Jan Calder v. TCI Cablevision

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedAugust 6, 2002
Docket01-3237
StatusPublished

This text of Jan Calder v. TCI Cablevision (Jan Calder v. TCI Cablevision) 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
Jan Calder v. TCI Cablevision, (8th Cir. 2002).

Opinion

United States Court of Appeals FOR THE EIGHTH CIRCUIT ___________

No. 01-3237 ___________

Jan Calder, * * Plaintiff/Appellant, * * v. * * Appeal from the United States TCI Cablevision of Missouri, Inc., * District Court for the doing business as TCI Media Services, * Eastern District of Missouri. * Defendant/Appellee, * * TCI Central, Inc., * * Defendant. * ___________

Submitted: June 14, 2002

Filed: August 6, 2002 ___________

Before WOLLMAN, RICHARD S. ARNOLD, and LOKEN, Circuit Judges. ___________

WOLLMAN, Circuit Judge.

Jan Calder filed suit against TCI Cablevision of Missouri, Inc. (TCI) alleging that she was terminated because of her age in violation of the Age Discrimination in Employment Act (ADEA), 29 U.S.C. §§ 621-634, and the Missouri Human Rights Act, Mo. Rev. Stat. §§ 213.010-213.137. The district court1 granted summary judgment to TCI, and Calder appeals. We affirm.

I.

Calder, who was born on June 12, 1934, was hired by TCI in March 1985. Her duties as an account executive at TCI were to sell advertising on TCI’s cable television system to St. Louis area businesses and manage individual advertisers’ accounts.

On December 4, 1994, several of the accounts Calder was managing were transferred to other account executives. Jill Gainer, who was then the general manager of the St. Louis office, and Kim Wright, the local sales manager, jointly decided to transfer the accounts. When told of the switch, Calder became agitated and stated that she believed the change was being made to force her out because of her age.

In December 1995, Sonja Farrand became regional vice president of TCI. She believed that the professionalism and revenue performance of the St. Louis office were well below that of other TCI offices. To increase the office’s performance, she purchased new equipment and furniture, provided training for account executives on research and sales presentations and techniques, hired John Gutbrod to replace Gainer as general manager and Pat Quesnel as the new local sales manager, and established minimum performance standards for all account executives. Under the new standards, account executives were required to make fifteen face-to-face sales calls per week, identify five new business prospects per week, make two face-to-face new business calls per week, submit a minimum of three written proposals per week to

1 The Honorable Carol E. Jackson, United States District Judge for the Eastern District of Missouri.

-2- management, prepare for and attend weekly individual business meetings with management, be proficient in using all sales resources, and be in the office from 8:30 a.m. until 5:30 p.m. or notify management of the reason for being out of the office. Account executives also had a budget of expected sales that they were supposed to reach monthly. These budgets were set one year in advance by management in consultation with the account executives and varied monthly based on changes in expected revenue.

Shortly after Farrand took over, Gainer and Wright informed her that Calder was upset about the account switches in 1994 and they expressed some concern about Calder’s performance. Despite these concerns, Calder had received good performance reviews under their management. She did not fare as well under the new management. Both Gutbrod and Quesnel noticed shortly after they started working that Calder was not meeting her budgets. Calder told Gutbrod that she believed the previous management was trying to force her out because of her age. He replied by stating that age did not matter to him, only performance.

Calder’s relationship with the new management deteriorated over the remainder of her time at TCI. In November 1996, Gutbrod sent Calder a memorandum criticizing her for making mistakes regarding a political candidate’s commercials. He also expressed concern about her not being in the office, not meeting her budget, and not generating new business. Quesnel rated her performance as below average on her January 1997 quarterly review. On January 17, 1997, Gutbrod wrote a letter to Farrand stating that “the prudent business decision is to terminate [Calder] or at least significantly reduce her account list,” but that he feared she would take legal action in response. On January 28, Gutbrod sent Calder a memo criticizing her for allowing her voice-mail box to fill up so that he could not leave her a message. Gutbrod sent Calder a memo on February 10, 1997, informing her that she had failed to meet her budget in twelve of the previous thirteen months. Gutbrod and Quesnel reassigned several of Calder’s accounts as well as the accounts of other account executives

-3- effective February 24, 1997. Quesnel testified that the reassignments were spurred by a merger that increased TCI’s market share and that Calder’s budget was adjusted to reflect the change in her accounts.

On March 7, 1997, Calder’s attorney sent TCI a letter stating that Calder “has been subjected to discriminatory treatment by her employer” and asking that the treatment be stopped. TCI’s division counsel replied by stating that TCI was unaware of any discriminatory treatment and by offering to work with appropriate management personnel to remedy any alleged discriminatory treatment upon receiving further details from Calder’s counsel regarding such treatment. Calder’s counsel’s only response to this offer was to file the present action against TCI following Calder’s termination.

Calder received her first “corrective discipline memorandum” on March 24, 1997, which stated that she was not making her budgets because she was not setting enough appointments with new clients. Quesnel later corrected this memorandum because Calder had not been credited with all her sales, and had actually achieved 99.5% of her budget. In April 1997, Farrand reminded Calder of the requirement that she submit a minimum of three proposals a week. Calder acknowledged that she had not complied with this requirement and promised to send Farrand some of her proposals, but failed to do so. On April 27, 1997, Gutbrod sent Farrand a memo in which he recounted the problems they had had with Calder and observed that the two had agreed to “document heavily” Calder’s lack of performance. On Calder’s July 16, 1997, performance evaluation, Quesnel and Gutbrod rated her as needing improvement in almost every category. Quesnel wrote that Calder was deficient in submitting written proposals, soliciting new clients, acquiring proficiency on new technology, and improving her dependability. In August 1997, Quesnel sent Calder a memorandum stating that she had made a mistake in setting up a commercial in the tape library and that she should either learn how to use the library properly or ask for assistance. Also in August, Quesnel criticized Calder for quoting an unapproved rate

-4- for advertising to a client, a mistake that caused the client to decide not to advertise on TCI’s cable system. In yet another August memo, Quesnel told Calder that she had to submit two proposals a week to Gutbrod and him and that she should take a manager on at least one appointment per week. In September, Quesnel wrote in a memorandum for Calder’s file that one of her clients had requested that its account be transferred to another account executive. In October, Gutbrod sent Calder a memo stating that her tardiness at the weekly sales meetings was unacceptable. Only seven percent of Calder’s billing through October was from new business, a much smaller proportion than any other account executive. In November, Quesnel gave Calder a memo stating that she was not filling out paperwork properly, along with two corrective discipline memorandums noting Calder’s failure to meet her budgets, as well as other problems.

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Jan Calder v. TCI Cablevision, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jan-calder-v-tci-cablevision-ca8-2002.