Jesse Cardenas v. At&t, Corp. Lucent Technologies, Inc.

245 F.3d 994, 2001 U.S. App. LEXIS 10977, 80 Empl. Prac. Dec. (CCH) 40,537, 2001 WL 322156
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedApril 4, 2001
Docket00-1915, 00-2353
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 245 F.3d 994 (Jesse Cardenas v. At&t, Corp. Lucent Technologies, Inc.) 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
Jesse Cardenas v. At&t, Corp. Lucent Technologies, Inc., 245 F.3d 994, 2001 U.S. App. LEXIS 10977, 80 Empl. Prac. Dec. (CCH) 40,537, 2001 WL 322156 (8th Cir. 2001).

Opinion

MAGILL, Circuit Judge.

Jesse Cardenas sued his employer, Lu-cent Technologies, Inc. (“Lucent”), alleging that its continuing failure to promote him to a supervisory position constituted age and national origin discrimination under the ADEA and Title VII, and that Lu-cent’s promotion policies and procedures had a discriminatory impact upon Hispanics and Mexican-Americans. The district court granted Lucent’s motion for summary judgment on Cardenas’s discriminatory impact claim, but allowed the disparate treatment age and national origin claims to go to trial. After a three-day trial, the jury returned a verdict against Lucent on Cardenas’s national origin claim, awarding him $50,942 in lost wages, $50,000 in compensatory damages, and $750,000 in punitive damages. Lucent appeals the district court’s denial of its motion for judgment as a matter of law. For the reasons set forth herein, we reverse.

*996 I.

Jesse Cardenas, a Mexican-American, was hired in 1962 by Western Electric, a predecessor to Lucent. At the time of the trial, Cardenas worked as an investigator at Lucent’s Omaha, Nebraska manufacturing facility, where he was responsible for investigating products and returning damaged or unfit products.

Lucent employed approximately 3400 people at its Omaha facility (the “Omaha Works”), which had a five-level management structure. Les Cole, an E-level manager, was the highest ranked employee at the Omaha Works. Jim Andry, a D-level manager, was the Director of Manufacturing Operations and reported directly to Cole. Andry managed four manufacturing areas, each headed by a C-level manager. The C-level managers supervised 13-level managers, who in turn supervised A-level managers. The A-level was the lowest managerial level, and was itself divided into five classifications: A-l, the lowest, through A-5, the highest. The Omaha Works employed approximately 130 A-level managers and 40 B-level managers. Jim Andry had final approval responsibility for A-level manager promotions but relied entirely upon hiring managers to make promotion decisions.

At the time in question, Lucent employees could learn of opportunities for promotion in several ways. First, an employee could inform his supervisor or department manager of his interest in a particular position. Second, Lucent maintained a computer-based system, known as ECOS, that contained information on most available managerial positions. Finally, Lucent posted job requisition forms for lateral internal management candidates on a management bid board outside the personnel office. Though nonmanagement employees were not technically eligible for lateral positions, they customarily bid for these jobs as well. Cardenas looked at the management bid board five times over the course of his career at Lucent.

Early in 1995, in response to a request from a Lucent manager, Lucent’s Human Resources Manager, Doug Thoms, compiled a “promotability list” of A-level supervisory candidates. In doing so, he consulted Lucent’s Diversity Manager, the Alliance of Black Telecommunications Employees (“ABTE”), and the Hispanic Association of AT & T Employees (“HISPA”). In addition, Thorns added individuals who had worked directly for him who he believed would make good supervisory candidates. Thoms looked at three factors in compiling the promotability list: (1) employees with good people skills; (2) employees who had college degrees; and (3) employees of color. When complete, the promotability list contained twenty African-American employees, four Hispanic employees, and three white employees. Cardenas did not appear on the promota-bility list. Cardenas had neither been recommended by HISPA nor worked for Thoms.

Later in 1995, Lucent received a large order and needed three new entry-level (A-4 level) supervisors in its Cabinet area. At the request of Fred Tirschman, the Cabinet area B-level supervisor, Judy Nebe, the Omaha Works’ staffing manager, posted the new positions on the management bid board. Cardenas and another employee stated that they did not see the post. Tirschman decided not to post the position on ECOS because a manager who had recently posted an A-4 supervisor position on ECOS had received no applications from qualified candidates.

Fifteen employees applied for the positions, of whom only four were A-4 supervisors eligible for lateral transfer to the new positions; the other eleven bid for the positions as promotions. Cardenas did not *997 submit a bid for the positions. Tirschman selected one of the lateral candidates, Tim Parks, a white male, to fill one of the new positions, but rejected all fourteen other candidates. Instead, Tirschman used the promotability list compiled by Thoms to fill the remaining two positions, selecting Nikki Welch, a black female, and Tom Leroux, a white male. In selecting Welch and Leroux, Tirschman did not strictly adhere to the order of candidates on the promotability list, passing over several white, African-American, and Hispanic candidates. At the time of his promotion decisions, Tirschman did not know Cardenas. Cardenas never applied for the available A-4 positions, never submitted a resume to Tirschman, and never otherwise asked Tirschman to consider him for the positions.

Cardenas asserts that Lucent did not give him a fair opportunity to be promoted. Specifically, Cardenas alleges that Lucent did not permit him to take a supervisory profile record exam, even though Lucent allowed Tom Leroux to take the exam. Cardenas also claims that he publicized his desire to be promoted by speaking with various employees and by submitting resumes. At trial, a Lucent manager testified that he had told Lucent’s Diversity Manager that Cardenas should be on the promotability list compiled by Thoms, but that the Diversity Manager did not want to put Cardenas on the list because he was a troublemaker. Cardenas claims that another Lucent employee, Herb Rhodes, told him that he should not have complained about Lucent’s promotion practices, and that Jim Andry was angry with Cardenas and had told Rhodes that Cardenas would never be promoted as long as Andry was at Lucent. Finally, Cardenas claims that some of Lucent’s managers evinced prejudice against Mexican-Americans, asserting that at a meeting in 1994, Jim Andry told some Mexiean-American employees that it was less important to use Spanish-speaking employees for jobs in South America than to present a “high professional image.” At the same meeting, Plant Manager John Heindel purportedly said: “If you guys worked a hundred years for AT & T, you’ll never reach the level that Jim Andry and I have reached.”

Prior to filing this case in federal court, Cardenas filed a discrimination charge with the Nebraska Equal Opportunity Commission (“NEOC”). In response to Cardenas’s NEOC charge, Helen Munoz, Lucent’s senior equal opportunity affirmative action consultant, drafted a position statement. In that position statement, Munoz stated that Cardenas was not eligible to bid for the A-4 positions because he was not an A-4 supervisor or a candidate for promotion. She explained that Cardenas was not a candidate for promotion because he had not been recommended for promotion by his supervisor, the Diversity Leadership Team, Human Resources, or HISPA. In the position statement, Munoz erroneously stated that Cardenas was a member of HISPA, and that only management employees were eligible to use self-nomination bid forms. She acknowledged these errors during her testimony at trial.

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