Cynthiа Strickland appeals the order of the district court granting her employer, Federal Express Corporation, summary judgment on her claims under the Age Discrimination in Employment Act (ADEA), 29 U.S.C. § 621 et seq. Strickland alleges that she was discharged from her position as Senior Training Specialist in Federal Express’s Latin American and Caribbean Division because of her age. At the time of her discharge, Strickland was fifty years old. The district court held that there was no genuine issue of material fact that she was not qualified for her position, failing a crucial element of the prima facie case for discrimination. Additionally, the district court determined that there was no genuine issue of material fact that Federal Express’s proffered explanation for Strickland’s discharge, her nonage-related discipline record, was not рre-textual. For the reasons set forth below, we affirm the district court’s summary judgment.
I
Strickland started with Federal Express in 1981 as a data processing operator. She progressed through the ranks and, in 1996, became a senior training specialist for the Latin American and Cаribbean Division of Federal Express. Her duties involved the development and execution of training programs for Federal Express employees.
The incidents that are the subject of her complaint began in early 1996 when Rosa Lindahl, who was then age 36, was appointed as Strickland’s immediate supervisor and permanent manager of a work group of about ten employees. By October 1996, Lindahl had held several discussions with Strickland regarding her job performance, noting that Strickland ad
On April 3, 1997, Lindahl issued a second warning letter, reprimanding Strickland for an angry and loud confrontation that Strickland had with fellow employees. That same day, Lindahl issued a performance reminder for Strickland’s failure to complete on time the training program that she had been compiling. According to Federal Express policy, however, the issuance of two warning letters was sufficient for termination, and Strickland was terminated on April 11,1997.
Strickland filed two complaints of discrimination with the EEOC. The EEOC issued a notice of a right to sue on the complaints, and Strickland filed this action in district court on March 16, 1999. Strickland claimed that Federal Express had terminated her because of her age or, in the alternative, had retaliated for her complaints. Strickland alleged that Federal Express was retaliating for her September 23, 1996 memorandum criticizing mаnagement, but containing no allegation of age discrimination, and an EEOC complaint of age discrimination that she filed on April 3,1997.
After discovery, Federal Express moved for summary judgment. The district court granted the motion with regard to all of Strickland’s claims. The court held that two crucial questions — whether Strickland was “qualified” for her position, as required to establish her prima facie case, and whether Federal Express’s proffered reason for her termination was merely pretext for actual discrimination — presented only one issue: whethеr StricMand was performing her job adequately. In either case, Strickland presented no evidence that the incidents for which she was reprimanded had not occurred or of any discriminatory animus which otherwise had motivated the terminations.
Strickland now appeals the district court’s summary judgment.
II
Age discrimination claims are subject to the burden-shifting scheme of McDonnell Douglas v. Green,
Strickland was fifty years old at the time of her termination, she was fired, and she was replaced by someone younger than forty.
The district court held that Strickland was not otherwise qualified for her position becаuse her disciplinary record indicated that she was not adequately performing her job. The test for determining whether an employee is otherwise qualified is whether “he was doing his job well enough to meet his employer’s legitimate expectations.” Dews v. A.B. Dick Co.,
In that regard, the court also held that there was no genuine issue of material fact that Federal Express’s proffered reasons for Strickland’s dismissal were not pretex-tual. The proffered reasons were also articulated in the warning letters and performance reminder delivered to Strickland in accordance with Federal Express’s policies. Strickland does not contest the facts underlying those warning letters and the performance rеminder. Strickland does argue that her first warning letter reprimanded her for conduct that was protected under Federal Express internal policies. At least in a suit denominated as an age discrimination action, violations of Federal Express policies are not actionable. Indeed, it is quite questionable that her caustic note regarding Lindahl was protected even under Federal Express’s policies, which require that feedback to managers be civil in tone and which do not explicitly authorize the dissemination of the feedback to a wider set of employees.
Strickland’s argument instead is with the weight that Federal Express reasonably could have assigned to the incidents for which she was disciplined. What really motivated Federal Express was age-based animus, Strickland claims. She points to several pieces of evidence for her argument. First, Strickland argues that the treatment of the other workers over forty in her working group creates a genuine issue of material fact regarding whether age-based animus motivated Lindahl’s personnel decisions. Of the ten employees in Strickland’s working group, three were over the age of forty. Those employees included Strickland, Katie Sanchez, age 41, and Carlos Lizardi, age 56. Neither Sanchez nor Lizardi was terminated. Instead, Sanchez rеsigned after receiving some bad performance reviews. Lizardi retired and also received at least one performance review with which he was unsatisfied. Sanchez, however, was replaced with an employee who was 43 years old, two yeаrs older than Sanchez. Lizardi’s replacement was younger than forty. None of the other employees in the working group left in close proximity to Strickland’s termination.
Additionally, Strickland argues that several ageist comments made by Federal Express managers raise a gеnuine issue of material fact that her termination was motivated by age. There are two comments that, according to Strickland, betray an age-based bias at Federal Express. Joseph McCarty, the president of Federal Express Logistics, said in a memo to Lin-dahl that “training needs to start over from scratch.” Strickland was member of the training department. Lindahl also said in a memorandum to her superiors that: “There are some limits on reassurances that can be given. Where there is deadwood, we have got to takе action.” Strickland argues that these statements indicate that Federal Express managers intended to wipe the slate clean of older workers, those who through age, the managers thought, had withered at the vine.
We have made clear before that “isоlated and ambiguous comments ‘are too abstract, in addition to being irrelevant and prejudicial, to support a claim of age discrimination.’ ” Scott v. Goodyear Tire & Rubber, Co.,
Our determination that the district court did not err in determining that there was no genuine issue of material fact with regard to the non-pretextual nature of Federal Express’s articulated reasons for termination also resolves Strickland’s retaliation claim. If the reasons are not pretextual, then Strickland was not terminated for her complaints. Moreover, Strickland made no protected complaints until after her termination was a foregone
Ill
For all the foregoing reasons, we AFFIRM the district court’s summary judgment in favor of Federal Express.
