This сase requires us to determine (1) whether, when an employer seeks to benefit from the exception described in
Greenway v. Buffalo Hilton Hotel,
BACKGROUND
The plaintiff, Sheryl P. Broadnax, a former member of the New Haven Fire Department (“the Department”), was terminated on February 25, 2002. However, the state labor board later reduced this termination to a six-month suspension without pay, and, in a union-filed appeal, the Connеcticut Superior Court vacated the six-month suspension. Broadnax testified that although she understood the effect of the decisions by the state labor board and the Connecticut Superior Court was that she could return to work, she chose not to do so because she “couldn’t take it anymore.” Later, she testified that she was unemployed, and, when asked if she had any “plans about what to do next,” she replied, “No, I don’t, but I was waiting for the trial to be over and the date kept moving. So I kind of have been in limbo.” She also testified that had she not been subjected to the treatment that she described, she would have continued as a member of the Department and pursued her goal of being Chief.
Broadnax’s case went to trial on September 22, 2003. During сlosing argument, counsel for Broadnax asked the jury to grant her approximately $30,000 per year from the time of entry of judgment until Broadnax reaches retirement age. At no time did defense counsel contend that the court, and not the jury, should determine any lost wages award. The jury found in favor of Broadnax on her Title VII gender discrimination, hostile work environment, and retaliation сláims; her Fourteenth Amendment equal protection claim; and her First Amendment free speech claim. The jury awarded Broad-nax total damages of $1,446,772. This amount included $965,571 in lost wages.
On October 22, 2003, the City filed a motion for judgment as a matter of law under Rule 50(b), and in the alternative for a new trial under Rule 59(a). After the district court denied that motion by order entered on March 2, 2004, the City filed this apрeal. As noted, this opinion addresses only two of the issues raised by this appeal: whether the lost wages award should be vacated because Broadnax did not demonstrate that she sought, other employment, and whether the district court was permitted to submit the lost wages issue to the jury based on the City’s failure to object to jury determination of the question. The remaining issues arе addressed in the accompanying summary order.
DISCUSSION
I. Evidence of an Effort to Seek Other Employment
The City argues that it is entitled to judgment as a matter of law under Rule 50 on the lost wages component of the jury’s monetary award because Broadnax failed to use reasonable diligence in attempting to pursue other employment. “We review de novo the district court’s denial of a motion for judgment as a matter of lаw.”
Rule 50(a) permits a court “during a trial” and once “a party has been fully heard on an issue” to “grant a motion for judgment as a matter of law against that party.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 50(a)(1). Rule 50(b) allows a party to make a motion for judgment as a matter of law after the jury has returned its verdict. That rule, however, only permits a party to “renew’.’ an earlier “request for judgment as a matter of law by filing а motion no later than 10 days after entry of judgment.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 50(b). The requirement that a post-trial motion for judgment as a matter of law be preceded by an earlier motion on the same subject is important because “ ‘[t]he very purpose of Rule 50(b)’s requiring a prior motion for a directed verdict is to give the other party an opportunity to cure the defects in proof thаt might otherwise preclude him [or her] from taking the case to the jury.’ ”
Cruz v. Local Union No. 3 of the Int’l Bhd. of Elec. Workers,
Genеrally, an employer seeking to avoid a lost wages award bears the burden of demonstrating that a plaintiff has failed to satisfy the duty to mitigate.
Dailey v. Societe Generale,
The City does not argue that it established that any suitable alternative work existed for Broadnax. Instead, relying on the exception carved out by
Green-way,
the City contends that it was entitled to judgment as a matter of law because Broadnax “offered absolutely no evidence of any effort on her part to seek alternative employment.” By asserting that Broadnax’s failure to offer evidence of a job search precludes a lost wages award, the City suggests that
Greenway
shifts to the plaintiff the burden of shovwng effort to obtain employment. The City is mistaken. Again,
Greenway
holds that “[a]n emplоyer ... is released from the duty to establish the availability of comparable employment
if it can prove
that the employee made no reasonable efforts to seek such employment.”
Id.
(emphasis added). Thus, the plain language of
Greenway
indicates that it is the employer, not the employee, who bears the burden on the issue of effort to seek employment. Indeed,
Greenway
makes clear that the exception it creates is merely an alternate evidentia-ry route by which a defendant can prove that the plaintiff did not fulfill the duty to mitigate, not a burden-shifting device. The decision states that the underlying rationale for the exception it creates “is that an employer should not be saddled by a requirement that
it
show other suitable employment in fact existed — the threat being that if it does not, the еmployee will be found to have mitigated his damages— when the employee, who is capable of finding replacement work, failed to pursue employment at all.”
Id.
These passages es
This outcome is сonsistent with the cases from other circuits on which
Greenway
relied. In
Weaver v. Casa
Gallardo,
Inc.,
In addition, our conclusion that
Green-way
does not disturb the employer’s traditional burden in employment cases is consistent with how the law allocates the burden of establishing failure to mitigate damages in non-employment cases. Where a claimant has a duty to mitigate damages, the opposing party generally bears the burden of showing that the claimant did not take reasonable measures to do so.
See, e.g., Ingersoll Milling Mach. Co. v. M/V Bodena,
Nonetheless, the City contends that language. in
Greenway
indicates that in that case, we shifted the burden to the plaintiff. Specifically, the City cites to Greenway’s observation that the plaintiff “made no showing that comparable compensation was
not
available,”
Greenway,
Thus, to the extent Greenway left any doubt about the issue, we hold that an employer, when arguing that a Title VII plaintiff failed to mitigate damages but seeking to avoid the requirement of showing that comparable employment is available, bears the burden on the issue of whether the plaintiff made no reasonable efforts to seek alternative employment.
With this in mind, we turn to whether the district court erred in not granting the City judgment as a matter of law on the mitigation issue. Judgment as a matter of law on an issue as to which the movant bears the burden of proof is “rarе.”
Granite Computer Leasing Corp. v. Travelers Indem. Co.,
The City introduced no evidence at trial bearing on whether Broadnax failed to seek alternative employment. In response to a question posed by her own attorney, Broadnax stated that she was unemployеd. She then gave the following answer:
Q. And do you have plans about what to do next?
A. No, I don’t,-but I was waiting for the trial to be over and the date kept moving. So I kind of have been in limbo.
Contrary to the City’s assertions, neither of these answers bears on whether, and to what extent, Broadnax sought other employment. Her statement that she was unemployed could mean either that she had not sought other employment, or she tried and fаiled — indeed, that an unsuccessful job hunt was ongoing. In addition, Broadnax’s statement that at the time of the trial, she did not have plans about what to do next does not permit any reasonable inferences about the extent of her efforts to find a job. An as-yet unsuccessful job search might have taken place before trial and might even have been ongoing during the trial, and Broadnax could have been waiting to make unspecified “plans about what to do next” until after the trial concluded. The City’s statement that based on these two items of testimony, “[i]t is clear ... that [Broadnax] made a conscious decision not to seek other employment,” is simply mistaken. Moreover, the City fails to cite any evidence beyond this testimony suggesting that Broadnax failed to pursue other employment.
In light of this, we conclude that the City failed to meet its burden of showing that Broadnax made no reasonable efforts to seek alternative employment. Consequently, it does not constitute “ ‘manifest injustice,’ ”
Cruz,
II. Jury Determination of Lost Wages
We must also cоnsider whether the district court erred in submitting to
Other circuits that have considered this question have answered in the affirmative. In
Pals v. Schepel Buick & GMC Truck, Inc.,
The Fifth Circuit has come to a similar conclusion. In
Whiting v. Jackson State University,
We find the reasoning of our sister circuits persuasive. In particular, we agree with the Seventh Circuit that having juries calculate lost wages requires no special competence or authority belonging solely to the court.
See Pals,
Here, the City failed to object to sending the lost wages issue to the jury, despite Broadnax’s including in her Complaint the statement that “[t]he plaintiff claims trial by jury of the issues in this case;” Consequently, it was not revеrsible error for the district court to submit to the jury the non-advisory determination of whether Broadnax was entitled to an award of back pay, front pay, or both, and if so, an appropriate award of lost wages.
Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, and for the reasons stated in the accompanying sum
Notes
. Some of our cases, in dicta concerning the Age Discrimination in Emplоyment Act, could be taken as suggesting that back pay is a jury question and that front pay, in contradistinction, is equitable and, hence, a question for the court.
See, e.g., Banks v. Travelers Cos.,
. Rule 39(c) distinguishes between an advisory jury determination, for which the parties’ consent is unneсessary, and a non-advisory jury determination, for which the parties’ consent is required. A non-advisory jury determination has the same effect as if a jury trial right existed. The full rule'states:
Advisory Jury and Trial by Consent. In all actions not triable of right by' a jury the court upon motion or of its own initiative may try any issue with an advisory jury' or, except in actions against the United States when a statute of the United States provides for trial without a jury, the court, with the consent of both .parties, may order a trial with a jury whose verdict has the same effect as if trial by jury had been a matter of right.
Fed.R.Civ.P. 39(c).
