Tisa Crawford brought this Title YII suit against her former employer, lost when the judge granted summary judgment for the defendant, and appeals. She worked аs a “conductor” — the job that used to be called “trainman” or “brakeman” — which meant operating the switches that move the traсks, coupling and uncoupling the rail cars, and warning the engineers about derailment dangers. She was fired after receiving eight reprimands in her first year of work: four reprimands for not reporting for duty, two for failing to properly stabilize a boxcar (and in one of these incidents the boxcar partially derailed and was damaged), one for failing to wear safety glasses, and another one for riding on а rail car in an unsafe manner. She is a black woman— the only one employed by the defendant— and claims that she was discharged because of her race and sex.
Obviously she was not a model employee. But if equally bad or worse white men employed by the dеfendant as conductors (no white women were employed in that position) were retained despite deficiencies as serious as hers, and the employer failed at the summary judgment stage to offer a nondiscriminatory explanation for the difference in treatment or it did but the plaintiff presented evidence that the explanation was a pretext (that is, false), then she was, prima facie, a victim of discrimination.
Flores v. Preferred Technical Group,
But this assumes that the bettеr-treated workers with whom the plaintiff compares herself are a representative sample of all the workers who are comparable to her.
Bush v. Commonwealth Edison Co., supra,
The plaintiff says that the number of comparable white men who were treated *846 better than she was 10 rather than 2 — the 2 were just the most egregiously bad of the bad male workers, and if that is right then the percentage of bad men who were fired was only 50 percent, and this begins to suggest that men were treated more leniently than the plaintiff was. But only if the men who were retained really were no better than she, a judgment dependent on their being similarly enough situated to her to make comparison meаningful.
There has been a tendency in our cases, and in those of some other circuits as well (a trend resisted, however, by the Eighth Circuit, see
Rodgers v. U.S. Bank, N.A., supra,
But if as we believe cherry-picking is imprоper, the plaintiff should have to show only that the members of the comparison group are sufficiently comparable to hеr to suggest that she was singled out for worse treatment.
Goodwin v. Board of Trustees of University of Illinois,
The defendant emphasizes that members of the comparison group had worked longer for the defendant, and had different supervisors, than the plaintiff did. Length of service is particularly relevant if the comparison group is selected on the basis of the total number of reprimands received by each of the members regardless of length of service; a worker who received one reprimand in 10 years would not be comparable to a worker who had received one reprimand in one year. Length of service would be much lеss relevant if instead the comparison group is defined by reference to the number of reprimands received by each member during the year in which the plaintiff was employed, unless the compared workers had a sterling record before the comparison year. The plaintiff used the first method, and failed to compare the overall safety and absentee records of the members of the comparison group with the *847 plaintiffs record, even though as we just noted two workers with the identical number of total infractions might, given different lengths of service, have a very-different number of average infractions. Moreover, one of the members of the comparison group was not a conductor.
A difference in supervisors is important in evaluating a worker’s record of reprimands when the supervisors who issue the reprimands have broad discretion (the equivalent of prosecutorial discretion) in deciding whether and when to do so, as assumed in the many cases, such as
Radue v. Kimberly-Clark Corp.,
So summary judgment was properly granted.
AFFIRMED.
