NOT RECOMMENDED FOR FULL-TEXT PUBLICATION
File Name: 05a0695n.06
Filed: August 11, 2005
No. 04-3540
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
JEROME B. WILLIAMS, )
)
Plaintiff-Appellant, )
) ON APPEAL FROM THE
v. ) UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
) FOR THE SOUTHERN DISTRICT
GENERAL ELECTRIC CO., ) OF OHIO
)
Defendant-Appellee. ) OPINION
)
Before: MOORE and COLE, Circuit Judges, and WISEMAN,* Senior District Judge.
THOMAS A. WISEMAN, JR., Senior District Judge. Plaintiff-Appellant Jerome B.
Williams (“Williams”) appeals the district court’s order granting summary judgment to Defendant-
Appellant General Electric Co. (“GE”) as to one of several claims in the underlying action, and also
appeals certain pretrial rulings concerning his presentation of damages evidence at trial on another
of his claims. For the reasons set forth below, we AFFIRM summary judgment in favor of GE and
DISMISS as moot Williams’ appeal on the damages issue.
I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
Williams began working for GE in June 1967 and remained with GE until his position was
eliminated on December 26, 2000. Over the years, Williams held several different positions with
GE. As of November 1999, Mr. Williams was Regional Sales Manager in the Power Management
*
The Honorable Thomas A. Wiseman, Jr., United States District Court for the Middle
District of Tennessee, sitting by designation.
Division.
On November 11, 1999, Mr. Williams was notified by his direct supervisor, Michael
Coleman, that GE was removing him from his position as Regional Sales Manager but had an
opportunity for him in another division. Mr. Williams was 57 years old at that time. He was
replaced by David Campbell, who was 31 years old.
After losing his position as Regional Sales Manager, Williams declined a position offered
by GE that would have involved relocating, but ultimately secured a position as Transmission
Leader with GE’s Transmission and Distribution Sales Division. The move to this position clearly
can be characterized as a demotion, since Williams’ pay was reduced. Williams began working in
his new position as Transmission Leader on January 10, 2000; his direct supervisor in the new
position was Thomas Bilia.
Ten months later, in October 2000, the entire Transmission and Distribution Sales Division
underwent a reduction in force (“RIF”). As a result of the RIF, Bilia was required to eliminate one
of the three Transmission Leaders under his supervision. Bilia was given complete discretion
regarding which employee to terminate. He ultimately elected to terminate Williams based upon
Williams’ rankings in a matrix provided to Bilia by the human resources department for evaluating
Transmission Leaders. Williams was given notice on October 24, 2000 that his position would be
terminated, but his employment with GE did not actually end until December 26, 2000.
Williams’ claims arise from his removal from the position of Regional Sales Manager in
November 1999 and consequent demotion (the “November 1999 Demotion”), and the termination
of his employment with GE altogether on December 26, 2000 (the “December 2000 Termination”),
both of which events he claims were a product of one continuous pattern of age discrimination.
2
Williams filed suit on June 25, 2001, alleging age discrimination in violation of federal1 and
Ohio state2 law with respect to both the November 1999 Demotion and the December 2000
Termination.3 GE moved for summary judgment of all claims asserted against it. The district court
entered summary judgment in GE’s favor as to the federal and state age discrimination claims
premised upon the November 1999 Demotion on the basis that they were time-barred. The court
denied summary judgment as to the federal and state age discrimination claims premised upon the
December 2000 Termination, finding those claims were not time-barred and that the existence of
material issues of disputed fact precluded summary judgment. Those claims were set for trial.
Shortly before trial, GE filed a pre-trial motion in which it cited new authority in support of
its argument that Williams’ federal age discrimination claim premised on the December 2000
Termination was time-barred. On the basis of that supplemental authority, the district court
reconsidered its initial position and this time granted GE’s motion for judgment on the pleadings as
to the remaining federal claim. The state age discrimination claim alone proceeded to trial.
Prior to the trial, both parties filed a flurry of pretrial evidentiary motions concerning the
presentation of Williams’ damages evidence, among other matters. The district court granted GE’s
motion to limit Williams’ damages to those categories and amounts of damages listed in a settlement
letter from plaintiff’s counsel to defense counsel. The court also granted GE’s motion to exclude
evidence relating to front-pay damages, possible stock-option grants, and punitive damages.
Williams’ state age discrimination claim based on the December 2000 Termination was tried
1
29 U.S.C. § 623 (the Age Discrimination in Employment Act).
2
Ohio Rev. Code §§ 4112.01, 4112.02, and 4112.99.
3
Williams had initially asserted claims for disability discrimination in violation of federal
and state law but later agreed to the dismissal of those claims with prejudice.
3
before a jury. Although the district court had ruled that any claims related to the November 1999
Demotion were time-barred and thus could not serve as the basis for a separate age discrimination
claim, Williams was permitted to introduce evidence of the November 1999 Demotion in support
of his theory of a continuing pattern of age discrimination that culminated in the December 2000
Termination. Regardless, the jury rendered a verdict in favor of GE. This appeal followed.
Williams only appeals (1) summary judgment in favor of GE on his state law age discrimination
claim based upon the November 1999 Demotion, and (2) the district court’s pretrial rulings
regarding his presentation of damages.
II. ANALYSIS
A. Standard of Review of Summary Judgment
We review a district court’s decision to grant summary judgment de novo. Johnson v.
Karnes, 398 F.3d 868, 873 (6th Cir. 2005). Summary judgment shall be granted when “the
pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories, and admissions on file, together with the
affidavits, if any, show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving
party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(c). Generally speaking, this
Court must view the facts and any inferences reasonably drawn from them in the light most
favorable to the nonmoving party. Matsushita Elec. Indus. Co. v. Zenith Radio Corp., 475 U.S. 574,
587 (1986).
B. State Law Age Discrimination Claim
As indicated above, Williams appeals the summary judgment only with respect to the
dismissal of his state age discrimination claim based upon the November 1999 Demotion. “A
federal court exercising supplemental jurisdiction over state law claims is bound to apply the law
of the forum state to the same extent as if it were exercising its diversity jurisdiction.” Super Sulky,
4
Inc. v. U.S. Trotting Ass’n, 174 F.3d 733, 741 (6th Cir. 1999) (citing Menuskin v. Williams, 145 F.3d
755, 761 (6th Cir. 1998)). Accordingly, Ohio law applies here, and it is clear that discrimination
claims based on Ohio law are subject to a 180-day statute of limitations. Oker v. Ameritech Corp.,
729 N.E.2d 1177, 1178–79 (Ohio 2000).4 The only issue in dispute is the date on which the
limitations period began to run. GE argues, and the district court found, that the statute for any
claims pertaining to the November 1999 Demotion began to run on the day of the Demotion and
therefore expired well before Williams filed suit in June 2001. Williams argues that it did not begin
to run until the day of the December 2000 Termination.5
In support of his position, Williams presents a two-pronged argument: (1) that the Ohio
Supreme Court held in Oker that the statute of limitations applicable to an age discrimination claim
begins to run on the date of the employee-plaintiff’s last day of employment, which ruling he claims
should apply to his case; and (2) that the statute of limitations period was tolled until December 26,
2001 under a “continuing violation” theory. Neither argument is availing.
1. The Statute of Limitations
In Oker, the Ohio Supreme Court stated: “[W]e hold that the statute of limitations period
applicable to age-discrimination claims brought under R.C. Chapter 4112 begins to run on the date
of the employee-plaintiff's termination from the defendant-employer.” 729 N.E.2d at 1179.
4
The Ohio General Assembly enacted a tort reform statute in 1997, H.B. 350, which changed
the statute of limitations for all employment-discrimination actions under Ohio Rev. Code Chapter
4112 to two years. In 1999, however, the Ohio Supreme Court struck down H.B. 350 altogether as
unconstitutional, thereby rendering the amendments to Chapter 4112 a nullity and causing the statute
of limitations for age discriminations claims to revert to the pre-H.B. 350 period of 180 days. State
ex rel. Ohio Academy of Trial Lawyers v. Sheward, 715 N.E.2d 1062, 1111 (Ohio 1999).
5
As the district court noted, the Complaint was filed on June 25, 2001, actually 181 days after
December 26, 2000, but was timely with respect to the claims based on Williams’ Termination
because the 180th day fell on a Sunday. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 6(a); Ohio R. Civ. P. 6(a).
5
Williams argues that this holding should apply to his case and, because his actual termination did
not occur until December 26, 2000, he contends the statute of limitations did not begin to run until
that day.
Although the Ohio Supreme Court did make the statement as quoted, the actual holding in
the case does not support Williams’ position. In Oker, the plaintiff, an Ameritech in-house lawyer,
sought a position with the company’s reorganized legal department. Id. at 1178. On November 9,
1994, Ameritech informed the plaintiff that his application had been denied. Id. The plaintiff was
ultimately terminated from Ameritech’s legal department on January 7, 1995, but he remained with
Ameritech as a customer-service representative until April 15, 1995 while he sought new
employment. Id. The Ohio Supreme Court found that the statute of limitations period for his age
discrimination claim began to run on January 7, 1995, the day the plaintiff was terminated from the
legal department, rather than on November 9, 1994, the day that Ameritech informed the plaintiff
that he would be terminated, or on April 15, 1995, the day plaintiff’s employment with the company
actually ended. Id. at 1180. Thus, while the court stated that the statute began to run “on the date
of the employee-plaintiff’s termination from the defendant-employer,” it actually held that the
statute began to run on the date of the employee’s termination from the legal department, since it
was that termination, not his later termination from a temporary position, which constituted the
discriminatory act.
In Oker, the court distinguished the facts before it in both that case from those at issue in
Delaware State College v. Ricks, 449 U.S. 250 (1980), where a non-tenured college professor
claimed the defendant college had discriminated against him on the basis of race by denying him
tenure, issuing him a one-year contract, and notifying him of its intent to terminate his employment
at the expiration of this one-year contract. The Ricks Court held that the limitation period began
6
running when the tenure decision was made and Ricks was notified, and not at the expiration of the
one-year contract. Id. at 259. The Ohio Supreme Court (while noting that the standards under
federal law are not identical to those under state law) maintained that its decision was consistent
with Ricks because, in both cases, the statute began to run at the time of “the final discriminatory
act.” Oker, 729 N.E.2d at 1180. In Ricks, the discriminatory act was the denial of tenure; the mere
expiration of the one-year contract, which began at the time of the denial of tenure, did not constitute
an additional discriminatory act. Conversely, in Oker, the notice given the employee was notice of
a future act of discrimination, that is, the actual termination of his employment in the legal
department. Id.6
Recently, in Kozma v. AEP Energy Services, Inc., No. 04AP-643, 2005 WL 615649 (Ohio
Ct. App. March 17, 2005), the plaintiff-employee appealed from summary judgment granted in favor
of the defendant-employer on the basis of the statute of limitations. There, the employer had
announced in the fall of 2002 that it would undertake a corporate-restructuring program, which
included a plan for lay-offs in its Columbus office where the plaintiff was employed. Following the
6
Williams also relies upon Lordstown Board of Education v. Ohio Civil Rights Commission,
421 N.E.2d 511, 513 (Ohio 1981), in which the Ohio Supreme Court considered the statute of
limitations applicable to a suit charging sexual discrimination under state law. That case involved
two teachers who were working for the school district under one-year limited contracts. When the
school district refused to renew the teachers’ contracts after their first year of employment, both
teachers filed claims alleging that the board of education refused to renew the contracts after
learning that they were pregnant. The school district argued that the complaints were not timely
because the statute of limitations period had begun to run at the time the teachers were informed that
their contracts would not be renewed. The court held instead that the statute began to run on the day
the teachers’ contracts expired without renewal, so their claims were not barred by the statute. As
the court later explained in Oker, “in holding that the claims were timely filed, . . . we concluded that
the final discriminatory act of the school board occurred upon the termination of the annual
employment contracts.” Oker, 729 N.E.2d at 1179-80. Lordstown is distinguishable from the case
at bar simply because there was no continued period of employment after the “final discriminatory
act,” that is, their last day of employment.
7
announcement, the company posted a list indicating which employees were scheduled to be released
in two planned “waves” of lay-offs and which would be retained. Plaintiff’s name was on the list
of those slated to be released. Rather than releasing plaintiff in the first “wave,” the company agreed
to keep him employed as head of a special project during a “retention period.” Plaintiff’s
management position terminated effective December 15, 2002, and his assignment to work on the
special project began the next day, December 16, 2002. The company guaranteed employment to
plaintiff through May 31, 2003. Plaintiff worked full time on the special project until it prematurely
ended in March or April 2003. Sometime in March, he was assigned to a different project, where
he worked as scheduled through May 31, 2003. He instituted an action for employment
discrimination on June 23, 2003.
As is the case here, there was no dispute in Kozma that “the limitations period applicable to
appellant’s claim for age discrimination is found at R.C. 4112.02(N), which provides, ‘[a]n
aggrieved individual may enforce the individual’s rights relative to discrimination on the basis of
age as provided for in this section by instituting a civil action, within one hundred eighty days after
the alleged unlawful discriminatory practice occurred.” Id. at *7 (emphasis in original) (quoting
Ohio Rev. Code § 4112.02(N)). The issue on appeal was whether the limitations period began to
run on December 16, 2002, when the plaintiff was removed from his management position and
assigned to the special project pursuant to the parties’ retention agreement, or on either March 5,
2003, the last day on which he worked on the special project, or May 31, 2003, his last day of
employment.
Citing Oker as well as Ricks and other persuasive federal authority, the Ohio Court of
Appeals held that the plaintiff’s cause of action accrued, and the statute began to run, no later than
December 16, 2002, by which time the employer’s decision to terminate his position and replace him
8
with a younger employee “had present, palpable injurious effects . . . and [plaintiff] was aware of
such actions.” Id. at *11.
Williams’ situation is closely analogous to that of the claimants in Oker and Kozma: He
learned on November 11, 1999 that he was losing his position as Regional Sales Manager and was
being replaced with a much younger employee with less relevant experience. He clearly suffered
an adverse employment action at that time. The cause of action accrued and the limitations period
began to run on the day Williams was removed from his position. Williams did not file a lawsuit
based upon that action until, June 25, 2001—more than a year and a half later and thus well after
the expiration of the 180-day limitations period.7
Notwithstanding, Williams claims that as a matter of policy, a finding that an employee
should be required to sue his employer for discrimination while still employed, “even if in a sham
position,” would be “disruptive to the employer/employee relationship.” (Appellant’s Brief at 27.)
Williams’ policy argument has clearly been rejected by the Ohio legislature and Ohio courts, as
demonstrated in both Oker and the more recent Kozma. The district court correctly determined that
Williams’ state law age discrimination claim based upon the November 1999 Demotion accrued on
the date of his removal from the position of Regional Sales Manager, rather than on the last day of
his employment with GE.
2. “Continuing Violation” Theory
7
At oral argument, counsel for Williams stated that Williams was not actually removed from
his management position until sometime in January 2000. If in fact there was a time-lag between
the date Williams was notified that his employment as Regional Sales Manager was being
terminated and the date his employment in that position actually terminated, then the statute of
limitations began to run on the latter date. Accord Lordstown, 421 N.E.2d at 514. That distinction
is immaterial in this case, however: Whether the demotion became effective in November 1999 or
January 2000, it happened more than 180 days before he filed suit on June 25, 2001.
9
In the alternative, in an effort to avoid application of the statute of limitations, Williams
asserts that the two actions (the Demotion and the Termination) were not discrete actions but merely
separate manifestations of one continued effort to terminate his employment for a discriminatory
reason. Cf. Featzka v. Millcraft Paper Co., 405 N.E.2d 264 (Ohio 1980) (finding the statute of
limitations in that case began to run on the date of the last instance of a “continuing violation” in the
context of a wage discrimination claim under Ohio Rev. Code § 4111.17).
The fundamental problem with Williams’ position, however, is that a jury heard that
argument and the evidence in support of it but nonetheless decided that GE did not engage in
discriminatory treatment of Williams in terminating his employment on December 26, 2000.
Williams has not appealed the jury verdict, so it forms part of the law of this case. See Klemencic
v. Ohio State University, 263 F.3d 504, 511 (6th Cir. 2001) (Clay, J., concurring) (“The law of the
case . . . prevents a litigant from resurrecting an issue that has already been decided by a lower court
and that has gone unchallenged on appeal.”) (citation omitted); United States v. Moored, 38 F.3d
1419, 1421 (6th Cir.1994) (“Under the doctrine of the law of the case, findings made at one point
in the litigation become the law of the case for subsequent stages of that same litigation.”). Because
the jury already determined that the December 2000 Termination was not discriminatory, then the
last allegedly discriminatory act of which Williams has any proof is the November 1999 Demotion,
that is, his removal from the position of Regional Sales Manager of GE’s Power Management
Division , which occurred more than 180 days before Mr. Williams filed suit. Accordingly, Mr.
Williams has no facts to support his allegation of a “continuing violation” (assuming the legal theory
to be valid).
Under clearly articulated Ohio law, the “last discriminatory act” of which Williams has any
potentially valid basis for complaint occurred when he was removed from his position as Regional
10
Sales Manager in November 1999. The fact that he stayed on with GE for another thirteen months
did not toll the running of the statute of limitations. The district court correctly found that Williams’
discrimination claim based upon the November 1999 Demotion was time-barred by the applicable
statute of limitations.
C. Evidentiary Issues
Williams claims the district court improperly limited his ability to present evidence to the
jury of certain types of damages, including front pay and punitive damages. These issues are moot
as a result of the jury verdict in favor of the defense. Cf. General Acquisition, Inc. v. GenCorp, Inc.,
23 F.3d 1022, 1030 (6th Cir. 1994) (refusing to consider question certified for appeal concerning
damages where liability had not yet been established, noting that a jury verdict of liability in the
defendant’s favor “would render the question of damages entirely moot”); Ralph by Ralph v. Nagy,
950 F.2d 326, 329 (6th Cir. 1991) (noting that “[i]ssues that would otherwise be appropriate for
review are commonly mooted by a jury’s verdict,” and refusing to consider appellant’s claims
regarding error in the admission of evidence on proximate cause on the basis that they had been
rendered moot by a jury verdict in favor of the defense on the question of negligence).
CONCLUSION
For the reasons set forth above, the district court’s order granting summary judgment is
AFFIRMED, and the appeal regarding the presentation of damages evidence is DISMISSED as
moot in light of the jury verdict in favor of the defendant.
11