Charlene Eggers v. Wells Fargo Bank, N.A.
Opinion
*631 Richard Eggers ("Richard") sued Wells Fargo Bank, N.A., alleging the bank violated the Age Discrimination in Employment Act (ADEA) in terminating his employment. The district court 1 granted Wells Fargo's motion for summary judgment. We affirm.
I. Background
In 2005, Richard, then age 61, applied to work at Wells Fargo. On the job application, Wells Fargo required applicants to answer whether they had ever been convicted of any crime involving dishonesty or breach of trust. He answered "No," and a name-based background check revealed no prior conviction. Wells Fargo subsequently hired Richard for its Home Mortgage division.
In 2010, Wells Fargo switched to a more sophisticated FBI fingerprint-based background check. The bank then ordered Richard's division to undergo rescreening with the new system. Richard authorized the rescreen, and again he indicated that he had no prior convictions for crimes involving dishonesty or breach of trust. However, the new background check showed that Richard had a fraud conviction under Iowa law in 1963 and served two days in jail.
Under federal law, Richard's prior conviction bars him from working for Wells Fargo. Referred to as "Section 19,"
Upon learning of Richard's disqualification under Section 19, Wells Fargo acted *632 to comply with the statute. The bank first offered him leave time to obtain a waiver, but he refused. Wells Fargo then terminated his employment. Richard then applied to the FDIC for a Section 19 waiver, which was granted. Wells Fargo offered to reinstate Richard to his prior position in the Home Mortgage division. He refused the reinstatement offer and opted to sue the bank, alleging employment discrimination in violation of the ADEA. He alleged Wells Fargo violated the ADEA by (1) refusing to sponsor Section 19 waivers and by (2) failing to provide job applicants and employees with pre-screening notice of the opportunity to obtain waivers. Specifically, Richard contended that these two practices created a disparate impact against older workers.
After two years of litigation, Wells Fargo moved in the district court for summary judgment. By then, Richard had died, and his widow, Charlene Eggers, had been substituted as the party plaintiff. The district court conducted a hearing on the summary judgment motion after briefing by the parties. It then issued a ruling in favor of Wells Fargo. The court, "[n]ow finally fully informed, ... conclude[d] [that] plaintiff[ ] ha[s] no viable theories for recovery, nor [has she] disclosed or discovered facts supporting [the] pleaded claims of age ... discrimination."
Eggers v. WellsFargo Bank, N.A.
, No. 4:14-cv-00394-CRW-SBJ, slip op. at 3,
II. Discussion
Eggers alleges that the district court, in granting summary judgment to Wells Fargo: (1) ignored Eggers's identified discriminatory employment practices; (2) conflated disparate treatment and disparate impact law in holding that Eggers failed to make out a prima facie case of disparate impact under the ADEA; and (3) incorrectly concluded that Wells Fargo's blanket refusal to sponsor waivers and to provide notice of opportunity for Section 19 waivers was a reasonable factor other than age. We disagree and address each argument in turn.
We review the district court's grant of summary judgment de novo.
Torgerson v. City of Rochester
,
Under the disparate impact theory of employment discrimination, an employer's practice may be "fair in form but discriminatory in practice."
Wards Cove Packing Co. v. Atonio
,
[a] plaintiff ... must first establish a prima facie case ... by identifying a specific employment practice and then presenting statistical evidence of a kind and degree sufficient to show that the practice in question caused the plaintiff to suffer adverse employment action because of his or her membership in a protected group [ (employees age 40 or older) ].
Evers v. Alliant Techsystems, Inc.
,
A legitimate business reason under the ADEA is any "reasonable factor[ ] other than age" (RFOA).
is that the factor relied upon was a "reasonable" one for the employer to be using. Reasonableness is a justification categorically distinct from the factual condition "because of age" and not necessarily correlated with it in any particular way: a reasonable factor may lean more heavily on older workers, as against younger ones, and an unreasonable factor might do just the opposite.
Meacham
,
1. Employment Practices at Issue
Eggers alleges that the district court misidentified the Wells Fargo employment policies that she challenges. She argues that the misidentification of the policies constituted reversible errors. Eggers challenges two policies: "(1) Wells Fargo's practice of refusing to sponsor team members' and new hires' Section 19 waiver *634 applications and (2) Wells Fargo's practice of refusing to provide its team members and applicants with pre-screening notice of the opportunity to obtain Section 19 waivers." Appellant Br. at 21.
In its summary judgment order, the district court stated:
To circumvent [Wells Fargo's] choice to terminate or not further employ persons convicted of crimes of dishonesty, the plaintiff[ ] ha[s] added several theories: (1) [Wells Fargo] should have given notice or helped the plaintiff[ ] seek and obtain exemptions from the FDIC ; (2) [Wells Fargo] should not have required [Eggers] to be fingerprinted and rescreened; (3) and [Wells Fargo] should itself have applied to the FDIC to obtain exemptions from the Section 19 collateral consequence of the employees' convictions .
Eggers , slip op. at 4 (emphases added). The court then concluded that Eggers "ha[s] neither cited legal authorities nor discovered evidence supporting [the] age discrimination claims, whether characterized as intentional discrimination or disparate impact results." Id. at 5.
Eggers's argument fails. The district court identified exactly the two policies Eggers challenged. Her contention on this issue is without merit, and we find no error.
2. Prima Facie Case
Eggers next faults the district court for concluding that she failed to establish a prima facie case of disparate impact discrimination under the ADEA. The district court found that Richard was disqualified for the job he held due to federal law.
See
id.
at 3 ("[A]ll of the plaintiffs have been convicted of disqualifying crimes of dishonesty and therefore were lawfully not hired, or were terminated when [Wells Fargo] learned of each disqualification."). Eggers argues that the district court's reliance on
EEOC v. Con-Way Freight, Inc.
,
In
Green
, the plaintiff alleged employment discrimination based on the employer's policy of disqualifying all job applicants with a conviction for any crime other than a minor traffic offense.
Green and Con-Way Freight can be read together to say that in cases where an employer's policy is not a "sweeping disqualification," such policies may preclude a *635 plaintiff from establishing a prima facie case of disparate treatment against her employer. In contrast, in a disparate impact case where a company-initiated disqualification policy is sweeping and overbroad, the policy not only does not bar a plaintiff's prima facie case; it also fails the business necessity test. But neither Green nor Con-Way Freight addressed a statutorily mandated employment disqualification. Thus, neither is directly on point. Here, federal law-not company policy-triggers disqualification from employment.
Eggers insists that establishing job qualification is never a requirement in an ADEA disparate impact case. However, even assuming that the Section 19 disqualification does not bar Eggers's claim, Eggers failed to present statistical evidence of
any kind
that the two challenged policies created a disparate impact among Wells Fargo employees older than 40.
See
Mems v. City of St. Paul, Dept. or Fire and Safety Servs.
,
Because Eggers failed to present any statistical evidence of a disparate impact, and because we may affirm on any ground supported by the record, summary judgment for Wells Fargo is appropriate for lack of a prima facie case.
III. Conclusion
Accordingly, we affirm the district court's grant of summary judgment to Wells Fargo.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Charlene EGGERS, Estate of Richard Eggers Plaintiff - Appellant Richard Eggers, Individually and on Behalf of a Putative Class of Similarly Situated Individuals, Deceased Plaintiff v. WELLS FARGO BANK, N.A. Defendant - Appellee
- Cited By
- 10 cases
- Status
- Published