Nancy Kobrin v. University of MN

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedAugust 12, 1997
Docket96-2674
StatusPublished

This text of Nancy Kobrin v. University of MN (Nancy Kobrin v. University of MN) 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
Nancy Kobrin v. University of MN, (8th Cir. 1997).

Opinion

United States Court of Appeals FOR THE EIGHTH CIRCUIT ___________

No. 96-2674 ___________

Nancy Kobrin, * * Appellant, * * Appeal from the United States v. * District Court for the * District of Minnesota. University of Minnesota; The Regents * of the University of Minnesota, * * Appellees. * ___________

Submitted: March 10, 1997 Filed: August 12, 1997 ___________

Before WOLLMAN, JOHN R. GIBSON, and MAGILL,1 Circuit Judges. ___________

MAGILL, Circuit Judge.

We revisit this sex discrimination case as Nancy Kobrin appeals from the district court’s2 order that both adopted the special master’s3 findings of fact as well as granted

1 The Honorable Frank J. Magill was an active judge at the time this case was submitted and assumed senior status on April 1, 1997, before the opinion was filed. 2 The Honorable Paul A. Magnuson, Chief Judge, United States District Court for the District of Minnesota. 3 Special Master Leonard E. Lindquist. judgment in favor of the defendant, the University of Minnesota (University). Kobrin argues that the district court’s order should be reversed for any one of the following three reasons: (1) she was entitled to have a hearing before a panel of three persons rather than the special master alone; (2) the special master applied the wrong legal standard when reviewing Kobrin’s claim; and (3) the University was unable to produce all of the documents that the University is required to maintain under its own hiring guidelines. We affirm.

I.

In 1980, the University settled a class action sex discrimination suit, Rajender v. University of Minnesota, No. 4-73-435 (D. Minn. Aug. 13, 1980), by entering into a consent decree. Under the terms of the Rajender consent decree, the University must conduct a nationwide search to fill any academic, non-student position. The University must also make a good faith effort to hire “approximately equally well qualified” female candidates under an affirmative action plan until the percentage of women employed at all levels within a University department equals the percentage of women available for hiring. Rajender Consent Decree at 3-4. To comply with this requirement, the University annually compiles faculty gender statistics of the percentage of women employed at each level within each department of the University. As part of its good faith effort, the University has written hiring guidelines for each department. The hiring guidelines require each department to keep extensive records of its hiring

-2- process. These hiring guidelines, however, are not part of the Rajender consent decree. Kobrin became a Ph.D. candidate in the University’s Department of Comparative Literature (Department) in 1978. She also pursued psychoanalytical training as an advanced research fellow at the Institute for Psychoanalysis in Chicago. Before receiving her Ph.D. in comparative literature from the University in 1984, Kobrin

-3- served as the Acting Program Director for the University’s Center for Humanistic Studies (CHS).4

After Kobrin received her Ph.D. in 1984, she applied, interviewed, and was selected for the position of CHS Program Coordinator. This selection process complied with the provisions of the Rajender consent decree. The position of CHS Program Coordinator was a non-tenured, year-to-year position that Kobrin held until 1988. In addition to her duties as CHS Program Coordinator, Kobrin also taught some classes for the Department. In 1988, however, the University closed the CHS. Consequently, Kobrin’s position as CHS Program Coordinator was eliminated.

Around the same time, two professors resigned from the Department. On the recommendation of one of the resigning professors, the University hired Kobrin as a lecturer5 for the Department. Kobrin’s position as a lecturer for the Department was funded by a “soft money fund,” a type of University grant given to a department for a specific purpose on an annual basis. Kobrin was notified that her job would last from September 16, 1989, through June 15, 1990.

After Kobrin was hired as a lecturer, the University informed Kobrin that the creation of the lecturer position for which she had just been hired triggered the

4 The CHS was an interdisciplinary center established by the College of Liberal Arts to promote research in the humanities. 5 The term “lecturer” applies to non-permanent, non-tenure track teaching positions. These positions can involve some administrative duties as well.

-4- need for a search pursuant to the Rajender consent decree. Kobrin objected to the need for a Rajender search, arguing that she did not occupy a newly created position because the position was not substantially different from her previous position as CHS Program Coordinator. The deans of the Department disagreed with Kobrin and decided that a Rajender search was necessary because, in their opinion, Kobrin’s new position was

-5- materially different from her old one. By the time the deans had made this decision, however, there was not enough time to conduct a Rajender search prior to the start of the academic year. Therefore, Kobrin was allowed to keep her position as a Department lecturer for one year. However, the University’s Equal Opportunity Office made it clear to the Department that Kobrin could not continue in her position as lecturer unless she was selected for that position in the course of the Rajender search that would be conducted before the start of the next academic year.

To conduct a Rajender search, the Department must first form a search committee. The committee’s job is to make a final selection for the advertised position based on characteristics such as a candidate’s training, his or her experience, the quality and quantity of a candidate’s published works, and the academic recommendations submitted on behalf of each candidate. If a Rajender search results in the hiring of a male candidate, the search committee must list the three most qualified women who were considered and document the committee’s reasons for not hiring one of these women.

In 1988, the Department approved funding for a new senior faculty position and a new junior faculty position. Both of these were tenure-track positions. To fill the two positions, the Department formed a search committee of three women and four men and then advertised for candidates with a solid background in critical theory and a background in at least one of the following areas: literature with an emergent critical interest, continental European critical interest, continental

-6- European literature of a period after 1600, or media studies. About one hundred people applied to the Department for the junior faculty position, including Kobrin. The search committee narrowed this pool to a group of about fifteen candidates, which included Kobrin. The search committee further narrowed the pool of candidates to a group of approximately three finalists. Kobrin, however, was not chosen as a finalist because, in the opinion of the search committee, there were several other candidates that were better qualified than she.

-7- Ultimately, the search committee selected a male, Prabhakara Jha, for the junior faculty position. He had a strong background in literature with an emergent critical interest. For the senior position, the search committee selected a candidate who ultimately declined the offer. Finding no other suitable candidates for the senior position, the committee received permission from the University to hire a second junior faculty member instead. Before filling this position, the University did not recalculate the Department’s faculty gender statistics for the junior faculty level, even though the hiring of professor Jha was likely to have changed the percentage of males and females at that level within the Department.

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