Koski, Lee W. v. Standex Int'l Corp

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedOctober 15, 2002
Docket01-3505
StatusPublished

This text of Koski, Lee W. v. Standex Int'l Corp (Koski, Lee W. v. Standex Int'l Corp) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Koski, Lee W. v. Standex Int'l Corp, (7th Cir. 2002).

Opinion

In the United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit ____________

No. 01-3505 LEE W. KOSKI, Plaintiff-Appellant, v.

STANDEX INTERNATIONAL CORPORATION, Defendant-Appellee. ____________ Appeal from the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Wisconsin. No. 00-C-0671—John W. Reynolds, Judge. ____________ ARGUED FEBRUARY 19, 2002—DECIDED OCTOBER 15, 2002 ____________

Before COFFEY, EASTERBROOK, and DIANE P. WOOD, Circuit Judges. DIANE P. WOOD, Circuit Judge. After working for 28 years at Spincraft, a unit of Standex International Cor- poration in Wisconsin, Lee Koski lost his job at the age of 56. He responded by filing this action in the district court, alleging violations of the Age Discrimination in Employ- ment Act (ADEA), 29 U.S.C. §§ 621, et seq. The district court granted summary judgment in favor of Spincraft, stating that even if Koski could establish a prima facie case of age discrimination, he had not offered enough evi- dence to support a finding that Spincraft’s stated reason 2 No. 01-3505

for firing him (inadequate performance) was pretextual. We affirm.

I Koski joined Spincraft in 1970 as a methods engineer. During his time at the company, he held a number of positions and received several promotions. In 1987, Koski was promoted from the position of estimator, a job that involved determining how a customer order should be produced and then calculating the cost for the order, to operations manager, which carried the greater respon- sibility of supervising manufacturing operations. While holding this position, Koski also temporarily assumed the responsibilities of the recently terminated Engineering Manager. Juggling both roles proved too much for Koski, and he was not able to fulfill the responsibilities of the engineering position adequately. In 1993, Del Lamont, who was then the President of Standex and acting Gen- eral Manager of Spincraft, along with David Schmitz, the Vice President of Financial Administration for Standex, met with Koski about his poor performance. They con- cluded that Koski should be demoted from operations manager to the position of senior estimator because he was unable to perform successfully in a managerial role. Koski accepted the demotion along with the accompany- ing pay reduction. Five years later, on September 29, 1998, Schmitz decided that Koski had to go. The reasons he offered for this de- cision were Koski’s unsatisfactory performance and his continued inability to communicate effectively within the company and with its customers. Because the question whether these reasons were pretextual lies at the heart of Koski’s appeal, we review the evidence that both he and the company presented on performance and pretext. No. 01-3505 3

Prior to 1991, Koski received only positive performance reviews. Beginning in January 1991, a variety of supervi- sors began to record that Koski was moody, had a nega- tive attitude and was not a team player. These comments were intermixed with positive statements, such as one in his October 1994 evaluation that reported that Koski worked hard, was well-informed and had a high degree of judgment. In August 1994, Schmitz became Spincraft’s general manager. Schmitz studied the performance of all the estimators and engineers and then met with Koski in April 1995 to discuss his job performance. During the meeting, Schmitz warned Koski that his job was in jeop- ardy because of his inability to communicate with the engineering department and other employees, which re- sulted in a breakdown in the handoff between estimat- ing and engineering. Koski apparently took this advice to heart, because by the time Schmitz reviewed Koski in 1996, things had changed. This time Schmitz noted significant improvements in Koski’s behavior. In the re- view, Schmitz even suggested giving Koski additional management responsibilities. Although Koski was not pro- moted again, he received merit salary increases in Sep- tember 1996 and in 1997. Despite Koski’s improvement between 1996 and 1997, in April 1998, Schmitz again expressed concern about Koski’s performance. In addition, Schmitz believed that Koski had made disparaging comments about him. Al- though Koski disputes that he ever made inappropriate remarks about Schmitz, he admits that he and other employees had a conversation about Schmitz on a busi- ness trip in Indianapolis. Although Koski’s exact words during this conversation are disputed, two employees reported to Schmitz that Koski stated that he was wait- ing for Schmitz to be fired before he would cooperate with Spincraft management. Schmitz met with Koski to 4 No. 01-3505

discuss both the performance issues and the reported remarks. During the meeting, Schmitz told Koski that he was difficult to work with because he was constantly bitter. This record standing alone would be enough to show that Spincraft regarded Koski as a problem employee by the time it decided to terminate him. Koski, however, argues that there is more to the story and claims that the following evidence reveals that the company’s views were not genuinely held. First, he suggests that Spincraft gave shifting and inconsistent reasons for terminating him. At one point Spincraft alleged that Koski was fired because of a longstanding failure to perform, lack of team- work, negative attitude (including open complaints and disparaging remarks about other employees and manage- ment), lack of communication, and poor transition from estimating to engineering. Later, in its response to inter- rogatories in the proceedings before the district court, Spincraft omitted the assertions that Koski was a poor team worker and made a bad transition from estimator to engineer, but it added charges of moodiness and non- acceptance of criticism along with an inability (as op- posed to failure) to perform. In the summary judgment affidavits, Spincraft said that Koski was fired prima- rily because of his allegedly disloyal statements made to fellow employees on the Indianapolis business trip. Second, Koski argues that Spincraft’s documentary rec- ord of his alleged deficiencies is itself suspicious. Many of the documents Spincraft claimed were supportive of its characterization of Koski’s performance were not found in Koski’s personnel file. Although performance reviews are ordinarily placed in an employee’s personnel file, Koski’s 1993, 1996, and October 1998 performance re- views were missing when he initially requested the file. Koski also points to his October 1998 performance re- view as an example of Spincraft’s spurious documents. No. 01-3505 5

The 1998 review is the document on which Spincraft prin- cipally relied to justify Koski’s September 29, 1998 ter- mination, but that review was dated October 6, 1998, seven days after the action in question. Koski also points out that Schmitz destroyed the notes that would have sup- ported the analysis in his performance reviews, including the 1998 performance review—an action that casts doubt on the integrity of Schmitz’s later evaluation, in his view. Koski maintains that a jury could infer that the notes never existed or that they would have supported Koski’s position had they not been destroyed. Koski offers a number of other pretext arguments, mostly disputing the findings in Schmitz’s evaluation. He as- serts that other employees would characterize his per- formance favorably. Koski also provides testimony that Schmitz had “invented charges” against other older em- ployees to support their termination. Finally, Koski offers statistical and anecdotal evidence in an attempt to document a pattern at Spincraft of unfair treatment and termination of older employees. He notes that of the 11 employees who were terminated between January 1995 and 1998, six were over 40 and four more were 39.

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