Gatch v. Milacron, Inc.

111 F. App'x 785
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedAugust 31, 2004
DocketNo. 02-3186
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 111 F. App'x 785 (Gatch v. Milacron, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gatch v. Milacron, Inc., 111 F. App'x 785 (6th Cir. 2004).

Opinions

GIBBONS, Circuit Judge.

Defendant-appellant Milaeron, Inc. appeals a district court decision denying its motion for a judgment as a matter of law. On December 12, 1999. plaintiff-appellee Robert M. Gatch filed an action against Milaeron, his employer, alleging age discrimination in violation of the Age Discrimination in Employment Act, 29 U.S.C. § 621 et seq. (2000) (“ADEA”) and Ohio Rev.Code § 4112.14. A jury found that Milacron had violated the ADEA and awarded Gatch $46,255 in back pay, $193,869 in front pay, and $50,000 in compensatory damages, for a total damages award of $290,124. The jury also found that Milacron had willfully violated the ADEA. Based on this finding, the district court then doubled the jury’s back pay award to $92, 510, bringing the total damages to $336,379. Milaeron filed a motion for a judgment as a matter of law and an alternative motion for a new trial or to alter or amend the judgment. Both motions were denied. The district court then ordered Milaeron to pay Gatch’s attorneys’ fees and costs in the amount of $100,651.30. Milaeron timely appealed. Because we find that Gatch failed to introduce evidence sufficient to support the verdict, we reverse the district court’s judgment denying Milacron’s motion for a judgment as a matter of law and remand with instructions to enter judgment for Milaeron.

I.

Defendant-appellee Milaeron, Inc. is a manufacturing company. Its business is divided into two segments: metal cutting and plastics technology. The plastics technology segment is divided into four units: specialty equipment, blow molding, extrusion, and the plastics injection machinery business unit (PIMB). Plaintiff-appellee Robert Gatch worked as Supervisor of Tool Services in the PIMB unit at Milacron. Gatch began working for Milaeron in 1957 at age 18. He left the company in 1960 to obtain a bachelor’s degree in business administration, after which he returned to Milaeron. He left again from 1969 to 1973. Since 1973, Gatch has been continuously employed at Milaeron except for one ten month layoff in the 1970s. In 1975, while still working at Milaeron, Gatch obtained a masters degree in business administration from Xavier University. He has held a variety of positions at the company, but from the late 1970s to March 1999 he held essentially the same position, Supervisor of Tool Services.

In March 1999, as part of a reduction in force (RIF), the position of Supervisor of Tool Services was eliminated, and Gatch was demoted to an hourly position as an assembler at a lower rate of pay. He was 60 years old at the time of this demotion. The RIF affected 38 positions at the facili[787]*787ty where Gatch worked, the Milacron plant in Afton, Ohio. Gatch was the only supervisor affected by the RIF.

Milacron employees are classified into two groups: direct employees and indirect employees. Direct employees are involved in production, and costs associated with them are classified as inventory expenses. Indirect employees are primarily involved in supervision, and costs associated with them are classified as overhead expenses. The RIF plan was initially drafted by James Kinzie, the PIMB plant manager at the Afton plant, and was later reviewed and approved by Dale Werle, General Manager of PIMB’s North American operations at the Afton plant and David Palmer, the human resources director of Plastics Technology. Incident to the RIF, Werle instructed Kinzie to reduce the number of both direct and indirect employees.

According to Milacron, the 1999 RIF was precipitated by a drop in sales and profitability by the PIMB division from the last quarter of 1998 to the first quarter of 1999. Milacron pointed to a 30% decrease in North American PIMB sales and an 80% decrease in North American PIMB earnings. Because of this decline, Werle ordered Kinzie to eliminate nine indirect labor jobs and 27 direct labor jobs. Kinzie selected 36 jobs in PIMB for elimination. Two other jobs not in PIMB were also eliminated. Of these 38 employees, 18 (with an average of 36) were laid off, the jobs of four on disability leave were eliminated from the budget, one retired, 12 were transferred to units other than PIMB, and three, including Gatch, were transferred from indirect labor jobs to direct labor jobs within PIMB. The RIF reduced payroll expenses by $1 million. Other cost reductions saved the Afton plant an additional $300,000.

In March 1999, Gatch was responsible for supervising only three employees. All other supervisors responsible for managing employees had at least eight employees reporting to them. Pursuant to the RIF, Gatch’s position was eliminated and the three employees formerly supervised by Gatch began to report to Gatch’s former immediate supervisor, Steve Dennison, who reported to Kinzie. Milacron asserts that Gatch’s former supervisory duties took Dennison less than an hour per day to perform. Gatch’s nonsupervisory duties were distributed among the hourly tool room employees. Gatch’s job as a supervisor was a salaried position which allowed him to collect additional pay for hours worked in excess of 42.5 per week. Gatch earned approximately $57,000 in 1998 in this position. His new position pays $19.55 per hour, and a higher rate for hours in excess of 40 per week. Prior to 1999, eight PIMB supervisors were transferred to non-supervisory jobs at lower rates of pay when supervisory jobs were eliminated. Milacron’s PIMB division performed RIFs in the 1980s, in 1991, 1992, 1996, and 1997, in addition to 1999.

Gatch was the only supervisor demoted or terminated pursuant to the RIF. Kinzie decided which supervisory positions to ehminate. At the time of the RIF, 65-70 indirect employees such as Gatch reported to Kinzie. Gatch was the fourth oldest indirect employee under Kinzie. Twenty-five or twenty-six of the indirect employees reporting to Kinzie were supervisors. According to Palmer, Gatch was one of the oldest and longest serving supervisors at Milacron. Gatch’s education level exceeded that of any other supervisor under Kinzie.

Gatch asserts that he was qualified for many other positions within the company at the time of his demotion. One such position which was open at the time was Project Engineer. Gatch claims that he [788]*788was qualified for this job, as he had performed the same function previously, and had previously supervised Managing Project Engineers. The position was awarded to Michael Barnhart, a salaried supervisor who, like Gatch, reported to Kinzie. At the time of the RIF, Barnhart supervised no employees. He had completed one semester of college. Barnhart lost no salary as a result of his reassignment. Milaeron asserts that it transferred Barnhart to the new position on the recommendation of the George Group, an outside consulting firm, which thought the move would increase efficiency.

After the RIF, Milaeron hired at least thirty new employees to work in the Plastics Technology Group. All except five of these new employees went to work in the PIMB division. Between February 1999 and April 1999, the time of the RIF, nine indirect employees were hired into the PIMB. However, the parties stipulated pri- or to trial that “[t]he position of Tool Services Supervisor occupied by Plaintiff was eliminated and Plaintiff was not replaced following the March 1999 reduction in force.”

Later in 1999, Milaeron offered a voluntary retirement package to workers aged 55 and over who had 15 years seniority.

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111 F. App'x 785, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gatch-v-milacron-inc-ca6-2004.