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Date: 06-14-2020

Case Style:

NORTON HEALTHCARE, INC. V. DONNA DISSELKAMP

Case Number: 2018-SC-000274-DG 2019-SC-000102-DG

Judge: CHIEF JUSTICE MINTON

Court: Supreme Court of Kentucky

Plaintiff's Attorney:

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Defendant's Attorney:

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Description:







Kentucky Supreme Court



Donna Disselkamp relied on circumstantial evidence at trial to support
her age-discrimination claim under the Kentucky Civil Rights Act against her
former employer, Norton Healthcare, Inc. Under Kentucky case law, an agediscrimination claimant, like Disselkamp, attempting to prove age
discrimination using circumstantial evidence must first make a legally
2
sufficient initial showing under what is known as the McDonnell Douglas
framwork1 that she can prove, among other elements, that her employer
replaced her with a substantially younger person. The primary issue is whether
the trial court committed reversible error by requiring the jury, rather than the
trial court itself, to make the specific factual determination about whether
Norton replaced Disselkamp with a substantially younger person. Like the
Court of Appeals, we hold that instructing the jury to decide this McDonnell
Douglas element was reversible error by the trial court. Accordingly, we affirm
the decision of the Court of Appeals to reverse the judgment and remand this
case to the trial court for further proceedings.
II. THE FACTS LEADING UP TO DISSELKAMP’S SUIT AGAINST
NORTON.
Disselkamp began working as a supervisor of Imaging Services at Norton
Suburban Hospital in 2002.2 As supervisor, Disselkamp was responsible for
preparing Quality Management Team (QMT) reports, wherein she collected data
from patients’ records each month and randomly sampled the data regarding
points such as patient-shield reports and ultrasound observations. The
purpose of the QMT reports was to monitor whether Norton’s employees were

1 See McDonnell Douglas Corp. v. Green, 411 U.S. 792, 802, 93 S. Ct. 1817,
1824, 36 L. Ed. 2d 668 (1973).
2 This opinion will refer to both “Norton Hospital” and “Norton Suburban
Hospital” as simply “Norton.” As far as we can tell from the parties’ briefs, the specific
“Suburban” location of Norton Hospital only matters to explain some parts of witness
McGinnis’s testimony. Disselkamp, McGinnis, and all other Norton employees and
supervisors who testified at trial worked at the Suburban location of Norton Hospital.
McGinnis explained during her testimony that she felt uncomfortable providing
testimony adverse to Norton in this case because, even though she left the Suburban
location and began working at another Norton hospital sometime after Disselkamp
was terminated, Norton Hospital was still McGinnis’s employer.
3
adhering to institutional policy requirements. Disselkamp maintained a “QMT
binder” with the data needed to create the reports.
In 2012, Norton terminated employment of Disselkamp’s immediate
supervisor, Kevin Hendrickson, and replaced him with Lori Bischoff. In
October that same year, Disselkamp emailed Bischoff the QMT reports, at
Bischoff’s request, reflecting the data collected from the previous three months.
As requested by Bischoff, Disselkamp later sent most of the supporting data
used to draft the reports, but she did not include July reports relevant to the
patient-shielding for radiation protection (“the patient-shielding report”) and
the ultrasound observations (“the ultrasound report”). Disselkamp was able to
obtain a copy of the July ultrasound report, and she asked another employee
to do another random sampling of the July data for the patient-shielding
report. When Disselkamp presented this information to Bischoff, Bischoff
complained that Disselkamp “recreated” data to support her previously
submitted report. Bischoff then met with her supervisor, Norton’s System
Director of Imaging Services, Richard Schilling, and Norton’s Human Resources
Manager, Tracy Patton, to discuss her uneasiness over Disselkamp’s QMT
report.
According to a Corrective Action Report (CAR) created by Bischoff
following the meeting with Schilling and Patton, Disselkamp was found to have
knowingly presented false data in her QMT report because she submitted the
report without having all the data needed to validate it. The CAR stated that
this behavior could not be tolerated because the QMT reports affected patient
care and were disseminated to organizations responsible for accrediting and
regulating health-care providers. Disselkamp provided a written response
4
denying the accusation, claiming that she reviewed the patient-shielding and
ultrasound reports before submitting the QMT report and was simply unable to
locate them when they were requested. Disselkamp explained that she
suspected her copy of the patient-shielding report was misplaced while moving
into a new office. Norton terminated Disselkamp’s employment in October
2012. At the time of her termination, Disselkamp was 60 years old, had over 30
years’ experience in radiology and mammography, and had over seven years’
management experience. Disselkamp provided evidence that Norton eventually
replaced her with a 48-year-old woman, Michele Meyers.
In February 2013, Disselkamp sent a demand letter to Norton stating her
legal claims against Norton. And the following month, she sued Norton for age
discrimination in violation of the Kentucky Civil Rights Act3 and for retaliation
under the theory that she was terminated for complaining about her former
supervisor’s, Hendrickson’s, behavior before he was replaced by Bischoff.
Throughout pretrial discovery, Disselkamp made repeated requests for
certain documents from Norton, seeking disclosure of such things as any
emails referencing the CAR created for Disselkamp’s alleged misconduct and
Disselkamp’s QMT binder. Norton eventually conceded that it could not find
some of the requested documents and admitted that many of them had been
destroyed. The protracted delay in Norton’s response and the ultimate
unavailability of these documents prompted a motion from Disselkamp for a
missing-evidence jury instruction at trial. The trial court denied this motion.
After the trial court denied Norton’s motion for summary judgment, finding

3 Kentucky Revised Statutes (KRS) 344.010, et seq.
5
issues of material fact concerning, among other things, whether Disselkamp
was replaced by a substantially younger employee, Disselkamp’s case was tried
before a jury over a ten-day period.
III. THE JURY TRIAL IN CIRCUIT COURT RESULTS IN A VERDICT
FOR NORTON.
Disselkamp and Norton each called several witnesses to testify about the
facts and events that occurred before and after Disselkamp’s termination.
Several current and former employees of Norton also testified regarding the
alleged discrimination they experienced or observed while working for Norton;
including Pam McGinnis, 64-year-old Barbara Colvin, 57-year-old Lee Ann
Neuman, 51-year-old Denise Dusch, 56-year-old Connie Hicks, 54-year-old
Donna Magee, and 58-year-old Patrick Anderson.
Colvin, another imaging supervisor at Norton who eventually left Norton
after Disselkamp was terminated, testified that Bischoff asked her to clean out
Disselkamp’s office and throw away her QMT binder but that she ignored the
instruction and kept the binder in her office, believing Disselkamp might need
the binder if a lawsuit occurred. Before Colvin left Norton in 2014, she
admonished several other employees not to throw Disselkamp’s binder away
when they cleared out Colvin’s office.
Pam McGinnis, a nurse who worked under Disselkamp’s supervision,
testified at length about: the culture in the imaging department at Norton;
alleged comments made and behaviors exhibited by Hendrickson to female
employees; alleged comments made by Bischoff and Schilling vowing to
retaliate against Disselkamp for complaining about Hendrickson’s harassing
behavior; and alleged comments made by Schilling to McGinnis regarding his
6
disappointment and anger that McGinnis complained about Hendrickson’s
harassing behavior. McGinnis also testified that Bischoff told her that Bischoff
would have to “find a reason” to terminate Disselkamp, as Bischoff was
directed to do so, and that it was supposed to have been done by Hendrickson.
When asked by Norton why she did not mention during her discovery
deposition that Bischoff informed her that she had to find a reason to fire
Disselkamp, McGinnis stated that she was not asked such a question, and that
she was only instructed to answer truthfully the questions she was asked and
not to elaborate. When Norton asked if there was any other information she
was withholding, McGinnis testified that there was “probably” a lot more
information to which she could testify, but she was not asked at her
deposition. McGinnis was not asked during re-direct to elaborate on this
statement. The trial court then released McGinnis as a witness.
When trial resumed the morning after McGinnis testified, Disselkamp
informed the trial court that McGinnis called Disselkamp over the evening
recess and told her that she had more pertinent information to offer about
Bischoff’s alleged discriminatory conduct against Disselkamp but that she did
not get the chance to relate that information in her testimony the preceding
day because the lawyers did not ask her the right questions. The additional
information concerned an alleged meeting McGinnis attended during which
Bischoff discussed a plan to bring in “new, young, fresh faces” and terminate
older employees, including Hicks, Neuman, Colvin, and Disselkamp, the latter
two of which were supposed to have been terminated by Hendrickson before he
left Norton. The trial court found that the phone call between Disselkamp and
McGinnis, initiated by McGinnis, did not violate any court order or admonition
7
and granted permission to Disselkamp’s attorney permission to speak directly
with McGinnis.4
Bischoff testified, among other things, that: she did not terminate anyone
because of age, nor was she directed by anyone to do so; she did not delete any
email she received from Disselkamp and did not know why Norton could not
produce the emails during discovery; and Norton created an addendum to the
2012 third-quarter QMT report noting that it had performed a new random
sampling of the July 2012 data and that the data from the new random
sampling did not change the underlying results of the QMT report created by
Disselkamp.
Following Bischoff’s testimony, the court had further discussions with
counsel about whether Disselkamp would be permitted to recall McGinnis as a
witness. The trial court declined Disselkamp’s request to allow her to recall
McGinnis as a witness despite acknowledging that the proposed testimony
would be beneficial to Disselkamp and that it could not point to a specific case
or statute to support its decision. The trial court observed that it would be
fundamentally unfair to allow a witness who had been deposed and examined
at length in discovery to retake the stand during trial after conferring privately
with the plaintiff.
The trial court did allow Disselkamp to make a testimonial offer of proof
in which McGinnis recounted the meeting she attended where Bischoff
discussed her plan to fire older employees and bring in younger ones.

4 There was discussion with the trial court about whether Disselkamp’s
attorneys could speak with McGinnis outside the presence of Norton’s attorneys
because McGinnis was still a Norton employee. Eventually, it was agreed that
Disselkamp’s attorneys could speak to McGinnis.
8
After the close of proof, the trial court held the first jury-instruction
conference. The trial court’s proposed instructions directed the jury that it
“shall find for Disselkamp if” it found, among other things, that “Disselkamp’s
age (60) was a substantial motivating factor in Norton’s decision to terminate
her employment; . . . AND Disselkamp was replaced by a substantially younger
person.” The trial court rejected Disselkamp’s request that the agediscrimination jury instruction be modified to include a definition of
substantially younger. Disselkamp also filed a memorandum objecting to the
trial court’s insertion of the substantially-younger person requirement into the
jury instructions, arguing that the substantially-younger person factor must be
resolved by the trial court’s ruling on motions for summary judgment or
directed verdict. Disselkamp also objected to the trial court’s inclusion of Tracy
Patton’s name in the retaliation instruction, arguing that Disselkamp offered
no evidence that supported a finding that Patton retaliated against her. The
trial court rejected Disselkamp’s arguments, finding that the substantiallyyounger requirement was properly included in the age-discrimination jury
instruction because it was an element of the McDonnell Douglas framework and
that Patton’s name was properly included as a potential retaliator because
Patton was accused of being a retaliator in Disselkamp’s complaint and prediscovery. The jury returned a verdict in Norton’s favor on both of
Disselkamp’s claims.
IV. THE COURT OF APPEALS REVERSES THE JUDGMENT.
Disselkamp appealed the judgment to the Court of Appeals, making the
following arguments: (1) the trial court erred in not allowing McGinnis to be
recalled as a witness; (2) the trial court erred in declining to include a missing-
9
evidence, or spoliation, instruction; (3) the trial court erred in including
Patton’s name among the list of potential retaliators in the retaliation jury
instruction; (4) the trial court erred in providing in the retaliation jury
instruction that the jury could find for Disselkamp only if it found that the
individuals responsible for her termination were aware that she complained
about “harassment and gender discrimination,” making it seem as though the
jury was required to find that Disselkamp complained about two separate
matters; and (5) the trial court erred in inserting the McDonnell Douglas
substantially-younger requirement into the age-discrimination jury instruction.
As to the first argument, the Court of Appeals found that the trial court
had the authority under KRE5 611 to determine whether it would allow
McGinnis to be recalled as a witness and held it was not an abuse of discretion
to deny Disselkamp’s request to recall McGinnis. As to the second argument,
the Court of Appeals held the trial court did not abuse its discretion in
declining to give a missing-evidence instruction because there was no evidence
presented that the requested evidence was “unaccountably missing” or was lost
due to conduct by Norton that went beyond “mere negligence.”6 The Court of
Appeals observed that even if the failure to give a missing-evidence instruction
were an abuse of discretion, the trial court’s failure here was harmless.
Disselkamp’s theory was that Bischoff used Disselkamp’s actions in preparing
the QMT reports as a pretext for discrimination and retaliation. However, it was

5 Kentucky Rules of Evidence
6 The Court of Appeals relied solely on this Court’s decision in University
Medical Center, Inc., v. Beglin, 375 S.W.3d 783, 792 (Ky. 2011) in considering
Disselkamp’s second argument.
10
“undisputed that Disselkamp could not produce the patient-shielding or
ultrasound reports when requested, and Bischoff testified a resampling of this
data yielded the same results Disselkamp reported.” Therefore, Disselkamp was
not prejudiced by Norton’s failure to produce the requested evidence.
As to the third argument, the Court of Appeals found that including
Patton’s name in the retaliation instruction, even if erroneous, was harmless
because the instruction allowed the jury to find for Disselkamp if either
“Richard Shilling, Lori Bischoff, or Tracy Patton” retaliated against Disselkamp,
and it was not prejudicial because there was evidence presented that Patton
participated in the decision to terminate.
As to the fourth argument, the Court of Appeals found that this
argument was not preserved for appeal because Disselkamp did not object
when the trial court offered a retaliation instruction that required the jury to
find that Disselkamp complained of “harassment and gender discrimination,”
and Disselkamp’s tendered jury instructions on the claim were not sufficiently
different to alert the trial court to the alleged error.7
Most significantly for our review today, the Court of Appeals reversed the
judgment and remanded the case to the trial court based on Disselkamp’s fifth

7 Disselkamp’s tendered instructions provided that the jury would find for
Disselkamp if it found that “Disselkamp’s complaints about being harassed and/or
adversely treated due to her gender were a but for factor in Defendant’s decision to
terminate her employment.” The instructions submitted to the jury provided that the
jury would find for Disselkamp if “Disselkamp engaged in a protected activity, i.e.,
complained to Norton, in good faith, about harassment and gender discrimination by
Kevin Hendrickson[] . . . and there was a causal connection between Disselkamp’s
termination and her complaints about Kevin Hendrickson.” The Court of Appeals
found that the only difference between the two instructions was Disselkamp’s use of
“and/or” instead of “and,” and Disselkamp did not explain how this minor difference
would call the trial court’s attention to the alleged error.
11
argument. Here, the appellate panel agreed with Disselkamp that the
substantially-younger requirement should not have been included in the jury
instructions because substantially younger was a legal question for the trial
court to determine based on the circumstances of the case. The Court of
Appeals noted that the Kentucky Civil Rights Act, is interpreted consistently
with applicable federal anti-discrimination laws,8 and “Age discrimination cases
under the federal [a]ge Discrimination in Employment Act (“ADEA”), 29 U.S.C.9
§§ 621–634, are analyzed under the same framework as employment
discrimination cases under Title VII.”10 In Title VII cases, the jury is called on
to determine whether the defendant intentionally discriminated against the
plaintiff,11 which can be proven by the plaintiff by presenting either direct
evidence of the defendant’s animus, or, in absence of direct evidence,
presenting circumstantial evidence by satisfying the burden-shifting framework
established in McDonnell Douglas Corp. v. Green12 to prove discrimination.13
The Court of Appeals found that the McDonnell Douglas framework is to
be used only as a burden-shifting mechanism to ensure only legitimate agediscrimination cases based on circumstantial evidence are submitted to the

8 Williams v. Wal-Mart Stores Inc., 184 S.W.3d 492, 495 (Ky. 2005).
9 United States Code.
10 Williams, 184 S.W.3d at 495 (citing Grosjean v. First Energy Corp., 349 F.3d
332, 335 (6th Cir. 2003)).
11 U.S. Postal Service Bd. of Governors v. Aikens, 460 U.S. 711, 715, 103 S. Ct.
1478, 1482, 75 L. Ed. 2d 403 (1983).
12 411 U.S. 792, 93 S. Ct. 1817, 36 L. Ed. 2d 668.
13 Williams, 184 S.W.3d at 496 (“Under the McDonnell Douglas framework a
plaintiff can establish a prima facie case of age discrimination by proving that he or
she: (1) was a member of a protected class, (2) was discharged, (3) was qualified for the
position from which they were discharged, and (4) was replaced by a person outside
the protected class.”).
12
jury. If the plaintiff establishes the prima facie case, a presumption of illegal
discrimination arises, and the burden then shifts to the defendant to produce
evidence of a legitimate reason for terminating the plaintiff to survive a motion
for a directed verdict. If the defendant is successful in satisfying this burden,
the McDonnell Douglas framework then “drops from the case” and the factfinder is then called on to determine whether the termination was
discriminatory.14 Based on this standard, the Court of Appeals found that the
jury instructions failed Kentucky’s bare-bones jury-instruction test and
misstated the law. The court held that these errors prejudiced Disselkamp
because there was no way of knowing whether the jury found for Norton
because it believed that Norton did not terminate Disselkamp because of her
age and because it believed that Disselkamp was not replaced by someone
substantially younger or because it believed Norton terminated Disselkamp
because of her age but Disselkamp was not replaced by someone substantially
younger. The Court of Appeals also provided the trial court with a model jury
instruction for Disselkamp’s age-discrimination claim that would be
appropriate for use at trial on remand:
You will find for the Plaintiff under this instruction if you are
satisfied from the evidence that her age was a substantial
motivating factor in Defendant’s decision to take adverse
employment action against her. Otherwise you will find for
Defendant under this instruction.
V. THE CASE BEFORE THIS COURT.
Norton’s central argument is that the Court of Appeals’ opinion should be
reversed and the jury’s unanimous defense verdict reinstated because the jury

14 Aikens, 460 U.S. at 714–15, 103 S. Ct. at 1481.
13
instructions on the age-discrimination claim did not misstate the law.
Conversely, Disselkamp argues that the Court of Appeals’ opinion should be
reversed only insofar as it finds that the retaliation instruction did not misstate
the law, the trial court did not err in refusing to allow McGinnis to be recalled
as a witness, and that the trial court did not err in refusing to grant a missingevidence instruction.
A. Challenges to the Age-Discrimination and Retaliation Jury
Instructions.
We will first consider the parties’ arguments with respect to the
challenges to the age-discrimination and retaliation jury instructions because
similar principles and standards of review apply.
1. Preservation and Standard of Review.
CR15 51(3) provides that:
No party may assign as error the giving or the failure to give an
instruction unless he has fairly and adequately presented his
position by an offered instruction or by motion, or unless he makes
objection before the court instructs the jury, stating specifically the
matter to which he objects and the ground or grounds of his
objection.
As this Court explained in Sand Hill Energy, Inc. v. Smith, “[t]he
underlying purpose of CR 51(3) is to ‘obtain the best possible trial at the trial
court level’ by ‘giv[ing] the trial judge an opportunity to correct any errors
before instructing the jury.’”16 The party challenging jury instructions given at
trial may preserve the challenge for appeal by making an objection, either oral
or written, before the court instructs the jury, that specifically states “the

15 Kentucky Rules of Civil Procedure.
16 142 S.W.3d 153, 162–63 (Ky. 2004) (quoting Cobb v. Hoskins, 554 S.W.2d
886, 887 (Ky. App. 1977), and Ellison v. R & B Contracting, Inc., 32 S.W.3d 66, 72–73
(Ky. 2000), respectively).
14
matter to which he objects and the ground or grounds of his objection,” or by
offering his own proposed instructions which “fairly and adequately” present
his position.17
Kentucky appellate courts have explained that a tendered
instruction will not fairly and adequately present the party's
position as to an allegation of instructional error when: (1) the
omitted language or instruction was not contained in the
instruction tendered to the trial court; i.e., when the allegation of
error was not presented to the trial court at all; (2) the minor
differences between the language of the tendered instruction and
the instruction given by the trial court would not call the trial
court's attention to the alleged error; or (3) the tendered instruction
itself was otherwise erroneous or incomplete.18
A properly preserved challenge to the contents of a given jury instruction
is a question of law subject to de novo review on appeal. 19 But if a party fails to

17 CR 51(3).
18 Sand Hill Energy, Inc., 142 S.W.3d at 163–64 (citations omitted).
19 As we explained in Sargent v. Shaffer, Kentucky courts “distinguish between
two types of alleged errors involving jury instructions. The first type of instructional
error is demonstrated by the claim that a trial court either (1) failed to give an
instruction required by the evidence, or (2) gave an instruction that was not
sufficiently supported by the evidence. . . . The second type of instructional error is
represented by the claim that a particular instruction given by the trial court,
although supported by the evidence, was incorrectly stated so as to misrepresent the
applicable law to the jury. . . . When the question is whether a trial court erred by: (1)
giving an instruction that was not supported by the evidence; or (2) not giving an
instruction that was required by the evidence; the appropriate standard for appellate
review is whether the trial court abused its discretion. . . . However, when it comes to
the second type of instructional error—whether the text of the instruction accurately
presented the legal theory—a different calculus applies. Once the trial judge is
satisfied that it is proper to give an instruction, it is reasonable to expect that the
instruction will be given properly. The trial court may enjoy some discretionary leeway
in deciding what instructions are authorized by the evidence, but the trial court has
no discretion to give an instruction that misrepresents the applicable law. The content
of a jury instruction is an issue of law that must remain subject to de novo review by
the appellate courts. In summary, a trial court's decision on whether to instruct on a
specific claim will be reviewed for abuse of discretion; the substantive content of the
jury instructions will be reviewed de novo.” 467 S.W.3d 198, 203–04 (Ky. 2015), as
corrected (Aug. 26, 2015) (citations omitted).
15
preserve properly a challenge to jury instructions in the trial court, the
challenge is not entitled to appellate review.20
As to the parties’ challenge to the age-discrimination jury instruction,
this issue is properly preserved for appellate review based on Disselkamp’s
tendered jury instruction on the age-discrimination claim and her
memorandum of law that argued against inclusion of the “substantially
younger person” requirement in the jury instructions. Because this juryinstruction issue concerns the content of the instructions, this is an issue of
law subject to de novo review.
As to Disselkamp’s challenge to the retaliation jury instruction, the trial
court’s instruction stated that the jury could return a verdict in her favor if it
found that:
• Disselkamp engaged in a protected activity, i.e., complained to
Norton in good faith, about harassment and gender discrimination
by Kevin Hendrickson;
• Richard Shilling, Lori Bischoff, or Tracy Patton, the individuals
responsible for terminating Disselkamp’s employment, were aware
of Disselkamp’s complaints of harassment and gender
discrimination by Kevin Hendrickson at the time the decision was
made to terminate Disselkamp’s employment;
AND
• There was a causal connection between Disselkamp’s termination
and her complaints about Kevin Hendrickson.

20 Hill v. Kentucky Lottery Corp., 327 S.W.3d 412, 427 (Ky. 2010), as modified on
denial of reh'g (Dec. 16, 2010), (“We conclude that KLC did not comply with CR 51(3),
and therefore was not entitled to demand a new trial on alleged errors that it failed to
bring to the trial court's attention in an adequate and timely manner. . . . KLC's
compliance with CR 51(3) at the end of a three-week jury trial would have not only
allowed the trial court to fairly evaluate the matter, it would have enabled the Hills to
protect their interest in avoiding the need for a second trial.”).
16
Disselkamp objects to two propositions included in the above instruction.
First, she argues that by including Human Resources Manager Tracy Patton’s
name among the list of potential retaliators, the trial court “commented on the
evidence and inserted another potential retaliator that the jury well knew had
no motive to terminate Ms. Disselkamp.” There is no dispute that Disselkamp
properly preserved this issue for appeal,21 and, as such, the standard of review
is de novo.
Second, Disselkamp points to the requirement in the retaliation
instruction that provided that the jury could only return a verdict in
Disselkamp’s favor if it found that Disselkamp engaged in a protected activity
by complaining to Norton about “harassment and gender discrimination” by
her former supervisor, Kevin Hendrickson. Disselkamp argues that this part of
the instruction improperly required her to prove she complained to Norton
about two separate matters. Unlike the first claim of error regarding the
retaliation instruction, the parties dispute whether Disselkamp preserved this
issue for appeal. But the parties do not dispute that Disselkamp’s only
argument for proper preservation in accordance with CR 51(3) is that she
tendered her own set of proposed jury instructions for her retaliation claim that
varied slightly from the instructions submitted to the jury.
Disselkamp’s proposed retaliation jury instruction provided the following:
[Y]ou will find for the Plaintiff Donna Disselkamp under this
instruction if you are satisfied from the evidence that Donna
Disselkamp’s complaints about being harassed and/or adversely
treated due to her gender were a but for factor in Defendant’s

21 Disselkamp orally objected to including Ms. Patton’s name as a potential
retaliator in the instruction provided to the jury, arguing that there was no evidence
that Patton fired Disselkamp in retaliation for Disselkamp complaining to Norton
about Hendrickson’s alleged unlawful conduct.
17
decision to terminate her employment. Otherwise you will find for
Defendant.”
As stated above, the Court of Appeals found that Disselkamp did not
preserve this issue by simply tendering her own set of proposed instructions
because Disselkamp’s instructions and the trial court’s instructions on the
retaliation claim were not so different as to “fairly and adequately present the
party's position as to an allegation of instructional error.” We agree.
The nuanced difference between the two instructions with respect to the
kind of conduct in which Disselkamp engaged is minor, as Disselkamp’s
instruction differs from the trial court’s only by use of the grammatical device
and/or in place of the conjunction and. Even if the difference between the two
instructions cannot be dismissed as trivial, it cannot be said that the trial
court was made aware of Disselkamp’s grounds for her objection—that being
that the instruction improperly required the jury to find that she complained
about two separate matters when KRS 344.280 protected a person who
“opposed a practice declared unlawful” under the chapter—so that the trial
court truly had an opportunity to address the alleged error. Again, CR 51(3)
required Disselkamp “fairly and adequately” to present her position on the
challenged instruction.
Like the Court of Appeals, we find Disselkamp’s argument that the trial
court’s use of the phrase “harassment and gender discrimination” is not
preserved for appellate review, and we decline to consider the merits of this
18
argument.22 We consider the remaining challenges to the age-discrimination
and retaliation instructions below.
2. Jury Instructions for Disselkamp’s Age Discrimination Claim.
The challenged jury instruction the trial court gave on Disselkamp’s agediscrimination claim said:
In this lawsuit, Plaintiff Donna Disselkamp (“Disselkamp”)
contends that her employment at Norton Suburban Hospital
(“Norton”) was terminated unlawfully.
You shall find for Disselkamp if you are satisfied by a
preponderance of the evidence all of the following:
• Disselkamp’s employment was terminated;
• Disselkamp was age 40 or over on the date of termination;
• Disselkamp’s age (60) was a substantial motivating factor in
Norton’s decision to terminate her employment;
• Disselkamp was otherwise qualified for her employment
position;
AND
• Disselkamp was replaced by a substantially younger person.
The parties raise the following question: Is it a misstatement of Kentucky
law to include the substantially-younger requirement as established in
McDonnell Douglas Corp. v. Green in a jury instruction for a claim of age
discrimination under the Kentucky Civil Rights Act? The Court of Appeals
answered this question in the affirmative and further found that the perceived
error was not harmless. The question here is a matter of first impression under
our law. And while only the substantially-younger requirement of the

22 Even though Disselkamp does not request palpable error review of this issue
in accordance with CR 61.02, it does not seem that she would be able to show that
this error resulted in manifest injustice. See Nami Res. Co., L.L.C. v. Asher Land &
Mineral, Ltd., 554 S.W.3d 323, 338 (Ky. 2018) (“To qualify as ‘palpable error’ under
[CR 61.02], an error ‘must be easily perceptible, plain, obvious and readily noticeable.’
. . . ‘Implicit in the concept of palpable error correction is that the error is so obvious
that the trial court was remiss in failing to act upon it sua sponte.’” (quoting Brewer v.
Commonwealth, 206 S.W.3d 343, 349 (Ky. 2006), and Lamb v. Commonwealth, 510
S.W.3d 316, 325 (Ky. 2017), respectively).
19
McDonnell Douglas framework is at issue in this case, this Court has not had
the opportunity analyze whether any of the requirements established by the
United States Supreme Court in McDonnell Douglas Corp. v. Green can be
properly included in jury instructions for an age-discrimination claim based on
circumstantial evidence.
In support of its argument that the Court of Appeals erred on this point,
Norton asserts that the Court of Appeals misconstrued and underappreciated
the role of the substantially-younger requirement in age-discrimination cases.
Norton argues that the requirements of the McDonnell Douglas framework may
properly be included in age-discrimination jury instructions because it is
undisputed that age-discrimination plaintiffs who are relying on circumstantial
evidence are required to present proof of these requirements to survive
dismissal. In support of this assertion, Norton cites primarily to the United
States Supreme Court’s decisions in McDonnell Douglas Corp. v. Green23 and its
progeny and to this Court’s decision in Williams v. Wal-Mart Stores Inc.
24 In the
alternative, Norton asserts that even if we conclude that the age-discrimination
instruction at hand did misstate the law, the error was harmless because the
alleged error did not affect the verdict. In other words, Norton asserts that any
error in this instruction was harmless because it was a redundancy, merely
asking the jury to make a finding of fact on an issue that Disselkamp was
required to prove to submit the case to the jury in the first place.

23 411 U.S. 792, 93 S. Ct. 1817, 36 L. Ed. 2d 668.
24 184 S.W.3d at 495. Norton also cites to several other cases decided by this
Court and other federal courts that, as explained in more detail below, are not binding
in this Court.
20
In reliance on essentially the same cases, Disselkamp argues that the
substantially younger-requirement was originally intended to only act as a
burden-shifting mechanism to be used only by the trial court in deciding
motions for summary judgment or directed verdict. In other words, Disselkamp
argues that the McDonnell Douglas framework requirements were never
intended to be a fact question for the jury to decide.
Based on our review of the record and supporting case law, we agree with
Disselkamp that the instruction at hand misstated the law because it included
the substantially-younger requirement as an issue for the jury rather than the
judge. And we hold that this error prejudiced Disselkamp. Our holding here is
justified based on: (1) the relevant provisions of both the Federal Civil Rights
Act of 1964 and the Kentucky Civil Rights Act; (2) the history of the McDonnell
Douglas framework and its application in the federal courts, specifically with
respect to drafting and discussing potential jury instructions; (3) the traditional
application of the McDonnell Douglas framework to Kentucky court
proceedings; and (4) the bare-bones approach to jury instructions adopted by
Kentucky courts and its impact on applicable presumptions.
a. The Kentucky and Federal Civil Rights Act
The specific statutory provision for Disselkamp’s age-discrimination
claim is KRS 344.040(1)(a). That statute makes it unlawful for an employer “to
discharge any individual, or otherwise to discriminate against an individual
with respect to compensation, terms, conditions, or privileges of employment,
because of the individual's . . . age forty (40) and over . . . .” As this Court
explained in Meyers v. Chapman Printing Co., “[o]ne important purpose of the
Kentucky Civil Rights Act was to incorporate the anti-discrimination ‘policies
21
embodied’ in the Federal Civil Rights Acts of 1964.”25 But that purpose is not
the only purpose expressed in the Kentucky Civil Rights Act. For example, KRS
344.020(1)(b) provides that one of the purposes is “[t]o safeguard all individuals
within the state from discrimination because of . . . age forty (40) and over[;] . .
. thereby to protect their interest in personal dignity and freedom from
humiliation.” And KRS 344.020(2) provides that the Act “shall be construed to
further the general purposes stated in this section and the special purposes of
the particular provision involved.”
Unlike claims asserted under Kentucky’s statute, claims for relief from
discriminatory practices filed in federal court will be brought under one of two
acts, depending on the status or characteristic the claimant believes was the
basis for the employer’s unlawful discrimination. First, Title VII of the Federal
Civil Rights Act of 1964 addresses employment discrimination based on “race,
color, religion, sex, or national origin.”26 As codified, the Federal Civil Rights
Act provides that “[i]t shall be an unlawful employment practice for an
employer-- (1) to fail or refuse to hire or to discharge any individual, or
otherwise to discriminate against any individual . . . because of such
individual's race, color, religion, sex, or national origin[.]”27 Second, the Age
Discrimination in Employment Act (ADEA) provides that “[i]t shall be unlawful
for an employer-- (1) to fail or refuse to hire or to discharge any individual or

25 840 S.W.2d, 814, 817 (Ky.1992) citing KRS 344.020(1)(a)).
26 42 U.S.C. § 2000e–2(a).
27 Id.
22
otherwise discriminate against any individual . . . because of such individual's
age[.]”28
b. The McDonnell Douglas Framework in Federal Courts
The line of cases relevant to Disselkamp’s age-discrimination claim
begins in 1973 with McDonnell Douglas Corp. v. Green. When that case was
decided, plaintiffs filing claims under the Federal Civil Rights Act were not
entitled to a trial by jury; a right afforded only with the passage of the Federal
Civil Rights Act of 1991.29 In McDonnell Douglas, a former employee of the
McDonnell Douglas Corporation brought suit against the corporation, in part,
for the corporation’s alleged racial discrimination in deciding not to rehire the
plaintiff, a long-time activist in the civil rights movement, following the
plaintiff’s participation in several events that targeted the corporation.30 At the
outset, the Supreme Court expressly stated that the critical issue to be
determined “concerns the order and allocation of proof in a private, non-class
action challenging employment discrimination.”31 In analyzing this issue, the
Supreme Court established the following “order and allocation of proof”
required in cases such as this:
The language of Title VII makes plain the purpose of
Congress to assure equality of employment opportunities and to
eliminate those discriminatory practices and devices which have
fostered racially stratified job environments to the disadvantage of
minority citizens. . . . The complainant in a Title VII trial must
carry the initial burden under the statute of establishing a prima
facie case of racial discrimination. This may be done by showing (i)

28 29 U.S.C. § 623(a)(1).
29 See CIVIL RIGHTS ACT OF 1991, Pub.L. 102–166, 105 Stat. 1071, as codified
in 42 U.S.C. § 1981a(c).
30 411 U.S. at 794–96.
31 Id. at 793–94.
23
that he belongs to a racial minority; (ii) that he applied and was
qualified for a job for which the employer was seeking applicants;
(iii) that, despite his qualifications, he was rejected; and (iv) that,
after his rejection, the position remained open and the employer
continued to seek applicants from persons of complainant's
qualifications. . . . The burden then must shift to the employer to
articulate some legitimate, nondiscriminatory reason for the
employee's rejection. . . . [If the employer satisfies its burden, the
complainant must then] be afforded a fair opportunity to
demonstrate that [employer’s] assigned reason for refusing to reemploy was a pretext or discriminatory in its application. If the
District Judge so finds, he must order a prompt and appropriate
remedy. In the absence of such a finding, [employer’s] refusal to
rehire must stand.32
Based on this standard, the Supreme Court held that the former
employee satisfied its initial burden of establishing a prima facie case of racial
discrimination and the employer also satisfied its burden by offering a
legitimate, nondiscriminatory reason for refusing to rehire the employee.33
Because the plaintiff was not afforded the opportunity at trial to respond to the
employer’s stated reason for refusing to rehire the plaintiff, however, the
Supreme Court remanded the case back to the district court.34 Following this
decision, the Supreme Court decided several other cases in an effort to clarify
the McDonnell Douglas framework.
In 1983, eight years before plaintiffs in Federal Civil Rights Act cases
were entitled to a jury trial, the Supreme Court discussed the role of the
McDonnell Douglas framework in Federal Civil Rights Act cases in U.S. Postal
Servs. Bd. of Governors v. Aikens, which was another racial-discrimination
case. The Supreme Court considered whether a federal district court erred in

32 Id. at 800–07.
33 Id. at 802–03.
34 Id. at 807.
24
entering judgment, following a bench trial, in favor of the defendant employer.35
On appeal to the Supreme Court, the parties focused on the sufficiency of
evidence presented at trial to satisfy the employee’s burden in establishing a
prima facie case.36 The Supreme Court found that the district court erred by
finding in favor of the defendant based on the district court’s belief that the
employee was required to submit direct evidence of discriminatory intent and
erroneously focusing on whether the plaintiff established a prima facie case
“rather than directly on the question of discrimination.”37 In so finding, the
Court provided the following analysis:
Because this case was fully tried on the merits, it is
surprising to find the parties and the Court of Appeals still
addressing the question whether Aikens made out a prima facie
case. We think that by framing the issue in these terms, they have
unnecessarily evaded the ultimate question of discrimination vel
non. By establishing a prima facie case, the plaintiff in a Title VII
action creates a rebuttable “presumption that the employer
unlawfully discriminated against” him. [If the defendant rebuts the
presumption], the fact finder must then decide whether the
rejection was discriminatory within the meaning of Title VII. At this
stage, the McDonnell. . . . presumption “drops from the case,” and
“the factual inquiry proceeds to a new level of specificity. . . .” The
“factual inquiry” in a Title VII case is “whether the defendant
intentionally discriminated against the plaintiff. . . .” The prima
facie case method established in McDonnell Douglas was “never
intended to be rigid, mechanized, or ritualistic. Rather, it is merely
a sensible, orderly way to evaluate the evidence in light of common
experience as it bears on the critical question of discrimination.”
Where the defendant has done everything that would be required of
him if the plaintiff had properly made out a prima facie case,
whether the plaintiff really did so is no longer relevant. The district
court has before it all the evidence it needs to decide whether “the
defendant intentionally discriminated against the plaintiff.” On the
state of the record at the close of the evidence, the District Court in
this case should have proceeded to this specific question directly,
just as district courts decide disputed questions of fact in other

35 460 U.S. 711, 713, 103 S. Ct. 1478, 1481, 75 L. Ed. 2d 403 (1983).
36 Id.
37 Id. at 717. civil litigation. . . . All courts have recognized that the question
facing triers of fact in discrimination cases is both sensitive and
difficult. . . . But none of this means that trial courts or reviewing
courts should treat discrimination differently from other ultimate
questions of fact. Nor should they make their inquiry even more
difficult by applying legal rules which were devised to govern “the
allocation of burdens and order of presentation of proof,” in
deciding this ultimate question.38
In 1996, four years after the Supreme Court took notice that plaintiffs
bringing claims under the Federal Civil Rights Act are entitled to a jury trial,39
the Supreme Court again discussed the McDonnell Douglas framework in
O’Connor v. Consolidated Coin Caterers Corp., which was also the first time the
Court considered the framework’s application to federal age-discrimination
claims brought under the ADEA.40 In O’Connor, the Court was called on to
answer whether a plaintiff who claimed his employment was terminated in
violation of the ADEA must show that “he was replaced by someone outside the
age group protected by the ADEA to make out a prima facie case under the
framework established by McDonnell Douglas[].”41 The Fourth Circuit affirmed
the District Court’s entry of summary judgment in favor of the defendant.42
After discussing the specifics of the McDonnell Douglas framework, the
Supreme Court made clear that while the Fourth Circuit and other federal
courts had applied some version of the framework in assessing claims of age
discrimination following the Court’s decision in McDonnell Douglas, the Court

38 Id. at 713–16.
39 See United States v. Burke, 504 U.S. 229, 241 n.12, 112 S. Ct. 1867, 1874,
119 L. Ed. 2d 34 (1992).
40 517 U.S. 308, 116 S. Ct. 1307, 134 L. Ed. 2d 433 (1996).
41 Id. at 309.
42 Id. at 309–10.
26
had not established that the framework applied in ADEA cases.43 Because the
parties in O’Connor did not dispute the framework’s application in any sense,
however, the Court assumed that for the purposes of this case the framework
applied. The Court found that the Fourth Circuit’s articulation of the
framework as it applies to ADEA cases was erroneous because it included as
an element that the plaintiff must show that he was replaced by another
employee who was not in the protected class, i.e., not over 40 years of age.44
The Court explained that the purpose of a prima facie case is to require
“evidence adequate to create an inference that an employment decision was
based on a[n] [illegal] discriminatory criterion.”45 In age-discrimination cases,
such an inference cannot be “drawn from the replacement of one worker with
another worker insignificantly younger. Because the ADEA prohibits
discrimination based on age and not class membership, the fact that a
replacement is substantially younger than the plaintiff is a far more reliable
indicator” than the “irrelevant” factor articulated by the Fourth Circuit.46
Finally, in Vance v. Ball State University, the Supreme Court considered a
plaintiff’s retaliation claim brought under the Federal Civil Rights Act, and the
relevant issue was the propriety of the Equal Employment Opportunity
Commission’s (EEOC) guideline definition of a “supervisor.”47 While the facts
and applicable standards in Vance are not relevant to the present case, Vance

43 Id. at 311.
44 Id. at 312–13.
45 Id. at 312 (citations omitted).
46 Id. at 313.
47 570 U.S. 421, 431–32, 133 S. Ct. 2434, 2443, 186 L. Ed. 2d 565 (2013).
27
is still instructive based on the Court’s discussion of the difficulty in including
the McDonnell Douglas elements in jury instructions. The Vance court stated
that “[c]ourts and commentators alike have opined on the need for reasonably
clear jury instructions in employment discrimination cases. And the danger of
juror confusion is particularly high where the jury is faced with instructions on
alternative theories of liability under which different parties bear the burden of
proof.”48 In the accompanying footnotes, the Court cited, for example, the Third
Circuit’s decision in Armstrong v. Burdette Tomlin Memorial Hospital for its
proposition that in the context of the McDonnell Douglas framework, “the prima
facie case and the shifting burdens confuse lawyers and judges, much less
juries, who do not have the benefit of extensive study of the law on the
subject.”49 The Supreme Court also cited the Third Circuit’s decision in
Sanders v. New York City Human Resources Administration for the proposition
that “[m]aking the burden-shifting scheme of McDonnell Douglas part of a jury
charge undoubtedly constitutes error because of the manifest risk of confusion
it creates.”50
Norton directs us to the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals’ decisions in
Cicero v. Borg-Warner Auto, Inc.,
51 and Blair v. Henry Filters, Inc.
52 In Cicero,

48 Id. at 444–45 (citations omitted).
49 Id. at 444–45 n.13 (quoting Armstrong v. Burdette Tomlin Mem’l Hosp., 438
F.3d 240, 249 (C.A.3 2006)).
50 Id. (quoting Sanders v. New York City Human Resources Admin., 361 F.3d
749, 758 (C.A.2 2004)).
51 280 F.3d 579 (6th Cir. 2002).
52 505 F.3d 517, 526 (6th Cir. 2007). Norton also provided this Court with the
list of federal cases that followed the Second Circuit’s approach in Bucalo v. Shelter
Island Union Free Sch. Dist., 691 F.3d 119, 129-30 (2d Cir. 2012) by requiring that
disputed elements of a prima facie case be submitted to the jury. This list of federal
28
there were no jury instructions at issue in the court’s decision because the
case was on appeal from a trial court’s order granting summary judgment. So
that case is only instructive in that it espouses the same principles established
by the Supreme Court cases discussed at length above regarding the fact
issues involved in the plaintiff’s prima facie case under the McDonnell Douglas
framework. In contrast, the Sixth Circuit in Blair directly considered jury
instructions and established that federal district courts were permitted, but not
required, to instruct a jury on the McDonnell Douglas burden-switching in
“appropriate” discrimination cases that are based on circumstantial evidence.53
The Blair court emphasized, however, that “[w]hen a discrimination case
proceeds to trial, the focus is on the ultimate question of discrimination,
rather than the burden-switching framework, regardless of whether a
plaintiff seeks to prove his case through direct evidence or circumstantial
evidence.”54
Based on the principles and standards established and reaffirmed in the
cases discussed above, we draw the following preliminary conclusions. First,
McDonnell Douglas established a burden-shifting framework, and its purpose is
to ensure that plaintiff employees who lack direct evidence of discrimination
still have an avenue for seeking relief. Second, in all discrimination cases, the
ultimate question is “of discrimination vel non.”55 And third, the Supreme

district court and state appellate court cases may be instructive but are not binding
on this Court.
53 Blair, 505 F.3d at 526 n.9.
54 Id. (emphasis added).
55 Aikens, 460 U.S. at 713. Bryan Garner, the Editor in Chief of Black’s Law
Dictionary, explains that “vel non” is translated to mean “or not.” Bryan A. Garner,
Garner’s Dictionary of Legal Usage 921–22 (3rd ed., Oxford 2011). As applied in this
29
Court has not determined whether the McDonnell Douglas framework,
admittedly a fact inquiry, is better analyzed by the judge or the jury in federal
cases, but the Supreme Court has taken note of the possible dangers
associated with including the framework’s elements in jury instructions. While
Blair and Cicero do provide some guidance in addressing the primary issue
raised in the present case, only Blair directly supports the ultimate rule Norton
asks us to adopt. Moreover, because this Court, unlike the United States
Supreme Court, has established that burden-shifting frameworks are not to be
included in Kentucky bare-bones jury instructions, the Blair case is
distinguishable from the present case.
With these preliminary thoughts in mind, we now turn to how the
McDonnell Douglas framework has been applied in Kentucky Civil Rights Act
cases because these cases and Kentucky’s evidentiary rules and rule regarding
jury instructions will ultimately determine whether the elements of the
McDonnell Douglas framework may properly be included in Kentucky jury
instructions.
c. The McDonnell Douglas Framework in Kentucky Courts
In Williams v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc., this Court applied an adapted
version of the McDonnell Douglas prima facie case framework to an age-

context, Aikens makes clear that the ultimate issue to be determined in discrimination
cases is simply whether discrimination occurred. See id. (“A more accurate definition
of the phrase as frequently used in American legal writing is ‘or the lack of them (or of
it).’ Usually the phrase is pretentious surplusage, since it can either be deleted or
translated into simpler words—e.g.: . . . ‘The ultimate issue, that of discrimination vel
non [omit], is to be treated by district and appellate courts in the same manner as any
other issue of fact.’ Williams v. Southwestern Bell Tel. Co., 718 F.2d 715, 717 (5th Cir.
1983).”).
30
discrimination claim.56 In Williams, a former employee of Wal-Mart, Linda
Williams, filed a discrimination suit against the corporation, alleging violation
of several provisions of the Kentucky Civil Rights Act.57 Williams resigned from
the corporation after it accused her of stealing bottled water from the store, but
she testified that Wal-Mart forced her to resign by threatening her with jail

56 Williams, 184 S.W.3d at 495. It is necessary here to clarify the continue
validity of Williams. In Williams v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc., this Court explained that
Kentucky “interpret[s] the civil rights provisions of KRS Chapter 344 consistent with
the applicable federal anti-discrimination laws.” Id. (citing Brooks v. Lexington–Fayette
Urban County Hous. Auth., 132 S.W.3d 790, 802 (Ky. 2004), Howard Baer, Inc. v.
Schave, 127 S.W.3d 589, 592 (Ky. 2003), Bank One, Kentucky, N.A. v. Murphy, 52
S.W.3d 540, 544 (Ky. 2001), and Ammerman v. Bd. of Educ., 30 S.W.3d 793, 797–98
(Ky. 2000)). The Williams court further explained that “[a]ge discrimination cases
under the Federal Age Discrimination in Employment Act (“ADEA”), 29 U.S.C. §§ 621–
634, are analyzed under the same framework as employment discrimination cases
under Title VII.” Id. While the parties in this case do not dispute this proposition, we
find it necessary to note that the case relied on by the Williams court in supporting
this proposition, Grosjean v. First Energy Corp., 349 F.3d 332, 335 (6th Cir. 2003), has
since been called into question by the United States Supreme Court’s decisions in
O’Connor v. Consol. Coin Caterers Corp., 517 U.S. 308, 116 S. Ct. 1307, 134 L. Ed. 2d
433 (1996), and Gross v. FBL Fin. Serv., Inc., 557 U.S. 167, 129 S. Ct. 2343, 2349, 174
L. Ed. 2d 119 (2009). In O’Connor, the Supreme Court stated that it has not “had
occasion to decide whether that application of the Title VII rule to the ADEA context is
correct, but since the parties do not contest that point, we shall assume it.” 517 U.S.
at 311, 116 S. Ct. at 1310, 134 L. Ed. 2d 433. Similarly, the Supreme Court in Gross
stated that it “has not definitively decided whether the evidentiary framework of
McDonnell Douglas Corp. v. Green, . . . utilized in Title VII cases is appropriate in the
ADEA context.” 557 U.S. at 175 n.2., 129 S. Ct. at 2349, 174 L. Ed. 2d 119 (citations
omitted). Despite these statements, other federal courts have continued to apply the
McDonnell Douglas paradigm in analyzing age-discrimination claims brought under
the ADEA. See, e.g., Scheick v. Tecumseh Pub. School, 766 F.3d 523, 529 (6th Cir.
2014) (“[A]pplication of the McDonnell Douglas evidentiary framework to prove ADEA
claims based on circumstantial evidence remains consistent with Gross.”). In absence
of a final word by the United States Supreme Court on this issue, and since the
parties in this case do not dispute whether the McDonnell Douglas framework applies
to Disselkamp’s age-discrimination case at some stage, we mirror the United States
Supreme Court and assume for the purposes of this case that it does.
57 Williams, 184 S.W.3d at 494. As the Williams court explained, “[b]ecause of a
medical condition, it was necessary for Williams to take medicine at various times
throughout her workday. Her doctor also recommended that her prescription be taken
with sodium-free water. Initially, Williams brought sodium-free water from home and
left it in the employee's lounge. However, because other employees sometimes drank
the water or threw it away, Williams decided it would be simpler to purchase water at
the store as she needed it.” Id.
31
time.58 Williams was 56 years old when she resigned.59 Following a jury trial on
Williams’s age-discrimination claim, judgment was entered in her favor.60 The
Court of Appeals reversed the trial court, finding that Williams failed to present
sufficient evidence to satisfy the elements of an age-discrimination claim.61
This Court ultimately affirmed the Court of Appeals, holding that Williams
failed to prove she was the victim of age discrimination.62
In applying KRS 344.010(1) consistently “with the applicable federal antidiscrimination laws,” including Title VII and the ADEA,63 this Court established
in Williams:
There are two paths for a plaintiff seeking to establish an age
discrimination case. One path consists of direct evidence of
discriminatory animus. Absent direct evidence of discrimination,
Plaintiff must satisfy the burden-shifting test of McDonnell
Douglas[]. . . . The reasoning behind the McDonnell Douglas burden
shifting approach is to allow a victim of discrimination to establish
a case through inferential and circumstantial proof. As Justice
O'Connor has noted, “the entire purpose of the McDonnell Douglas
prima facie case is to compensate for the fact that direct evidence
of intentional discrimination is hard to come by.” If a plaintiff
attempts to prove its case using the McDonnell Douglas framework,
then the plaintiff is not required to introduce direct evidence of
discrimination. Under the McDonnell Douglas framework a plaintiff
can establish a prima facie case of age discrimination by proving
that he or she: (1) was a member of a protected class, (2) was
discharged, (3) was qualified for the position from which they were
discharged, and (4) was replaced by a person outside the protected
class. In age discrimination cases the fourth element is modified to
require replacement not by a person outside the protected class,
but replacement by a significantly younger person. . . . Once the
plaintiff has established a prima facie case, the burden shifts to
the employer to articulate a “legitimate nondiscriminatory reason”

58 Id. at 495 n.2.
59 Id. at 494.
60 Id.
61 Id.
62 Id.
63 Id. at 495.
32
for the termination decision. . . . After a defendant has provided a
legitimate, nondiscriminatory reason for the termination, the
McDonnell Douglas framework disappears. At this point, the
plaintiff must persuade the trier of fact, by a preponderance of the
evidence, that the defendant unlawfully discriminated against
her.64
In analyzing first whether Williams satisfied her burden of proving a
prima facie case of age discrimination, the Williams court only focused on the
final element because it was undisputed that Williams provided sufficient proof
of the first three elements.65 The Court found that the element was satisfied
because Williams provided evidence that she was replaced “by an individual
who is significantly younger than” she was at the time she separated from
Walmart because all sixteen people who were hired after Williams left were at
least eight years younger than she, and all but three were under age 40.
66 But
the Court declined to settle the precise issue as to “how many years younger a
replacement has to be in order to satisfy the significantly-younger requirement”
because “[q]uite simply, when the evidence at trial is viewed in the light most
favorable to Williams, it establishes that she was replaced by at least one of
these substantially younger individuals.”67 The Williams court further found
that Wal-Mart had satisfied its rebuttal burden of production by showing that
it had a legitimate, nondiscriminatory reason for forcing Williams to resign, by
showing that it had “strict polic[ies]” against “employees taking merchandise
without first paying for it and that a violation of the policy resulted in

64 Williams, 184 S.W.3d at 495–97 (citations omitted).
65 Id. at 496.
66 Id. (emphasis added).
67 Id. at 496–97.
33
immediate termination,” and against allowing employees to “purchase
merchandise while ‘on the clock.’”68
Since the McDonnell Douglas framework had disappeared at this point,
the Williams court discussed the evidence presented by Williams to show that
“the employer's stated reason for the termination was merely a pretext,
masking the discriminatory motive.”69 While the Williams court disagreed with
the Court of Appeals and found that Williams provided enough evidence,
admittedly “weak,” to satisfy at least one of the “three methods for establishing
pretext,”70 the Court made clear that a plaintiff's success in establishing a
prima facie case and providing evidence of a pretext does not always mean the
plaintiff has presented evidence sufficient to survive a motion for a directed
verdict if it is clear that the evidence would still not be enough to sustain a
jury’s finding of liability.71 The Williams court ultimately held that even though
the parties had satisfied their respective evidentiary burdens, Wal-Mart’s
motion for a directed verdict should have been granted because no “rational
trier of fact [could] conclude that Wal-Mart had unlawfully discriminated
against Williams because of her age” based on the complete absence of

68 Id. at 497.
69 Id.
70 Id. (“In Manzer v. Diamond Shamrock Chems., Co., 29 F.3d 1078, 1083 (6th
Cir. 1994)], the court listed three methods for establishing pretext: (1) the proffered
reasons are false; (2) the proffered reasons did not actually motivate the decision; and
(3) the plaintiff could show that the reasons given were insufficient to motivate the
decision.”).
71 Id. at 499 (citing Reeves v. Sanderson Plumbing Prods., Inc., 530 U.S. 133,
148–49, 120 S. Ct. 2097, 2109, 147 L. Ed. 2d 105 (2000)).
34
evidence that the person solely responsible for Williams’s termination actually
knew of her age.72
This Court has discussed Williams in three cases since rendering it.
73
The parties in the case at hand rely only on one these decisions, Childers Oil v.
Adkins,
74 in their arguments for or against the propriety of the jury instruction
under discussion.75 Norton also directs us to the unpublished Court of
Appeals’ decision in Stauble v. Montgomery Imports, LLC76 in support of its

72 Id. at 498–99 (explaining Supreme Court’s decisions in St. Mary's Honor
Center v. Hicks, 509 U.S. 502, 113 S. Ct. 2742, 125 L. Ed. 2d 407 (1993), wherein “the
Supreme Court rejected the ‘pretext plus’ and ‘pretext only’ approaches in favor of the
‘permissive pretext only’ standard and held that it was permissible, but not
mandatory, for the trier of fact to make an ultimate finding of intentional
discrimination once the plaintiff has established pretext.) The Williams court
explained, however, that these cases are not always required to be submitted to the
jury based on the Supreme Court’s decision in Reeves v. Sanderson Plumbing Products,
Inc., 530 U.S. 133, 148-49, 120 S. Ct. 2097, 2109, 147 L. Ed. 2d 105 (2000), wherein
the Court stated that “a plaintiff's prima facie case, combined with sufficient evidence
to find that the employer's asserted justification is false, may permit the trier of fact to
conclude that the employer unlawfully discriminated. This is not to say that such a
showing by the plaintiff will always be adequate to sustain a jury's finding of liability.
There will be instances where, although the plaintiff has established a prima facie case
and set forth sufficient evidence to reject the defendant's explanation, no rational
factfinder could conclude that the action was discriminatory.” Id. at 499–500.
73 See Charalambakis v. Asbury Univ., 488 S.W.3d 568 (Ky. 2016); Childers Oil
Co. v. Adkins, 256 S.W.3d 19 (Ky. 2008); Commonwealth v. Solly, 253 S.W.3d 537 (Ky.
2008).
74 256 S.W.3d 19.
75 It is likely that the parties in this case did not rely on the other two cases
because they are not age-discrimination cases and thus do not discuss the
substantially-younger requirement of McDonnell Douglas that is at issue in this case.
See Charalambakis, 488 S.W.3d at 580 (affirming the circuit court’s grant of summary
judgment in favor of the defendant based on the finding that the plaintiff “failed to
demonstrate under the McDonnell Douglas burden shifting analysis that his
circumstantial evidence of discriminatory treatment is sufficient to disprove
[defendant’s] proffered reasons for its disciplinary decisions[]”); Solly, 253 S.W.3d at
540 (affirming the Franklin Circuit Court’s finding that the administrative hearing
office correctly found that the plaintiff’s sex-discrimination claim “did not state a
prima facie case of discrimination and that the reasons given for the nonrenewal were
not pretextual[]”).
76 No. 2005–CA–001967, 2011 WL 2119364, at *1 (Ky. App. May 27, 2011).
35
argument that jury instructions for age-discrimination claims commonly
include elements of the McDonnell Douglas framework for establishing a prima
facie case. We agree with Norton that this Court’s decision in Childers Oil and
the Court of Appeals’ unreported decision in Stauble merit discussion, but we
do note that both cases are distinguishable from the present case. There is no
evidence that the trial court in Childers Oil submitted jury instructions that
included the McDonnell Douglas elements, and the only discussion of the jury
instructions concerns the propriety of the instruction on punitive damages.77
Similarly, jury instructions were not at issue in Stauble because that case was
dismissed before trial.
In Childers Oil Co., a former employee, 47-year-old Bertha Adkins, of
Defendant Childers Oil filed an age-discrimination claim after she was
terminated from her job.
78 On discretionary review in this Court, we
considered, in part, whether the trial court erred when it declined to grant
Childers Oil’s motion for a directed verdict. The primary claim made by
Childers Oil was that the trial court erred in denying its motion for a directed
verdict because Adkins failed to provide proof that she was replaced by a
“significantly younger” employee.
79
In Childers Oil we agreed with the Court of Appeals that the trial court
did not err in denying Childers Oil’s motion for a directed verdict based on the
evidence presented at trial that management “had made a deliberate decision

77 Childers Oil Co., 256 S.W.3d at 22.
78 Id.
79 Id. at 26–27.
36
to seek to place young females at the cash registers.”80 Testimony presented to
the jury at trial showed that the manager told another employee that “the
company wanted pretty, young girls up front to draw in truck drivers and the
‘young ones' went ‘up there.’”81 Furthermore, trial evidence showed that one
young female was hired only eleven days before Adkins was terminated, and
five other people, all of whom were more than ten years younger than Adkins,
were hired shortly after Adkins was discharged.82
In Stauble, the Court of Appeals affirmed the trial court’s grant of
Defendant Montgomery Imports’s motion for summary judgment in Plaintiff
Gary Stauble’s age-discrimination claim.83 Stauble filed the age-discrimination
claim after he, at age 49, was first demoted from his position as service
manager to parts manager and replaced by an individual who was in his late
20s or early 30s, and then terminated and replaced by an individual who was
40 years old.84 On appeal, the parties disputed whether Stauble provided
sufficient evidence to establish several of the elements.85 In its discussion of
the substantially-younger element, the Court of Appeals found that both the
20-year age difference between Stauble and the employee who replaced him
when he was demoted, and the nine year age difference between Stauble and

80 Id.
81 Id.
82 Id. The Childers Oil court also found that Adkins presented sufficient
evidence to allow the jury to conclude that that Childers stated reason for termination,
that the store was closing soon and no longer needed Adkins’s services, was a mere
pretext. Id. at 26.
83 2011 WL 2119364, at *1
84 Id.
85 Id., at *3–4.
37
the employee who replaced him when he was terminated were sufficient to
present a “fact question for the jury.”86 Ultimately, the Court of Appeals found
that Stauble presented sufficient evidence to make out a prima facie case of age
discrimination, but summary judgment in favor of Montgomery Imports was
still proper because Stauble failed to present sufficient evidence that
Montgomery Imports’s proffered reason for demoting and terminating Stauble
was merely a pretext.87
Based on these Kentucky cases, we draw some further conclusions.
First, Kentucky courts have embraced and affirmed the United States Supreme
Court’s assertions that McDonnell Douglas established a burden-shifting
framework, and that in all discrimination cases the ultimate question is
whether the defendant unlawfully discriminated against the plaintiff. Second,
neither the United States Supreme Court, this Court, nor any other Kentucky
court has considered whether the McDonnell Douglas framework, an admittedly
factual inquiry, is to be decided by the judge or the jury in Kentucky Civil
Rights Act cases. In fact, and unlike the Supreme Court of the United States, it
seems that this Court has never had the occasion to express an opinion about
the potential propriety of including the elements of the framework in juryinstructions in these cases. With these additional preliminary thoughts in
mind, we now turn to Kentucky’s rule regarding jury instructions because this

86 Id., at *4. (“In Cicero v. Borg–Warner Automotive, Inc., 280 F.3d 579, 588 (6th
Cir. 2002), the United States Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals held that deciding whether
an age difference of seven and one-half years is significant is a question of fact for the
jury. . . . See [also] Grosjean v. First Energy Corp., 349 F.3d 332, 336 (6th Cir. 2003)
(noting that “[a]ge differences of ten or more years have generally been held to be
sufficiently substantial . . . ’’).”).
87 Id., at *4–5, 7.
38
issue is critical in determining whether the elements of the McDonnell Douglas
framework may properly be included in Kentucky jury instructions.
d. Kentucky’s “Bare Bones” Approach to Jury Instructions
As the Court of Appeals in this case correctly noted, Kentucky long-ago
adopted a bare-bones approach to jury instructions. This Court has explained
this approach as demanding that jury instructions “provide only the bare
bones, which can be fleshed out by counsel in their closing arguments if they
so desire.”88 As this Court established in Meyers v. Chapman Printing Co.,
bare-bones instructions means those that simply frame “what the jury must
believe from the evidence in order to return a verdict in favor of the party who
bears the burden of proof.”89 This interpretation of bare-bones was reaffirmed
in Olfice, Inc. v. Wilkey, wherein this Court stated that “‘[t]he basic function of
instructions in Kentucky is to tell the jury what it must believe from the
evidence in order to resolve each dispositive factual issue in favor of the party
who bears the burden of proof on that issue.’”90 In an effort to clarify further
the bare-bones standard for jury instructions, this Court established in Mason
v. Commonwealth established that bare-bones instructions do not include
unnecessary detail such as evidentiary presumptions.91 As the Mason case

88 Cox v. Cooper, 510 S.W.2d 530, 535 (Ky. 1974).
89 840 S.W.2d at 824.
90 173 S.W.3d 226, 229 (Ky. 2005) (quoting Justice Charles M. Leibson, “Legal
Malpractice Cases: Special Problems in Identifying Issues of Law and Fact and in the
Use of Expert Testimony,” 75 Ky. L.J. 1, 40 (1986) (quoting John S. Palmore, Kentucky
Instructions to Juries, § 13.01 (1977))).
91 565 S.W.2d 140, 141 (Ky. 1978). See also Meyers, 840 S.W.2d at 824 (“In
Kentucky jury instructions do not include evidentiary presumptions. Such
presumptions alter the burden of going forward with the evidence, and thus may
result in a directed verdict in the absence of countervailing evidence.”).
39
explained, evidentiary presumptions should not be included in Kentucky jury
instructions because presumptions, by their nature, are “guides to be followed
by the trial judge in determining whether there is sufficient evidence to warrant
the submission of an issue to the jury[.]”92 The Mason court went on to state
that the instructions must still include “[a]ll essential aspects of the law
necessary to decide the case . . . .”93 These cases essentially mean that trial
courts are called upon to engage in a balancing effort to ensure that jury
instructions in Kentucky provide only the bare minimum necessary to ensure
that the jury understands the ultimate issue of fact to be decided in any case,
but still provide enough law and background knowledge so that the jury comes
to a decision that is supported by law.
Merely failing to adhere to the bare-bones approach, however, is
generally not enough to justify a new trial under our jurisprudence. When a
Kentucky appellate court is confronted with a challenge to a jury instruction
based on the content of the instruction, the appellate court must consider
whether the instruction “misstated the law by failing to sufficiently advise the
jury ‘what it [had to] believe from the evidence in order to return a verdict in
favor of the party who [had] the burden of proof.’”94 If the appellate court finds
that the challenged jury instruction did misstate the law, a presumption of

92 Id. Recall that the United States Supreme Court in Vance noted that other
courts have expressed similar disfavor in including some presumptions in jury
instructions. The Vance court stated that “[c]ourts and commentators alike have
opined on the need for reasonably clear jury instructions in employment
discrimination cases. And the danger of juror confusion is particularly high where the
jury is faced with instructions on alternative theories of liability under which different
parties bear the burden of proof.” 570 U.S. at 444–45 (citations omitted).
93 Mason, 565 S.W.2d at 141.
94 Wilkey, 173 S.W.3d at 230 (quoting Meyers, 840 S.W.2d at 823).
40
prejudice arises and the challenging party is entitled to a new trial unless the
responding party is able to show affirmatively that the error did not affect the
verdict.95 In contrast, if the appellate court finds that the jury instructions did
not misstate the law, no presumption of prejudice arises and the complaining
party is only entitled to a new trial if she is able affirmatively to show prejudice,
meaning that the error affected the verdict.
e. Rule and Application of these Principles to Disselkamp’s case
Upon careful review, we hold that the substantially-younger requirement
issue must be decided by the trial court after considering the parties’ evidence.
In other words, it is a misstatement of law to include the substantially-younger
element of the McDonnell Douglas framework into jury instructions submitted
in age-discrimination cases that are based on circumstantial evidence. As
explained in more detail below, this holding furthers the purpose of the
Kentucky Civil Rights Act, is supported by the case law discussed above, and
avoids illogical and unjust results that could arise were we to adopt the
position advanced by Nortons.
First, by holding that the trial court, and not the jury, must make the
determination about whether age-discrimination plaintiffs satisfy their initial
burden under the McDonnell Douglas framework, this Court ensures that the
statutory purposes of the Kentucky Civil Rights Act are not undermined by

95 McKinney v. Heisel, 947 S.W.2d 32, 35 (Ky. 1997). See also Harp v.
Commonwealth, 266 S.W.3d 813, 818 (Ky. 2008) (“But a party claiming that an
erroneous jury instruction, or an erroneous failure to give a necessary jury
instruction, bears a steep burden because we have held that ‘[i]n this jurisdiction it is
a rule of longstanding and frequent repetition that erroneous instructions to the jury
are presumed to be prejudicial; that an appellee claiming harmless error bears the
burden of showing affirmatively that no prejudice resulted from the error.’”) (quoting
McKinney, 947 S.W.2d at 35).
41
incorporating additional elements the jury is required to believe to find in favor
of the plaintiff. To be entitled to relief under KRS 344.040(1)(a), a plaintiff is
required to convince the jury that the plaintiff’s employer terminated or
otherwise discriminated against the plaintiff because of the plaintiff’s age and
that the plaintiff was age 40 or over. Recall the General Assembly’s articulated
reasons for making it unlawful to discriminate against an individual based on
age under the Kentucky Civil Rights Act: to incorporate and uphold the antidiscrimination policies of the Federal Civil Rights Act;96 and “[t]o safeguard all
individuals within the state from discrimination because of . . . age forty (40)
and over, [and] thereby to protect their interest in personal dignity and freedom
from humiliation.”97 KRS Chapter 344 also provides that the chapter “shall be
construed to further the general purposes stated in this section and the special
purposes of the particular provision involved.”98
The substantially-younger requirement is not codified in any part of KRS
Chapter 344; it is simply an element that a plaintiff is required to provide
evidence in support of, before the case is submitted to the jury, in cases in
which the plaintiff is attempting to prove unlawful discrimination with
circumstantial evidence. Furthermore, it is undisputed that this Court has
found that the substantially-younger requirement was satisfied in cases where
the age gap between the plaintiff and the individual who replaced the plaintiff
upon termination was narrower than the age gap between Disselkamp and the

96 KRS 344.020(1)(a).
97 KRS 344.020(1)(b).
98 KRS 344.020(2).
42
individual she argued replaced her.99 Disselkamp’s claimed replacement,
Meyers, was twelve years younger than she, and Norton points this Court to no
evidence that disputes Disselkamp’s arguments that she was replaced by
Meyers. By submitting the substantially-younger element to the jury in
Disselkamp’s case, the trial court essentially incorporated an additional
element the jury was required to find as true to find for Disselkamp.
Our holding today also follows the United States Supreme Court’s, this
Court’s, and other federal courts’ established principle that that the ultimate
issue to be determined by the jury in civil rights cases is whether the defendant
engaged in unlawful discrimination.100 Recall the Aikens court’s explanation
that the McDonnell Douglas framework was never meant to be applied
“ritualistically;” rather it was simply meant to establish “a sensible, orderly way
to evaluate the evidence in light of common experience as it bears on the
critical question of discrimination.”101 As this Court stated in Williams, the
framework drops from the case after it has been decided that the plaintiff has
established a prima facie case of age discrimination and the defendant

99 Disselkamp was 60 years old at the time Norton terminated her employment,
and she was replaced by 48-year-old Michele Meyers. In Williams, this Court found
that the plaintiff had provided sufficient evidence to prove the substantially younger
requirement because Plaintiff Williams was 56-years-old when she resigned and all
sixteen people who were hired after Williams left were at least eight years younger
than her. In Childers Oil Co., this Court found that the plaintiff had provided sufficient
proof that she was replaced by a substantially younger employee when she was
terminated at age 47 and was replaced by individuals who were all more than ten
years younger.
100 See, e.g., Aikens, 460 U.S. at 713-14 (“Because this case was fully tried on
the merits, it is surprising to find the parties and the Court of Appeals still addressing
the question whether Aikens made out a prima facie case. We think that by framing
the issue in these terms, they have unnecessarily evaded the ultimate question of
discrimination vel non.”).
101 Id. at 715.
43
responds by offering a legitimate, non-discriminatory reason for the adverse
action against the employee. It would be inconsistent to now hold that while
the framework “drops out” after the parties meet their respective burdens, the
fourth element of the prima facie case can nonetheless be submitted once more
to the jury to determine if it agrees with the trial court’s determination.
Finally, today’s holding comports with our bare-bones approach to jury
instructions. So, instructing the jury on the substantially-younger element of
the McDonnell Douglas prima facie case is not necessary to instruct the jury as
to “[a]ll essential aspects of the law necessary to decide the case . . . .”102 If we
were to allow such inclusion, we would be moving past simply establishing a
gatekeeping function to ensure only meritorious age discrimination claims that
are based on circumstantial evidence are submitted to the jury; instead, we
would be reading into KRS 344.040 additional elements of age discrimination
that the statute does not require.
f. Harmlessness of the Instructional Error
Our determination that the jury instruction in the present case misstates
the law does not end our analysis. Even though we conclude that jury
instructions in the present case misstated the law, giving rise to a presumption
that this error prejudiced Disselkamp by affecting the verdict, we must
determine if Norton is correct that the misstatement of the law was harmless
because it was a mere redundancy, as neither party disputes that Disselkamp
was required to present evidence tending to prove the substantially-younger
requirement to survive directed verdict. As explained in more detail below,

102 Mason, 565 S.W.2d at 141.
44
however, when we consider the consequences of finding that the instructional
error did not prejudice Disselkamp, it becomes clear that Norton has failed to
prove that the instructional error did not prejudice Disselkamp.
Again, the substantially-younger element has been found to be satisfied
in cases were the plaintiffs were replaced by an employee who was eight years
and ten years younger than the plaintiffs. In reliance on this precedent,
Disselkamp was justified in assuming that the 12-year age difference between
herself and the employee who arguably replaced her was more than enough to
satisfy the requirement.
As provided above, the age-discrimination jury instruction submitted in
Disselkamp’s case stated that the jury could find in favor of Disselkamp if it
found all of the following to be true: “[1] Disselkamp’s employment was
terminated; [2] Disselkamp was age 40 or over on the date of termination; [3]
[Disselkamp was otherwise qualified for her employment position;] [4]
Disselkamp’s age (60) was a substantial motivating factor in Norton’s decision
to terminate her employment; [5] AND Disselkamp was replaced by a
substantially younger person.” It would have been unreasonable for the jury to
conclude, considering the evidence presented at trial, that Disselkamp failed to
satisfy the first three requirements, which leaves disputed questions as to
whether Disselkamp satisfied the final two elements. It is possible that the jury
found that Disselkamp’s age (60) was not a substantial motivating factor in
Norton’s decision to terminate her employment, and she was not replaced by a
substantially younger person. It is also possible, that the jury found that
Disselkamp’s age (60) was not a substantial motivating factor in Norton’s
decision to terminate her employment, but she was replaced by a substantially
45
younger person. Moreover, it is possible that the jury could have found that
Disselkamp’s age (60) was a substantial motivating factor in Norton’s decision
to terminate her employment, but she was not replaced by a substantially
younger person. Under any of the possible scenarios, Disselkamp’s agediscrimination claim would fail, but there is no way to determine under which
scenario the jury was operating in rendering the verdict in Norton’s favor.
Under the first two scenarios, the failure of Disselkamp’s claim is not
problematic, much less unjust. But under the third scenario, the prohibitions
and purposes provided under the Kentucky Civil Rights Act would be
frustrated. Under the third scenario, despite the jury’s finding that
Disselkamp’s age was a motivating factor in Norton’s decision to terminate her,
which is exactly the conduct expressly prohibited under KRS 344.040, the jury
would still be required to find in favor of Norton because they did not find, for
whatever reason, that Disselkamp was not replaced by a substantially younger
person. That result would undermine the Kentucky Civil Rights Act’s purpose
“[t]o safeguard all individuals within the state from discrimination because of . .
. age forty (40) and over, [and] thereby to protect their interest in personal
dignity and freedom from humiliation,” and would be a miscarriage of justice.
Because there is no way to tell which scenario occurred when the jury in the
present case found in favor of Norton, the inclusion of the substantiallyyounger requirement in the age discrimination jury instructions prejudiced
Disselkamp.
g. Direction on Remand
In sum, the Kentucky and Federal Civil Rights Acts, the Supreme
Court’s, and this Court’s precedent concerning the Kentucky Civil Rights Act
46
and Kentucky’s unique requirements regarding bare-bones jury instructions
support holding that the substantially-younger requirement of the McDonnell
Douglas prima facie case is an issue that must be decided by the trial court. In
other words, it is a misstatement of law to submit the substantially-younger
determination to the jury in discrimination cases based on circumstantial
evidence. As such, the misstatement of law in Disselkamp’s age-discrimination
jury instructions, which was prejudicial, justifies vacating the jury’s verdict
with respect to this claim and remanding the claim back to the trial court to
conduct further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
There is no question that Disselkamp satisfied the first three elements of
the McDonnell Douglas prima facie case as it was articulated in Williams.
103
Disselkamp provided undisputed testimony that she was terminated by Norton
when she was 60 years old and that she was qualified for the position from
which she was discharged. Disselkamp also provided sufficient evidence to
allow the trial court to find that her replacement, if the trial court believed it
was Meyers who replaced Disselkamp, was substantially younger. There is also
no question that Norton satisfied its burden of production to show that it had a
legitimate, nondiscriminatory reason for terminating Disselkamp, given the
documented evidence that Norton’s stated reason for firing Disselkamp was
based on its belief that Disselkamp falsified data used to support the
conclusions made in the QMT report she submitted to her supervisor. At this
point, the McDonnell Douglas framework “disappears,” and Disselkamp must
show that the stated reason was merely a pretext.

103 184 S.W.3d at 495–97 (citations omitted).
47
On remand, if the evidence presented by the parties is substantially the
same, which includes relevant evidence discussed elsewhere in this opinion,
the trial court would be justified in finding that both parties satisfied their
respective burdens established under the McDonnell Douglas framework, and
submitting the case to the jury. A proper jury instruction on remand would not
include the substantially-younger element but could state something like: “You
will find for the Plaintiff under this instruction if you are satisfied from the
evidence that the Defendant’s decision to terminate Plaintiff’s employment was
because of Plaintiff’s age.104 Otherwise you will find for Defendant under this
instruction.”
3. Jury Instructions for Disselkamp’s Retaliation Claim.
Disselkamp argues on her cross-appeal for discretionary review that the
Court of Appeals’ opinion should be reversed insofar as it finds that the
retaliation instruction did not misstate the law by including Tracy Patton’s
name among the list of potential retaliators. As explained above, Disselkamp
properly preserved this issue for appeal and, as such, the standard of review is
de novo. The retaliation instruction as submitted to the jury provided that the
jury could return a verdict in Disselkamp’s favor if it found that:

104 Based on the United States Supreme Court’s interpretation of the phrase
“because of” in the ADEA to mean “the plaintiff retains the burden of persuasion to
establish that age was the ‘but-for’ cause of the employer's adverse action,” it is
questionable whether the jury instruction submitted for Disselkamp’s age was a
proper statement of Kentucky law based solely on its requirement that the jury find
that “Disselkamp’s age (60) was a substantial motivating factor in Norton’s decision to
terminate her employment.” See Gross, 557 U.S. at 176. KRS 344.040(1)(a) states, like
the ADEA, that it is unlawful for an employer “to discharge any individual . . . because
of the individual's . . . age forty (40) and over . . . .” (emphasis added). However, we are
without authority to determine this issue because the parties do not dispute this part
of the jury instruction.
48
• Disselkamp engaged in a protected activity, i.e., complained to
Norton in good faith, about harassment and gender discrimination
by Kevin Hendrickson;
• Richard Shilling, Lori Bischoff, or Tracy Patton, the individuals
responsible for terminating Disselkamp’s employment, were aware
of Disselkamp’s complaints of harassment and gender
discrimination by Kevin Hendrickson at the time the decision was
made to terminate Disselkamp’s employment;
AND
• There was a causal connection between Disselkamp’s termination
and her complaints about Kevin Hendrickson.
Disselkamp argues that by including Patton’s name among the list of
potential retaliators the trial court impermissibly “commented on the evidence
and inserted another potential retaliator that the jury well knew had no motive
to terminate Ms. Disselkamp,” and Norton was then allowed to take “full
advantage” of this alleged error by making statements during closing
arguments that, as Disselkamp puts it, Patton had no motivation to retaliate
against Disselkamp, “so there was no possibility that retaliation occurred.”
Norton responds that the instruction correctly stated the law by
including all the elements required to be successful in a retaliation claim
brought under KRS 344.280(1), and any error in including Patton’s name in
the retaliation jury instruction was harmless because the instruction merely
listed Patton as one of three individuals the jury could find retaliated against
Disselkamp. The Court of Appeals agreed with Norton, and so do we. As Norton
points out, and Disselkamp does not dispute, the retaliation jury instructions
clearly did not misstate any of the law explained above, and based on the
language of the jury instructions, this assertion is correct. In fact, Disselkamp
failed to direct our attention to any authority, binding or persuasive, that
would support an alternate holding.
49
KRS 344.280(1) governs Disselkamp’s retaliation claim. The statute
provides that “[i]t shall be an unlawful practice for a person . . . :(1) To retaliate
or discriminate in any manner against a person because he has opposed a
practice declared unlawful by this chapter, or because he has made a charge,
filed a complaint, testified, assisted, or participated in any manner in any
investigation, proceeding, or hearing under this chapter[.]” Disselkamp’s theory
at trial was that Bischoff and Shilling fired her in retaliation for Disselkamp’s
formal complaints made against her former supervisor, Hendrickson, for
gender discrimination and harassment.
As we explained in Charalambaskis v. Asbury University, “[a] claim for
unlawful retaliation requires the plaintiff to first establish a prima facie case of
retaliation, which consists of showing that (1) she engaged in a protected
activity, (2) she was disadvantaged by an act of her employer, and (3) there was
a causal connection between the activity engaged in and the [defendant]
employer's act.”105 Furthermore, as the Court of Appeals noted, to prove the
casual-connection element with circumstantial evidence, in most cases, this
plaintiff is required to present proof that “(1) the decision-maker responsible for
making the adverse decision was aware of the protected activity at the time
that the adverse decision was made, and (2) there is a close temporal
relationship between the protected activity and the adverse action.”106

105 488 S.W.3d 568, 583 (Ky. 2016) (internal quotations omitted). See also
Norton Healthcare, Inc. v. Deng, 487 S.W.3d 846, 851–52 (Ky. 2016).
106 Kentucky Dep't of Corr. v. McCullough, 123 S.W.3d 130, 135 (Ky. 2003), as
modified on denial of reh'g (Jan. 22, 2004) (citing Clark County School District v.
Breeden, 532 U.S. 268, 273, 121 S. Ct. 1508, 1511, 149 L. Ed. 2d 509, 515 (2001)).
50
Even assuming for the present case that including Patton’s name in the
retaliation instruction was an error, Norton successfully proved that the error
did not prejudice Disselkamp because the error was harmless. As the Court of
Appeals correctly found, the retaliation jury instruction was harmless because
use of the word “or” rendered it unnecessary for the jury to make any finding
that Patton specifically knew of Disselkamp’s protected conduct in complaining
about her former supervisor’s alleged harassment or gender discrimination, or
that Patton made the decision to terminate Disselkamp in retaliation for this
protected conduct. Furthermore, there was evidence in the record to support
the trial court’s inclusion of Patton’s name in the retaliation jury instruction—
Disselkamp testified that Patton was one of the three people who made the
decision to terminate her and Disselkamp’s Complaint named Patton as a
retaliator— despite Disselkamp’s later position that Patton was simply being
used as a “rubber stamp” by Bischoff and Shilling to terminate Disselkamp.
In sum, the trial court did not err in including Patton’s name in the list
of potential individuals that the jury could find unlawfully retaliated against
Disselkamp. As such, Disselkamp is entitled to no relief from the jury’s verdict
in favor of Norton on Disselkamp’s retaliation claim.
B. Disselkamp’s Requested Spoliation Instruction.
The final issue raised by Disselkamp is that the Court of Appeals erred
by finding that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in denying
Disselkamp’s request for a missing-evidence, or spoliation, instruction.
Disselkamp specifically argues that she was entitled to a spoliation instruction
on “four key categories of evidence” because “spoliation was rampant in this
case.”
51
The “four key categories of evidence” that Disselkamp points to are: (1)
the emails Norton referenced in its CAR report terminating Disselkamp; (2) the
Ultrasound Observation Report Norton claimed that Disselkamp falsified as the
stated reason for Disselkamp’s termination; (3) Disselkamp’s QMT binder; and
(4) the handwritten piece of paper that Bischoff allegedly showed to a Norton
technologist in the days following Disselkamp’s termination.
Disselkamp made repeated pretrial requests, both formally and
informally, that Norton produce all four categories of evidence, and the trial
court ultimately entered an order compelling Norton to produce the evidence.
But Norton did not produce any of the evidence, explaining after the trial court
compelled disclosure that the items requested, including the QMT binder,
could not be found or were destroyed due to “reasonably necessary information
purge procedures.” We agree with the Court of Appeals that the trial court did
not abuse its discretion in declining to give a missing-evidence jury instruction
based on any of the four categories of missing evidence relied on by
Disselkamp.
“Trial courts are vested with discretion in deciding what admonitions and
instructions to the jury are appropriate under the evidence and attendant
circumstances.’’
107 Our standard of appellate review is for abuse of
discretion.108 A party is entitled to a missing evidence, or spoliation, instruction
where “‘significant evidence was forever lost’” to the prejudice of the party.109 In

107 Beglin, 375 S.W.3d at 790 (citing Harris v. Commonwealth, 313 S.W.3d 40,
50 (Ky. 2010)).
108 Id. at 790–91
109 Estep v. Commonwealth, 64 S.W.3d 805, 809 (Ky. 2002) (quoting Tinsley v.
Jackson, 771 S.W.2d 331, 332 (Ky. 1989)).
52
the realm of civil cases, this Court has not had many opportunities to explain
when a party is entitled to a missing-evidence instruction. In fact, the only
modern case this Court has decided that is relevant to a missing-evidence
instruction is University Medical Center v. Beglin.
In Beglin, we first reaffirmed that the “approved” missing-evidence
instruction is one that “sets forth the elements necessary to permit a jury to
draw an adverse inference from missing evidence.”110 In establishing “the
evidentiary prerequisite for giving the instruction when potentially relevant
evidence is inexplicably unavailable,” we rejected the assertion “that direct and
conclusive evidence of intentional and bad faith destruction as pre-determined
by the trial court are absolute prerequisites for obtaining the instruction.”111
While in Beglin we did not articulate an exact standard by which to determine
when a party is entitled to a missing-evidence instruction,112 we did provide
examples of circumstances when a missing-evidence instruction is not
authorized and provided some guidance as to when a trial court would be
authorized to give a missing-evidence instruction. In Beglin, we established
that a missing-evidence instruction should not be given “when the proof shows

110 Beglin, 375 S.W.3d at 788 (citing Sanborn v. Commonwealth, 754 S.W.2d
534, 540 n.3 (Ky. 1988) (“If you find from the evidence that there existed a tape
recording. . . and that the state intentionally destroyed the tape recording, you may,
but are not required to, infer that the information contained on the tape recording
would be, if available, adverse to the state and favorable to the defendant.” (citing
State v. Maniccia, 355 N.W.2d 256, 259 (Iowa App. 1984))).
111 Id. at 789.
112 In fact, the Beglin court explicitly declined to adopt “a special rule for
measuring the quantum or quality of evidence that will authorize a missing evidence
instruction.” Id. at 790. Instead, the Beglin court opted for a flexible standard that
grants wide discretion to the trial court.
53
that the evidence was lost as a result of ‘mere negligence[,]’”113 nor where
evidence was lost “as a result of fire, weather, natural disaster, other
calamities, or destruction in the normal course of file maintenance, particularly
in accordance with industry or regulatory standards.”114 We essentially
explained that, apart from the above circumstances, the trial court is within its
discretion to give a missing-evidence instruction when: (1) the evidence is
material or relevant to an issue in the case; (2) the opponent had “absolute
care, custody, and control over the evidence;” (3) the opponent was on notice
that the evidence was relevant at the time he failed to produce or destroyed it;
and (4) the opponent, “utterly without explanation,” in fact failed to produce
the disputed evidence when so requested or ordered.115 In so finding, we relied
in part on Justice, then Judge, Stephen Breyer’s notation that “nonproduction
alone ‘is sufficient by itself to support an adverse inference even if no other
evidence for the inference exists[.]’”116

113 Id. at 791 (quoting Mann v. Taser Intern., Inc., 588 F.3d 1291, 1310 (11th
Cir. 2009)).
114 Id. (citing Lawson, The Kentucky Evidence Law Handbook, § 2.65[3] (4th ed.
2003) (An inference based on destruction (or loss) may not be drawn if the destroyer
acted inadvertently (mere negligence) or if there is an adequate explanation for the
destruction (or loss)) and Millenkamp v. Davisco Foods Intern., Inc., 562 F.3d 971 (9th
Cir. 2009) (No missing evidence inference is proper when evidence was destroyed long
before litigation was anticipated)).
115 Id. at 792.
116 Id. at 789 (quoting Nation-Wide Check Corp., Inc. v. Forest Hills Distributors,
Inc., 692 F.2d 214, 217 (1st Cir. 1982)). The Beglin court also quoted Justice Breyer’s
explanation of the rationale behind the missing evidence instruction. Id. (“Judge
Breyer's analysis does not at all suggest the enhanced burden advocated by the
hospital. His reasoning for a lesser standard becomes clearer when the reasons behind
the adverse inference instruction are considered: ‘The adverse inference is based on
two rationales, one evidentiary and one not. The evidentiary rationale is nothing more
than the common sense observation that a party who has notice that a document is
relevant to litigation and who proceeds to destroy the document is more likely to have
been threatened by the document than is a party in the same position who does not
destroy the document. . . . The other rationale for the inference has to do with its
54
The only case in which a Kentucky court has provided an in-depth
discussion of the Beglin standard for a missing-evidence instruction is Mitchell
v. Baptist Healthcare System Inc., an unpublished Court of Appeals decision.117
In Mitchell, the Court of Appeals found that the plaintiff was not entitled to a
missing-evidence instruction based on missing medication and a corresponding
report drafted by a nurse.118 Based on the defense’s witness testimony,
Glimepiride was found on the decedent’s person while he was in the ICU and
was taken to the hospital pharmacy according to protocol.119 The medication’s
discovery by the defense’s witness and destruction by the pharmacy was
documented according to hospital policy.120 The plaintiff in Mitchell argued to
the Court of Appeals that she was entitled to a missing-evidence instruction
based on the defense’s presentation of testimony that suggested that the actual
cause of the plaintiff decedent’s death was ingestion of Glimepiride because the
Glimepiride that the defense witness claimed she found on the decedent could
not be produced as evidence.121 Relying on Beglin and The Kentucky Evidence
Law Handbook, the Court of Appeals stated that it is “well-settled that a
missing evidence instruction should not be utilized in cases where the evidence
was lost as a result of negligence or destroyed in the normal course of business

prophylactic and punitive effects. Allowing the trier of fact to draw the inference
presumably deters parties from destroying relevant evidence before it can be
introduced at trial. The inference also serves as a penalty, placing the risk of an
erroneous judgment on the party that wrongfully created the risk.’” (quoting Nation–
Wide Check Corp., 692 F.2d at 217)).
117 No. 2014–CA–000125-MR, 2015 WL 6082806 (Ky. App. Oct. 16, 2015).
118 Id., at *9.
119 Id.
120 Id.
121 Id., at *8.
55
management.”122 Because the evidence presented at trial showed that the
medication at issue was “destroyed by the pharmacy as part of its regular
course of business . . . , as set forth in written policy[,] . . . . long before there
was any indication that litigation would ensue,” the Court of Appeals found
that the testimony regarding the evidence was properly admitted without
issuing a missing-evidence instruction.123
As explained above, the Court of Appeals in this case found that the trial
court did not abuse its discretion in declining to give a missing-evidence
instruction because there was no proof offered that the requested evidence was
“unaccountably missing” or was lost because of conduct by Norton that went
beyond “mere negligence.” The Court of Appeals relied solely on Beglin124 in
reaching this conclusion. Disselkamp also argues the Court of Appeals’
decision is wrong because it ignores Norton’s ethical duty to preserve evidence
once on notice of potential litigation and because the Court of Appeals
misinterpreted Beglin. Disselkamp asserts that a missing-evidence instruction
was necessary to uphold the integrity of the judicial system because Norton,
being on notice of Disselkamp’s claim as early as her pre-litigation demand
letter, has a duty to preserve all potentially relevant evidence.
Disselkamp also argues that by failing to implement a corporate
“litigation hold” and allowing the requested evidence to be misplaced or
destroyed by normal purging procedures, Norton breached its ethical duty to
preserve the evidence. Disselkamp requests us to clarify a party’s duty to

122 Id.
123 Id., at *9–10.
124 375 S.W.3d 783 (Ky. 2011) as modified on denial of reh'g (Mar. 22, 2012).
56
preserve evidence that could be relevant to potential litigation, specifically
pointing to a federal district court’s decision in Scalera v. Electrograph Systems,
Inc. as the appropriate standard for a party’s duty to preserve such evidence.125
In response, Norton argues that the Court of Appeals did not err by
finding that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in denying Disselkamp’s
request for a missing-evidence instruction. Norton dismisses that Disselkamp’s
argument because a missing-evidence instruction is: (1) must be supported by
trial evidence and Disselkamp’s argument is based mostly on pre-trial
discovery evidence; (2) is only proper when the alleged missing evidence is
material to the issues at trial, and the evidence to which Disselkamp points is
not because “there was no dispute about the information in the missing
documents;” (3) was irrelevant because Disselkamp was allowed to argue fully
her spoliation theory to the jury, even if Disselkamp did not take full advantage
of this.
While we acknowledge that parties in civil litigation must not destroy
evidence the parties know is relevant to potential litigation,
126 we do not agree

125 262 F.R.D. 162, 171, 177 (E.D.N.Y. 2009) (“The Second Circuit has held that
‘[t]he obligation to preserve evidence arises when the party has notice that the
evidence is relevant to litigation or when a party should have known that the evidence
may be relevant to future litigation.’ . . . The court in Zubulake set forth several steps
that counsel should take ‘to ensure compliance with the preservation obligation’: (1)
issue a litigation hold at the outset of litigation or whenever litigation is reasonably
anticipated, (2) clearly communicate the preservation duty to ‘key players,’ and (3)
‘instruct all employees to produce electronic copies of their relevant active files’ and
‘separate relevant backup tapes from others.’”) (internal citations omitted).
126 See, e.g., Beglin, 375 S.W.3d at 788–92 (discussing the remedy available to a
party when an opposing party loses or destroys evidence the opposing party knew was
relevant to potential litigation). Moreover, the Rules of Professional Conduct establish
that lawyers who either destroy or aid another in destroying “a document or other
material having potential evidentiary value[,]” are guilty of an ethical violation.
Kentucky Rules of the Supreme Court (SCR) 3.130(3.4).
57
with the Disselkamp that a party is always entitled to a missing-evidence
instruction, to uphold “judicial integrity,” in all cases where evidence is not
available after the party responsible for the evidence was put on notice of
potential litigation. We also decline Disselkamp’s request to further clarify the
specifics of any ethical duty to preserve evidence in the electronic age because
this case falls clearly within the established principles as articulated in Beglin.
Under the principles articulated and explained in Beglin, the Court of Appeals
was correct, and the trial court in this case did not abuse its discretion in
declining to give Disselkamp a missing-evidence instruction because
Disselkamp failed to explain how the missing categories of evidence were
material to her case, or even if at least one piece of the alleged missing evidence
even existed.
Again, the “four key categories” of missing evidence to which Disselkamp
points are: (1) the emails Norton referenced in its CAR report terminating
Disselkamp; (2) the Ultrasound Observation Report Norton claimed that
Disselkamp falsified as the stated reason for Disselkamp’s termination; (3)
Disselkamp’s QMT binder; and (4) the handwritten piece of paper that Bischoff
allegedly showed to a Norton technologist in the days following Disselkamp’s
termination.
As to the first category of evidence, the emails Norton referenced in its
CAR terminating Disselkamp, we find that this information, even if destroyed
long after the time that Norton was aware of its duty to preserve, fails under
the first element described in Beglin because Disselkamp failed to show that
the emails were material to her case. Disselkamp explains that the CAR stated
that Disselkamp “presented QMT results to manager on 10-21-2012, stating
58
that she had all monthly data via email[,]” and that “only part of the [QMT]
documentation was sent via email.” Disselkamp argues that these emails were
material because the cited references implied that Disselkamp had not sent all
the QMT data to Bischoff. But there seemed to be no dispute between the
parties at trial that Disselkamp did not send all the supporting data to Bischoff
along with her QMT report. Disselkamp’s argument at trial was that she did
not falsify the July data for the patient shielding report but had merely
misplaced the data she used to create the report, and that Bischoff used the
falsification allegation as a pretext to terminate her. This Court fails to see how
the emails stating that Bischoff had received the QMT report but was missing
the July data would have supported Disselkamp’s assertions. While we do not
necessarily agree with the Court of Appeals that Disselkamp was not entitled to
a missing evidence-instruction for the missing emails because she failed to
show that they were destroyed due to anything other than normal purging
procedures,127 we affirm the Court of Appeals insofar as it finds that the trial

127 We are inclined to find that the time delay alone was enough to allow an
adverse inference in favor of Disselkamp given that more than eighteen months
elapsed between the first time Disselkamp formally requested the documents from
Norton, March 4, 2014, and when Norton sent Disselkamp its Supplemental
Response, October 23, 2015, stating that the relevant emails had been “purged.” In
Beglin, we relied on the Ninth Circuit’s decision in Millenkamp v. v. Davisco Food
Intern., Inc., 562 F.3d 971 (9th Cir. 2009), as authority for its proposition that a
missing-evidence instruction is not authorized in cases where evidence was lost “as a
result of fire, weather, natural disaster, other calamities, or destruction in the normal
course of file maintenance, particularly in accordance with industry or regulatory
standards.” Beglin, 375 S.W.3d at 791. But in Millenkamp, the Ninth Circuit found
that a missing-evidence instruction was not warranted where the evidence presented
showed that the alleged missing evidence was destroyed long before the opposing party
was on notice of any potential litigation. We cannot say that Norton purged the
relevant emails long before it was put on notice of the emails’ relevancy to the present
litigation because Norton did not claim that the emails were purged until more than a
year after Disselkamp first formally requested that Norton produce the emails. The
Beglin court also relied on § 2.65[3] of the Kentucky Evidence Law Handbook as
support for this same proposition, which states that “[a]n inference based on
59
court did not abuse its discretion in denying Disselkamp’s request for a
spoliation instruction based on the missing evidence.
As to the second category of evidence, the ultrasound observation report,
which Disselkamp claims that Norton accused Disselkamp of falsifying as the
stated reason for Disselkamp’s termination, we likewise find that this evidence,
even if destroyed long after the time that Norton was aware of its duty to
preserve, fails under the first element described in Beglin because Disselkamp
failed to show that the report was material to her case. Disselkamp argues that
this evidence was material to her case because if she had access to the
document she could have proven that the QMT report was in fact not falsified,
thereby bolstering her claim that Norton used this reason as a pretext to
terminate her employment. But as Norton points out, it was undisputed at trial
that the data contained in the QMT report Disselkamp allegedly falsified did
not change when Norton compiled new data for the patient-shield and
ultrasound reports. We fail to see how access to the actual report submitted by
Disselkamp would have made any difference to her claim that she did not
falsify data. We find that the trial court did not err in declining to grant a
missing-evidence instruction in favor of Disselkamp based on the missing
ultrasound observation report.128

destruction (or loss) may not be drawn if the destroyer acted inadvertently (mere
negligence) or if there is an adequate explanation for the destruction (or loss)[.]”.
Beglin, 375 S.W.3d at 791 (quoting Lawson, The Kentucky Evidence Law Handbook, §
2.65[3] (4th ed. 2003)). Again, while purging emails according to policies of ordinary
business practice is generally considered an “adequate” explanation, Norton’s
explanation strains credulity when considering the time delay between the time
Disselkamp first formally requested the emails and when Norton provided its
explanation for the emails’ unavailability.
128 It seems that the Court of Appeals did not specifically analyze whether the
trial court erred in failing to grant a missing-evidence instruction based solely on the
60
As to the third category of evidence, Disselkamp’s QMT binder, we again
find that this evidence, even if destroyed long after the time that Norton was
aware of its duty to preserve, fails under the first element described in Beglin
because Disselkamp failed to show that the report was material to her case.
Disselkamp claims that this evidence was material because Norton accused
Disselkamp of falsifying QMT data and used the allegation as the reason it
terminated her employment. Disselkamp also relies on testimony presented at
trial that both she and another Norton employee took steps to preserve the
QMT binder even after Bischoff directed that it be destroyed after Disselkamp
was terminated, and that Bischoff placed patient-shielding reports collected by
another Norton employee in Disselkamp’s QMT binder. Disselkamp claims that
the patient-shielding report that Disselkamp was unable to find when Bischoff
requested it could have been among the patient-shielding reports Bischoff
placed in Disselkamp’s binder. Not only is this theory based on nothing more
than speculation, like the analysis of the ultrasound observation report
evidence above, having access to the QMT binder would have done little to help
Disselkamp’s case. Again, Disselkamp’s theory at trial was that Bischoff used
the falsification allegation as a pretext for discrimination and retaliation, and it
was undisputed that the data contained in the QMT report Disselkamp

missing Ultrasound Observation report, but it did find that any error was harmless
because the jury heard evidence that Disselkamp presented accurate data in
compiling the QMT report but could simply not find some of the supporting documents
when requested. So Disselkamp’s theory that Bischoff misrepresented Disselkamp’s
actions to provide pretext for discrimination and retaliation was not prejudiced by
Norton’s failure to produce the requested evidence. Even if we did find that the
missing Ultrasound Report was material to Disselkamp’s case, we agree with the Court
of Appeals that any error in not granting a missing-evidence instruction based on this
evidence would have been harmless for the same reasons.
61
allegedly falsified did not change whenever Norton compiled new data for the
patient shield and ultrasound reports. We agree with the Court of Appeals that
the trial court did not abuse its discretion in declining to give Disselkamp a
missing-evidence instruction.
Finally, as to the fourth category of evidence, the handwritten piece of
paper that Bischoff allegedly showed to a Norton technologist in the days
following Disselkamp’s termination, we conclude that the Court of Appeals did
not err in upholding the trial court’s declining to give a missing-evidence
instruction based on this evidence. Disselkamp’s claim for materiality is based
on speculation and is not supported by any evidence. Disselkamp claims that
Bischoff showed a Norton technologist a handwritten piece of paper a short
time after Disselkamp’s termination, and the technologist identified the piece of
paper as a monthly patient-shielding report. Disselkamp claims that this
evidence was material and should have been produced by Norton because it
could have been the very patient-shielding report that Norton claimed
Disselkamp falsified. We do not find this argument for materiality compelling
because it seems as least equally possible that this was not Disselkamp’s
missing patient-shielding report. Even if we were to find that this evidence is
material, there is absolutely no evidence that this evidence was unavailable due
to anything other than negligence or normal purging procedures. While we do
not mean to suggest that the party requesting a missing-evidence instruction
has a high burden to overcome in showing that an opposing party, who had
exclusive custody and control over the requested evidence, committed some
affirmative act to conceal the evidence, we do find that in this circumstance,
where it is entirely speculative that this lone piece of paper could have been the
62
elusive patient-shielding report Disselkamp herself misplaced, the trial court
did not abuse its discretion in declining to give a missing-evidence instruction
for this evidence.
While the trial court could have granted Disselkamp’s request for a
missing evidence instruction based on one or more categories of missing
evidence outlined above, we cannot find that the trial court abused its
discretion in declining such request. We conclude that the Court of Appeals did
not err when it upheld the trial court’s rulings declining to give the missingevidence, or spoliation, instruction.

Outcome: For the reasons stated in this opinion, we affirm the opinion of the Court
of Appeals. Because our holding with respect to the challenge to the agediscrimination jury instruction affirms the Court of Appeals’ decision to vacate
the judgment and remand the case to the trial court for further proceedings, we
consider moot Disselkamp’s arguments relating to the propriety of the trial
court’s refusal to allow her to recall McGinnis as a witness to rebut Bischoff’s
testimony and provide additional evidence of discrimination. Consequently, we
do not address this argument further because the trial court may revisit the
issue under different circumstances in the event of a new trial.

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