Moham v. Steego Corp.

                 UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
                      FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT

            _________________________________________

                           No. 92-5165
            _________________________________________


                         WILLIAM T. MOHAM,

                                               Plaintiff-Appellee,


                              VERSUS


                       STEEGO CORP., ET AL.,

                                                        Defendants,

                       STEEGO CORPORATION,

                                               Defendant-Appellant.


_________________________________________________________________

           Appeal from the United States District Court
               for the Western District of Louisiana
_________________________________________________________________

                       (September 27, 1993)

Before REAVLEY, DUHÉ, and BARKSDALE, Circuit Judges.

BARKSDALE, Circuit Judge:


     In this Title VII case, the only issue on appeal concerns the

denial of the equal opportunity to seek employment; and that issue

turns on whether a selling company can be held liable for the

discriminatory acts of its supervisors committed while in the

employ of the seller, but while acting for the benefit of the

purchasing company.   Because we conclude that such liability would

push beyond the limits of applicable general agency principles, we

REVERSE that part of the judgment appealed from.
                                 I.

       Nabors Trailers, Inc., a subsidiary of Steego Corporation,

manufactured and distributed trailers through its facility in

Mansfield, Louisiana.     Early in 1988, it stopped manufacturing,

maintaining only its parts, shipping and service departments.

       The repair shop was part of the service department.     William

T. Moham, who began his employment with Nabors in 1966, worked in

that shop.     In June 1988, Moham (age 58) and four others were

working under the supervision of foreman Tommy Mason and service

department supervisor Joe Leone.       Three of Moham's co-workers were

white; Moham and one co-worker were black.           All three whites

received raises that month; neither Moham nor his black co-worker

did.

       On August 23, 1988, pursuant to an agreement signed that July

1, Nabors sold its assets to Mansfield Industries, Inc., which

assumed operation of the business the next day.1          In the weeks

prior to the sale, Mason had made applications for employment with

the new company (Mansfield) available to the repair shop employees.

All except Moham were interviewed and assured that they would

maintain their positions after the sale.2

        As Moham left work on Tuesday, August 23, at approximately

four o'clock, Mason told him that, if the sale took effect that

1
     Mansfield Industries took the name "Nabors Trailers".          We
refer to it as "Mansfield".
2
     Wilfred Woods, the other black working in the repair shop,
suffered a job-related injury after he submitted his application.
As a result, he was not on the job when the sale took place, but
was interviewed and hired when he returned after the sale.

                                   2
night, Moham would no longer have a job; otherwise, he should

report to work as usual.     When Moham asked for an explanation,

Mason said that Moham had failed to turn in his application.   Moham

offered to go home, get the application and return it immediately.

Instead, Mason gave Moham his paycheck, and instructed him to turn

in his application at the Louisiana Job Service office.

     Within an hour, Mason had telephoned a friend, who was white,

and suggested that his 19-year-old son come to the plant for an

interview.   And, by six o'clock that day, the friend's son had been

hired to fill Moham's position and report to work the following day

for the new company.   The next morning, Moham returned and met with

Leone, who again told him that he must apply for a job through the

Louisiana Job Service.

     After filing a complaint with the EEOC for age and race

discrimination, Moham was issued a right to sue letter; and suit

was brought against, inter alia, Mansfield and Steego, Nabors'

parent.   Because of its bankrupt status, Mansfield was dismissed,

pursuant to joint motion.      And, because Nabors and Steego had

merged, the parties agreed that Steego would be liable for any

discriminatory acts by Nabors.

     After a short bench trial, the district court found Steego

liable for the discriminatory acts which deprived Moham of both the

June pay raise ($320 in damages) and the opportunity to seek

employment with Mansfield (net damages of approximately $37,000).

The court also found that Moham had not established age as a

motivating factor in those discriminatory acts.


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                                II.

     Section 703(a)(1) of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of

1964, 42 U.S.C. § 2000e, et seq. states that it is an unlawful

employment practice for an employer to

          fail or refuse to hire or to discharge any
          individual, or otherwise to discriminate against
          any individual with respect to his compensation,
          terms, conditions, or privileges of employment,
          because of such individual's race, color, religion,
          sex, or national origin.

42 U.S.C. § 2000e-2(a)(1). Steego does not challenge the pay raise

ruling; it appeals only the finding that Mason and Leone violated

Title VII and the conclusion that they did so as its agents.

Because only the liability of Steego (Nabors), the selling company,

is in issue, we need not reach the issue of discrimination, unless

Steego can be held liable for it.    Therefore, we address the latter

issue first.

     But, for a full understanding of this issue, we need to

present briefly the claimed discriminatory acts.    And, in order to

do that, we must note quickly that the burden of proof for § 2000e

cases, articulated in McDonnell Douglas Corp. v. Green, 411 U.S.

792 (1973), has been recently reaffirmed and clarified in St.

Mary's Honor Center v. Hicks, ___ U.S. ___, 113 S. Ct. 2742 (1993).

As is well known, the plaintiff must first establish a prima facie

case of discrimination.   If he does, he has created a presumption

of discrimination, see Texas Dept. of Community Affairs v. Burdine,

450 U.S. 248, 254 (1981); and the burden shifts to the defendant to

"articulate some legitimate, nondiscriminatory reason" for the

challenged action, McDonnell Douglas, 411 U.S. at 802.        If the

                                 4
defendant meets this burden by presenting evidence which, "if

believed by the trier of fact, would support a finding that

unlawful    discrimination     was    not   the   cause   of    the   employment

action", St. Mary's, ___ U.S. ___, 113 S. Ct. at 2747 (emphasis

omitted), then the presumption raised by the plaintiff's prima

facie case essentially disappears, and the plaintiff is left with

the ultimate burden, which has never left him:                 that of proving

that the defendant intentionally discriminated against him, see id.

     And,   the   trier   of   fact    must   still    answer    that   ultimate

question of discrimination, even if the defendant's explanation has

been rejected.    As explained in St. Mary's, that rejection is not,

in and of itself, a finding of intentional discrimination.                  "[A]

reason cannot be proved to be a `pretext for discrimination' unless

it is shown both that the reason was false, and that discrimination

was the real reason".     Id. at ___, 113 S. Ct. at 2752 (citation and

emphasis omitted).

     The defendant's proffered reason for hiring the 19-year-old

white, and not considering Moham for his old position with the new

company, was that he did not apply for it.            When asked if Moham was

not hired because he failed to turn in his application, Mason

testified that Moham was rejected "[s]olely on that basis".                   In

addition to finding Mason's testimony "unconvincing", the court

found Moham's testimony "credible" and obviously believed that he

had specifically asked for permission to submit his application

before leaving work on August 23 -- before Mason solicited an

application from his friend's son.            Certainly this is a finding


                                       5
that the defendant's proffered reason is false.               (This finding is

supported by the testimony of a white co-worker of Moham's, who

testified that Mason told him in June 1988 that "he was maybe gonna

have an all-white shop, get rid of all these blacks".)                   The court

went on to make the required finding on the ultimate question:

"Mr. Moham, a black man, was discriminatorily denied an equal

opportunity to seek employment with the new company".

      Therefore, assuming that Mason and Leone did discriminate in

this fashion against Moham on the basis of his race, we must

determine    whether     Steego        can    be     held   liable      for   that

discrimination.      On this issue, the district court concluded:

            Tommy Mason and Joe Leone were employees of Nabors
            ... at the time the discriminatory acts occurred,
            were being paid by Nabors ... and were acting
            within   the   purview  of  their   employment  as
            supervisory personnel of Nabors. ... Their actions
            in denying Moham the equal opportunity to seek
            employment with the new company [Mansfield] were
            clearly within the scope of their employment. An
            employer is liable for the discriminatory acts of
            its personnel.

Needless to say, we freely review this conclusion of law.

      For the definition of "employer", 42 U.S.C. § 2000e(b),

Congress includes "any agent of such a person".                Because of such

use of the term "agent", instead of "employee" or "supervisor", for

example, the Supreme Court has interpreted this provision to mean

"that Congress wanted courts to look to agency principles for

guidance in this area".        Meritor Sav. Bank, FSB v. Vinson, 477 U.S.

57,   72   (1986).      The    Court    noted      that   although     "common-law

principles   [of     agency]   may     not   be    transferable   in    all   their

particulars to Title VII, Congress' decision to define `employer'

                                         6
to include any `agent' of an employer ... surely evinces an intent

to place some limits on the acts of employees for which employers

under Title VII are to be held responsible."   Id.    In its ruling,

the Court cited the Restatement (Second) of Agency.     Id.

     Section 219 of the Restatement provides that a master is

liable for the acts of his servants "committed while acting in the

scope of their employment".    A servant's conduct is within the

scope of his employment if

          (a) it is of the kind he is employed to perform;

          (b) it occurs substantially within the authorized
          time and space limits; [and]

          (c) it is actuated, at least in part, by a purpose
          to serve the master.

Restatement (Second) of Agency § 228(1).

     Parts (a) and (b) are not at issue; it is uncontested that

Mason and Leone were authorized to hire repair shop employees for

Nabors and that their acts took place on Nabors' property during

working hours.   The final element, however, cuts against Steego's

liability, and is decisive.

     Consistent with the above quoted § 228, Restatement § 235

provides that conduct is not within the scope of employment if it

is not performed for the purpose of serving the master.         The

comment explains that the rule applies

          although the servant would be authorized to do the
          very act done if it were done for the purpose of
          serving the master, and although outwardly the act
          appears to be done on the master's account. It is
          the state of the servant's mind which is material.
          ... Conduct is within the scope of employment only
          if the servant is actuated to some extent by an
          intent to serve his master.

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Restatement (Second) of Agency § 235 cmt. a. (emphasis added).

      As stated, we find this agency principle applicable and

controlling.      Mason and Leone took applications and interviewed

potential employees for Mansfield, the purchasing company.                     The

applicants were already employed by Nabors.             Interviewing them for

positions with a successor company might have been "actuated ... by

a purpose to serve" the predecessor (Steego/Nabors) if it had

contracted to have a work force in place, or if the sale was more

likely to take place, or at a higher price, if the work force

remained.   But, there was no such evidence.            In fact, John Lowrey,

a representative of the purchaser, testified that Mansfield was

"buying assets, and it was up to us to make them productive.

[Steego] didn't care whether we did or not."             He further testified

that the ongoing service department had no effect on the price

Mansfield   was     willing   to   pay:       "[A]s    far   as    Mansfield   was

concerned, ... [Nabors] was closed down.               It was nice that there

were a few people hanging around, but it didn't help us any, didn't

add anything."

      However, Lowrey did meet with Nabors' middle management in

July or August and make it known that Mansfield wanted to start

operations as soon as possible after the sale.               It is unclear how,

or when, these middle management employees were hired by Mansfield.

In   any   event,    Bobby    Dillard,       Nabors'   plant      superintendent,

testified that "we all felt that the ones that were called at the

meeting at Mr. Lowrey's would be involved with the [new] company".




                                         8
And, it is uncontested that "[m]iddle management was largely the

same for [Steego/Nabors and Mansfield]."

       Although he could not recall any discussion about having a

work crew ready to start after the sale, Dillard testified that "it

was kinda understood".         And, at some point after the meeting with

Lowery,      Mason   and    Leone   began     distributing    applications       and

conducting interviews.         (Leone attended the meeting with Lowrey.

Mason did not.       Mason testified that his instructions to make the

applications available came from Leone.)             Dillard testified that,

about three days before the August 23 sale, he also became involved

with getting a crew together.             He testified further that no one

with Nabors or Steego consulted him, directed him, or had any

connection with this effort.            Dillard confirmed that his actions

were "just an effort to assist the new owners in starting up".

       In asserting that the discriminatory acts are nonetheless

attributable to Steego, Moham relies upon Sibley Memorial Hosp. v.

Wilson, 488 F.2d 1338 (D.C.Cir. 1973) and a line of similar cases.

Sibley, however, does not involve an agency question.                   Rather, it

notes that Title VII prohibits an employer from discriminating

against "any individual", and holds that, under its plain meaning,

a    plaintiff   may   sue    one   who     interferes     with   his   access    to

employment, even if he is not the plaintiff's direct employer.                   The

question here, however, is not whether Steego could be liable under

Title VII if its agents had interfered with Moham's access to

employment.      Rather, the question is whether Mason and Leone were,

in   fact,    acting   as    Steego's     agents   while    hiring   repair   shop


                                          9
employees for the new company.     We conclude that they were not.

Instead, they were acting solely for the benefit of Mansfield; and,

therefore, their discriminatory acts cannot be attributable to

Steego, the selling company.3

                                III.

       Accordingly, that part of the judgment appealed from (equal

opportunity to seek employment) is      REVERSED, and judgment is

RENDERED for Steego on that issue; and this matter is REMANDED for

such further proceedings as may be necessary.



    AFFIRMED in Part, REVERSED and RENDERED in Part, and REMANDED




3
     As alternative bases for Steego's liability, Moham seeks
assistance under theories of equity and of Steego (Nabors) and
Mansfield "be[ing] considered brother-sister corporations for acts
of discrimination occurring during the transition period". Neither
theory has merit. The former is, in fact, no more than a misguided
deep pocket approach; the cases relied on concern successor
liability, while here it is the predecessor that Moham seeks to
hold liable.    And, the latter theory is not supported by the
record.

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