Eighth Circuit weighs in on Shifting Reasons doctrine
In a recent post, this blog discussed an Eleventh Circuit case on the Shifting Reasons doctrine, in which a plaintiff argues that their case warrants a trial because the employer has provided shifting reasons, suggesting the real reason was an unlawful intent. As noted in our prior blog post, this is one of the most common arguments plaintiffs make in response to a motion for summary judgment.
Now it’s the Eighth Circuit’s turn, and like the its sister, the Eleventh Circuit, the Eighth Circuit rejected the plaintiff’s claim of shifting reasons, holding that an employer can “elaborate” on its reason, provide additional examples or flesh out its reason, without it being considered “shifting reasons.”
(I)t is well-established that a employer may elaborate on its explanation
for an employment decision. Evidence of a substantial shift in an employer’s explanation for a decision may be evidence of pretext, but an elaboration generally is not.
(Citations omitted.)
In this case, when Rock-Tenn fired Rooney, it told him the reason was poor performance with regard to his “interaction with coworkers” and “failure to support” one particular client. Then after he sued, it gave as additional examples his (alleged) poor performance as to other clients. The Court held that was not a shift in the reason for his discharge, just further explanation.
These two Circuit Court decisions illustrate how common the Shifting Reasons doctrine is used by plaintiffs and the need for plaintiffs to show a true shift in the reason, not simply an elaboration of the reason.
Source: Rooney v. Rock-Tenn Services, Inc. (8th Cir. 1/9/18).