Reber v. BELL HELICOPTER TEXTRON, INC.

248 S.W.3d 853, 2008 Tex. App. LEXIS 1724, 2008 WL 623949
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 6, 2008
Docket2-07-104-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 248 S.W.3d 853 (Reber v. BELL HELICOPTER TEXTRON, INC.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Reber v. BELL HELICOPTER TEXTRON, INC., 248 S.W.3d 853, 2008 Tex. App. LEXIS 1724, 2008 WL 623949 (Tex. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

OPINION

BOB McCOY, Justice.

I. Introduction

In this labor law case, Appellants Ronnie R. Reber and Alan R. Todd assert in five issues that the trial court erred by granting a new trial to Appellee Bell Helicopter Textron, Inc. (“Bell”) based on a misunderstanding of the application of the “mixed motive” theory in age discrimination cases (issues one, two, and three), whether a judgment can be final that does not dispose of all parties and claims (issue four), and whether sufficient evidence was *855 presented to support a mental anguish damage award (issue five).

II. Factual and Procedural Background

This case originated with thirteen plaintiffs’ collectively suing Bell for age discrimination relating to a layoff that occurred in December 2001. With the plaintiffs’ agreement, the trial court scheduled the case to be tried in four separate trials. Reber, Todd, and a third non-appealing party were in this trial.

A. Factual Background

According to Bell, as a result of adverse business conditions, Bell management determined that $100 million had to be cut from its 2002 budget. Among the issues Bell faced were serious problems with the V-22 project program, which was in danger of cancellation. Had the V-22 project been cancelled, it would have imperiled Bell’s future as an ongoing company. Finally, as of the end of the third quarter of 2001, Bell was $100 million behind its sales plan for the year for its business and commercial aircraft.

In 2001, Jeffrey Pino was a senior vice president at Bell and headed its Commercial Business Unit. As such, he was responsible for profit and loss for Bell’s commercial and international military business. His charge in a September 4, 2001 memo from Bell’s chairman was to “close the gap in the profitability of the business unit [he] was assigned.” To do that, Pino was directed to find a way to save $40 million in his unit’s operation. To accomplish that level of cost reduction, Pino made a significant reduction in personnel.

According to Bell, Pino and his team ranked all of the employees in his business unit and made decisions regarding whom to lay off based on a discussion of each person’s strengths and weaknesses. Decisions were made based on the prospect of each employee’s potential for contribution in a different work environment, and those who ranked at the bottom of the list, when compared with their peers, were laid off. Pino and his team decided to eliminate the marketing group and to have salesmen pick up that function. He also decided to eliminate the infrastructure operation because it was not making progress selling infrastructure services (consulting on heliports and landing locations for the V-22); Pino decided to devote one employee to that sales area on a part-time basis.

Pino was the decisionmaker regarding the layoffs in his unit, and according to Bell, neither he nor his team discussed or utilized age as a criterion for any layoff. Two employees who were let go by Bell were Reber and Todd.

B. Reber

Reber was employed by Bell from 1966 until his termination in December 2001. Reber worked in marketing and infrastructure development. He was told that his position was being terminated due to economic conditions. However, he alleged that his job was taken over by a substantially younger and less qualified individual, Pat Foley. Bell confirmed at trial that Foley had replaced Reber.

According to Bell, the result of the rating exercise and the decisions regarding division functions was that Reber was ranked lower than the employees who were retained, most of whom, although younger than Reber, purportedly had specific skills that Reber did not have. Also, according to Pino, involved in Pino’s deci-sionmaking process was knowledge that Reber had done a poor job developing what became a web-based program that facilitated customer communications with Bell.

*856 Also according to Bell, Pino and his management team attempted to find other places in the organization for Reber, but in the end, the marketing department under Pino, which employed Reber, was largely eliminated.

C. Todd

Todd, a sales engineer in the marketing group, had been employed by Bell from 1987 until his termination in December 2001. His function was to support salesmen and to provide technical evaluations of competing products for use when a salesman tried to make a sale to a customer. He was told that his job was being eliminated due to problems with the government, commercial problems, and reorganization. According to Bell, as with Reber, the result of the rating exercise and the decisions regarding division functions was that Todd was also ranked lower than the employees who were retained; and most of these retained employees, also younger than Todd, purportedly had specific skills that Todd did not have. Todd had also been criticized for, among other things, falling asleep at meetings. According to Bell, Pino and his management team attempted to find other places in the organization for Todd but in the end, could not.

Shortly after being terminated, Todd discovered that a similar job was being advertised by Bell, and that the position was later filled by Britt McDermott, a younger, less qualified person whom Todd had trained.

D. Procedural History

In the first trial, the jury found that age was a motivating factor in the decision to terminate Reber and Todd, and a final judgment was entered in their favor. Bell then filed a motion for new trial contending that the trial court’s failure to submit a “mixed-motive” jury question warranted a new trial. 1 The trial court granted the motion for new trial, concluding that the jury had been improperly charged because of the omission of the mixed-motive question that Bell had requested prior to the case’s being submitted. Todd and Reber filed a motion for reconsideration arguing that this was not a “mixed-motive” case because the plaintiffs had never pleaded this theory. They also asserted that the decision whether to proceed on a mixed-motive theory in a discrimination case is a choice left to the plaintiff. The reconsideration motion was not granted.

The second trial was held in November 2006. A jury again found that age was a motivating factor regarding the termination of both Reber and Todd and awarded them $804,809. However, the jury answered affirmatively to the “mixed-motive” would-have-been-terminated-anyway question, thus leaving Reber and Todd without any damages. 2 This appeal followed.

III. Age Discrimination Statutory and Case Law Background

A. Pretext or Mixed-Motive

While case law is abundant in both state and federal court, our supreme court lucidly articulated the parameters of these two types of age discrimination claims in *857 Quantum, Chemical Corp. v. Toennies,

Related

Hawkins v. Grinnell Regional Medical Center
929 N.W.2d 261 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 2019)
Peterson v. Bell Helicopter Textron, Inc.
901 F. Supp. 2d 846 (N.D. Texas, 2012)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
248 S.W.3d 853, 2008 Tex. App. LEXIS 1724, 2008 WL 623949, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reber-v-bell-helicopter-textron-inc-texapp-2008.