that he was satisfied with this ruling. On appeal, Ms. Russell interprets the judge’s remark as a sanction against the Department under the district court’s inherent powers. Hardly. By saying “I don’t think it is necessary,” the judge was indicating that he found little or no merit to the motion and that he did not believe that the Department was destroying evidence. The district court did not find that the Department had acted in bad faith in destroying records, and absent such a finding, there was no basis for the award of monetary sanctions.
See Shepherd,
Russell’s contention that the district court abused its discretion in denying her motion for sanctions for bad faith litigation abuses without an evidentiary hearing fares no better. She presents no basis for concluding that the district court abused its discretion in proceedings without such a hearing.
See LaPrade v. Kidder Peabody & Co., Inc.,
Regarding discovery, the district court will need to reassess, in light of our reversal of the grant of summary judgment, the *821 relevance of Russell’s motion to compel discovery responses to five interrogatories, which pertained to the handling of a letter that she sent concerning the safeguarding of records, the disposition of telephone records, alleged document destruction by Department attorneys, Department action to preserve telephone records, and Department policies and procedures to preserve records. To the extent relevant to Russell’s claim of disparate treatment, the discovery requests may be meritorious. To the extent they relate to her motion for sanctions for litigation abuse that the district court properly denies, there may be no basis for granting the requests. We leave these matters to the district court on remand, to proceed as is appropriate, recognizing that the district court may ultimately conclude that its prior discovery rulings should stand.
Finally, Russell’s effort to pursue an independent cause of action for bad faith litigation abuse against the Department fails. As Russell acknowledges, to date no circuit court has held that a federal cause of action exists. Because she did not raise this issue in the district court and does not show on appeal that “a manifest injustice might otherwise result,”
Herbert v. National Academy of Sciences,
Accordingly, we reverse the grant of summary judgment for failure to present a prima facie case under Title VII, and remand the case for further proceedings; we deny the request to plead a new cause of action.
