U.S. Supreme Court Rules in Favor of White Firefighters

In a much-anticipated review of a Second Circuit Court of Appeals decision endorsed by Supreme Court nominee Sonia Sotomayor, the Supreme Court has reversed the appellate court's decision, ruling that white firefighters in New Haven, Connecticut, were unfairly denied promotions because of their race.  The case is Ricci v. DiStefano (Supreme Court, June 29, 2009).

The case arose out of New Haven's use of objective examinations to identify those firefighters best qualified for promotion. When the results of examination to fill vacant lieutenant and captain positions showed that white candidates had outperformed minority candidates, the City, fearing a lawsuit, threw out the results based on the statistical racial disparity. White and Hispanic firefighters who passed the exams but were denied a chance at promotions sued the City, alleging that discarding the test results discriminated against them based on their race in violation of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. The City responded that if they had certified the test results, they could have faced Title VII liability for adopting a  practice having a disparate impact on minority firefighters. The district court granted summary judgment for the defendants, and the Second Circuit Circuit of Appeals affirmed.

The Supreme Court reversed, holding that City’s action in discarding the tests violated Title VII. The court held that under Title VII, before an employer can engage in intentional discrimination for the asserted purpose of avoiding or remedying an unintentional, disparate impact, the employer must have a strong basis in evidence to believe it will be subject to disparate-impact liability if it fails to take the race-conscious, discriminatory action. The court acknowledged that the racial adverse impact from the test results was significant.  However, a threshold showing of a significant statistical disparity, and nothing more, is insufficient to show that the City would have been liable under Title VII had it certified the test results, because the City could be liable for disparate-impact discrimination only if the exams at issue were not job related and consistent with business necessity, or if there existed an equally valid, less discriminatory alternative that served the City’s needs but that the City refused to adopt. Based on the record, there was no substantial basis in evidence that the test was deficient in either respect. Fear of litigation alone, the Court held, cannot justify the City’s reliance on race to the detriment of individuals who passed the examinations and qualified for promotions.

The Ricci decision is certain to be a focus of upcoming Senate hearings on Sotomayor's nomination.  For employers, Ricci offers new guidance concerning the circumstances under which an employer can take race-conscious measures to avoid or remedy an unintentional, disparate impact on minority groups.  Under Ricci, the employer must have a "strong basis in evidence" to believe it will be subject to disparate-impact liability if it fails to take the race-conscious action.  This high burden is certain to be the basis for other challenges to employers' affirmative action policies throughout the United States.

Supreme Court Applies More Stringent "But For" Standard of Proof in Age Cases

The following is a client alert authored by EBG attorney Barry Guryan on the Supreme Court's recent decision in Gross v. FBL Financial Services, which I reported on last week.   

On June 18, 2009, the Supreme Court of the United States ruled fohe first time that in order to prevail in a disparate treatment case brought under the Age Discrimination in Employment Act (ADEA), the plaintiff must prove that "but for" the alleged discrimination, the employer would not have taken the "adverse employment action." Unlike a Title VII case, the burden of persuasion does not shift to the employer when the employee shows that age was one of the factors in a mixed-motive case.

In a 5-4 decision written by Justice Thomas, the majority held that it would not extend the "mixed motive" analysis applicable to Title VII cases to ADEA cases. In Title VII cases, which prohibit discrimination based on race, sex or national origin, where an employer is motivated by both a permissible factor and an impermissible factor, (i.e. a mixed motive), the Court, historically, has applied the well-known burden-shifting analysis. Thus, if the plaintiff meets his or her initial burden of persuasion by demonstrating that the employer considered an impermissible factor, such as race, in taking an adverse action against the plaintiff, the burden then switches to the employer to prove that it would have taken the same adverse action in any event. Gross v. FBL Financial Services, Inc., No. 08-441.

The case was brought by Petitioner Jack Gross (Gross), who claimed that his employer, FBL Financial Group, Inc. (FBL), demoted him because of his age. At the time of his demotion he was 54. His duties were transferred to a woman who, at the time, was in her early forties. At trial, Gross presented evidence that age played a role in FBL's decision. The jury returned a verdict for Gross at the trial court level, after the trial judge, over FBL's objection, instructed the jury that it must return a verdict for Gross if he proved, by a preponderance of the evidence, that age was a "motivating factor" when FBL demoted him. The trial court also instructed the jury that it must find for FBL if it found that FBL would have demoted Gross regardless of his age.

On appeal, the majority held that the burden-shifting analysis does not even apply in a mixed-motive case brought under the ADEA. In reaching this conclusion, the majority noted that after the Price Waterhouse decision of 1989, which discussed the proper allocation of the burdens of persuasion in mixed-motive cases brought under Title VII, Congress explicitly amended Title VII, in 1991, by authorizing discrimination claims in which an improper consideration was a "motivating factor" for an adverse employment decision, even though other factors also motivated the adverse action. Since Congress limited its amendment to Title VII claims, the majority refused to apply the language of the amendment to the ADEA.

The Court concluded by interpreting the plain language of the ADEA, which prohibits various types of discrimination in employment "because of" age. The majority interpreted the phrase "because of" to mean that age was "the reason" that the employer decided to act. The majority concluded: "Thus, to establish a disparate treatment claim under the plain language of the ADEA, therefore, a plaintiff must prove that age was the ‘but-for' cause of the employer's adverse action." The plaintiff, therefore, retains the burden of persuasion throughout the case.

There were strong dissents written by Justice Stevens with whom Justices Souter, Ginsburg and Breyer joined. They stated that the "but for" standard was rejected in Price Waterhouse and that it should be rejected in cases alleging violations of the ADEA as well, since both statutes use identical language in prohibiting discrimination (i.e., both statutes prohibit adverse employment actions "because of" the impermissible factor). Moreover, there is precedent that Title VII analysis has historically been applied to the ADEA.

One of the most interesting questions that the Gross case raises is whether the Court's holding will extend to other discrimination statutes. Most notably is the Americans With Disabilities Act (ADA), which prohibits discrimination "because of" a disability. Even though the ADA, like the ADEA and Title VII, prohibits discrimination "because of" the protected category, the Supreme Court, if faced with the right facts, could apply the "but for" test to ADA claims, since, like the ADEA, discussed in Gross, Congress did not amend the ADA when it amended Title VII in 1991.

We will continue to follow these developments.
 

U.S. Supreme Court Rules on Burden of Proof in Age Discrimination Cases

The United States Supreme Court ruled today that a plaintiff bringing a disparate treatment claim under the federal Age Discrimination in Employment Act ("ADEA") must prove, by a preponderance of the evidence, that age was the “but-for” cause of the challenged adverse employment action. The burden of persuasion does not shift to the employer to show that it would have taken the action regardless of age, even when a plaintiff has produced some evidence that age was one motivating factor in that decision.  The case is Gross v. FBL Financial Services, Inc. (June 18, 2009). 

I will offer some analysis of the Gross decision in a future post.  Stay tuned.

Supreme Court Upholds Mandatory Arbitration of Discrimination Claims Under Union Contracts

The following is a reprint of a client alert authored by EBG Attorneys Michael A. Levine, Evan J. Spelfogel, and Steven M. Swirsky.  It should be of interest to all private sector Florida employers with unionized employees.

On April 1, 2009, the United States Supreme Court issued its long-awaited decision in 14 Penn Plaza LLC, et al., v. Steven Pyett et al., No. 07-581, 556 U.S. ___ (2009), upholding mandatory arbitration of statutory employment discrimination disputes under union collective bargaining agreements. This decision is of potentially great significance to those employers who are currently defending employment discrimination claims brought by employees covered by such contracts. Under the Court’s 14 Penn Plaza decision, employers may now have a basis to move to dismiss such claims on the grounds that they must be grieved and arbitrated and may not be the basis of private discrimination litigation brought by the employees. The decision also offers a way to help ensure that future employment discrimination claims proceed through arbitration, rather than through burdensome and time-consuming litigation.

The Court’s Decision

The issue before the Court in this case was whether a provision in a collective bargaining agreement ("CBA") that clearly and unmistakably required employees covered by the CBA to arbitrate claims arising under the Age Discrimination in Employment Act of 1967 ("ADEA") was enforceable. The Second Circuit United States Court of Appeals held the Supreme Court’s 1974 decision in Alexander v. Gardner-Denver Co., 415 U.S. 36, forbade enforcement of such arbitration provisions, stating an employee could pursue such a claim in court notwithstanding the terms of the contract between the employee’s union and employer.

The CBA was between the Realty Advisory Board on Labor Relations, Inc. ("RAB"), a multi-employer bargaining association for employers in the New York City real estate industry, and Service Employees International Union, Local 32BJ ("Union"). The CBA required covered employees to submit all claims of employment discrimination to binding arbitration under specified dispute resolution procedures. After a change in business operations, a number of jobs were reassigned and the employees filed grievances challenging the reassignments. The grievances alleged that the job reassignments violated the CBA’s seniority provisions and the ADEA’s prohibition against age discrimination. During the arbitration proceedings, the Union withdrew the age discrimination claims but continued to pursue the employees’ claims that their contractual seniority and overtime rights had been violated, which claims were subsequently denied by the arbitrator. The employees then filed a complaint with the EEOC, alleging age discrimination under the ADEA. After the EEOC issued a right-to-sue letter, the employees filed suit in the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York, alleging the changes in their assignments violated the ADEA and applicable New York state and city laws prohibiting age discrimination. The employer responded by filing a motion to compel arbitration of the age discrimination claims, under the Federal Arbitration Act.

The District Court denied the motion because, it said, "Even a clear and unmistakable union negotiated waiver of a right to litigate certain federal and state statutory claims in a judicial forum is unenforceable." It cited in support the decision of the United States Supreme Court in Gardner-Denver. The Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit affirmed, holding that Gardner-Denver remained the law and that a CBA could not waive covered workers’ rights to a judicial forum for causes of action created by Congress.

In reaching its decision, the Second Circuit recognized that Gardner-Denver was "in tension" with the Supreme Court’s 1991 decision in Gilmer v. Interstate/Johnson Lane Corp., 500 U.S. 20 (1991), where the high court held that an individual employee who had agreed to waive rights to a federal forum could be compelled to arbitrate a federal age discrimination claim. The Second Circuit also noted the Supreme Court had previously declined to resolve this tension in its 1998 decision in Wright v. Universal Maritime Services Corp., 525 U.S. 70, 82 (1998), finding that the waiver at issue was not "clear and unmistakable."

In the Court’s 5 to 4 majority opinion in 14 Penn Plaza, Justice Thomas pointed out that the Union had negotiated on behalf of the employees and RAB had negotiated on behalf of 14 Penn Plaza, each had bargained in good faith and they had together agreed that all employment-related discrimination claims, including claims under the ADEA, would be resolved through arbitration. This, the majority found, was a freely negotiated term between the Union and RAB that readily qualified as a "condition of employment" that was subject to "mandatory bargaining" under the National Labor Relations Act ("NLRA"). Such contractual arbitration provisions, the Supreme Court said, must be honored unless Congress, in enacting the ADEA, had itself removed this particular class of grievances from the NLRA’s broad sweep in the field of labor-management relations. Since the ADEA did not preclude arbitration (and the Supreme Court had so held in Gilmer), the Court found the employees were bound to arbitrate their age discrimination claims. Arbitration, the Court noted, did not deprive the employees of any substantive statutory rights; rather, it merely was a substitute for a judicial forum.

In summarizing, the Supreme Court stated that its examination of the two federal statutes at issue in the case, the NLRA and the ADEA, yielded a straightforward answer to the question presented: the NLRA provides the Union and the RAB with the statutory authority to collectively bargain for arbitration of workplace discrimination claims, and Congress did not limit that authority in the ADEA. Accordingly, the Court held, there was no legal basis for it to strike an arbitration clause that was freely negotiated and which clearly and unmistakably required the parties to arbitrate the age discrimination claims at issue.

In reaching its decision, the Supreme Court did not overturn Gardner-Denver but went to great lengths to narrow the holdings and invalidate dicta in Gardner-Denver and its progeny. The employees in 14 Penn Plaza argued that allowing a union to waive their right to a judicial forum in discrimination cases would substitute the union’s interests for the employees’ right to protection against discrimination, and that unions did not always represent the interests of certain of the employees as is their legal duty. The Court expressly rejected these arguments. The majority found that Gardner-Denver, Barrantine v. Arkansas-Best Freight System, Inc., 450 U.S. 728 (1981) and McDonald v. West Branch, 446 U.S. 284 (1984) were all distinguishable from 14 Penn Plaza because, in each of those cases, the grievance and contractual arbitration provisions at issue did not expressly encompass statutory discrimination claims, as did the CBA between the RAB and the Union. In this regard, the Court noted that in 14 Penn Plaza, the Union-RAB CBA not only contained express anti-discrimination language referencing the ADEA specifically but, most significantly, it also identified as disputes that were required to be arbitrated under the CBA’s arbitration mechanism, all alleged violations of the enumerated anti-discrimination statutes.

Justice Thomas’ opinion, in which he was joined by Chief Justice Roberts and Justices Scalia, Kennedy and Alito, resolves, at least for the moment, the question of whether and in what circumstances contractual provisions calling for the mandatory arbitration of statutory discrimination claims that arise under collective bargaining agreements that expressly cover such claims and provide for arbitration of such claims, will be upheld. Further, the majority justices went to great lengths once again to emphasize their preference for arbitration and to reject judicial suspicion of arbitration’s desirability or arbitral tribunals’ competence to resolve statutory discrimination claims. Arbitral tribunals, the majority stated, are readily capable of handling the factual and legal complexities of statutory claims, and there is no reason to assume that arbitrators will not follow the law.

Addressing the concern that unions might not always rigorously pursue a bargaining unit employee’s discrimination claims, Justice Thomas highlighted the duty of fair representation imposed on labor unions by the NLRA, and the fact that an employee would have a claim against the union for breach of that duty if it were to be found to have discriminated or otherwise been guided by bad faith in addressing an employee’s grievance over discrimination. Thus, a union itself would be subject to liability under the NLRA if it illegally discriminated against older workers in either the negotiation or enforcement of a CBA or in deciding whether to pursue a grievance on behalf of an employee for discriminatory reasons. Further, notwithstanding 14 Penn Plaza, under the Supreme Court’s 2002 decision in EEOC v. Waffle House, Inc., 534 U.S. 279 (2002), employees covered by arbitration agreements retain the right to file age and other statutory discrimination claims with the EEOC, which may initiate court action and seek judicial intervention, although not financial remedies for the adversely affected employees. In sum, the Court noted, Congress has already provided remedies to employees if a union is less than vigorous in addressing its members’ discrimination claims.

Significant Impact for Employers

The 14 Penn Plaza v. Pyett decision has a number of significant and immediate practical implications for employers whose employees are covered by union contracts. These relate to any pending claims of discrimination and the defense of future claims, as well as future union contract negotiations.

First, employers with CBAs should examine their non-discrimination and arbitration provisions to determine if these provisions are within the scope of the 14 Penn Plaza decision and require arbitration of pending and future statutory discrimination claims without more expensive and time-consuming judicial proceedings. In those instances where contract language is either ambiguous or would not support arbitration under 14 Penn Plaza, employers should consider whether to seek to secure the inclusion of such terms in their contracts as they come up for renegotiation. Well-crafted revisions could potentially enable employers to limit dramatically the litigation of a significant number of discrimination cases and the potential for runaway jury verdicts.

Second, employers with existing union contracts prohibiting discrimination should review any pending discrimination litigation involving covered employees to determine whether there is a basis for motions to dismiss such claims under 14 Penn Plaza, and if so, to take timely and appropriate action based upon such analysis.

Of course, all of this may become moot if, as it did with Ledbetter, Congress ultimately moves to amend the ADEA and other federal anti-discrimination laws to expressly preclude the arbitration of such claims.