Pilgrim v. Tufts University

USCA1 Opinion











UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS

FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT

____________________

No. 96-2084

HUGH G. PILGRIM,

Plaintiff, Appellant,

v.

THE TRUSTEES OF TUFTS COLLEGE,

Defendants, Appellees.

____________________


APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS

[Hon. Richard G. Stearns, U.S. District Judge]

____________________

Before

Selya, Circuit Judge,

Aldrich and Cyr, Senior Circuit Judges.

____________________


William F. Green with whom Robert A. Rossi was on brief for
appellant.
David C. Henderson with whom Victoria L. Botvin and Nutter,
McClennen & Fish were on brief for appellees.

____________________

July 10, 1997
____________________






ALDRICH, Senior Circuit Judge. Plaintiff Hugh G.

Pilgrim ("Pilgrim") commenced this journey, pro se, with a 24

page complaint of employment discrimination containing 19

counts, his opponents being the Trustees of Tufts College

("Tufts") and several named individuals. After a number of not

now relevant steps he ended, with counsel, with 6 counts, some

old, some new, and with Tufts as the sole adversary. At one

time or another he faced the following procedures -- a motion

to dismiss; multiple motions to strike; and defendant's motion

for summary judgment. On his own part Pilgrim moved for

summary judgment. In due course the court denied this, and

granted all of Tufts' motions. We affirm.

I. Background

We take the facts favorably to plaintiff, or, if

against him, if not rebutted. Pilgrim was an African-American,

a native of Barbados. He had many qualifications, for which,

in November 1987, he became employed as an environmental

research analyst in Tufts Center for Environmental Management

("CEM"). In January of 1989 his promotion to Program

Development Analyst brought him under the supervision of Kurt

Fischer ("Fischer"), a white male. In April of 1990 Fischer

gave Pilgrim an "inconsistent" performance rating. Despite

Pilgrim's request for the full account, Fischer did not supply

it until July 30. The writing was even more negative than the

oral review. Fischer required Pilgrim to sign for its receipt



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without any opportunity either to read or discuss. Under Tufts

policy Pilgrim should have been allowed to discuss a negative

review with the next level of management, in this case, William

Moomaw ("Moomaw") a director of CEM and Fischer's supervisor.

Moomaw, however, refused to meet with Pilgrim.

Beginning in June of 1990, Fischer began imposing

disciplinary restrictions on Pilgrim. These included a

requirement that, for a three week period, he submit daily logs

recording all of his activities (including telephone calls in

and out, and all meetings held), and that he submit in advance

abstracts of papers intended for publication or acceptance for

presentation at conferences. He was also denied funding to

attend professional conferences. Fischer imposed further

disciplinary restrictions in September 1990, including

reimplementation of the daily log requirement and an order that

Pilgrim cease participating in an ad hoc committee on race,

justice and the environment.

According to Pilgrim's affidavit, during the period

Fischer supervised Pilgrim, he called him "space pilgrim,"

"lazy" and accused him of "shifting positions all the time."

Pilgrim took these comments as racial slurs.

On September 24, 1990, Pilgrim initiated an internal

grievance procedure alleging discrimination by Fischer.

Pilgrim's claims were initially evaluated by Moomaw who

subsequently informed Pilgrim by letter that there was no



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evidence of discrimination by Fischer. Pilgrim proceeded with

the grievance. A grievance committee (sometimes the

"Committee") composed of three Tufts faculty members, was

convened. We note, in passing, that in March of 1991, Dean

Anthony Cortese ("Cortese") refused to provide Pilgrim with a

reference to accompany his application for admission to a

workshop. According to Pilgrim, Cortese told him that the

refusal was based on the fact that Pilgrim had filed this

grievance.

In January of 1991, the Tufts Budget Department

directed CEM to cut its payroll expenses by ten percent.

Moomaw and two other directors decided to eliminate ten staff

positions and to reconfigure others. As a result of these

moves, Pilgrim's job was deemed superfluous. A few of the

designated employees left voluntarily while the rest, including

Pilgrim, were scheduled for termination. On the advice of the

Human Resources Department, however, Pilgrim was spared because

of his pending grievance. The other employees (including an

African-American woman who was rehired three months later),

were terminated on June 10, 1991.

On March 27, 1991, the Committee had forwarded the

results of its investigation of Pilgrim's grievance to Jean

Mayer ("Mayer"), then President of Tufts. When Pilgrim

attempted to obtain a copy of the Committee's report, he was

told that Mayer had determined that it was "classified." As a



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result of the Committee's recommendations, however, Fischer was

relieved of all supervisory duties and Pilgrim began reporting

to Moomaw.

In July of 1991, six weeks after the new reporting

relationship began, Moomaw gave Pilgrim an "inconsistent"

performance rating, repeating criticisms made by Fischer a year

earlier. Also that summer, Pilgrim applied for a promotion to

Executive Director of the Sustainability Consortium, a position

which was eventually given to a white female.

On October 2, 1991, Pilgrim filed a complaint with

the Massachusetts Commission Against Discrimination ("MCAD")

claiming various acts of alleged racial and national origin

discrimination on the part of Tufts. On October 31, he was

notified that he would be terminated on December 31, and he

amended his MCAD complaint to reflect the fact that he was

being "laid-off." He filed an amended complaint in this action

on June 2, 1994, charging, inter alia, racial and national

origin-based harassment, failure to promote, wrongful

discharge, and retaliatory discharge1 in violation of Title VII



1. Not to by-pass anything, we recognize in a footnote,
Pilgrim's retaliatory discharge claim, on the very difficult
to make assumption that it was inferentially pleaded in his
complaint to the MCAD. Even assuming that amending his MCAD
complaint as to his "laid off" status was enough to encompass
a claim of retaliatory discharge in this action, see
Lattimore v. Polaroid Corp., 99 F.3d 456, 464 (1st Cir. 1996)
(construing liberally pro se plaintiff's administrative
complaint), it is precluded by the undisputed fact that Tufts
was not notified of the MCAD complaint until more than two
months after Pilgrim was notified of his termination, see

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of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 42 U.S.C. S 2000e et seq., and

pendent state discrimination claims brought under Mass. Gen.

Laws ch. 151B, and the Massachusetts Civil Rights Act.

II. Discussion

Prior to any analysis of Pilgrim's substantive

claims, we first dispose of several procedural grounds alleged.

Pilgrim maintains that the court erred in striking certain

exhibits and portions of his affidavits, wrongly disregarded

his showing of a continuing violation which would have pushed

back the barriers of the statutes of limitation, and abused its

discretion in refusing to admit the Committee's report,

virtually the only piece of evidence presented in his

opposition to summary judgment. We review seriatim.

A. Motions to Strike

Pilgrim appeals the allowance of Tufts' motion to

strike 18 of 19 documents submitted in support of his motion

for summary judgment2 and the partial striking of "incompetent

hearsay" in the 19th document: his affidavit. One of the





Fennell v. First Step Designs, Ltd., 83 F.3d 526, 535 (1st
Cir. 1996) (requiring a plaintiff to show knowledge of
protected conduct by employer).

2. Although Pilgrim is not appealing the denial of his
motion for summary judgment, he apparently subsequently
resubmitted some or all of these previously stricken
documents in conjunction with his opposition to Tufts' motion
for summary judgment and now argues that they should have
been considered as part of the court's analysis of that
motion.

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stricken documents was the report of the grievance committee,

which we address separately, post.

Without further explanation for the disallowance of

these documents, we will assume that the court's basis for

striking was the one stated in Tufts' motion, that the court

had used to grant an earlier motion to strike: Pilgrim's

failure to certify the documents in accordance with Fed. R.

Civ. P. 56(e), or his failure to state an inability to do so.

See Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(f). Pilgrim makes no excuses, arguing,

instead, that Tufts' motion to strike was untimely, coming

after the 20 days allowed by Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(f). As Tufts

points out, however, Rule 12(f) applies only to pleadings and

has no applicability to motions made in pursuit of or in

opposition to summary judgment.

In regard to Pilgrim's affidavit, we are unsure which

of the statements the court struck. However, we will consider

statements Pilgrim alleges were made directly to him by

Fischer, Cortese, Rebecca Flewellyn, Mayer's assistant, and

Kathe Cronin, the Human Resource Director, as admissions by a

party opponent under Fed. R. Evid. 801(d)(2). The alleged

statement by Professor Gerard Gill, one of the members of the

Committee, to Pilgrim that "race was a factor in Kurt Fischer's

treatment of [him]" was inadmissible hearsay against Tufts. We

concur with the court that all other alleged statements were

hearsay and therefore excludable.



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B. Continuing Violations

As part of its motion to dismiss, Tufts sought to

limit Pilgrim's Title VII and Chapter 151B claims to conduct

occurring outside the parameters set by the respective statutes

of limitation. The court held that any conduct alleged to

violate Title VII that occurred before February 4, 1991 -- 240

days prior to the MCAD complaint -- and any conduct relevant to

his claim under Chapter 151B occurring before June 2, 1991 --

180 days prior to the MCAD complaint, could not be considered.

See 42 U.S.C. S 2000e-5(e); 29 C.F.R. SS 1601.70(a),

1601.74(a); Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 151B S 9. To avoid the

strictures of the limitations periods, Pilgrim contends that

the periods should be extended due to a continuing violation.

In the Title VII arena:

[I]f a violation is of a continuing
nature, the charge of discrimination filed
with the appropriate agency may be timely
as to all discriminatory acts encompassed
by the violation so long as the charge is
filed during the life of the violation or
within the statutory period . . . which
commences upon the violation's
termination.

Kassaye v. Bryant College, 999 F.2d 603, 606 (1st Cir. 1993).

The same holds true of Chapter 151B. See Lynn Teachers Union

v. Massachusetts Comm'n Against Discrim., 406 Mass. 515, 520

(1990).

A continuing violation may be either serial or

systemic. La wton v. State Mut. Life Assur. Co., 101 F.3d 218,



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221 (1st Cir. 1996). A systemic violation has its "roots in a

discriminatory policy or practice; so long as the policy or

practice itself continues into the limitation period, a

challenger may be deemed to have filed a timely complaint."

Id. at 222 (citing Jensen v. Frank, 912 F.2d 517, 522 (1st Cir.

1990)). Pilgrim argues only for a serial violation. This is

one "compris[ing] a number of discriminatory acts emanating

from the same discriminatory animus, each of which constitutes

a separate wrong actionable under Title VII." Id. at 221-22.

The series must contain a specific beachhead violation

occurring within the limitations period. Muniz-Cabrero v.

Ruiz, 23 F.3d 607, 610 (1st Cir. 1994). Mere subsequent

effects of earlier discriminatory action will not extend the

limitations period. Kassaye, 999 F.2d at 606. As a threshold

requirement, Pilgrim must identify at least one discriminatory

act or practice occurring after February 4, 1991.

Pilgrim maintains that Cortese's refusal of the

letter of reference on March 1, 1991 and Moomaw's negative May

1991 review establish that beachhead. We disagree. Pilgrim

has not shown either of these actions to constitute an

actionable violation of Title VII or Chapter 151B. Pilgrim's

affidavit testimony that Cortese told him he was denying the

letter of reference because Pilgrim had filed a discrimination

grievance is not of itself evidence of, nor an admission of

racial or national origin bias. Nor has Pilgrim identified any



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evidence that would lend an inference of illegal motivation to

Moomaw's review. Thus, there is no continuing violation that

would serve to extend the limitations period.

C. Denial of Extension of Discovery Deadline

On April 24, 1995, the court set December 29, 1995 as

the deadline for discovery. On December 11 Pilgrim noticed

five Tufts employees, including Fischer and Moomaw, for

depositions to be taken in mid-January 1996. On January 4,

1996, Tufts objected to the proposed depositions as being after

the discovery deadline. On January 9, Pilgrim moved for an

extension of the deadline that the court then denied. We will

overturn a court's denial of a motion to extend discovery only

for abuse of discretion. Coyante v. Puerto Rico Ports Auth.,

105 F.3d 17, 22 (1st Cir. 1997). There is no such abuse here.

Pilgrim acknowledges that his failure to ask for an extension

prior to the deadline's expiration was an error in judgment.

In the next breath, however, he accuses Tufts of delaying

delivery of documents, without which he could not properly

depose its employees.

We cannot agree. First, Tufts did not, as Pilgrim

implies, delay in the delivery of these documents. The record

reflects that an overly broad discovery order by Pilgrim

resulted in a motion to quash and finally in a protection

order. Second, Pilgrim's own brief tells us that these

documents were delivered on December 21, 1995, 10 days after he



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noticed the depositions. We fail to understand how Pilgrim can

claim that he scheduled the depositions after receiving the

documents and then admit that the documents came later. If

there was any error here, it was Pilgrim's own.

D. The Grievance Report3

Central to almost every substantive ground in

Pilgrim's appeal is a report (the "Report") issued by the

Committee on March 27, 1991. When Pilgrim attempted to submit

it as part of his summary judgment motion, the court found it

inadmissible as "a collection of multi-level hearsay

statements." We understand Pilgrim's distress at this ruling,

the Report being his only hope of withstanding Tufts' motion

for summary judgment. On appeal, as he did below, Pilgrim

contends that the Report was not hearsay, but instead

qualifies, inter alia, as an admission of a party opponent

under Fed. R. Evid. 801(d)(2)(B), as an adoptive admission.

Rule 801(d)(2)(B) provides that "[a] statement is not

hearsay if . . . [the] statement is offered against a party and

is . . . a statement of which the party has manifested an

adoption or belief in its truth . . . ." The burden of showing

the manifestation is on the party offering the evidence. Cf.

Riccardi v. Children's Ho sp. Medical Ctr., 811 F.2d 18, 24 (1st



3. As we noted, ante, the Report was one of the documents
earlier stricken for lack of certification. However, since
the court ruled on its admissibility in its memoranda denying
Pilgrim's motion for summary judgment, we assume this
deficiency was repaired.

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Cir. 1987). We have identified the correct approach where

documents are concerned as asking whether "the surrounding

circumstances tie the possessor and the document together in

some meaningful way." Un ited States v. Paulino, 13 F.3d 20, 24

(1st Cir. 1994). We believe that Pilgrim has carried his

burden, at least to an extent. The question is to what extent?

The answer is: to the extent that the adoptive party accepted

and acted upon the evidence.

"Adoption or acquiescence may be manifested in any

appropriate manner." Fed. Rules of Evid., Advisory Committee

Notes. The Committee was convened under Tufts' established

grievance procedures, and its recommendations given to Mayer.

The major ones were that Fischer be relieved from all

supervisory responsibilities, that Pilgrim, instead, report to

Moomaw, and that an independent overseer outside of CEM be

appointed to monitor the new reporting relationship.

Tufts does not dispute that Mayer implemented all

three of these recommendations. In particular, removing

Fischer from all supervisory duties was a serious enough action

that we cannot but think that Mayer would not have carried this

out unless he accepted the Report's conclusions as the truth.

As such, his acceptance of the contents of the Report and his

implementation of its recommendations, without disclaimer,

served as an adoption of the Report for the purposes of Rule

801(D)(2)(B). We note, however, that while the Report was



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generated during the limitations period, most of its contents

detail conduct that occurred prior to that period, and hence

barred from consideration. We will, nevertheless, discuss it.

In essence, the Committee concluded that Fischer had

failed to give Pilgrim a fair and impartial review and that he

had exaggerated complaints about Pilgrim's performance in order

to justify an "apparent desire . . . to terminate [him]." It

also stated a finding that "Pilgrim appears to have been

singled out for certain types of disciplinary actions." On the

question of racial and national origin discrimination it

stated:

[N]o substantive evidence that Mr. Fischer
intended to discriminate against Mr.
Pilgrim on the basis of race, color, [or]
national origin . . . although Mr. Fischer
could have been motivated by prejudices
against Mr. Pilgrim. It is plausible to
the Committee that Mr. Fischer's actions
were motivated by other factors, such as
personality conflicts. However, the
Committee could not fully evaluate this
component of the grievance, as performance
reviews of other CEM personnel supervised
by Fischer could not be obtained.
Therefore, the Committee could not compare
Mr. Fischer's decisions with respect to
performance ratings and salary increases.
Nonetheless, the Committee finds that
several of Mr. Fischer's actions . . . did
result in the perception of discrimination
by Mr. Pilgrim. Such restrictions could
have had discriminatory impacts to the
extent that Mr. Pilgrim was in several
instances treated differently from other
professional staff at CEM.

Having determined that this finding, along with party opponent

admissions from Pilgrim's affidavit, compose all of Pilgrim's


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evidence, we turn next to the court's grant of summary judgment

to Tufts.

E. Summary Judgment

We review grants of summary judgment de novo,

indulging, as must the court below, in all inferences favorable

to the non-moving party. Lehman v. Prudential Ins. Co. of Am.,

74 F.3d 323, 327 (1st Cir. 1996). Summary judgment is

appropriate only when the record, viewed in this favorable

light, produces no genuine issue of material fact, thereby

entitling the moving party to a judgment as a matter of law.

Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(c). This standard is applicable even in

employment discrimination cases "where elusive concepts such as

motive or intent are at issue . . . if the non-moving party

rests merely upon conclusory allegations, improbable

inferences, and unsupported speculation." Lehman, 74 F.3d at

327 (quoting Medina-Munoz v. R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co., 896

F.2d 5, 8 (1st Cir. 1990)). The bare fact is that Pilgrim

failed to present evidence of the quality and type adequate to

stave off summary judgment within the context of the familiar

McDonnell-Douglas framework for discrimination claims. See

McDonnell Douglas Corp. v. Green, 411 U.S. 792, 802-05 (1973);

Lattimore v. Polaroid Corp., 99 F.3d 456, 465 (1st Cir. 1996).

Pilgrim's perception is not evidence. The Report's deficiency

we have already referred to. As we noted, ante, the Report is

the cornerstone upon which Pilgrim attempts to build his case.



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But a close reading of the Committee's conclusions fails to

provide the required inference of bias behind Tufts' actions.

Read closely in the light most favorable to Pilgrim, the Report

concludes that the restrictions placed on him resulted in

Pilgrim being treated "differently from other professional

staff." In the same breath, the Committee reported that they

were unable to find any "substantive evidence that Fischer

intended to discriminate against Pilgrim on the basis of race,

color [or] national origin . . . and that [i]t is plausible

that Mr. Fischer's actions were motivated by other factors,

such as personality conflicts."

The only inference that can be drawn here is that for

whatever reason Pilgrim received "different" treatment, it was

as likely due to a clash of personalities as anything else.

And although the Committee found that Fischer's behavior left

Pilgrim with the perception he had been discriminated against,

Pilgrim's perception is not enough to withstand summary

judgment. The relevant inquiry here is the intent of the

defendant which the Committee was unable to define.

Nor do any of statements in Pilgrim's affidavit

alleged to have been made by the defendant's employees lend

assistance to this uphill battle. These statements, for the

most part, serve to show that Pilgrim was told by certain Tufts

employees, first, that he would receive a copy of the Report,

and later by those same employees, that he would not be able to



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obtain a copy because it was "classified." The inference

Pilgrim would like us to draw from this -- that he was

initially denied access to the Report because Tufts feared it

would be damaging -- is belied by the actual contents.

Cortese's alleged comment that he would not provide

a reference for a workshop Pilgrim wanted to attend because

Pilgrim "filed a discrimination grievance against CEM with

Tufts," as we observed, ante, does not disclose the actuating

motive. As is the case with virtually all of Pilgrim's

evidence, it can be construed as supporting the fact that

Pilgrim was treated differently, however, it does not show that

this treatment resulted from any racial or national origin

bias.

To avoid summary judgment Pilgrim must, at the very

least, present a single piece of evidence that would allow a

reasonable juror to infer this bias. He has not done so;

accordingly, his claims must fail. The orders of the district

court are

Affirmed.















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