Hilde v. City of Eveleth

986 F. Supp. 2d 1068, 2013 WL 6283909, 2013 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 170647, 120 Fair Empl. Prac. Cas. (BNA) 1681
CourtDistrict Court, D. Minnesota
DecidedDecember 4, 2013
DocketCiv. No. 12-2794 (RHK/LIB)
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 986 F. Supp. 2d 1068 (Hilde v. City of Eveleth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hilde v. City of Eveleth, 986 F. Supp. 2d 1068, 2013 WL 6283909, 2013 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 170647, 120 Fair Empl. Prac. Cas. (BNA) 1681 (mnd 2013).

Opinion

[1070]*1070MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER

RICHARD H. KYLE, District Judge.

INTRODUCTION

Plaintiff Leroy Hilde has worked for Defendant, the City of Eveleth, Minnesota (the “City”), as a police officer for the past 29 years, serving as Lieutenant, the City’s second-highest-ranking officer, since 1998. In January 2012, the City’s Chief of Police, Brian Lillis, announced his intention to retire. Hilde was among five applicants for Lillis’s position but was not selected. He then commenced this action, alleging he was passed over for the position on account of his age in violation of the Age Discrimination in Employment Act (“ADEA”), 29 U.S.C. § 621 et seq., and the Minnesota Human Rights Act (“MHRA”), Minn.Stat. § 363A.01 et seq. Presently before the Court is the City’s Motion for Summary Judgment. For the reasons that follow, the Motion will be granted.

BACKGROUND

When viewed in the light most favorable to Hilde, the record reveals the following facts. The Court notes that most of the pertinent facts are undisputed.

I. The department and Hilde’s background

The City has a small police force, comprising approximately a dozen officers including a Chief of Police, a Lieutenant, two or three Sergeants, and several patrol officers. The Lieutenant is second in command, generally charged with overseeing the department’s day-to-day operations. In addition, the Lieutenant serves as acting Chief whenever the Chief of Police is absent for vacation or other reasons.

Hilde was born in 1960. The City hired him as a patrol officer in 1983, a year after he earned an Associate’s degree in law enforcement; Lillis also was hired as a patrol officer around this time. Lillis was later promoted to Lieutenant (in 1987), and Hilde was promoted to Sergeant in 1990.

In 1998, the City’s then-Chief of Police, James Bozicevich, retired. Hilde and Lillis applied for the position, although Hilde told Lillis he didn’t really want the job at that point in his career — he applied only to keep it “an internal process.”1 Lillis eventually was selected, creating a vacancy at the Lieutenant level; Hilde was then promoted to Lieutenant.

Over the next 14 years, Hilde performed well in this position. His day-to-day duties included, among other things, preparing shift schedules, representing the Chief of Police at professional seminars and conferences, conducting training for lower-ranking officers, and as noted above, assuming the role of acting Chief when Lillis was absent. According to Lillis, Hilde’s position as the second-highest-ranking officer afforded him unique insight into the functioning of the police department and equipped him with skills that would be valuable were he ever to seek the Chief of Police job.

II. Lillis’s resignation and the process for picking a new Chief

In early 2012, Lillis announced his intention to retire, effective April 30. At a January 9, 2012 meeting with Lillis, the [1071]*1071Police Commission2 considered how the next Chief should be selected. The Commissioners first asked Lillis how many City officers were qualified for the position, and he responded that there were three — two Sergeants (Jesse Howe and Brandon Elias) and Hilde — but one was “not interested.”3 The Commission ultimately decided to post the position internally but also to advertise for external candidates.

In addition, the Commission determined, with input from Lillis, the process it would utilize to select the next Chief. Each applicant would be scored in two phases, an interview (worth up to 100 points) and an experience/training rating (no set number of points), and then ranked based upon the overall score. The interview rating had two components. A candidate could obtain up to five points in four categories — overall appearance, greeting to the interview panel, overall presence, and closure of the interview — for a total of 20 possible points. The remaining 80 points were to be awarded based on the candidate’s answers to eight questions (up to 10 points each) selected by Lillis and approved by the Commission.

The experience/training rating also had two components: (1) experience and (2) training and employment history. For experience, candidates were awarded one point for each year of service as a police officer; one point for each year of service as a Sergeant (or equivalent); and two points for each year of service as a Lieutenant (or equivalent). For training and employment history, candidates were awarded between 0 and 20 points, but no criteria were selected to determine the appropriate score in this category.

This overall procedure — a subjective interview score combined with objective scores for experience, training, and employment history — was not unique. According to Lillis, the same basic process had been used for every hiring and promotion decision during his tenure as Chief of Police.4 And other than on rare occasions in which the top-ranked candidate was later disqualified (for example, because of problems with his background investigation) or dropped out of contention, the highest-rated candidate always was recommended for hiring or promotion to the City Council.

III. The interviews

Five persons applied for the Chief of Police position and four were interviewed by the Commission: (1) Hilde, (2) Howe, (3) Elias, and (4) Tim Koivunen, a detective with the Virginia, Minnesota, police department. Because of the purely objective manner in which points were awarded for years of service at various ranks, Hilde held a significant advantage before the interviews began, as no other applicant had advanced to the rank of Lieutenant. He received 65 “experience” points (29 points for 29 years as a police officer, plus 8 points for 8 years as a Sergeant, plus 28 points for 14 years as a Lieutenant), far surpassing Koivunen, the next nearest candidate (with 28 “experience” points).

The training and employment scores, however, closed this gap somewhat: Koivunen received 15 points in this category, [1072]*1072Howe received 11, and Elias and Hilde each received 9. When asked in their depositions how they had calculated these scores, the Commissioners testified that Lillis had determined them. But Lillis testified to the contrary, asserting these numbers came from the Commission and he had no idea what criteria they had used to calculate them. Nor did certain of the training/employment scores make sense to Lillis. He noted, for example, that Howe had been a police officer for only eight years, four of which were at the Sergeant level, and at all times had been supervised by Hilde. Hence, he could not explain why Hilde’s training/employment score was lower than Howe’s.

Regardless, even with the training/employment scores factored in, Hilde still held a substantial lead before the oral interviews on February 15, 2012. Lillis was present at the interviews and read the Commission’s questions to each candidate; Hilde went first, followed by Koivunen, Howe, and Elias. The Commissioners independently scored each interview, completing a score sheet that Lillis had prepared.

Howe received scores of 54, 72, and 82 from the Commissioners.

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Noreen v. Pharmerica Corp.
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777 F.3d 998 (Eighth Circuit, 2015)

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986 F. Supp. 2d 1068, 2013 WL 6283909, 2013 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 170647, 120 Fair Empl. Prac. Cas. (BNA) 1681, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hilde-v-city-of-eveleth-mnd-2013.