Wallace v. O.C. Tanner Recognition Co.

299 F.3d 96, 2002 WL 1827286
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedAugust 19, 2002
Docket01-2624
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 299 F.3d 96 (Wallace v. O.C. Tanner Recognition Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wallace v. O.C. Tanner Recognition Co., 299 F.3d 96, 2002 WL 1827286 (1st Cir. 2002).

Opinion

COFFIN, Senior Circuit Judge.

Appellant Thomas Wallace was fifty-three years old when he was terminated from O.C. Tanner Company (“Tanner”) after twenty years of employment and repeated recognition as one of the company’s top sales managers. He disputes the company’s claim that he was spending excessive time on a personal project that he had concealed from Tanner officials, and claims that age discrimination led the company to replace him with his thirty-six-year-old subordinate. The district court granted summary judgment for appellee Tanner, finding that Wallace failed to allege suffi- *97 dent evidence of age-based animus. We affirm.

I. Background

O.C. Tanner Company, based in Salt Lake City, Utah, assists companies in developing programs to recognize and reward their employees. Its services include providing custom gifts or jewelry for service anniversaries. Tanner hired appellant in 1975 to help develop a market in the Northeast. He began as a salesperson in the Boston area, advanced to Regional Sales Manager as the supervisor of several other employees, and achieved a record of superior performance in generating new business. His region ranked in the top ten for sales for twelve of the last fifteen years of his employment, and among other recognitions, he shared the “Most Impressive Customer Commitment Award” with another regional manager in 1992.

In July 1996, however, the Sales Director for the Boston region (and appellant’s superior), Rulon Horne, drafted a memo identifying eight concerns that had developed about appellant’s performance and other work-related matters. According to Horne, appellant’s personal sales numbers had been lagging and he had become less involved in the region’s business and activities. Doug Duckworth, Horne’s predecessor, testified that he communicated a similar concern about appellant’s “lack of involvement” in the region to Horne during the transition in sales directors earlier in the year. In addition to declining sales, the issues identified in Horne’s memo included appellant’s intimidating management style, lack of respect for Horne, resistance to signing a confidentiality agreement, and the lack of growth in repeat sales in the Boston region. Horne also noted two operational changes the company wished to effectuate in the Boston office: (1) to end the relationship with appellant’s wife’s brochure business, and (2) to either relocate the regional office from a building owned by appellant or obtain a lease from him. Finally, the memo noted appellant’s minimal use of his laptop computer, which frustrated the company’s effort to track activity at its field offices.

A few days after writing the memo, Horne met with his superiors to discuss his concerns. Present at the meeting, which was held at the corporate office in Salt Lake City, were Tanner’s chief executive officer, Don Ostler; its president, Kent Murdock; the executive vice president of sales, Tim Treu; and the vice president of sales, Dale Sansom. The group agreed that appellant would be offered the opportunity to correct the problems, and Horne and Treu arranged to meet with Wallace in Boston at the end of August.

In sessions on August 27 and 28, Horne and Treu reviewed with appellant the concerns listed in Horne’s memo. Horne testified that appellant was not given advance notice of the agenda in order to prevent him from “pre-framing” his responses. Although the parties differ on certain particulars of the meetings, they agree that appellant made a commitment to address each of the eight items. In response to questions about sales performance, appellant explained that he had credited much of his own personal business to Doug Mercer, the senior sales associate in the office. Treu’s notes of the meeting on the first day report that Wallace also attributed his lower performance to other factors, including concern about his daughter’s health. In his deposition, however, appellant testified that he may have made reference to his daughter’s illness, but said that her health was not a distraction that affected his work for Tanner. He attributed his lower numbers entirely to the allocation of *98 his business to Mercer and agreed to meet with his staff to re-assign the credit for sales that he — Wallace—had generated. 1 He also promised quick action on other issues, stating that a lease and the signed confidentiality agreement would be submitted early the next week, and he would “dial in” on his laptop immediately.

Treu and Horne returned to Utah on Wednesday, August 28. On Friday, August 30, the Boston office administrator, Patty Prew, separately called two headquarters employees who worked in the sales promotion and customer service departments, apparently to express surprise that appellant had not been fired. Prew told the two employees, Kathie Lewis and Carol Anderson, that appellant was not actively involved in the region’s business and was spending substantial time on other, personal activities. Prew asked that Horne call her at home the next day so that she could communicate her concerns directly to him. In a ninety-minute phone conversation with Horne, she reported that appellant had paid little attention to Tanner business for the past two years because of his preoccupation with a personal real estate investment. He had purchased a large painel of land that he hoped to develop for commercial, residential and recreational uses.

Aware that Prew was unhappy with appellant because she felt underpaid, 2 company officials sought confirmation of her information from other sources. Anderson, one of the headquarters employees whom Prew had contacted, told Horne and Treu that her once-regular contacts with appellant had dropped off in the previous year or so. 3 Lewis reported only two conversations with appellant during the eight months she had been working with his region. Horne spoke with Mercer — ultimately appellant’s successor — who reported that appellant was no longer heavily involved in Tanner business. Horne and Treu also did an online search of Boston area newspapers and found that they were “full of articles” covering meetings and “battles” concerning appellant’s real estate project; Treu’s notes describe the coverage as “one of the biggest ongoing stories of the year.” According to Horne’s deposition testimony, this information “filled in the unanswered question ... as to what had really gone on here, and it created, in our mind, the perception that [appellant] had not been forthright in his answers to us as to why he was distracted.”

The four officers who had met previously to discuss appellant’s work situation— Horne, Treu, CEO Ostler and company president Murdock — again consulted and *99 decided to terminate him. Murdock testified that the company officials felt “duped” and “misled” by the discussions with appellant in Boston the previous week, concluding that “he was collecting a lot of money for not doing anything at O.C. Tanner.” Horne and Treu flew to Boston and told appellant on September 5 that he was being terminated, attributing the decision to his involvement with the real estate development.

In depositions and documents, appellant offered a competing version of his work habits.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Bitisillie v. Haaland
D. Nevada, 2025
John Doe I v. Exxon Mobil Corp
District of Columbia, 2022
Fife v. MetLife Group, Inc.
D. Massachusetts, 2019
Cruz v. Hagel
152 F. Supp. 3d 74 (D. Puerto Rico, 2016)
Echevarria v. AstraZeneca, LP
133 F. Supp. 3d 372 (D. Puerto Rico, 2015)
Acevedo-Parrilla v. Novartis Ex-Lax, Inc.
696 F.3d 128 (First Circuit, 2012)
O'Leary v. Infrasource Transmission Services Co.
758 F. Supp. 2d 9 (D. Maine, 2010)
Acevedo-Padilla v. Novartis Ex Lax, Inc.
740 F. Supp. 2d 293 (D. Puerto Rico, 2010)
Swana v. Nu Visions Manufacturing, LLC
353 F. Supp. 2d 153 (D. Massachusetts, 2005)
Webber v. International Paper Co.
326 F. Supp. 2d 160 (D. Maine, 2004)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
299 F.3d 96, 2002 WL 1827286, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wallace-v-oc-tanner-recognition-co-ca1-2002.