Momcilo Filipovich v. K & R Express Systems, Inc., Cross-Appellee

391 F.3d 859, 2004 U.S. App. LEXIS 25066, 86 Empl. Prac. Dec. (CCH) 41,911, 94 Fair Empl. Prac. Cas. (BNA) 1564, 2004 WL 2794941
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedDecember 7, 2004
Docket03-2038, 03-2070, 03-3011
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 391 F.3d 859 (Momcilo Filipovich v. K & R Express Systems, Inc., Cross-Appellee) 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.

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Momcilo Filipovich v. K & R Express Systems, Inc., Cross-Appellee, 391 F.3d 859, 2004 U.S. App. LEXIS 25066, 86 Empl. Prac. Dec. (CCH) 41,911, 94 Fair Empl. Prac. Cas. (BNA) 1564, 2004 WL 2794941 (7th Cir. 2004).

Opinion

DIANE P. WOOD, Circuit Judge.

Convinced that his employer, K & R Express Systems, Inc., has been discriminating against him on various grounds prohibited by Title VII 42 U.S.C. §§ 2000e, et seq., Momcilo Filipovich has sued the company several times. In the present case, he alleges that K & R discriminated against him on the basis of age and national origin and that it unlawfully retaliated against him for bringing his earlier complaints.

That earlier litigation began in 1995, when Filipovich sued K & R based on charges he filed with the EEOC in 1993 and 1994 complaining about discrimination on the basis of national origin and retaliation. See Filipovic v. K & R Express Sys., Inc., 176 F.3d 390, 392-93 (7th Cir.1999). Before that case was concluded in K & R’s favor (in fact, just fifteen days after the district court dismissed the lawsuit) Filipo-vich filed another charge with the EEOC. This one claimed that the company had discriminated against him in a variety of ways, all on account of his age or national origin or because he had filed a charge. On April 27, 1998, the EEOC issued a notice of right to sue, and on July 27,1998, Filipovich filed this lawsuit. The district court dismissed several of Filipovich’s claims at the summary judgment stage, but the age discrimination and retaliation claims went to the jury. The jury found for Filipovich on both claims and awarded compensatory and punitive damages. After trial, however, the district court granted judgment as a matter of law to K & R on the age discrimination claim, finding that Filipovich failed to demonstrate that he was similarly situated to any younger employee who was treated more favorably. The court upheld the retaliation claim but remitted the punitive damages. K & R appealed from the verdict in Filipovich’s favor, contending that there is insufficient evidence to support it; Filipovich cross-appealed from the judgment as a matter of law on the age claim and the elimination of his punitive damage award. We find that K & R has the better of the argument on all aspects of the case: we therefore reverse the judgment in Filipovich’s favor on the retaliation claim, and we affirm the judgment for K & R on the remainder of the case.

I

Filipovich is a 62-year-old man from the former Yugoslavia who works for K & R Express Systems, a regional trucking company. Filipovich works at K & R’s main terminal in Hinsdale, Illinois, and is a member of Local Union No. 710 of the International Brotherhood of Teamsters. Filipovich is, and was, a dockman for K & R. His responsibilities include loading and unloading freight on trucks and trailers. Filipovich has worked as a full-time dock-man since 1982.

After fifteen years working only as a dockman, Filipovich sought a promotion to the position of “spotter.” A spotter is responsible for moving trailers between various loading docks. Filipovich considered such a promotion “very big.” The spotter position carried greater pay and certain weekend work assignments not available to dockmen. Additionally, driving a trailer is much easier on a person *862 physically than is loading and unloading freight.

Spotter positions do not open up regularly. When the company expects openings, it posts a sign-up sheet. In order to be chosen and trained as a spotter, an interested employee must sign up. He must then take and pass a road test, which is designed to ensure that the person knows how to drive a trailer. Filipovieh signed up for a spotter position, but he failed the road test twice. Scott Weigand, K & R’s safety manager and the person in charge of spotters, met with Filipovieh twice to train him on driving the trailers. Weigand then told Filipovieh that he had to proceed to a “second stage” of training before he could take a qualification test. Weigand, however, never met with Filipo-vich again, and Filipovieh was given neither another road test nor the qualification test. Although Filipovieh again signed the sheet indicating his interest in the position, he was never again contacted about becoming a spotter.

Filipovieh suspected that he was not selected as a spotter because he was thought to be too old. In late 1997, he filed an EEOC charge to this effect. Following the filing of his charge, Filipovieh began to receive disciplinary letters, warning him of problems with his loading, unloading, and securing of freight. Filipovieh received eight such letters between May 1998 and December 1999. As a result of the letters, Filipovieh received two suspensions, one in November 1998, the other in December 1999. Filipovieh did not have to serve the December suspension, as it was successfully reversed by his union.

Filipovieh filed suit on July 27, 1998, alleging discrimination based on his age and national origin and retaliation against him for his prior complaints. The court granted K & R’s summary judgment motion directed to the national origin claims and most of the age discrimination claims, but it allowed Filipovieh to proceed on the claim that the denial of the promotion to the spotter position was on account of either his age or the company’s desire to retaliate against him. At trial, Filipovieh introduced evidence documenting Wei-gand’s refusal to train him further on driving the trailers, and Weigand’s refusal to explain what the “second stage” of training was supposed to be. Filipovieh testified that he trained extensively on his own and felt ready to -take a third road test, but that he was never allowed to do so. Fili-povich also claimed that he had not committed any of the infractions for which he had been disciplined.

K & R argued that it refused to promote Filipovieh to a spotter position because he failed the test twice, and because even after training sessions with Weigand, he still could not safely maneuver the trailers. K & R pointed out in its Rule 50 motion that Filipovieh failed to show that he was as . qualified as those dockmen who were promoted, or that there were similarly situated dockmen who received, more extensive training. K & R emphasized that there is no official training program in place to teach dockmen how to drive the trailers, and that Weigand’s attempts to teach Filipovieh were out of the ordinary.

In response to the retaliation claim, K & R testified that its shipping manifests, which contain the records of all freight being loaded and unloaded, documented all of • Filipovich’s errors. In the normal course of its business, a doekman signs a manifest and notes on the manifest what freight he has handled. On September 18, 1998, K & R issued a letter to Filipovieh outlining his failure to unload 39 pieces of a 460-piece shipment. The shipment was destined for Michigan, but the 39 pieces were left on a trailer heading for Missouri. Filipovieh claimed that the shipping mani *863 fest indicated that all 460 pieces were to be left on the trailer, but he admitted unloading the 421 pieces and then circling the shipment on the manifest, which was a way of indicating that he had unloaded the entire 460-piece shipment. Each of the disciplinary letters arose out of similar circumstances.

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391 F.3d 859, 2004 U.S. App. LEXIS 25066, 86 Empl. Prac. Dec. (CCH) 41,911, 94 Fair Empl. Prac. Cas. (BNA) 1564, 2004 WL 2794941, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/momcilo-filipovich-v-k-r-express-systems-inc-cross-appellee-ca7-2004.