David Griffith v. City of Des Moines

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedOctober 15, 2004
Docket03-3266
StatusPublished

This text of David Griffith v. City of Des Moines (David Griffith v. City of Des Moines) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
David Griffith v. City of Des Moines, (8th Cir. 2004).

Opinion

United States Court of Appeals FOR THE EIGHTH CIRCUIT ___________

No. 03-3266 ___________

David Griffith, * * Plaintiff - Appellant, * * Appeal from the United States v. * District Court for the * Southern District of Iowa. City of Des Moines, et al., * * Defendants - Appellees. * ___________

Submitted: April 15, 2004 Filed: October 15, 2004 ___________

Before LOKEN, Chief Judge, BYE, Circuit Judge, and MAGNUSON,* District Judge. ___________

LOKEN, Chief Judge.

David Griffith, who is Hispanic, joined the Des Moines Fire Department in 1989. He commenced this action in August 2001, alleging on-going disparate treatment and retaliation by the City of Des Moines, Fire Chief Ronald Wakeham, and Assistant Fire Chief Jerry Cohoon in violation of Title VII, 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-2; 42 U.S.C. §§ 1981 and 1983; and the Iowa Human Rights Act, Iowa Code § 216.6. The

* The HONORABLE PAUL A. MAGNUSON, United States District Judge for the District of Minnesota, sitting by designation. district court1 granted summary judgment dismissing Griffith’s Third Amended Complaint. Griffith appeals. Reviewing the grant of summary judgment de novo, and viewing the summary judgment record in the light most favorable to Griffith, the nonmoving party, we affirm. See Putman v. Unity Health Sys., 348 F.3d 732, 733 (8th Cir. 2003) (standard of review).

I. A Threshold Issue of Law.

Title VII and the Iowa Human Rights Act prohibit an employer from discriminating against an employee with respect to his compensation, terms, or conditions of employment on account of his race, color, religion, sex, or national origin. Griffith complains that he was suspended and then denied retraining, unfairly disciplined, and harassed by co-workers because of his Hispanic background.

Griffith urges us to conclude, as some district courts have concluded, that the Supreme Court in Desert Palace, Inc. v. Costa, 123 S. Ct. 2148 (2003), implicitly directed us to modify our Circuit’s use of the familiar framework established in McDonnell Douglas Corp. v. Green, 411 U.S. 792, 802-04 (1973), at the summary judgment stage of an employment discrimination lawsuit. Griffith’s brief does not explain how our summary judgment analysis must be modified. But he relies on Dunbar v. Pepsi Cola General Bottlers of Iowa, Inc., 285 F. Supp. 2d 1180, 1197 (N.D. Iowa 2003), where the court concluded that, at the summary judgment stage, the third step in the McDonnell Douglas analysis must be modified “so that it is framed in terms of whether the plaintiff can meet his or her ‘ultimate burden’ to prove intentional discrimination, rather than in terms of whether the plaintiff can prove ‘pretext.’” We do not agree that Desert Palace affected controlling Eighth Circuit precedents in this fashion.

1 The HONORABLE RONALD E. LONGSTAFF, Chief Judge of the United States District Court for the Southern District of Iowa.

-2- Desert Palace involved the post-trial issue of when the trial court should give a “mixed motive” jury instruction under 1991 Title VII amendments codified at 42 U.S.C. §§ 2000e-2(m) and 2000e-5(g)(2)(B). The Court’s opinion did not even cite McDonnell Douglas, much less discuss how those statutes impact our prior summary judgment decisions. While in general the standard for granting summary judgment “mirrors” the standard for judgment as a matter of law, Reeves v. Sanderson Plumbing Products, Inc. 530 U.S. 133, 150 (2000), the contexts of the two inquiries are significantly different. At the summary judgment stage, the issue is whether the plaintiff has sufficient evidence that unlawful discrimination was a motivating factor in the defendant’s adverse employment action. If so, the presence of additional legitimate motives will not entitle the defendant to summary judgment. Therefore, evidence of additional motives, and the question whether the presence of mixed motives defeats all or some part of plaintiff’s claim, are trial issues, not summary judgment issues. Thus, Desert Palace, a decision in which the Supreme Court decided only a mixed motive jury instruction issue, is an inherently unreliable basis for district courts to begin ignoring this Circuit’s controlling summary judgment precedents. For concrete evidence confirming that Desert Palace did not forecast a sea change in the Court’s thinking, we need look no further than Raytheon Co. v. Hernandez, 124 S. Ct. 513, 517-18 & n.3 (2003), a post-Desert Palace decision in which the Court approved use of the McDonnell Douglas analysis at the summary judgment stage.

McDonnell Douglas and most subsequent cases in which the Supreme Court has applied McDonnell Douglas came to the Court on a trial record, not a summary judgment record. Prior to Desert Palace, in two recent cases involving the sufficiency of the plaintiff’s evidence at trial, the Court held that a finding of pretext does not compel judgment for the plaintiff, St. Mary’s Honor Center v. Hicks, 509 U.S. 502, 511 (1993), but conversely, that the plaintiff’s prima facie case combined with sufficient evidence of pretext may permit the jury to find unlawful discrimination, Reeves, 530 U.S. at 148. Hicks and Reeves are far more pertinent to our summary judgment analysis than Desert Palace, particularly because the Court reiterated the

-3- principle that the McDonnell Douglas burden-shifting analysis is not the only way for a plaintiff to prove unlawful discrimination: “Proof that the defendant’s explanation is unworthy of credence [i.e., pretextual] is simply one form of circumstantial evidence that is probative of intentional discrimination, and it may be quite persuasive.” Reeves, 530 U.S. at 147.

We have long recognized and followed this principle in applying McDonnell Douglas by holding that a plaintiff may survive the defendant’s motion for summary judgment in one of two ways. The first is by proof of “direct evidence” of discrimination. Direct evidence in this context is not the converse of circumstantial evidence, as many seem to assume. Rather, direct evidence is evidence “showing a specific link between the alleged discriminatory animus and the challenged decision, sufficient to support a finding by a reasonable fact finder that an illegitimate criterion actually motivated” the adverse employment action. Thomas v. First Nat’l Bank of Wynne, 111 F.3d 64, 66 (8th Cir. 1997). Thus, “direct” refers to the causal strength of the proof, not whether it is “circumstantial” evidence. A plaintiff with strong (direct) evidence that illegal discrimination motivated the employer’s adverse action does not need the three-part McDonnell Douglas analysis to get to the jury, regardless of whether his strong evidence is circumstantial.

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Related

Rachid v. Jack In The Box Inc
376 F.3d 305 (Fifth Circuit, 2004)
Griggs v. Duke Power Co.
401 U.S. 424 (Supreme Court, 1971)
McDonnell Douglas Corp. v. Green
411 U.S. 792 (Supreme Court, 1973)
Texas Department of Community Affairs v. Burdine
450 U.S. 248 (Supreme Court, 1981)
Price Waterhouse v. Hopkins
490 U.S. 228 (Supreme Court, 1989)
St. Mary's Honor Center v. Hicks
509 U.S. 502 (Supreme Court, 1993)
Desert Palace, Inc. v. Costa
539 U.S. 90 (Supreme Court, 2003)
Raytheon Co. v. Hernandez
540 U.S. 44 (Supreme Court, 2003)
Paul J. Kiel v. Select Artificials, Inc.
169 F.3d 1131 (Eighth Circuit, 1999)
Wayne Ronald Simmons v. Oce-Usa, Inc.
174 F.3d 913 (Eighth Circuit, 1999)
Gail L. Cronquist v. City of Minneapolis
237 F.3d 920 (Eighth Circuit, 2001)
Thomas Woodland v. Joseph T. Ryerson & Son, Inc.
302 F.3d 839 (Eighth Circuit, 2002)
Clarence Putman v. Unity Health System
348 F.3d 732 (Eighth Circuit, 2003)
Reeves v. Sanderson Plumbing Products, Inc.
530 U.S. 133 (Supreme Court, 2000)
Dunbar v. Pepsi-Cola General Bottlers of Iowa, Inc.
285 F. Supp. 2d 1180 (N.D. Iowa, 2003)

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David Griffith v. City of Des Moines, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/david-griffith-v-city-of-des-moines-ca8-2004.