Bazemore v. Friday Appendix to Petition for Writ of Certiorari
Public Court Documents
January 1, 1985
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Brief Collection, LDF Court Filings. Bazemore v. Friday Appendix to Petition for Writ of Certiorari, 1985. 6c26850c-c39a-ee11-be37-00224827e97b. LDF Archives, Thurgood Marshall Institute. https://ldfrecollection.org/archives/archives-search/archives-item/05e54220-5d92-4a2f-82a7-01102ecfd7cf/bazemore-v-friday-appendix-to-petition-for-writ-of-certiorari. Accessed October 29, 2025.
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No.
I f the
(&mxt nt thx Intfrii States
October Term, 1984
P. E. Bazemore, et al.,
V.
Petitioners,
W illiam 0 . F biday, et al.,
Respondents.
APPENDIX TO
PETITION FOR WRIT OF CERTIORARI
E dward D. R eibmah
108 North Eighth Street
Allentown, Pa. 18101
Cbessie H. Thigpeh, Jb.
Thigpen, Blue & Stephens
Suite 214
Hallmark Building
Raleigh, North Carolina 27601
J ulius L eV onne Chambers
R onald L. E llis
E bio Schfapper*
NAACP Legal Defense &
Educational Fund, Inc.
16th Floor
99 Hudson Street
New York, New York 10013
Counsel for Petitioners
* Counsel of Record
QUESTIONS PRESENTED
(1) Did the court of appeals err in
holding that it is both legal and
constitutional for a state to intentional-
ly pay black employees less than white
employees in the same job, so long as the
original decision establishing that
discriminatory wage differential was not
itself the subject of a timely charge or
action?
(2) Did the court of appeals err in
holding that statistics may not be treated
as probative evidence of discrimination
unless the statistical analysis considers
every conceivable non-racial variable?
(3) Did the court of appeals err in
holding that a state may satisfy its obli-
i
tion to desegregate a de jure system by
adopting a freedom of choice plan that
fails?
(4) Did the court of appeals err in
holding that an employer may immunize
itself from liability under Title VII by
delegating its employment decisions to
discriminatory a third party?
(5) Did the court of appeals err in
denying class certification in this case?
ii
PARTIES
The petitioners in this action are: P.
£. Basemore? James E. Wright? George E.
McDaniel? Plese Corbett? Calvin Hargrave?
Fred Bel f ield, Jr.? W. N. Payton, Jr.? L.
C. Cooper? Chester L . Bright? Johnnie
Jones, III? Lloyd L. Peace? James P.
West? E. C. Short? Haywood E. Harrell? D.
B. Waymer? Roosevelt Lawrence? Booker T.
McNeill? Richard M. Edwards? L. E.
Baldwin? Leroy James? Robert L. Lancas
ter? Henry Revel1, Jr»? Clifton M. Grimes?
Chester Stocks? Avant P. Coleman? Percy W.
Williams? W. C. Stroud? Elizabeth Ivey,
Administratrix of the Estate of D. 0.
iii
Ivey, deceased; Cassius S. Williams;
Samuel Taylor; Fletcher Barber; R. E.
Wilkins; J. H. Wallace; Eva L. Greene,
Administratrix of the Estate of Cleo Rich
Greene; Warren G. Barnes; Hoover M.
Royals; Thelma Graves Turner, Administra
trix of the Estate of J. A. Turner; S. T.
Lloyd; Hernando F. Palmer; Clifton Parker;
W. F. Wright; Clarence Stockton; Earl G.
Swann; I. W. Murfree; J. M. Spaulding;
Mary C. Martin; Alma C. Hobbs; Martha B.
Thomas; Ann Coston; Esther B. Roscoe;
Minnie B. Taylor; Jo Ann Fleming; Jeanette
B. Sherrad; Inez W. Foster; Carrier U.
Lindsey; Geraldine H. Ray; Mary I. Parham;
Dianne Stanley and Dorothy M. Mobley;
Louise P. Slade; Marilyn White; Pennie P.
IV
Battle i Joyce P. Hunter, on their own
behalf and on behalf of all others
similarly situated? Timothy Bazemore?
Eddie Watford? Willie Ryan? Alice Ballance
and Herbert White, on their own behalf
and on behalf of others similarly situ
ated? Mary B . Crawford and Essie Moore, on
their own behalf, and on behalf of all
others sifiiilarly situated? Deborah Jean
Hart, by her father and next friend, James
Hart? Herman Hinton, by his father and
next friend, James Hinton? Bernice Staton
and Marian Staton, by their father and
next friend James Staton, on their own
behalf and on behalf of all others
similarly situated.
The respondents are: William C.
Friday, President of Consolidated Univer
sity of North Carolina?
v
Ivey, deceased; Cassius S. Williams;
Samuel Taylor; Fletcher Barber; R. E.
Wilkins; J. H. Wallace; Eva L. Greene,
Administratrix of the Estate of Cleo Rich
Greene; Warren G. Barnes; Hoover M.
Royals; Thelma Graves Turner, Administra
trix of the Estate of J. A. Turner; S. T.
Lloyd; Hernando F. Palmer; Clifton Parker;
W. F. Wright; Clarence Stockton; Earl G.
Swann; I . W . Murfree; J . M. Spaulding;
Mary C. Martin; Alma C. Hobbs; Martha B.
Thomas; Ann Coston; Esther B. Roscoe;
Minnie B. Taylor; Jo Ann Fleming; Jeanette
B. Sherrad; Inez W. Foster; Carrier U.
Lindsey; Geraldine H. Ray; Mary I. Parham;
Dianne Stanley and Dorothy M. Mobley;
Louise P. Slade; Marilyn White; Pennie P.
- iv -
TABLE OP CONTENTS
Page
Questions Presented ............... i
Parties ........ iii
Table of Authorities .......... xiii
Opinions B e l o w ....... 2
Jurisdiction ................ 2
Statutes and Constitutional
Provisions Involved........... 3
Statement of the Case ............. 4
Reasons for Granting the Writ .... 13
I. Certiorari Should Be
Granted to Resolve a
Conflict Among The
Circuits As to Whether
The Application Of
Racially Motivated
Wage Scales Violates
Title VII or the Four
teenth Amendment...... . 13
vii
Page
II. Certiorari Should Be
Granted To Resolve A
Conflict Among The
Circuits As To The
Admissibility of Sta
tistical Evidence of
Intentional Racial
Discrimination ........ 32
III. The Decision Of The
Court Of Appeals Is In
Conflict With Green
v. School Board Of"New
Kent County, 3 9 1 U .s".w'ci^dr.............. 49
IV. The Decision Of The
Court Of Appeals
Raises An Important
Question As To The
Meaning Of General
Building Contractors
v. Pennsylvania, 458
D.S. 375 ( 1982) ........ 54
V. The Decision Of The
Court Of Appeals Is
In Conflict With Eisen
v. Carlisle & Jacque-
Tin, 417U.S. 196
TT974) ................. 60
Conclusion .................... 64
- viii
Page
APPENDIX
Judgment on Class-Wide Claims,
August 20, 1982.......... 1a
District Court, Memorandum of
Decision (Class-Wide Claims),
August 20, 1982 ................. 3a
Order of Dismissal as to Certain
Individual Claims, August
20, 1982......... 208a
Judgment, September 17, 1982....... 213a
District Court, Memorandum of
Decision (Individual Claims),
September 17, 1982 .............. 216a
Opinion of the Court of Appeals,
December 10, 1984 .............. 346a
Order of the Court of Appeals
Denying Rehearing and Rehear
ing En Banc, April 15, 1985 .... 482a
ix
^ D - ^
? L L * * * '
TABLE OF AUTHORITIES
Cases: Page
Arizona Governing Board of v.
Norris, 77 L.Ed.2d 1236
(1983)....................... 58 ,59
Bartlett v. Berlitz School of
Languages, 698 F.2d 1003
(9th Cir. 1983)............. . 23
Berry v. Board of Supervisors
of Louisiana State University,
715 F.2d 971 (5th Cir. 1983). 21
Bowman v. County School Board
of Charles City County, 382
F . 2d 326 (4th Cir. 1967)..... 50
Brown v. Board of Education, 347
U.S. 483 (1954)............... 49 ,50
Cajidas v. Banco de Ponce, 791
F . 2d 464 (1st Cir. 1984)..... 26
Calcote v. Texas Educational
Foundation, 578 F.2d 1251 (6th
Cir. 1978).................... 21
Chrisner v. Complete Auto Transit
645 F.2d 1251 (6th Cir. 1981).. 45
Clark v. Olinkraft, 556 F.2d 1219
( 5th Cir. 1977)................ 21
Corning Glass Works v. Brennan,
417 U.S. 18 (1974)............. 29
County of Washington v. Gunther,
452 U.S. 161 (1981).......... 26 ,27
x
Craik v. Minnesota State Univer
sity Board, 731 P.2d 465 (8th
Cir. 1984)..................... 46
Davis v. Califano, 613 F.2d 957
(D.C. Cir. 1980).............. 40 ,46
Delaware State College v. Ricks,
449 U.S. 250 (1980)............ 22
DiSalvo v . Chamber of Commerce ,
598 F.2d 593 (8th Cir. 1978)... 23
Dothard v. Rawlinson, 433 U.S. 321
(1977)................. 32 ,34 ,38 ,41
Dumas v. Town of Mount Vernon,
612 F.2d 974 (5th Cir. 1980).. 25 ,26
Eisen v. Carlisle & Jacquelin
417 U.S. 156 (1974)........... 61
Falcon v. General Telephone,
626 F.2d 369 (5th Cir. 1980).. 42
General Building Contractors v.
Pennsylvania, 458 U.S. 375
(1980)...... ........... . 55 ,60
General Telehone Co. v. EEOC,
446 U.S. 318 (1980)........ 12
Green v. School Board of New
Kent County, 391 U.S. 430
(1968)............. 11 ,49 ,51 ,52 ,53
Griggs v. Duke Power, 401 U.S.
424 (1971) ................. 48 ,55
Guardians Association v. Civil
Service Commission, 630
F.2d 79 (2d Cir. 1980)....... 40
xi
Guardians Association v. Civil
Service Commission, 633 F.2d
232 (2d Cir. 1980) ............. 42
Hall v. Ledex, 669 F.2d 3978
(6th Cir. 1982)................ 21
Hunter v. Underwood, 85 L.Ed.2d
222 (1985) ..................... 31
International Union of Electri
cal Workers v. Westinghouse,
631 F.2d 1094 (3d Cir.
1980).......................... 24
Laffey v. Northwest Airlines,
Inc. , 567 F.2d 429 (D.C.
Cir. 1976)..................... 19,27
Lamphere v. Brown University,
685 F.2d 743 (1st Cir.
1982) ......................... 20
Norman v. Missouri Pacific Rail
road, 414 F.2d 73 (8th Cir.
i969)........................... 18 ,28
Norris v. Arizona Governing
Board , 77 L.Ed.2d 1236
(1983)......................... 59
Payne v. Travenol Laboratories,
Inc., 673 F.2d 788 (5th Cir.
1962)........................... 43-44
Perez v. Laredo Junior College,
706 F.2d 731 (5th Cir.
1983) .......................... 21
- xii -
Roberts v. North American Rock
well Corp. , 650 F.2d 823
(8th Cir. 1981)................ 25
Satz v. ITT Financial Corp.,
619 F.2d 738 (8th Cir.
1980)...... 22
Segar v. Smith, 738 F.2d 1249
(D.C. Cir. 1984) ...... 39
Teamsters v. United States,
431 U.S. 324 (1977) ....... 29,32,33
38 ,42
Trout v. Lehman, 702 F.2d 1044
(D.C. Cir. 1983)........... 39 ,47
United Airlines v . Evans, 431
U.S. 533 (1977) ........... 17,19 ,20
22,25
Other Authorities;
Equal Pay Act..................... 30
Title VI Civil Rights Act of
1964 ................ 3 ,11
Title VII Civil Rights Act of
1964.......................... passim
28 U.S.C. § 1254(1) ............. 3
42 U.S.C. § 1981 ................ 54
42 U.S.C. § 2000d . . .............. 3
- xiii -
42 O.S.C. § 2000e-2( a)........... 3
42 U.S.C. § 2000e-5 (e )............ 4
Fourteenth Amendment, U.S. Consti
tution .......... 4,8,11
14 ,1 6 ,1 7 , 1 8 ,30
7 C.F.R. 15.3(b)(6) (i) .. ........ 51
Rule 23, Federal Rules of Civil
Procedure ............ 60,63
Ore. Rev. Stat. § 137.350........ 27
xiv
No
IN THE
UNITED STATES SUPREME COURT
October Term, 1984
P. E. BAZEMORE, et al. ,
Petitioners,
v.
WILLIAM C. FRIDAY , et al. ,
Respondents.
PETITION FOR WRIT OF CERTIORARI
TO THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
Petitioners P. E. Bazemore, et al. ,
respectfully pray that a Writ of Certio
rari issue to review the judgment and
opinion of the United States Court of
Appeals for the Fourth Circuit entered in
this proceeding on December 10, 1984
2
OPINIONS BELOW
The opinion of the court of appeals
is reported at 751 F.2d 662 and is set out
at pp. 346a-481a of the Appendix. The
order denying rehearing , which is not
reported, is set out at p. 482a. The
district court's memorandum of decision of
August 20, 1982, regarding class claims,
which is not reported, is set out at pp.
3a-207a of the Appendix. The district
court's memorandum of decision regarding
individual claims, dated September 17,
1982, is set out at pp. 216a-345a.
JURISDICTION
The judgment of the court of appeals
was entered on December 10, 1985. A
timely petition for rehearing and sugges
tion for rehearing en banc was denied by
an evenly divided court on April 15, 1985.
Jurisdiction of this Court is invoked
under 28 U.S.C. S 1254(1).
3
STATUTES AND CONSTITUTIONAL
PROVISION INVOLVED
Section 601 of Title VI of the 1964
Civil Rights Act, 42 U.S.C. § 2000d,
provides:
No person in the United States
shall, on the ground of race,
color, or national origin, be
excluded from participation in,
be denied the benefits of, or
be subjected to discrimination
under any program or activity
receiving Federal financial
assistance.
Section 703(a) of Title VII of the 1964
Civil Rights Act, 42 U.S.C. § 2QQ0e-2(a),
provides in pertinent part
It shall be an unlawful
employment practice for an
employer —
(1) to fail or refuse to hire
... any individual or
otherwise to discriminate
against any individual
with respect to his
compensation, terms,
conditions, or privileges
of employment, because of
such individual's race,
color, religion, sex, or
national origin....
4
Section 706(e) of Title VII of the 1964
Civil Rights Act, 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-5(e) ,
provides in pertinent parts
(e) A charge under this
section shall be filed
within one hundred and
eighty days after the
alleged unlawful employ
ment practice occurr
ed....
Section 1 of the Fourteenth Amendment
provides, in pertinent part, “No state
shall ... deny to any person within its
jurisdiction the equal protection of the
laws."
STATEMENT OF THE CASE
This is an action seeking to redress
intentional racial discrimination in the
operation of the North Carolina Agricul
tural Extension Service. ("NCAES") NCAES is
a federally funded state agency which
provides assistance to farmers throughout
5
North Carolina, and which organizes and
assists the system of 4-H clubs in that
state. Prior to 1965 NCAES was a de jure
segregated agency operating along strictly
racial lines. There were separate black
and white offices in each county, with
each servicing exclusively black and white
citizens respectively. The several
thousand state assisted 4-H clubs were
also organized along racial lines. It was
the avowed policy of the defendant to pay
black workers lower salaries than were
paid to whites in the same positions. The
black and white offices were merged in
1965, but the differences in the salaries
of the black and white employees per
forming the same jobs were never elimi
nated, and no steps were taken to merge
the separate all-white and all-black 4-H
clubs operating side by side in communi
ties throughout the state.
6
This action, commenced in 1971 in the
United States District Court for the
Eastern District of North Carolina, was
initially filed by private plaintiffs,
including NCAES employees, seeking to
redress a variety of forms of intentional
racial discrimination alleged to exist at
NCAES. In 1972 the United States of
America intervened as a plaintiff in the
action, advancing essentially the same
claims as the individual plaintiffs.
Following a lengthy trial the district
court rejected on the merits all the
claims of both the United States and the
private plaintiffs. On appeal a divided
panel affirmed the decision of the
district court; Judge Phillips, dissent
ing , insisted that the denial of relief
was an error as a matter of law.
A timely petition for rehearing was
filed, together with a suggestion for
rehearing en banc. Five members of the
7
fourth circuit voted to grant rehearing en
banc, Judges Winter, Murnaghan, Sprouse,
Ervin, and Phillips. The court of appeals
was evenly divided on the petition, and
rehearing en banc was therefore denied.
This case presents several somewhat
interrelated claims of intentional
discrimination. First, the plaintiffs
alleged that the different salary scales
established prior to 1965 for black and
white workers hired prior to 1965 still
remained in effect, and that blacks hired
before 1965 continued to be paid less than
white colleagues holding the same posi
tions. The district court and the court of
appeals concluded that pre-1965 pay
differentials for black and white workers
1
indeed remained in effect, but both
courts held that the continued use of such
differentials violated neither Title VII
T '
30a-31 a , 122a, 201a, 359a, 360a, 390a.
8
2
nor the Fourteenth Amendment. Judge
Phillips dissented, insisting that those
salary differentials were both illegal and
3
unconstitutional.
Second, the plaintiffs alleged that
NCAES engaged in intentional racial
discrimination in fixing the salaries of
workers hired after 1965, and in determin
ing raises for pre-1965 hires. The
plaintiffs introduced statistics demon
strating that the average salaries of
white workers were consistently higher
than the average salaries of black workers
in the same jobs and with the same amount
of seniority and education. Both courts
below concluded that proof that black and
white workers holding the same position
were paid different salaries was as a
matter of law devoid of evidentiary
significance, and could provide no support
2 —
o 122a, 380a-82a.
462a~66a.
9
for the claims of intentional racial
4
discrimination in compensation. Again
Judge Phillips dissented, arguing that
such statistical evidence clearly demon
strated intentional racial discrimination
5
in compensation.
Third, the plaintiffs alleged that the
defendants had engaged in intentional
racial discrimination in selecting the
County Chairmen, the salaried official
responsible for supervising the NCAES
office in each county. The record showed
that between 1965 and 1981 no black had
ever been appointed to a county chairman
ship for which a white male also applied?
of 123 appointments in this period, only 6
went to blacks, and only one black County
Chairman was appointed prior to 1976. The
court of appeals agreed that there was was
evidence of discrimination, but concluded
4
5 131a-136a , 389a, 392a.
448a-462a.
10
that any discrimination was on the part of
local officials to whom NCAES delegated
decisions between black and white appli
cants, and that NCAES was immune from
6liability for such discrimination.
Fourth, the plaintiffs asserted that
continued state assistance to several
thousand single race 4-H clubs violated
both Title VI and the Fourteenth Amend
ment. Following the enactment of Title VI,
the defendants had adopted a freedom of
choice plan that failed,- there were 1 ,474
all-white clubs in 1965, and 1,348
all-white clubs in 1980. Despite this
Court's decision in Green v. School Board
of New Kent County, 391 D.S. 430 (1968),
both courts below held that NCAES was
under no obligation to take any steps to
7
desegregate the clubs. Judge Phillips
dissented, contending that the majority
— —
7 412a-13a.
165a-184a , 424a, n. 128.
- 1 1 -
opinion erred in refusing to comply with
Green.
Fifth, the private plaintiffs
presented individual claims of
discrimination in compensation or in
promotion to the position of County
Chairman. Both courts below regarded the
resolution of these claims as controlled
by their views of the merits of the
9related class-wide claims.
Finally, the district court believed
class certification in a private Title VII
case was impermissible if, as here, the
United States had filed a pattern or
10
practice action. Judge Phillips insisted
8
g 469a-481a.
218a, n.70, 380a. Petitioners believe
that this position was essentially
correct. Reversal by this Court on the
pattern and practice issue would neces
sarily require reversal of disposition of
the individual claims. For that reason,
the disposition of the individual claims
is encompassed within questions 1, 2 and
10 5>
45a.
12
that this reasoning was inconsistent with
General Telephone Co. v. EEOC, 446 O.S.
fl '
318 (1980), and the majority declined to
12
defend it. The majority, however, held
that denial of certification was proper,
because it rejected on the merits the
legal claims which petitioner sought to
present on behalf of the claims. Judge
13
Phillips again dissented.
Petitioners sought rehearing en banc
on each of these issues, and five members
of the court of appeals voted to rehear
all of them en banc.
11
432a-33a.
12
372a-73a.
1 3
426a-33a.
13
REASONS FOR GRANTING THE WRIT
I. CERTIORARI SHOULD BE GRANTED
TO RESOLVE A CONFLICT AMONG THE
CIRCUITS AS TO WHETHER THE
APPLICATION OF RACIALLY
MOTIVATED WAGE SCALES VIOLATES
TITLE VII OR THE FOURTEENTH
AMENDMENT
The decision in this case marks a
clear and dangerous departure from what
until now has been the uniform view of
seven circuits regarding the legality of
racial discrimination in salaries. For
fifteen years every appellate court which
has considered this issue has concluded
that, where an employer intentionally
establishes different salaries for white
and black employees because of their
race, that practice violates Title VII and
the Fourteenth Amendment, where applic
able, as long as that pay differential
remains in effect. Every prior decision
has held discrimination in compensation to
- 14 -
be continuing violation, recurring anew
with each pay period.
The panel opinion in this case now
adopts the opposite rule. The facts with
regard to this issue are not in dispute.
Prior to 1965 , when many of the petition
ers were initially hired, North Carolina's
Agricultural Extension Service was
operated as a de jure segregated system.
Black employees worked in separate
offices, serviced only black citizens, and
were deliberately paid less than white
employees doing the identical work in the
white offices. In 1 965 the offices were
merged, but no changes were made in the
salaries; black and white employees
worked side by side performing the same
duties but continued to receive different
salaries. Both courts below found that
these racially based salary differentials
continued well past 1971, the year in
15
14
which this action was filed, and petiti
oners contend that those disparities
15
persist to this day. The fourth circuit,
however, held that these practices
violated neither Title VII nor the
Fourteenth Amendment. (80a-82a). The
majority opinion holds, not only that
North Carolina is free to pay blacks hired
prior to 1965 less than whites for the
rest of their lives, but that the state
may in the future give black employees
smaller raises than comparable whites so
long as those raises are based on the
racially motivated pay schedules esta
blished in the past. (390a).
14
30a-31 a , 122a, 201a, 359a, 360a.
1 5 The fourth circuit noted, "the Extension
Service admits that, while it had made
some adjustments to try to get rid of the
salary disparity resulting on account of
pre-Act discrimination, it has not made
all the adjustments necessary to get rid
of all of such disparity." 390a.
16
The majority below believed that this
extraordinary conclusion was required by
this Court's decision in United Airlines
v . Evans, 431 U.S. 533 ( 1977), a reading
of Evans that has been expressly rejected
by several other circuits. The fourth
circuit reasoned that the only discrimi
nation in compensation forbidden by Title
VII or the Fourteenth Amendment is an
employer's initial decision establishing
the level of compensation for an indi
vidual or position; the continued appli
cation of that racially based rate of pay,
which may recur over years or even
decades, was held to be entirely lawful.
Judge Phillips dissented, insisting that
Evans did not sanction the use of a
"pattern of salary discrimination that
carries forward differentials originating"
prior to the adoption of Title VII or
prior to the commencement of the relevant
limitations period. (462a-466a). But the
17
majority held that the Constitution
forbids only the creation, but not the
implementation, of separate and unequal
wage scales for blacks and white, and
concluded that the Congress that adopted
Title VII did not wish to affect the
salaries of blacks then being paid less
than whites for doing the same work, but
intended to leave an entire generation of
women and minorities in that inferior
position so long as they continued to hold
the same jobs that they held in 1965.
Seven circuits over 15 years have
uniformly rejected this interpretation of
Title VII and the Fourteenth Amendment. As
early as 1969, in a decision joined by
then circuit judge Blackmun, the eighth
circuit held in Norman v. Missouri Pacific
Railroad, 414 F.2d 73, that discrimination
in compensation was a "continuing"
violation of the law. 414 F.2d at 84-84.
The controversy in Norman concerned
18
pre-Act pay differentials that dated from
1918. 414 F .2d at 76, 81. In Laffey v.
Northwest Airlines, Inc., the District of
Columbia circuit also concluded that
discrimination in salaries was a contin
uing violation, and afforded relief to
correct pay differentials that had been
established in 1947 and that had first
been applied to the lead plaintiff in
1958. 567 F.2d 429, 437-38, 473 (D.C. Cir.
1976) .
This Court's decision in United
Airlines v. Evans made clear that claims
of continuing violations were to be
closely scrutinized, but until the instant
case all circuits remained in agreement
that Title VII forbade the application as
well as the creation of a racially based
compensation scheme. In Lamphere v. Brown
University the first circuit held that
Evans did not permit an employer to pay
19
a female employee a lesser wage based on a
discriminatory pre-Act salary schedule:
A discriminatory ... decision,
made prior to the effective
date of the Act, but implement
ed post-Act, is actionable ....
[A] decision to hire an
individual at a discriminatori-
ly low salary can , upon
payment of each subsequent pay
check, continue to violate the
employee's rights.
685 F.2d 743, 747 (1st. Cir. 1982). Twice
since this Court's decision in Evans, the
fifth circuit has held that salary
discrimination is a continuing violation,
and that, in addition to the original
decision establishing a salary scale,
"each discriminatory pay check violates
the act." Berry v. Board of Supervisors of
Louisiana State University, 715 F.2d 971, -----------------------
980 ( 5th Cir. 1983 ). In Hall v. Ledex,
Berry discussed Evans at 715 F . 2d at 971 .
A similar interpretation of Evans can be
found in Perez v. Laredo JuniorColleg e ,
706 F .2d 731 , 7 33-34 (5th Cir. 1983) . In
Calcote v. Texas Educational Foundation,
578 F. 2d 9 5 ( 5 th Cir.' 1978) a black and a
white with similar credentials were hired
20
669 F .2d 397 (6th Cir. 1982), the plain
tiff complained that when she was named to
a supervisory position she was paid only
two-thirds of the salary given to men in
that job. The defendant asserted the
action was untimely, since the plaintiff
had not filed her complaint with EEOC
until over a year after her salary was
1 7
fixed. The sixth circuit rejected that
contention, insisting "the discrimination
was continuing in nature. Hall suffered a
to do the same work but given different
job titles and salaries. The Fifth
circuit held that the defendant was in
violation of Title VII even though later
it placed both employees in the same
classification , since each kept "his prior
salary level." 578 F.2d at 96-97. In
Clark v. Olinkraft , 556 F.2d 1219 (5th
Cir. 1977) , decided shortly after Evans ,
the fifth circuit upheld the plaintFFfrs
contention that salary discrimination in
197 4 , although based on wages established
in 1964, was "a continuing and unlawful
employment practice in violation of Title VII." 556 F .2d at 1222.
The defendant relied in particular on
Delaware State College v. Ricks, 449 U.S.
250 ( 1980) . See 669 F.2d at 399.
21
denial of equal pay with each check she
received." 669 F.2d at 398.
Similarly, the eighth circuit has
reiterated since Evans its view that
salary discrimination is a continuing
violation. In Satz v. ITT Financial
Corp. , 619 F.2d 738 (8th Cir. 1980), the
plaintiff did not file a charge with EEOC
until more than 180 days after her
employer set her salary at a level lower
than that of men doing the same work. The
court of appeals rejected the employer's
contention that the charge was untimely,
holding that " [ t]h e practice of paying
discriminatorily unequal pay occurs not
only when an employer sets pay levels, but
as long as the discriminatory differential
18
continues." 619 F .2d at 743. In Bart-
See also Di Salvo v. Chamber of Commerce,
598 F. 2d 593 , 595 (8th Cir. 19 78) (salary
discrimination claim upheld despite the
fact that the disputed salary was fixed
more than 180 days prior to the filing of
a charg e . )
22
lett v. Berlitz School of Languages, 698
F.2d 1003 (9th Cir. 1983), the employer
made precisely the argument sustained by
the fourth circuit in this case, that only
the original action establishing an
19
employee's wages violates Title VII. The
ninth circuit rejected that contention,
holding that "paying lower wages to female
employees on each payday constitutes a
'continuing violation'". 698 F .2d at
1004. The third circuit dealt with claims
similar to those in the instant case in
International Union of Electrical Workers
v . West ing house, 631 F .2d 1 094 ( 3d Cir.
1980), in which the plaintiffs alleged
that the employer's wage scales, which
provided the lowest salaries for predomi
nantly female jobs, had been established
See 698 F. 2d at 1005 n. 1: "Serlitz’s
primary argument is that the limitations
period should run from the date the
plaintiffs became [employees] because it
was at this time that their allegedly
discriminatory wages were set."
23
as the result of an intentional policy to
discriminate against women* 631 F.2d at
1 097 . The third circuit held that those
allegations stated a cause of action under
Title VII, despite the fact that the
salary scales at issue had been created in
the 1930's, a generation prior to the
adoption of Title VII itself.
The division in the circuits on this
issue is typical of the widespread
disagreements among the lower courts as to
the meaning of United Airlines v. Evans.
The fifth circuit has aptly described
those subsequent interpretations of Evans
as "inconsistent and confusing". Dumas v.
Town of Mount Vernon , 612 F . 2d 974 , 977
(5th Cir. 1980). The courts of appeals
are also divided, for example, over
20
whether or when discrimination in hiring
20
Compare, Roberts v . North American
Rockwell Corp, 650 F. 2d 823 (ITth Cir. 1981)
(hiring"discrimination a continuing
violation not subject to the rule in Evans)
with Dumas v. Town of Mount Vernon ,
24
21
or discrimination in promotions constitute
continuing violations of the law.
The fourth circuit's decision in this
case, unless overturned, will largely
emasculate the statutory and constitu
tional prohibitions against racial
discrimination in compensation. Both
Title VII and the Fourteenth Amendment,
where applicable, forbid an employer to
intentionally assign a lower wage to a
particular position because most or all of
the employees in that position are black
or female. See County of Washington v.
Gunther, 452 U.S. 161 (1981). But such
discriminatory wage systems ordinarily
were established, as was the case in
612 F .2d 974 (5th Cir. 1980)(hiring discrim
ination is not a continuing violation and is
thus subject to the rule in Evans.)
20Compare Dumas, supra (promotion discrimina
tion is a continuing violation not subject to
the rule in Evans) with Cajidas v. Banco de
Ponce, 741 F.2d 464, 469-70 (1st Cir. 1984)
(Evans is applicable to some but not to all
discrimination in promotions).
25
22
Gunther, long prior to the adoption of
Title VII or the beginning of the limita
tions period relevant to the constitu-
23
tional claim. If, as the fourth circuit
has held , only the creation of such
discriminatory wage scales, but not their
application, is unlawful, then Gunther
and the principle it establishes would be
a dead letter.
The same is true of the statutory and
constitutional prohibitions against
intentional racial discrimination in the
fixing of salaries for particular em
ployees. Unlike discrimination in
promotions or assignments, the effects of
which are often obvious to all involved,
The existence of a separate position for
female prison guards dated from prior to
1 955 . See note at Ore. Rev. Stat.
§ 137.350
See, e.g. Norman v. MissouriPacific
Railroad , 414 P 2d 73 , §4-8 5 (8th CirT
1969) (system established in 1930's);
Laffey v. Northwest Airlines, Inc., 567
F . 2d 429 , 437-38 (D.C. Clr. 1978) (system
established in 1947) .
26
the existence of discrimination in
compensation is only rarely apparent,
since the victims of that practice usually
do not know the salaries of their white
colleagues, and ordinarily have no method
of comparing their wages with those of
others doing the same work. In a substan
tial proportion of all reported Title VII
wage compensation cases, the plaintiffs
were unable detect that statutory vio
lation until it was already too late to
file a charge with regard to the initial
action establishing their salaries.
The fourth circuit decision is
manifestly incorrect. It is simply
incon-ceivable that the Congress which
adopted the 1964 Civil Rights Act intended
to pro-vide no redress for blacks who were
then being paid less than whites for the
same work. It is equally unlikely that
Congress intended to prohibit judicial
scrutiny of the pre-Act origins of salary
27
scales when it clearly contemplated such
inquiries into the original purposes of
pre-Act senority systems. See Teamsters
v. United States, 431 U.S. 324 , 356
(1977). The fourth circuit's holding that
Title VII does not forbid the continued
use of racially based pre-Act salary
scales is squarely contrary to this
Court's resolution of the same question
under the Equal Pay Act. In Corning Glass
Works v . Brennan , 417 U.S. 1 88 ( 1 974),
this Court held unlawful pre-Act discri
minatory salary salary scales that
remained in effect after the adoption of
the Equal Pay Act:
The differential ... reflected
a job market in which Corning
could pay women less than men
for the same work. That the
company took advantage of such
a situation may be understand
able as a matter of economics,
but its differential neverthe
less became illegal once
Cong ress enacted into law the
pr inc iple of equal pay for
equal work.
28
417 U.S. at 205. (Emphasis added).
As a matter of constitutional law, the
decision of the fourth circuit — that the
Fourteenth Amendment forbids only the
adoption, but not the implementation, of a
racially motivated practice — flies in
the face of a century of Supreme Court
decisions. This Court has repeatedly held
unconstitutional the application of state
laws adopted for racial reasons, no matter
how old the laws themselves. The rule
whose implementation was condemned in
Hunter v. Underwood, 85 L.Ed. 2d 222
(1985), for example, had been established
by the Alabama Constitutional Convention
of 1901, even some eighty years before
Underwood filed suit. If the North
Carolina legislature had in 1964 fixed
petitioner Bazemore's salary by statute,
intentionally setting it at a lower level
because of his race, every court in the
land would have struck down that law as
29
unconstitutional. Surely the result is no
different where, as here, the racially
motivated state practice complained of was
taken pursuant to an administrative
decision rather than a state statute.
II. CERTIORARI SHOULD BE
GRANTED TO RESOLVE A CONFLICT
AMONG THE CIRCUITS AS TO THE
ADMISSIBILITY OF STATISTICAL
EVIDENCE OF INTENTIONAL RACIAL
DISCRIMINATION
The fourth circuit decision in this
case revives, and gives conclusive weight
to, the very objection to the use of
statistical evidence that this Court
expressly rejected in both Sothard v.
Rawl inson, 433 O.S. 321 (1977) and Team
sters v. United States , 4 31 O.S. 324
(1977). In Dothard the plaintiff relied
on population statistics to show that an
employer's hiring criteria had an adverse
impact on women. The defendant urged that
such data be deemed insufficient, arguing
30
that an analysis of actual applicants
might have yielded a different result. The
Court held that such speculation about the
possible effect of a more refined statis
tical analysis was not an adequate basis
for rejecting the plaintiffs' statistics:
The plaintiffs in a case such
as this are not required to
exhaust every possible source
of evidence..... if the
employer discerns fallacies or
deficiencies in the data
offered by the plaintiff, he is
free to adduce countervailing
evidence of his own. In this
case no such effort was made.
433 U.S. at 331.
Similarly, in Teamsters the employer
objected to the significance of evidence
that it employed a far smaller proportion
of minorities than were present in the
population. The employer insisted that
half a dozen factors not considered in the
plaintiff's analysis might have explained
away that disparity, and presented an
expert on statistics to criticize the
- 31 -
24
plaintiff's methodology. But the employer
adduced no statistics of its own indi
cating that the methodology it advocated
would have yielded any different result,
and this Court concluded that the plain
tiff itself was under no obligation to
"fine tun[e]" its statistics. 431 O.S. at
342 n. 23.
The fourth circuit in this case
sustained precisely the unsubstantiated
speculation objection disapproved in
Dothard and Teamsters. The plaintiffs
here adduced uncontroverted evidence that
the average salaries of whites and blacks
in the same job were consistently dif
ferent, with the white average invariably
25
higher. This disparity was true for all
See Brief for Petitioner T.I.M.E.-D.C. ,
Inc. , pp. 18-20 .
The disparities in the wages of Associate
Ag ricul tural Ag ent, the sing le larg est job
title , were typical:
Average Average
Salary Salary
of Whites of Blacks DifferenceYear
32
jobs, persisted for over a decade, and was
present even when the experience and
education of the employees was consi- 26
dered. An expert retained by the
defendant's conducted his own analysis of
the data, and also concluded that at least
until the mid-1970's there was a disparity
between the salaries of blacks and whites
in the same jobs. (387a). The fourth
circuit, however, concluded that these
disparities were "unacceptable as evidence
of discrimination." (391a). It was of no
significance, the court of appeals held,
that the employer consistently paid whites
more than similarly educated and experi-
1970 $ 9,876 $ 8,956 $ 9201971 10 ,241 9 ,558 6821973 10 ,292 9 ,797 4951974 10 ,244 9 ,840 4041976 12 ,711 1 1 ,885 8261978 14 ,754 13 ,518 1 ,2361980 15 ,253 14 ,485 7681981 17 ,035 15 ,849 1 ,186
App. 1562; GX 95, 98; PX 50, 100.
App. 399-418; GX 122-24.
33
enced blacks doing the same work; no
statistical analysis was entitled to any
weight unless it considered "all measur
able variables thought to have an effect
on salary." (391a). (Emphasis added) The
trial judge had speculated that there were
at least nine additional variables that
might have explained the disparities
(133a), and the majority on appeal
thought this speculative possibility fatal
to plaintiffs claims. (389a-91a).
Judge Phillips correctly dissented
from this aspect of the panel decision
below, insisting that statistical evidence
could not be rejected
for failure to include a number
of other independent variables
merely hypothesized by defen
dants. ....[Tj o apply such a
rule generally would effective
ly destroy the ability to
establish, any Title VII pattern
or practice claim by this means
of proof . . . [I]t will
always be possible for Title
VII defendants to hypothesize
yet another variable that might
theoretically reduce a race-
effect coefficient demonstrated
34
by any multiple repression
analysis that could be con
ceived. (448a-49a).
Judge Phillips stressed, as did this Court
in Dothard, that there was no "evidence
that the inclusion of other variables
would in fact reduce" the disparities in
the wages of blacks and whites in the same
job. (450a) (Emphasis in original).
Correctly recognizing the substantial
impact the majority opinion would have on
the use of statistics in any future in
Title VII case, five members of the fourth
circuit voted to rehear this case en banc.
35
27
The decision of the fourth circuit
sustaining the very speculation objection
disapproved in Dothard and Teamsters is
in square conflict with the decisions of
the five courts of appeals that have
dutifully followed the opinions of this
Court. The District of Columbia circuit,
citing Dothard and Teamsters, has
rejected the fourth circuit's rule that
statistical evidence should or can be
rejected merely because it does not
analyze every conceivably relevant factor:
The majority opinion rejected the indivi
dual claims of salary discrimination on a
similar theory. Petitioners offered
statistical comparisons of their wages
with the wages of white agents with the
same education hired at the same time into
the same jobs. The majority dismissed
that evidence on the ground that such
comparisons did not also consider possible
additional job qualifications or dif
ferences in job performance. (378a-
379a). Both the majority and Judge
Phillips agreed that the district court's
decision rejecting the individual claims
would have to be reversed if there was
proof of a pattern and practice of salary
discrimination. (380a, 467a).
36
[U]nquantified, speculative and
theoretical objections to the
proffered statistics are
properly given little weight by
the trial courts 'When a
plaintiff submits accurate
statistical data, and a
defendant alleges that relevant
variables are excluded,
defendants may not rely on
hypothesis to lessen the
probative value of plaintiff's
statistical proof. Rather,
defendant ... must either
rework plaintiff's statistics
incorporating the omitted
factors or present other
proof undermining plaintiff's
claims.'
Similarly, in a promotion discrimination
case, the District of Columbia circuit
insisted, contrary to the position of
29fourth circuit in the instant case, that
in a comparison of black and white
Trout v. Lehman , 702 F.2d 1044 , 1102 (D.C.
Cir. 1 983) , vacated on other grounds sub
.nom. Lehman v. Trout, ~79 L.Ed“.'2d 732
THT8 4) . See also Segar v. Smith, 738 F.2d
1 249 , 1 2 T T TD7C.CTf7~TW4 ) cert. den.
______U . S . __ ____ ( 1985). (Omission of a
variable does not affect validity of the
statistics absent proof that the omission
affected the outcome of the analysis.)
29 See, n. 27, supra.
37
employees "not every conceivable factor
relevant to a ... decision must be
included in the statistical case in order
10to make out a prima facie case."
The second circuit has also rejected
the fourth circuit rule. In Guardians
Association v. Civil Service Commission,
630 F . 2d 79 (2d Cir. 1980), the defendant
responded to evidence that its tests had
an adverse impact on minorities by
"hypothesiz [ ing ] some situations in which
[the] statistics might be misleading ...
but present [ed] no evidence to show that
this occurred." 630 F.2d at 88 n, 7. The
second circuit dismissed that objection
out of hands
To accept such unsupported
possibilities, and require the
plaintiffs to refute every
circumstance that could explain
the disparate impact shown by
the statistics, would create an
onerous burden of proof, far in
30
Davis v. Califano , 613 F.2d 957, 964 (D.C.
CTrT....19801 "
38
excess of the Title VII
standard as interpreted by the
Supreme Court. See Dothard v.
Kawlinson....
Id. Later in the same litigation the city
again chose to object to a statistical
analysis without offering a more complete
analysis of its own. The second circuit,
quoting Dothard at length, again rejected
that approach:
We see no justification for
holding plaintiffs to an
unrealistic standard regarding
the "completeness" of their
statistical showing.... [I] t
is not inappropriate to expect
a public employer to come
forward with evidence ... even
where the plaintiffs* showing
has been somewhat modest....
[D]efendants offered no
persuasive evidence of dif
ferences in preparation or
content that would cast doubt
on [their statistical] conclusion. ...
Guardians Association v. Civil Service
Commission, 633 F.2d 232, 240 n. 13 (2d
Cir. 1980)
39
The fifth circuit has adhered to the
same view of statistical evidence as the
District of Columbia and second circuits.
In Falcon v. General Telephone, 626 F.2d
369 (5th Cir. 1980), rev'd on other
grounds 457 U.S. 147 (1982), the fifth
circuit interpreted Teamsters
to mean that once the plaintiff
has offered some evidence that
is probative of disparity that
may be statutorily significant,
it is then the defendant's
burden to come up with more
specific statistical evidence
to rebut the plaintiff's
proof.
626 F.2d at 381. (Emphasis added.) This
requirement that statistics be rebutted
with evidence, not merely with speculative
objections, was applied in Payne v.
Travenol Laboratories, Inc., 673 F.2d 788
(5th Cir. 1982), which also relied on
Teamsters. The defendant in Payne
responded to evidence that white appli
cants were hired at a higher rate than
40
black applicants by hypothesizing that
black applicants might have failed in
disproportionate numbers to actually
attend scheduled interviews. The fifth
circuit agreed that this was an important
consideration, but rejected defendant's
argument because the defendant had
adduced no evidence of any such dispro
portion ;
[A] comparison of referred
applicants to actual hires
omits an important variable:
how many applicants Travenol
failed to interview because
they did not show up. Theo
retically, this point is well
taken, but its major premise is
speculative.... [T]he record
indicates there was no evidence
how many applicants did not
keep their interview dates.
673 F.2d at 822. The defendant in Payne
also speculated that the number of black
applicants might be inflated because
blacks might have filed more duplicate
applications than whites. Again the fifth
circuit rejected that sort of objection,
41
insisting that a defendant come forward
with evidence to support its contentions
that a more complete statistical analysis
31
would have yielded different results.
The rule expressly adopted by the
second, fifth and District of Columbia
circuits has been applied by at least two
other courts of appeals. In Chrisner v.
Complete Auto Transit, Inc., 645 F.2d 1251
(6th Cir. 1981), the plaintiffs, in
seeking to prove that a two year experi
ence requirement would have an adverse
impact on female applicants, adduced
evidence as to the proportion of men and
women employed in the industry involved.
The sixth circuit, citing one of the
31
"[Tjhere was no testimony that
black duplicates occurred at a
greater rate than white dupli
cates, and we are unwilling to
make such an assumption without
evidence in the record to support
it."
673 F.2d at 822.
42
32
District of Columbia cases noted above,
held this evidence "sufficiently proba
tive" of disparate impact to establish a
prima facie case, and stressed that the
defendant had failed to offer "coun
tervailing evidence" to rebut the infer
ence that arose from the plaintiff's
rather general data. 645 F.2d at 1259. In
Craik v. Minnesota State University Board ,
731 F .2d 465 (8th Cir. 1984), the defen
dant criticized a statistical analysis
offered by plaintiff because it had
included some administrators among the
teachers whose treatment was at issue. The
eighth circuit, again citing one of the
District of Columbia opinions mentioned 33
earlier, dismissed that objection, noting
that the defendant had declined to offer
Davis v. Califano is cited at 645 F.2d at
1259 n. 7~; see n. 30, supra.
33 Trout v. Lehman is cited at 731 F.2d at
477 n.' i 5.
43
any evidence as to the impact of correct-
34
ing this over inclusion.
The panel decision in the instant
case has the practical effect of forbid
ding the use of statistics in the fourth
circuit to prove either intentional
discrimination or disparate impact. As
Judge Phillips noted in his dissent, no
statistics could ever be sufficiently
complete to meet the majority's standard,
since it will always be possible for a
defendant or a court to conceive of some
other factor that might have been con
sidered in any statistical analysis.
Without the use of statistics, proof of
discriminatory intent will often be
impossible. Since statistics are the only
3 4 "The effect of the inclusion of such a
small proportion of administrators is not
obvious , and the defendants chose not to
rework the multiple reg ression analyses on
a corrected data base in order to demon
strate that the result would be more
favorable to them." 731 F.2d at 477 n.
15.
44
method by which a plaintiff can establish
that a test or job requirement had a
disparate impact, the fourth circuit's
decision effectively nullifies Griggs v.
Duke Power Co. , 401 U.S. 424 ( 1971 ). In
Maryland, Virginia, West Virginia and the
Carolinas today,the enforcement of Title
VII has been severely impeded. Certiorari
should be granted to correct that situa
tion and to resolve the inter-circuit
conflict created by the decision below.
III. THE DECISION OF THE COURT
OF APPEALS IS IN CONFLICT WITH
GREEN V. SCHOOL BOARD OF NEW
KENT COUNTY, 39l uTS^ 4J0
TTM81---- ------
The panel decision in this case marks
the resuscitation of a fourth circuit
remedial doctrine unanimously condemned by
this Court some 18 years ago.
In Green v. School Board of New Kent
County, 391 U.S. 430 ( 1968), the officials
of the de j ure segregated school system
45
adopted , in response to Brown v. Board of
Educat ion, a "freedom of choice" plan
which left students in the schools to
which they had originally been assigned on
the basis of race, but permitted them to
transfer elsewhere on their own initia
tive. Not a single white child chose to
attend a black school, and 85% of all
black children remained in black schools.
The plan "operated simply to burden
children and their parents with a respon
sibility which Brown II places squarely on
the School Board." 391 U.S. at 441-42.
The fourth circuit held, however, that
that manifestly unsuccessful freedom of
choice plan fully satisfied the require
ments of Brown , and that there was no
longer any actionable violation of the
constitution. See Bowman v. Qounty School
Board of Charles City County, 382 F .2d
326, 327-28 (4th Cir. 1967).
46
This Court unanimously reversed,
holding that freedom of choice, plans were
only acceptable if they in fact disestab
lished the de jure system that the state
had created:
The burden on a school board
today is to come forward with a
plan that promises realistical
ly to work, and promises
realistically to work now . . .
[ I ] f [freedom of choice!" fails
to undo segregation, other
means must be used to achieve
this end. The Board must be
required to formulate a new
plan ... which promise[s]
realistically to convert
promptly to a system without a
"white" school and a "Negro"
school, but just schools.
391 U.S. at 437. Following the decision
Green, the United States Department of
Agriculture adopted regulations governing
the desegregation of programs such as the
North Carolina 4-H clubs:
In administering a program
reg arding which the recipient
has previously discriminated
against persons on the ground
of race ... the recipient must
take affirmative action to
I
- 47 -
overcome the effects of prior
discrimination.
7 C.P.R. § 15.3(b)(6)(i) . The requirements
of this regulation parallel those of Green
itself.
The 4-H clubs in North Carolina were
for years operated on a strictly de jure
35
segregated basis. Separate all-black and
all-white clubs existed in the same
communities. In 1965 state officials
adopted a freedom of choice plan similar
to that in Green, and in North Carolina
that plan failed just as it had in Green
itself. In 1965, prior to the adoption of
the freedom of choice plan, there were
1,474 all-white 4-H clubs; after 15 years
of freedom of choice there were 1 ,348
36
all-white clubs. Between 1972 and 1980
35
The history of Extension Homemaker Clubs,
which are also supported by NCAES , is
essentially similar to that of the 4-H
Clubs.
App. 1806, 2237; Ex. 11, 115; 472a
48
the number of single race clubs in
racially mixed communities declined by
37
less than 2%. Far from converting the
North Carolina system from "black" clubs
and "white" clubs to just clubs, the
freedom of choice plan had what Judge
Phillips accurately described as only a
"minimal" effect. (471a).
The panel opinion in the case did not
suggest that the 1965 freedom of choice
plan had succeeded. Rather, the majority
adopted precisely the position taken by
the fourth circuit in Green itself — that
a state which establishes a d_e jure
segregated system need do no more to meet
its legal obligations than refrain from
new additional acts of discrimination.
38
( 368a,424a, n.128). As Judge
37
38 App. 1807 , 181 3; 472a.
The evidence also clearly indicated a
pattern of post-1965 intentional racial
discrimination in the recruiting of club
members ( 47 5a-77 ) . Again, the majority
evidently believed that the very existence
49
Phillips noted in his dissent, the
opinions below do not even purport to find
that the defendants satisfied the require
ments of Green or of the Department of
Agriculture regulations. (474a-75a. The
panel majority was apparently of the view
that the fourth circuit is somehow free to
refuse at will to enforce either Green or
the duly promulgated applicable federal
regulations. No reasons were given by the
majority for its refusal to do so, and no
legitimate basis for that action is
conce ivable.
IV. THE DECISION OF THE COURT
OF APPEALS RAISES AN IMPORTANT
QUESTION AS TO THE MEANING OF
GENERAL BUILDING CONTRACTORS
v. PENNSYLVANIA, 458 U.S. 375
TT9W) -
Three years ago in General Building
Contractors v. Pennsylvania, this Court
of a freedom of choice plan fully remedied
any injuries that might be occasioned by
such ongoing discrimination.
50
held that section 1981 p e r m i t s an employer
to delegate its hiring decisions to a
third party which engages in intentional
racial discrimination.' In rejecting
Pennsylvania's argument that section 1981
imposed a non-deleg able duty to hire on a
non-racial basis, the Court stressed that
liability under section 1 9 8 1 required
proof of discriminatory intent on the part
of the employer.
The fourth circuit decision in this
case extends the holding in General
Building Contractors to Title VII, despite
the fact that Title VII, unlike section
1981, contains no such intent require
ment. Griggs v. Duke Power C o , 401 U.S.
424 (1971).In selecting County Chairmen,
NCAES followed one of two procedures. In
most instances NCAES made the decision
itself, approving only a single applicant
and forwarding his or her name to elected
county officials for a pro forma ratifi-
51
cation. In some cases, however, NCAES
would recommend several candidates to the
county officials, and delegate to those
local authorities the final selection.
The record in this case made clear
that county officials invariably exercised
any such delegated authority in a racial
manner and the Court of Appeals did not
hold otherwise. In every instance in
which NCAES recommended both a black and a
white applicant, the county officials
chose to select the white applicant. As a
result, although blacks account for 25% of
the full agents, the position from which
County Chairmen are chosen, only 2.6% of
the County Chairmen selected between 1962
and 1981 were black. (406a).
The fourth circuit, however, con
cluded that Title VII permitted NCAES to
delegate its selection decisions to
discriminatory county officials. NCAES,
it held, was "not separately responsible
52
for the appointment" decisions made by
such county officials. (412a). So long
as NCAES "recommended" blacks as well as
whites, the agency was not legally
accountable if, as invariably occurred,
county officials chose only whites. In
the fourth circuit's view it was irrele
vant that this delegation practice had a
100% adverse impact on black applicants or
that NCAES officials must have been aware
of the county level discrimination. Nor
did the fourth circuit think it important
that in this case NCAES resorted to
delegation in a racially selected manner.
Although NCAES approved only a single
39
applicant in 83% of all cases, NCAES has
never recommended a black for a job which
a white male had applied without also
recommending at least one white male as
NCAES recommended only a single applicant
in 94 of 113 cases. See charts following 419a.
40
53
well. The court of appeals insisted that
NCAES was immune from liability so long as
it was "recommending" a substantial number
of blacks, regardless of whether the
counties were invariably and predictably
rejecting all of those black applicants.
The decision below is squarely
inconsistent with this Court's opinion in
Arizona Governing Committee v. Norris, 77
L . Ed. 2d 1236 (1983). In Norris , the
defendant insisted that it could not be
held liable for discrimination engaged in
by independent operators of a pension plan
funded by the defendant employer. This
Court rejected that contention, holding
that under Title VII "employers are
ultimately responsible for the 'compensa
tion, terms, conditions, [and] terms of
employment'." 77 L .Ed.2d at 1292. It
reasoned, "We do not think it makes
40 In the only two instances in which NCAES
recommended only a black for a position
for which a white had applied, the white
applicant was a woman. Id.
54
any . . . difference . . . that the
employer engaged third parties to provide
a benefit rather than directly providing
the benefit itself." icU at 1292 n. 21.
The decision here whether to promote to
County Chairman blacks as well as whites
is as central to the employment rela
tionship, and as non-deleg able, as was the
decision in Norris whether to provide to
female employees the same pensions that
were accorded to male workers.
The fourth circuit decision in this
case is an open invitation for employers
to evade the requirements of Title VII.
Under the principles of the decision
below, an employer is free to delegate to
a third party any employment decision that
might violate the law. Thus, while an
employer may not select its workers on the
basis of a non-job related discriminatory
test, it could legally delegate hiring
authority to an agency or individual that
55
utilized that very test. Such a rule
represents a radical and unwarranted
extension of General Building Conractors
and should be reconsidered by this Court.
V. THE DECISION OF THE COURT OF
APPEALS IS IN CONFLICT WITH EISEN
V . CARLISLE & JACQUELIN, 417 U.S.
156 (1974)
A decade ago in Eisen v. Carlisle &
Jacquelin, 417 U.S. 156 (1974), this Court
made clear that Rule 23 class actions were
not to be limited to claims which a court
had already decided were meritorious. "In
determining the propriety of a class
action, the question is not whether the
plaintiff or plaintiffs . . . will
prevail, but rather whether the require
ments of Rule 23 are met." 417 U.S. at
178. Eisen reiterated the purpose and
standards of Rule 23, which was framed to
provide an opportunity for the resolution
of class-wide claims, some of which would,
of course, inevitably prove unsuccessful.
56
The district court decision in this
case denied certification on grounds which
41the fourth circuit declined to sustain.
The panel majority, however, insisted that
this case could not be certified as a
class action because there were no
meritorious class claims. Petitioners
alleged a class-wide state practice of
perpetuating pre-Act intentional wage
discrimination; the fourth circuit denied
certification as to that issue because it
42believed the practice to be lawful.
Petitioners alleged that the state had a
non-deleg able duty to select County
Chairmen on a racially neutral basis; the
41
The district court held (1) that no class
action could be maintained in a private
Title VII action if the United States
filed a related pattern and practice
action (44a-46a) , and (2) that no class
action could ever be maintained on behalf
of employees working at different loca
tions. ( 43a-44a) . Judg e Phillips describ
ed the errors underlying this reasoning in
his dissent. (426a-433a)..
42 Compare, 369a with 380a~82a.
57
fourth circuit denied certification as to
that issue because it believed there was
43
no such duty. Petitioners alleged that
the continued operation of over a thousand
single-race 4-H clubs violated both the
Constitution and the applicable federal
regulations; certification was denied on
the ground that the fourth circuit
believed the operation of those clubs to
44
be entirely legal.
On the fourth circuit's view, class
certification cannot be granted unless the
party seeking certification proves, or at
least alleges, a "legally cognizable
wrong." (372a). In this case the court
below concluded that the facts in the
record did not constitute a "legally
cognizable wrong" because the fourth
circuit rejected on the merits peti
tioners’ contentions as to the legal
43
.. 369a-37Qa.
370a-371a.
58
principles applicable to those facts. But
Rule 23 is available for the litigation of
"common issues of law" as well as common
issues of fact. The decision below that
there were no "legally cognizable wrongs"
constitutes, not a finding that there were
no such common issues of law, but an
adverse resolution of those very common
issues. Bisen forbids denial of class
certification on such a basis.
CONCLUSION
For the above reasons a writ of cert
iorari should issue to review the judgmrnt
and opinion of the fourth circuit.
Respectfully submitted ,
edwareT d “REIBMAN
108 North Eighth Street
Allentown, Pa. 18101
CRESSIE H. THIGPEN, JR.
Thigpen, Blue & Stephens
Suite 214
Hallmark Building
Raleigh, North Carolina 27601
59
J. LEVONNE CHAMBERS
RONALD L. ELLIS
ERIC SCHNAPPER *
NAACP Legal Defense &
Educational Fund, inc.
16th Floor
99 Hudson Street
New York, New York 10013
COUNSEL FOR PETITIONERS
* Counsel of Record
Hamilton Graphics, Inc.— 200 Hudson Street, New York, N.Y.— (212) 966-4177