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Viola Fair v. Larry Norris, 06-1580 (2007)

Court: Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit Number: 06-1580 Visitors: 18
Filed: Mar. 27, 2007
Latest Update: Mar. 02, 2020
Summary: United States Court of Appeals FOR THE EIGHTH CIRCUIT _ No. 06-1580 _ Viola Fair, * * Plaintiff-Appellant, * * Appeal from the United States v. * District Court for the Eastern * District of Arkansas. Larry Norris, Director, Arkansas * Department of Correction; Kevin * [PUBLISHED] Murphy, Human Resources * Administrator; Arkansas Department * of Correction; Ray Hobbs, in his * capacity as Chief Deputy Director, * * Defendants-Appellees. * _ Submitted: March 16, 2007 Filed: March 27, 2007 _ Befor
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                    United States Court of Appeals
                          FOR THE EIGHTH CIRCUIT
                                  ___________

                                  No. 06-1580
                                  ___________

Viola Fair,                             *
                                        *
             Plaintiff-Appellant,       *
                                        * Appeal from the United States
      v.                                * District Court for the Eastern
                                        * District of Arkansas.
Larry Norris, Director, Arkansas        *
Department of Correction; Kevin         *    [PUBLISHED]
Murphy, Human Resources                 *
Administrator; Arkansas Department      *
of Correction; Ray Hobbs, in his        *
capacity as Chief Deputy Director,      *
                                        *
             Defendants-Appellees.      *
                                   ___________

                           Submitted: March 16, 2007
                               Filed: March 27, 2007
                                 ___________

Before MELLOY, SMITH, and BENTON, Circuit Judges.
                            ___________

MELLOY, Circuit Judge.

       Plaintiff Viola Fair, an African-American woman, brought several employment-
discrimination claims against the Arkansas Department of Correction and some of its
officers (collectively, “the ADC”) for events relating to the ADC’s handling of her
application for an internal promotion. The district court1 granted the ADC’s motion
for summary judgment on all of Fair’s claims. Fair appeals only the grant of summary
judgment as to her claim under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 42 U.S.C.
§§ 2000e to 2000e-17. We affirm the judgment of the district court.

I. BACKGROUND

       We recount the relevant evidence in Fair’s case below. Because this is an
appeal from an adverse grant of summary judgment, we present the evidence in the
light most favorable to the nonmoving party. Gilmore v. AT&T, 
319 F.3d 1042
, 1046
(8th Cir. 2003).

       Fair graduated from the University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff in 1995, with a
bachelor’s degree in criminal justice. That same year, the ADC hired her for the
entry-level position of Administrative Assistant II at the standard pay level for the job,
Grade 17/Level I. Her formal performance reviews were strong. While working at
the ADC, she attended graduate school part-time at the urging of a supervisor, Ray
Hobbs.2 Fair eventually earned a master’s degree in social work from the University


      1
       The Honorable J. Leon Holmes, United States District Judge for the Eastern
District of Arkansas.
      2
       In her complaint, Fair alleged incidents of sexual harassment by Hobbs during
her tenure at the ADC. Fair’s complaint to the Equal Employment Opportunity
Commission alleged only racial discrimination with regard to non-promotion for an
open position. The alleged incidents of sexual harassment occurred well before Fair
applied for the position, and Hobbs had no decision-making role in the hiring for that
job. We have held that a Title VII plaintiff generally does not exhaust her
administrative remedies unless she complains of the discriminatory behavior to the
EEOC before filing a lawsuit. Stuart v. General Motors Corp., 
217 F.3d 621
, 630-31
(8th Cir. 2000). Although an EEOC complaint “need not specifically articulate the
precise claim or set forth all the evidence an employee may choose to later present in
court,” it must nevertheless “be sufficient to give the employer notice of the subject

                                           -2-
of Arkansas at Little Rock in the spring of 2003. Shortly after obtaining this degree,
Hobbs informed her of job vacancies in the ADC’s Internal Affairs Division, told her
that she would be a strong candidate, and encouraged her to apply. Fair applied for
two vacant, identical positions as an investigator for the ADC’s Internal Affairs
Division. The job posting stated that the salary for the position was $23,768 annually,
a Grade 18/Level I pay level. In her application, Fair listed her educational history
(including her master’s degree) and her work experience, and she attached copies of
relevant training certificates, scholastic transcripts, and letters of recommendation.
Fair did not state in her application or attached materials that she harbored
reservations about accepting the position at the advertised level of compensation.

       The ADC claims to have received an application from Fair for only one of the
positions, and it delivered the application to Tammy Luckett, the Unit Human
Resources Manager and employee responsible for “pre-screening” the applicants. In
the pre-screening process, it was Luckett’s duty to perform an initial review of the
applications and award standard numbers of “points” for applicant qualifications
above the minimum required for the posted job opening. The Internal Affairs
investigator position required a bachelor’s degree “in criminal justice or a related
field,” which Fair possessed. Fair’s additional master’s degree in social work entitled
her to five pre-screening points for education above the minimum job requirements,
but Luckett did not award the points to Fair. Luckett claimed she failed to award the
points because she mistakenly believed that social work was not a “related field”
within the meaning of the job requirements. There is no evidence that Luckett knew
Fair’s race, and Luckett made the same error in pre-screening the application of
Cynthia Tillman, a white woman who was also seeking an investigator position in


matter of the charge and identify generally the basis for a claim.” Wallace v. DTG
Operations, Inc., 
442 F.3d 1112
, 1123 (8th Cir. 2006). Given the lack of any apparent
relationship between Fair’s allegations of sexual harassment by Hobbs and the basis
for her complaint to the EEOC, we find that Fair has failed to exhaust her
administrative remedies with regard to her claim of gender discrimination.

                                         -3-
Internal Affairs. Tillman also possessed a master’s degree in social work, and Luckett
also failed to grant Tillman five points for her advanced educational qualifications.

       In the hiring process, the ADC combines an applicant’s pre-screening points
with his or her interview score for an overall numerical rating. The relevant division
supervisors for the job vacancy then choose one of the three highest-scoring applicants
for the position. As a direct result of Luckett’s failure to credit Fair with five points
for her master’s degree, Fair was not one of the three highest-scoring applicants for
the position—her point total was fifth-highest of twelve interviewed applicants—and
therefore she was not selected. The ADC notified Fair of this decision by letter dated
August 4, 2003. Three days later, Fair filed a formal grievance with the ADC,
claiming that she was more qualified than the selected candidate and arguing that the
ADC’s failure to hire her for the vacancy constituted a violation of Title VII.

       After conferring with a lawyer, she asked that the ADC remedy the situation by
hiring her as an investigator at the maximum pay level for the position (Grade
18/Level IV), including retroactive pay and benefits from the date the position was
filled. Under the state compensation scheme, the Level IV pay rate is reserved for
“Exceptionally Well-Qualified” candidates. Such a pay rate for an employee entering
a new position would require approval from the Arkansas Office of Personnel
Management, the state’s Chief Fiscal Officer, the Committee on Uniform
Classification and Compensation, and the Arkansas Legislative Council. According
to Kay Barnhill, State Classification and Compensation Manager for the Arkansas
Department of Finance and Administration, “level IV special entry rates are rarely
sought and rarely granted,” as the state generally reserves Exceptionally Well-
Qualified status for “professional positions . . . for which pay level I may not provide
a salary that is competitive with the private marketplace.” Barnhill noted that it was
“highly unlikely” that her office would have approved level IV compensation for Fair,
and she stated that the Office of Personnel Management probably would have denied
that entry rate if there were other qualified applicants who would have accepted the

                                          -4-
regular rate. Fair admits that she did not expect to receive Grade 18/Level IV
compensation for the position, but nevertheless made the aggressive request with the
hope of receiving an offer for some increase in compensation above Grade 18/Level
I.

       In a memo dated August 25, 2003, Luckett informed Human Resources
Administrator Kevin Murphy that she had mistakenly failed to award five points to
Fair during the pre-screening process. With the five points, Fair would have had the
highest score of the remaining applicants.3 Murphy contacted the hiring authority for
the Internal Affairs position, told him that there was a new top applicant, and received
confirmation that the hiring authority wished to employ Fair as an investigator.

       Murphy and Richard Rodgers, the Equal Employment Opportunity/Grievance
Officer for the ADC, contacted Fair to arrange a meeting the next day. They did not
permit Fair’s attorney to attend. Fair met as scheduled with Murphy, Rodgers, and
Nedenia Blair, an African-American employee at the ADC. Rodgers explained the
mistake in the pre-scoring process and offered Fair the position at the Grade 18/Level
I compensation scale. This compensation package included the standard six-percent
pay raise for a one-grade intra-departmental promotion, which would be retroactive
to the date she would have been hired absent Luckett’s mistake. Fair asked for higher
pay, and Murphy told her he was not authorized to go above the standard increase.
Fair pointed out that Murphy could request “Exceptionally Well-Qualified” status for
her from the proper state agencies, and Murphy became upset and struck the desk.
Fair then said that, given her exceptional qualifications, she would not accept the
position unless she received more than the standard pay raise.




      3
       Two applicants’ scores would have been higher than Fair’s revised score, but
those applicants withdrew their names from consideration for the Internal Affairs
investigator position before the hiring decision was made.

                                          -5-
      Later that day, Rodgers sent Fair a memo memorializing the meeting. The
memo noted that Fair was offered and had refused to accept the job for which she had
applied on the ground that she wanted higher compensation. Because she had been
offered the promotion, Rodgers noted that the basis of her grievance had been
resolved; now that her dispute was merely a matter of compensation, it was no longer
subject to the ADC’s grievance procedures. Therefore, he dismissed the grievance.

       Fair remained employed at the ADC in her capacity as an administrative
assistant, and has since received a promotion to the position of program coordinator
at a Grade 18/Level I pay scale. She filed a complaint in the United States District
Court for the Eastern District of Arkansas in April of 2004, after receiving a right-to-
sue letter from the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission. The complaint
alleged, inter alia, that the ADC discriminated against Fair by failing to promote her
in violation of Title VII, the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment,
and state civil-rights statutes. She sought damages and job placement as an Internal
Affairs investigator at the Grade 18/Level IV scale.

       The ADC moved for summary judgment, arguing that Fair had not suffered any
adverse employment action and that Fair had not shown that her initial non-selection
for the position was anything but a mistake. The district court granted the motion as
to each of Fair’s claims. With regard to her racial-discrimination claim under Title
VII, the court found that even “[a]ssuming Fair has presented sufficient evidence to
satisfy her prima facie burden” of proof under Title VII, she had not produced
evidence to contradict the ADC’s claim that its initial failure to promote Fair was a
result of Luckett’s mistake rather than discrimination. Thus, because the ADC had
presented a legitimate, non-discriminatory reason for not initially promoting Fair, and




                                          -6-
because Fair lacked any evidence that this articulated reason was a mere pretext for
discrimination, the court found that summary judgment for the ADC was appropriate.

II. DISCUSSION

       We review the district court’s grant of summary judgment de novo. Wheeler
v. Aventis Pharm., 
360 F.3d 853
, 857 (8th Cir. 2004). In doing so, we affirm only
when “the evidence, viewed in a light most favorable to the non-moving party,
demonstrates that there is no genuine issue of material fact, and that the moving party
is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” Gordon v. Shafer Contracting Co., 
469 F.3d 1191
, 1194 (8th Cir. 2006) (quotation omitted). In the employment-
discrimination context, a plaintiff may avoid summary judgment if she presents
evidence “sufficient for a reasonable factfinder to infer that the employer’s decision
was motivated by discriminatory animus.” Dionne v. Shalala, 
209 F.3d 705
, 709 (8th
Cir. 2000) (quotation omitted).

       We limit our discussion to the district court’s grant of summary judgment on
Fair’s Title VII claim for racial discrimination because she failed to exhaust
administrative remedies with regard to her gender discrimination claim, see note 
2, supra
, and waived any arguments related to her other claims by failing to raise them
in her opening brief. See Harris v. Folk Constr. Co., 
138 F.3d 365
, 367 n.1 (8th Cir.
1998) (“[B]y failing to assert grounds for reversal of these orders in his briefs, [the
appellant] is deemed to have waived these issues on appeal.”).

       Fair presented no direct evidence of discrimination, and therefore the district
court applied the burden-shifting framework of McDonnell Douglas Corp. v. Green,
411 U.S. 792
(1973). Under that framework, the plaintiff must establish a prima facie
case of discrimination; if she does so, the burden of production shifts to the employer
to articulate a “legitimate, nondiscriminatory reason” for the employment decision.
Ross v. Kansas City Power & Light Co., 
293 F.3d 1041
, 1046 (8th Cir. 2002). If the

                                         -7-
employer presents such a reason, the burden returns to the plaintiff to present evidence
that the reason was a pretext for intentional discrimination. 
Id. Fair argues
that the
district court failed to recognize evidence that the purported mistake in pre-scoring her
application may have been pretextual.

       We need not reach the question of pretext in this case, because Fair was not
ultimately rejected for the promotion. Therefore, we find that Fair failed to present
a prima facie case of discrimination. See Ross v. Kansas City Power & Light Co., 
293 F.3d 1041
, 1046 (8th Cir. 2002) (listing the four elements of a prima facie case for the
failure to promote under Title VII, one of which is a showing that the plaintiff was
rejected for the position she sought). It is true that the ADC initially failed to hire Fair
for the position she sought. Had the ADC not taken corrective action and offered Fair
the job after reviewing her grievance, she may have been able to present a prima facie
case of discrimination. Once the ADC made its subsequent offer of the promotion
with retroactive pay and benefits, however, it had no longer rejected Fair for the
promotion. The basis for Fair’s initial grievance was the ADC’s failure to select her
for the position; the ADC acted upon this grievance, discovered that it had erroneously
rejected her for the promotion, and attempted to right its prior wrong by offering her
the position she wanted. Even if there were flaws in the manner in which the ADC
handled Fair’s grievance, its ultimate decision to offer the promotion to Fair is the
kind of extrajudicial corrective action envisioned by Congress when it passed Title
VII. See Burlington Indus., Inc. v. Ellerth, 
524 U.S. 742
, 764 (1998) (noting
“Congress’ intention to promote conciliation rather than litigation in the Title VII
context”).

       Fair does not dispute these facts, yet nevertheless contends that she suffered an
adverse employment action within the meaning of Title VII. She primarily argues that
she should not have had to file a grievance to receive the promotion for which she was
qualified, and that the ADC should have offered her the pay she sought in the new
position. While the general premise of her first contention may be sound in theory,

                                            -8-
it loses its strength under the facts of this case. Only twenty-two days lapsed between
the filing of Fair’s grievance and the ADC’s offer of the promotion, an offer that
included retroactive pay and benefits for the time Fair was wrongfully deprived of the
promotion she sought. Within the context of Title VII, this delay amounted to no
more than a “mere inconvenience” and does not give rise to an actionable Title VII
claim. See Cruzan v. Special Sch. Dist. No. 1, 
294 F.3d 981
, 984 (8th Cir. 2002).

        The compensation issue also lacks the necessary factual support to survive
summary judgment. While Title VII does prohibit race-based wage discrimination,
42 U.S.C. § 2000e-2, a plaintiff who pursues such a claim must show that her
employer “paid different wages to employees of different races for equal work on jobs
the performance of which requires equal skill, effort, and responsibility, and which are
performed under similar working conditions.” Tademe v. St. Cloud State Univ., 
328 F.3d 982
, 989 (8th Cir. 2003) (quotation omitted). The ADC operated under the
compensation structure for state employees. Fair does not contest the ADC’s assertion
that a six-percent raise is standard for one-grade promotions within the ADC, and Fair
admitted that she did not expect to receive Level IV pay for the position. Barnhill
confirmed that it was “highly unlikely” such a pay level would have been approved
for Fair in the position she sought. Furthermore, Fair does not present evidence as to
any similarly situated employee of a different race who received higher than the
standard pay increase for a one-grade intra-departmental promotion,4 nor any


      4
        Fair points to ADC social worker Paul Mincey, a white male and fellow
recipient of a master’s degree in social work at the University of Arkansas at Little
Rock, as an example of a similarly situated employee who was offered his current
position and a higher salary than Fair shortly after receiving his degree. Beyond
Fair’s bare assertions, however, the record is silent as to Mincey’s qualifications,
salary level, job duties, and whether the compensation structure for the position of
social worker is relevant to that of the position of Internal Affairs investigator.
Therefore, on the record before us, we cannot say that the ADC’s purportedly
favorable treatment of Mincey supports Fair’s claim that the ADC discriminated in
failing to give her a higher salary for the position she sought.

                                          -9-
employee who was compensated on a higher scale than Grade 18/Level 1 for the
position of Internal Affairs investigator. She points out that she “tried consistently”
to find out how to get higher levels of pay at the ADC, but “[n]o one seems to know
. . . . [H]ow you get to these other levels is like a State secret.” While this statement
suggests a lack of familiarity with the compensation scheme among ADC employees,
it does not alone prove that the ADC paid different wages to employees of different
races for substantially similar work. Therefore, to the extent Fair raises a claim that
the ADC discriminated against her by failing to offer the promotion at a higher salary,
that claim also lacks evidence sufficient to avoid summary judgment.

       In sum, Fair sought a promotion. The ADC ultimately offered her the
promotion at the advertised salary. Fair turned it down. Absent additional facts not
present in the record before us, no reasonable factfinder could conclude that Fair is
entitled to relief under Title VII.

III. CONCLUSION

      For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the judgment of the district court.
                           ______________________________




                                          -10-

Source:  CourtListener

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