Hoffman-Garcia v. Metrohealth, Inc.
Opinion
*229 Wilbur Hoffman-García ("Hoffman") was employed by Hospital Metropolitano in San Juan, Puerto Rico, from 1995 until 2012, when he was laid off. At the time of his termination he served as Physical Plant Director, and his duties included handling maintenance issues, managing the Physical Plant Department's budget, overseeing utilities management and repairs, attending meetings with other senior personnel at the hospital, procuring supplies to keep the hospital in good physical condition, hiring contractors to perform larger projects, and maintaining premises safety and security.
The hospital explained Hoffman's dismissal as part of an effort to cut costs, as it subsequently hired an outside contractor to perform maintenance services. Along with Hoffman, the hospital laid off all of the staff employed in the Physical Plant Department, including Hoffman's deputy, Giovanni Martínez. However, Martínez was rehired some months later for the newly created position of Safety Officer. Hoffman calls the rehiring of Martínez instead of him discriminatory based on age, but Hoffman did not apply for the position of Safety Officer when it became available. Martínez was thirty-six years old at the time he was rehired, while Hoffman was sixty-two.
Hoffman sued the hospital under the Age Discrimination in Employment Act ("ADEA"),
A jury trial then ensued, but at the close of evidence the district court granted the hospital's motion for judgment as a matter of law, Fed. R. Civ. P. 50(a). In that ruling,
see
Hoffman-Garcia
v.
Metrohealth, Inc.
, No. 14-CV-1162,
The court found as to both theories that the position of Safety Officer varied significantly in its duties and requirements from those of Physical Plant Director and that the two were not "situated similarly in all relevant aspects,"
Cardona Jimenez
v.
Bancomercio de Puerto Rico
,
The court also granted judgment as a matter of law to the hospital on Hoffman's two surviving Puerto Rico law claims, one of which alleged age discrimination,
Hoffman now appeals, claiming that the court erred in granting judgment as a matter of law to the hospital and that a jury question existed as to the hospital's motivations in rehiring Martínez rather than Hoffman for the position of Safety Officer. Such claims are reviewed
de novo
,
Delgado
v.
Pawtucket Police Dep't
,
Hoffman's brief principally seizes on language from the district court's oral announcement and subsequent written order of its decision which mentions the uncontradicted testimony from José Samuel Rosado, the hospital's director, that age did not factor in his decision to rehire Martínez and that because the safety officer position was inferior in authority and salary to Hoffman's prior position, he did not believe that Hoffman would have been interested. Hoffman ties this in with various cases noting the traditional rule that in the Rule 50 context it is improper to consider the credibility of witnesses,
see, e.g.
,
Barkan
v.
Dunkin' Donuts, Inc.
,
The problem for Hoffman is that much of Rosado's testimony and the district court's mention of it were beside the point: here, Hoffman plainly failed to meet his burden of showing that his previous position of Physical Plant Director, or a position involving comparable duties and responsibilities at the hospital, was subsequently filled by a younger person, or that he applied for a position and did not get the job because the employer preferred a younger candidate. Under the burden shifting framework of
McDonnell Douglas Corp.
v.
Green
,
The Physical Plant Director position at the hospital was eliminated entirely; Martínez was rehired for the position of Safety Officer, which came with a monthly salary of $2,183 (Hoffman had been earning $7,432 a month at the time his position was terminated). Hoffman never himself applied for the position, which we have noted is a fatal defect in the similar context of Title VII failure-to-rehire retaliation cases.
See
Velez
,
*231 Hoffman's duties as Physical Plant Director at best minimally overlapped with Martínez's duties as Safety Officer. Martínez in his new role had no director-level, decision-making responsibility. He did not attend meetings with other directors, supervise contractors, oversee the budget, or otherwise manage the physical plant.
That Martínez in his new position inherited Hoffman's responsibility for safety issues is not sufficient, for this was but a small portion of Hoffman's duties.
See
LeBlanc
v.
Great Am. Ins. Co.
,
Affirmed.
The court granted summary judgment to the hospital with respect to Hoffman's claim under Puerto Rico's general tort statute,
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Wilbur L. HOFFMAN-GARCÍA, Plaintiff, Appellant, Zoraida I. Rodríguez-Díaz; Conjugal Partnership Hoffman-Rodríguez, Plaintiffs, v. METROHEALTH, INC., D/B/A Hospital Metropolitano, Defendant, Appellee, Karen Artau-Feliciano; Facilities Services Management & Maintenance, Inc.; Ian Rodríguez-Alvarado; XYZ Insurance Corp.; American International Insurance Group, Inc. (AIG), Defendants.
- Cited By
- 6 cases
- Status
- Published