United States Court of Appeals
FOR THE EIGHTH CIRCUIT
___________
No. 97-1486
___________
Debra L. Herr, *
*
Plaintiff - Appellant, *
* Appeal from the United States
v. * District Court for the
* Eastern District of Missouri.
Airborne Freight Corporation, *
*
Defendant - Appellee. *
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Submitted: September 9, 1997
Filed: December 12, 1997
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Before FAGG, LAY, and LOKEN, Circuit Judges.
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LOKEN, Circuit Judge.
Debra Herr appeals the district court’s1 grant of summary judgment
dismissing her federal and state law claims of sex discrimination against
her former employer, Airborne Freight Corporation. See Herr v. Airborne
Freight Corp., 950 F. Supp. 273 (E.D. Mo. 1996). The issue on appeal is
whether Herr presented sufficient evidence that Airborne’s reason for
failing to give her work and then discharging her as a temporary driver was
a pretext for intentional sex discrimination. See Ryther v. KARE
1
THE HONORABLE GEORGE F. GUNN, JR., United States District Judge for
the Eastern District of Missouri.
11, 108 F.3d 832, 836-38, 848 (8th Cir.), cert. denied, 117 S. Ct. 2510
(1997), construing St. Mary’s Honor Center v. Hicks, 113 S. Ct. 2742, 2749
(1993), and Texas Dep’t of Community Affairs v. Burdine, 450 U.S. 248, 254-
56 (1981).2 After reviewing the district court’s grant of summary judgment
de novo, viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to Herr, see
Hutson v. McDonnell Douglas Corp., 63 F.3d 771, 775 (8th Cir. 1995), we
affirm.
I.
Airborne employs truck and van drivers to deliver time-sensitive
packages. Airborne drivers work under the National Master Freight
Agreement, a multi-employer collective bargaining agreement between
Airborne, other cartage companies, and the International Brotherhood of
Teamsters. Under this Agreement, Airborne’s full-time and part-time
permanent drivers have regular delivery routes and are guaranteed a minimum
number of work hours each week. Airborne routes are distributed to
permanent drivers through a bi-annual bidding process. A driver’s
seniority for bidding purposes runs from his or her date of hire as a
permanent driver.
All new Airborne drivers are probationary employees. During their
first thirty days, probationary drivers need not join the Union, and their
employment is terminable at will by Airborne. Drivers who successfully
complete this probationary period become “casual” drivers. Casual drivers
fill in for permanent drivers who are absent, ill, or on vacation. Casual
drivers must join the Union and pay union dues for any month in which they
work at least one day. However, they have no seniority rights under the
collective bargaining agreement -- Airborne has unfettered discretion to
decide who will fill in for absent permanent drivers and who will be
invited to bid on
2
These federal cases govern Herr’s claims under the Missouri Human Rights Act
as well as her Title VII claims. See Midstate Oil Co. v. Missouri Comm’n on Human
Rights, 679 S.W.2d 842, 845-46 (Mo. banc 1984).
-2-
new or unclaimed permanent routes. When a permanent driver is absent, the
supervisor on duty consults a list of casual drivers and calls the driver
that the supervisor thinks is best able to complete the available route.
Thus, the ranks of Airborne casual drivers may include some who are never
chosen for temporary work assignments and will never be asked to bid for
permanent routes. Airborne supervisors periodically purge these unwanted
temporary employees from the official list of casual drivers, with no
written notice of that action to the now-terminated casual driver.
Supervisor Jeff Bruer hired Herr and gave her a brief orientation in
March or April of 1992. Her thirty-day probation began on May 6 when she
reported for work at Airborne’s facility at the St. Louis airport. After
two or three days learning to sort packages and assisting permanent drivers
with deliveries, Herr was assigned a route often used to train probationary
employees. Herr admits she was unable to finish that route on time. Bruer
recalls assigning Herr to a route for one week and then cutting that
assignment short when she failed to finish the route two or three times.
Herr recalls working various routes during her second and third weeks of
probation but cannot recall specific assignments.
According to Herr, Bruer told her on May 21 that she had
satisfactorily completed probation and could call in for work as a casual
driver on the following Monday.3 Herr did so and was told there was no
work available. She called Airborne every week in June and July of 1992
and periodically until 1994 but was always told there was no work
available. When she finally pressed for an explanation, Herr was told in
March 1994 that she had been discharged. The Union filed a grievance on
her behalf. Airborne produced a June 1992 document stating that she was
terminated for unsatisfactory job performance and listing May 21, 1992, as
her last day of work. The grievance was then dismissed as untimely, and
the Union did not appeal.
3
May 21 would have been only half way through Herr’s thirty-day probation
period, but we credit this testimony for summary judgment purposes.
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Herr filed this action in December 1995, claiming that Airborne
failed to give her work as a casual driver and discharged her on account
of her sex. In response to Airborne’s motion for summary judgment, Herr
alleged that Airborne’s profferred explanation of unsatisfactory job
performance is a pretext for sex discrimination. Her theory is that
Airborne hired and inadequately trained her only to be an entry in its
employment records, in other words, to inflate Airborne’s roster of women
drivers. In support of this theory, Herr avers that, when she complained
to a union shop steward in 1994, he told her that she was an “illusion,”
that Airborne never intended to give her any work.4 In addition,
emphasizing that she was not notified of discharge until March 1994, Herr
asserts that Airborne’s termination document must have been back-dated.
She reasons that even if there was an administrative breakdown in notifying
her, someone would have told her when she kept calling in looking for work,
if she had in fact been terminated in June 1992.
II.
Herr’s sex discrimination claim has two components, Airborne’s
failure to assign her work as a casual driver, and its decision to
terminate.
A. Herr’s failure-to-assign-work claim must overcome two undisputed
facts -- she failed to complete assigned routes while on probation, and
Airborne has unfettered discretion under the collective bargaining
agreement to assign casual drivers as much
4
This statement by a third party would be inadmissable hearsay if offered in this
form at trial. As Herr has not shown that the shop steward would be available as a trial
witness, she may not rely on this statement in opposing summary judgment. See Pink
Supply Corp. v. Hiebert, Inc., 788 F.2d 1313, 1319 (8th Cir. 1986); 11 MOORE’S
FEDERAL PRACTICE ¶ 56.14[1][d] (Matthew Bender 3d ed. 1997). Moreover, the
statement is highly ambiguous, particularly given the Union’s lack of concern with
probationary and casual drivers as reflected in the collective bargaining agreement.
Thus, we disregard it.
-4-
or as little work as it chooses. Herr responds by alleging that Airborne
gave her inadequate training and no assignments because it only pretends
to hire women drivers. However, she presented no evidence that any other
probationary driver received more training. Title VII and the Missouri
Human Rights Act do not require that Airborne provide a particular level
of new employee training, only that women be given equal employment
opportunities. See Smith v. Monsanto Chemical Co., 770 F.2d 719, 723 n.3
(8th Cir. 1985), cert. denied, 475 U.S. 1050 (1986). Moreover, Herr’s
assertion that Airborne did not genuinely employ women drivers is contrary
to undisputed portions of the summary judgment record. The woman who
referred Herr to Airborne in 1991, Kelly Hotchkiss, was then a casual
driver and is now a permanent Airborne driver. Between 1991 and 1996,
Airborne hired twenty-one women drivers in St. Louis. Twelve remain
Airborne drivers, and four others were terminated during probation. There
is no evidence that Airborne’s male drivers suffered less attrition during
this period.
Lacking evidence of systematic discrimination in Airborne’s hiring
and training of women drivers, Herr’s failure-to-assign-work claim fails
because Airborne had no obligation to assign her temporary work. Herr
canvassed other women drivers informally and could muster no credible
evidence that Airborne supervisors have used their discretion to
discriminate against women casual drivers. The only other example of a
woman who survived probation but was not given casual work, Paula Cox,
admitted that she, too, was unable to deliver packages in a timely manner.
There is no evidence that any casual male driver failed to make timely
deliveries yet continued to receive casual work. Thus, the district court
properly dismissed Herr’s failure-to-assign-work claim. Indeed, as to this
claim, Herr failed to present a prima facie case of intentional sex
discrimination.
B. Turning to the wrongful termination claim, we note at the outset
the unusual nature of this claim. As we have explained, Airborne’s
supervisors lawfully elected not to assign Herr work as a casual driver.
It is likewise apparent that she would never
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have been invited to bid on a permanent route and acquire seniority as a
permanent driver. In these circumstances, her “termination” was a mere
formality -- the excising of a redundant name from Airborne’s official list
of casual drivers that had no financial impact on Herr. Indeed, she
admitted as much when she applied for and began collecting unemployment
insurance in early June 1992. Herr nonetheless argues that she presented
sufficient evidence to convince a reasonable fact finder that Airborne’s
stated reason for discharge, unsatisfactory job performance, was a pretext
for intentional discrimination. She reasons that Airborne’s failure to
notify her of discharge, and its use of an allegedly back-dated termination
document, are sufficient to infer intentional discrimination.
Regarding Airborne’s failure to notify, Herr asks how she could have
called Airborne every week in the months of June and July of 1992, and then
again with some frequency into 1994, without being told she had been
discharged. Jeff Bruer testified that he would ordinarily tell a casual
driver of termination, but that he could not remember whether or not he
notified Herr. Crediting Herr’s testimony that she was not told of the
termination, the fact remains that Airborne has little reason to formally
terminate casual drivers because they only work when they are given work.
Airborne’s lack of a policy to notify unwanted casual drivers that they
have been terminated may be an unkind business practice, but it is not
evidence of sex discrimination. Likewise, absent evidence that Airborne
back-dated Herr’s termination document, and there is no such evidence, that
document is consistent with Airborne’s non-discriminatory description of
its business practices -- an internal business record used to remove an
unwanted casual driver from the official list that only came to light in
this case when the Union filed a grievance on Herr’s behalf.
Herr also argues that she was not given a second chance to perform
the job satisfactorily, contrasting her treatment with numerous letters
disciplining, but not discharging, male permanent drivers who committed
work-related infractions. But Herr cannot meet her burden of proving that
she was similarly situated to these male
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employees in all relevant respects. See Harvey v. Anheuser-Busch, Inc.,
38 F.3d 968, 972 (8th Cir. 1994). Herr’s poor performance occurred when
she was a probationary driver, unprotected by the collective bargaining
agreement and its discipline process that governed permanent drivers.
Moreover, there is no reason for Airborne to issue discipline letters to
casual drivers because its recourse for a casual driver’s poor performance
is not to give that driver more work. Thus, Herr was not similarly
situated to male permanent drivers regarding disciplinary procedures.
Finally, in considering this wrongful termination claim, it is
significant that Jeff Bruer both hired and fired Herr. There is a strong
inference that discrimination was not a motivating factor if the same
person hired and fired the plaintiff within a relatively short period of
time. See Rothmeier v. Investment Advisers, Inc., 85 F.3d 1328,1337 (8th
Cir. 1996); Lowe v. J.B. Hunt Transp., Inc., 963 F.2d 173, 174-75 (8th Cir.
1992). This inference arises because it is unlikely that the same
supervisor would hire a woman, only to turn around and discharge her for
that reason. Cf. Proud v. Stone, 945 F.2d 796 (4th Cir. 1991). Herr
cannot overcome this inference by alleging without supporting evidence that
Airborne hired her merely to pad its roster of women drivers.
The judgment of the district court is affirmed.
LAY, Circuit Judge, dissenting.
Airborne filed a motion for summary judgment in the district court,
alleging the company discharged Herr for a non-discriminatory reason, and
Herr failed to show such reason was pretextual. In doing so, as the
district court found, Airborne expressly assumed Herr could make a prima
facie showing of sex discrimination. For this reason, the district judge
did not address the issue of whether Herr made a prima facie showing of sex
discrimination. See Appellant’s Appendix at 213, 215 ( reprinting Memo.
and Order, Herr v. Airborne Freight Corp., No. 4:95CV02355 GFG (E.D. Mo.
Dec. 31, 1996)). The trial court ruled Herr failed to establish the
existence of a genuine issue
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of material fact on the question of pretext, and Herr did not rebut
Airborne’s proffered nondiscriminatory reason for her discharge. The
parties briefed and argued this case on the basis of the district court’s
ruling.5
In this circuit, grounds not raised in the district court shall not
form the basis of an appeal. See United States v. One Parcel of Property,
959 F.2d 101, 103 (8th Cir. 1992) (citing In re Pan Am. World Airways,
Inc., 905 F.2d 1457, 1462 (11th Cir. 1990) (?[I]f a party hopes to
preserve a claim, argument, theory, or defense for appeal, [the party] must
first clearly present it to the district court, that is, in such a way as
to afford the district court an opportunity to recognize and rule on it.”).
Despite this fundamental rule, the majority affirms the district court on
grounds not raised in that court’s ruling: namely, Herr failed to make a
prima facie showing of sex discrimination.6
This issue is not before this court on appeal. Even if it were,
there is ample evidence to support a prima facie case of sex
discrimination.7 To urge otherwise overlooks basic evidence and slights
permissible inferences available to Herr, violating the fundamental rule
that on motion for summary judgment, the non-moving party is entitled to
all favorable inferences. See Hutson v. McDonnell Douglas Corp., 63 F.3d
771, 775 (8th Cir. 1995).
5
Airborne repeated its concessions to this court: ?In this case, Airborne was
willing to assume that Ms. Herr had met her initial burden and undertook to
demonstrate that she was terminated for a legitimate, nondiscriminatory reason.”
Appellee’s Br. at 8.
6
Where an issue is not disputed on summary judgment in the district court, the
non-moving party is deprived of fair notice if the district court or this court raises the
issue sua sponte.
7
This may explain why Airborne conceded the issue of Herr’s prima facie case.
Although the evidence is disputed, Herr clearly demonstrated evidence of a prima facie
case of sex discrimination sufficient to survive summary judgment.
-8-
The majority only draws inferences in favor of Airborne. For
example, Herr testified Bruer, her immediate supervisor, told her she had
passed the probationary period, and she would be called in as a casual
worker. Bruer does not contradict this statement, and for two years, Herr
called Airborne seeking casual work, and Airborne continually told Herr
there was no work available. This gives rise to an inference that Bruer
did make this statement. Cf. Adickes v. S.H. Kress & Co., 398 U.S. 144,
156-57 (1970) (allowing inference of conspiracy where police officer did
not deny presence in restaurant when management refused to serve white
teacher accompanied by six black students, and police officer later
arrested teacher outside the restaurant). The majority claims it credits
Herr’s testimony on this point, yet draws no inference in favor of Herr.
Further, in 1994, the Union filed a grievance on Herr’s behalf.
Suddenly, Airborne asserted it had terminated Herr two years earlier. To
support this assertion, Airborne produced a document dated June 1992,
stating Airborne terminated Herr for unsatisfactory job performance.8 Herr
urges Airborne never notified her of the alleged termination, and the
majority claims it credits Herr’s testimony on this point. Moreover, the
majority acknowledges Bruer testified he could not remember whether he
notified Herr of her termination. Based upon this evidence, Herr is
entitled to the reasonable and favorable inference that Airborne’s
proffered reason for not assigning her work for two years is pretextual.
Curiously, the only inference the majority draws from Airborne’s
conduct is that Airborne’s “lack of a policy to notify unwanted casual
drivers that they have been
8
In its brief to this court, Airborne claims “[f]or reasons unknown to everyone,
Ms. Herr apparently did not receive a copy of the termination notice.” Appellee’s Br.
at 5. It seems odd that Airborne would imply Herr should have received a copy of the
notice if the termination notice is, as the majority terms it, “an internal business record
used to remove an unwanted casual driver from the official list.” Supra (emphasis
added).
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terminated may be an unkind business practice, but it is not evidence of
sex discrimination.” The majority overlooks that evidence of pretext need
not constitute direct evidence of discrimination. In most instances that
is impossible. The evidence of pretext along with the elements of the
prima facie case serve to create a permissible inference sufficient to take
the case to the jury. See United States Postal Serv. Bd. of Governors v.
Aikens, 460 U.S. 711, 716 (1983) (?[S]ensitive and difficult” issue of
intentional discrimination will frequently be proven by circumstantial
evidence of pretext, as ?[t]here will seldom be