Thomas Yates appeals from the entry of summary judgment on his age discrimination claim against Rexton, Inc. Yates alleges that Rexton terminated his employment in violation of the Age Discrimination in Employment Act (ADEA), 29 U.S.C. §§ 621-634 (1994 & Supp. IV 1998), and the Minnesota Human Rights Act, Minn. Stat. § 363.03 (2000). Yates argues that the district court applied the wrong analytical framework and erred in its pretext analysis, that it improperly concluded that certain evidence submitted by Yates was inadmissible hearsay, and that it improperly made findings of fact in ruling on Rex-ton’s summary judgment motion. We reverse and remand.
Because we are reviewing the entry of summary judgment, we view the facts in the light most favorable to Yates.
Fast v. S. Union Co.,
In 1988, Rexton moved from Chicago to Plymouth, Minnesota, and the company recruited a new management team, engineers, technicians, and marketing and sales staff. Yates, one of the few Rexton employees to make the move, assisted in the recruitment.
Although Rexton’s policy is that all employees are to receive regularly scheduled performance reviews with an accompanying written summary, Yates received no such reviews during his employment. According to Zei, the most important performance criterion for Yates was “how many did you sell and what price did you sell them at.” Judged by that yardstick, Yates performed well. From 1988 to 1996, he was responsible for increasing Rexton’s annual sales from $5 million in 1988 to $16 million in 1996. During that same time, Rexton’s sales grew an average of 30 percent per year and the average selling price of an in-the-ear hearing aid rose from $179 to $302. Yates received approximately $22,650 in merit pay increases and $157,469 in performance bonuses from Rexton during those years.
Zei was promoted in 1991 to become president of Siemens Hearing Instruments in New Jersey and chairman of the board of Rexton. While he was still in Minnesota as Rexton’s president, Zei asked Yates if he had plans to retire and, in spite of Yates’s denial, Zei told others that Yates would soon be retiring. Zei was replaced as president of Rexton by Brian Woo-dhurst, who was terminated by Hans Weckherlin, a managing director of Siemens AG, within a few months of his hiring. The next Rexton president, Delain Wright, remained in that position through the time Yates was terminated- in 1996.
During his tenure, Wright had numerous conversations with Zei in which Zei expressed the need to get Yates removed as a Rexton employee. Zei attributed this decision to two Siemens AG officials in Germany: Weckherlin and Dr. Prigge, who were a managing director and a manager, respectively. According to Wright, Weckherlin and Prigge had told Zei that they were of the opinion that employees over age 60 should retire, and they believed that Yates would retire soon because of his age. Zei told Wright that he was authorized to enter into a consulting agreement with Yates, which Zei believed Yates would take because no other company would hire him at this time in his life.
Zei’s pressure on Wright was documented in an August 13, 1994 memo stating: “We have discussed the issue of Tom Yates. You have a commitment to demonstrate that Tom is off the payroll and head count by the end of the year. You are authorized to keep him on in a consulting capacity.” Zei and Yates corresponded directly about a potential consulting agreement. In a letter dated June 8, 1995, Zei rejected Yates’s proposal and wrote that he had substantial concerns about Yates’s performance. Yates responded a month later and referred to a June 20 lunch he had with Wright in which Wright assured him that there were “no issues” with his performance. Yates’s letter continued: “Indeed, not only have you and I never had a discussion about my performance, no one at Rexton (or Siemens, for that matter) has ever questioned my ability as a manager.”
Wright told Yates in the spring of 1996 that he was going to hire Tom Cutting, age 35,' to assist him in his duties. Although Wright asserts that Yates told him in the *798 spring of 1995 that he intended to retire in two years, Wright also acknowledged that he became aware no later than the spring of 1996 that Yates had no such plans. Nevertheless, Wright sent Yates a memo on April 5, 1996, stating that he intended to bring Cutting on in early May as National Sales Manager. He intended for Cutting to begin with responsibility for inside sales, then gradually take on more responsibility for marketing and behind-the-ear hearing aid sales, and eventually take over all of Yates’s duties.
On November 23, 1996, Wright terminated Yates at age 68. Cutting was then in charge of the inside sales force and Yates was responsible for marketing, behind-the-ear sales, and outside sales. Cutting never did assume all of Yates’s responsibilities, as the supervision of outside sales fell to Wright.
Rexton asserts that Yates was part of an across-the-board reduction-in-force which resulted in the termination of eight employees. The average age of the terminated individuals, excluding Yates, was approximately 35. In a letter written by its attorney in response to the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission’s request for information, Rexton took the position that Yates was included in the reduction-in-force because of poor performance: he was unable to successfully hire and retain field sales personnel; he failed to adequately review and control expense reports; he failed to follow up with training field sales personnel; he failed to develop meaningful sales plans and promotions; he failed to record business deals with customers and made poor decisions on business loans to customers; and he used abusive language and engaged in abusive behavior towards other employees.
Yates argues that these reasons are pre-textual. He asserts that age was the reason for his firing and in support offers evidence from a variety of sources. He points to: comments made by Zei, Prigge, and Weckherlin expressing their opinion that Yates would and should retire because of his age; other Rexton and Siemens employees over fifty who were fired and replaced by much younger employees; ageist attitudes by Siemens management that, because of the control Siemens exercised over Rexton, were relevant to Yates’s situation; and the promotion and retention of Tom Cutting.
I.
We review the district court’s grant of summary judgment de novo, giving the non-moving party the benefit of any reasonable inferences.
Britton v. City of Poplar Bluff,
Yates asserts that Rexton discriminated against him in violation of both federal age discrimination and Minnesota human rights laws. The district court applied the burden-shifting analysis of
McDonnell Douglas Corp. v. Green,
The district court was correct in applying the
McDonnell Dcmglas
analysis, as Yates presented no direct evidence of discrimination.
2
“Direct evidence is that which demonstrates a specific link between the challenged employment action and the alleged animus.”
Kells v. Sinclair Buick-GMC Track, Inc.,
Because Yates presented only indirect evidence of discrimination,
McDonnell Douglas
applies. The requirements Yates must satisfy in order to establish a prima facie case are stated somewhat differently because this is a reduction-in-force action. Yates must show that (1) he is age forty or older; (2) he met the applicable job qualifications; (3) he was discharged; and (4) age was a factor in the employer’s decision to terminate him.
Reynolds v. Land O’Lakes, Inc.,
The district court determined that Yates satisfied each of the four factors and that he therefore established a prima facie case. Rexton argues that Yates did not present additional evidence that age was a factor in his termination. As the district court. noted, this Court has determined that the “additional showing” inquiry is not a significant hurdle for an employment discrimination plaintiff.
Hutson,
II.
The district court determined that Rex-ton presented evidence to support its legitimate, non-discriminatory reasons for firing Yates: Yates was not performing satisfactorily, and he was part of a legitimate reduction-in-force. Accordingly, the burden then shifted back to Yates to demonstrate pretext. Yates argues that, once the analysis moved to the issue of pretext, the district court incorrectly applied that analysis and erroneously determined that Yates had not presented sufficient evidence to create a genuine issue of material fact.
Once the employer produces evidence of a non-discriminatory reason for its employment decision, the burden shifts back to the plaintiff to offer proof that would allow a rational fact-finder to conclude that the proffered reason was not the true reason for the employment action, and that age was.
St. Mary’s Honor Ctr. v. Hicks,
Yates can avoid summary judgment in the face of Rexton’s presentation of nondiscriminatory reasons only if he presents evidence that (1) creates a question of material fact as to whether Rexton’s proffered reasons are pretextual, and (2) creates a reasonable inference that age was a determinative factor in the adverse employment decision.
Fisher v. Pharmacia & Upjohn,
We conclude that Yates created a question of material fact as to whether Rexton’s proffered reasons for firing him are pretextual. Although Rexton argues that Yates’s performance was unsatisfactory, Yates presented evidence to the contrary. Rexton’s policy calls for employees to receive periodic performance reviews, but Yates received no such reviews during his employment. In a July 1995 letter to Zei, Yates reported that Wright had told him a few weeks earlier that there were “no issues” with his performance. Yates also noted that no one at Rexton or at Siemens had ever questioned his ability as a manager. In his reply letter, Zei did not specifically address these statements.
*801 Rexton’s bottom line grew during Yates’s tenure, as well. Rexton’s-sales grew an average of 80 percent a year for each of the five years prior to Yates’s termination. According to Zei, the most important performance criterion for Yates (whom Zei supervised from 1987 until 1990) is “how many did you sell and what price did you sell them at.” The average selling price of Rexton’s in-the-ear hearing aid rose from $179 in 1988 to $302 in 1996. Under the standard articulated by Zei, Yates presented evidence creating a genuine issue of fact concerning his performance.
Similarly, we conclude that Yates created a reasonable inference that age was a determinative factor in his firing. In so doing, we are mindful that the fact-finder would be permitted to consider the evidence establishing Yates’s prima facie case and inferences drawn from that evidence.
Reeves,
The district court’s determination is consistent with this court’s treatment of comments demonstrating age animus. Assuming for the purposes of argument that Wright was the sole decision-maker as to Yates’s termination, the comments of Siemens’ management could not themselves support a finding of discrimination. However, when the comments are considered along with other evidence of pretext, they may be sufficient to allow a fact-finder to reasonably infer age discrimination.
See Kells v. Sinclair Buick-GMC Truck, Inc.,
Although the district court determined that the comments were relevant, it ultimately did not consider them because it found them to be “hearsay, not falling within any hearsay exception,” and inadmissible as a matter of law. This ruling primarily included evidence Yates presented both as to Zei’s own statements to Wright as well as Zei’s statements to *802 Wright which repeated comments by Prigge and Weckherlin.
We review the district court’s exclusion of evidence in a summary judgment motion for abuse of discretion.
Nat’l Steel Corp. v. Golden Eagle Ins. Co.,
Some of the statements were also admissible because they were made by an agent of a party-opponent and therefore are not hearsay.
See
Fed.R.Evid. 801(d)(2)(D). The district court’s determination that Prigge’s and Weckherlin’s statements were relevant because of the control Siemens exercised over Rexton plays a role in this analysis. We need not consider whether Prigge and Weckherlin were decision-makers with respect to Yates’s termination because they were intimately involved in the process of shaping Rexton’s work-force. For the purpose of determining whether Prigge and Weckher-lin were “agents” under Rule 801(d)(2)(D), it is not necessary that they be the actual decision-makers. “Significant involvement, either as advisor or other participant in a process leading to a challenged decision,” may be sufficient to establish agency under Rule 801(d)(2)(D).
Equal Employment Opportunity Comm’n v. Watergate at Landmark Condo.,
We conclude that the inter-connectedness of Rexton and Siemens is sufficient to establish that Prigge and Weckherlin were agents of Rexton in this evidentiary context. Our conclusion is consistent with an earlier ADEA case from our circuit,
Bevan v. Honeywell, Inc.,
Zei’s statement to Wright that Yates would accept a consulting agreement because no one else would hire him at his age and Zei’s statement to two fellow employees that Yates was retiring were also admissible. Not only were these statements of a party opponent, but they were not hearsay because they were not offered for the truth of the matter asserted. Fed. R.Evid. 801(c);
see Equal Employment Opportunity Comm’n v. HBE Corp.,
We conclude that Yates created both a question of fact as to pretext and a reasonable inference that age was a determinative factor in his termination. Thus, even though Rexton set forth non-discriminatory reasons for its action, Yates provided sufficient evidence of pretext to avoid summary judgment.
*803 Because our opinion results in the remand of this case for trial, we need not separately consider Yates’s final argument that the district court erred in making findings of fact in its summary judgment ruling.
III.
For the reasons set forth above, we reverse the district court’s entry of summary judgment in favor of Rexton and remand for trial on Yates’s age discrimination claims.
Notes
. The Minnesota Supreme Court has determined that the
McDonnell Douglas
analysis also applies to age discrimination claims in the employment arena which allege violation of the Minnesota Human Rights Act.
Anderson v. Hunter, Keith, Marshall & Co.,
