Before 1979, collective bargaining agreements between
respondents AT&T Technologies, Inc., and Local 1942,
International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers, AFL-CIO, had
determined a worker's seniority on the basis of years of plantwide
service, and plantwide seniority was transferable upon promotion to
a more skilled "tester" position. A new agreement executed in 1979
changed this by making seniority in tester jobs dependent upon the
amount of time spent as a tester. In 1982, petitioners -- women
employees who were promoted to tester positions between 1978 and
1980 -- received demotions that they would not have sustained had
the former seniority system remained in place. They filed charges
with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission in 1983, and,
after receiving right-to-sue letters, filed the present action in
the District Court, alleging that respondents had violated Title
VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 by adopting the new seniority
system with the purpose and effect of protecting incumbent testers
-- jobs traditionally dominated by men -- from female employees who
had greater plantwide seniority and who were becoming testers in
increasing numbers. The court granted summary judgment for
respondents on the ground that the charges had not been filed
within the required period "after the alleged unlawful employment
practice occurred," § 706(e) of Title VII, 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-5(e),
and the Court of Appeals affirmed.
Held: Under § 703(h) of Title VII, 42 U.S.C. §
2000e-2(h), the operation of a seniority system having a disparate
impact on men and women is not unlawful unless discriminatory
intent is proved.
E.g., Pullman-Standard v. Swint,
456 U. S. 273,
456 U. S. 289;
American Tobacco Co. v. Patterson, 456 U. S.
63,
456 U. S. 65,
456 U. S. 69;
Trans World Airlines, Inc. v. Hardison, 432 U. S.
63,
432 U. S. 82. It
is not disputed that the seniority system at issue is facially
nondiscriminatory (treats similarly situated employees alike) and
is nondiscriminatorily applied. Its alleged invalidity rests on the
claim that intentional discrimination produced the unfavorable
change in petitioners' contractual seniority rights when
respondents adopted the new system in 1979. The limitations period
under § 706(e) therefore commenced at that point.
Delaware
State College v. Ricks, 449 U. S. 250;
United Air Lines, Inc. v. Evans, 431 U.
S. 553. This rule strikes a balance
Page 490 U. S. 901
between the interest in having valid claims vindicated and the
interest in not adjudicating stale claims, which is heightened in
this context by the special reliance interests that are protected
by seniority systems. Pp.
490 U. S.
904-913.
827 F.2d 163, affirmed.
SCALIA, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which
REHNQUIST, C.J., and WHITE, STEVENS, and KENNEDY, JJ., joined.
STEVENS, J., filed a concurring opinion,
post, p.
490 U. S. 913.
MARSHALL, J., filed a dissenting opinion, in which BRENNAN and
BLACKMUN, JJ., joined,
post, p.
490 U. S. 913.
O'CONNOR, J., took no part in the consideration or decision of the
case.
JUSTICE SCALIA delivered the opinion of the Court.
Respondent AT&T Technologies, Inc. (AT&T) manufactures
electronics products at its Montgomery Works plant. The three
petitioners, all of whom are women, have worked as hourly wage
employees in that facility since the early 1970's, and have been
represented by respondent Local 1942, International Brotherhood of
Electrical Workers, AFL-CIO. Until 1979, all hourly wage earners
accrued competitive seniority exclusively on the basis of years
spent in the plant,
Page 490 U. S. 902
and a worker promoted to the more highly skilled and better paid
"tester" positions retained this plantwide seniority. A collective
bargaining agreement executed by respondents on July 23, 1979,
altered the manner of calculating tester seniority. [
Footnote 1] Thenceforth a tester's seniority
was to be determined not by length of plantwide service, but by
time actually spent as a tester (though it was possible to regain
full plantwide seniority after spending 5 years as a tester and
completing a prescribed training program). The present action
arises from that contractual modification.
Petitioners became testers between 1978 and 1980. During a 1982
economic downturn, their low seniority under the 1979 collective
bargaining agreement caused them to be selected for demotion; they
would not have been demoted had the former plantwide seniority
system remained in place. Claiming that the present seniority
system was the product of an intent to discriminate on the basis of
sex, petitioners filed complaints with the Equal Employment
Opportunity Commission (EEOC) in April, 1983. After the EEOC issued
right-to-sue letters, petitioners in September, 1983, filed the
present lawsuit in the District Court for the Northern District of
Illinois, and sought certification as class representatives for
women employees of AT&T's Montgomery Works plant who had lost
plantwide seniority or whom the new system had deterred from
seeking promotions to tester positions. Their complaint alleged
that, among hourly wage earners, the tester positions had
traditionally been held almost exclusively by men, and nontester
positions principally by women, but that, in the 1970's, an
increasing number of women took the steps necessary to qualify for
tester positions
Page 490 U. S. 903
and exercised their seniority rights to become testers. They
claimed that the 1979 alteration of the rules governing tester
seniority was the product of a
"conspir[acy] to change the seniority rules in order to protect
incumbent male testers and to discourage women from promoting into
the traditionally-male tester jobs,"
and that
"[t]he purpose and the effect of this manipulation of seniority
rules has been to protect male testers from the effects of the
female testers' greater plant seniority, and to discourage women
from entering the traditionally-male tester jobs."
App. 20, 21-22.
On August 27, 1986, before deciding whether to certify the
proposed class, the District Court granted respondents' motion for
summary judgment on the ground that petitioners had not filed their
complaints with the EEOC within the applicable limitations period.
[
Footnote 2] 44 FEP Cases 1817,
1821 (ND Ill.). A divided panel of the Court of Appeals for the
Seventh Circuit affirmed, concluding that petitioners' claims were
time-barred because
"the relevant discriminatory act that triggers the period of
limitations occurs at the time an employee becomes subject to a
facially-neutral but discriminatory seniority system that the
employee knows, or reasonably should know, is discriminatory."
827 F.2d 163, 167 (1987). We granted certiorari, 488 U.S. 887
(1988), to resolve a Circuit conflict on when the limitations
period begins to run in a lawsuit arising out of a seniority system
not alleged to be discriminatory on its face or as presently
applied.
Compare, e.g., case below,
with Cook v. Pan
American
Page 490 U. S. 904
World Airways, 771 F.2d 635, 646 (CA2 1985),
cert.
denied, 474 U.S. 1109 (1986).
Section 706(e) of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 78
Stat. 260,
as amended, provides that "[a] charge . . .
shall be filed [with the EEOC] within [the applicable period] after
the alleged unlawful employment practice occurred." 42 U.S.C. §
2000e-5(e). Assessing timeliness therefore "requires us to identify
precisely the
unlawful employment practice' of which
[petitioners] complai[n]." Delaware State College v.
Ricks, 449 U. S. 250,
449 U. S. 257
(1980). Under § 703(a) of Title VII, it is an "unlawful employment
practice" for an employer
"(1) . . . 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; or"
"(2) to limit, segregate, or classify his employees or
applicants for employment in any way which would deprive or tend to
deprive any individual of employment opportunities or otherwise
adversely affect his status as an employee, because of such
individual's race, color, religion, sex, or national origin."
42 U.S.C. § 2000e2(a).
Petitioners' allegation of a disparate impact on men and women
would ordinarily suffice to state a claim under § 703(a)(2), since
that provision reaches "practices that are fair in form, but
discriminatory in operation,"
Griggs v. Duke Power Co.,
401 U. S. 424,
401 U. S. 431
(1971);
see Connecticut v. Teal, 457 U.
S. 440,
457 U. S. 446
(1982). "[S]eniority systems," however, "are afforded special
treatment under Title VII,"
Trans World Airlines, Inc. v.
Hardison, 432 U. S. 63,
432 U. S. 81
(1977), by reason of § 703(h), which states:
"Notwithstanding any other provision of this subchapter, it
shall not be an unlawful employment practice for an employer to
apply different standards of compensation,
Page 490 U. S. 905
or different terms, conditions, or privileges of employment
pursuant to a bona fide seniority . . . system, . . . provided that
such differences are not the result of an intention to discriminate
because of race, color, religion, sex, or national origin. . .
."
42 U.S.C. § 2000e-2(h). We have construed this provision to mean
that,
"absent a discriminatory purpose, the operation of a seniority
system cannot be an unlawful employment practice even if the system
has some discriminatory consequences."
Hardison, supra, at 82;
see American Tobacco Co. v.
Patterson, 456 U. S. 63,
456 U. S. 65,
456 U. S. 69
(1982). Thus, for liability to be incurred
"there must be a finding of actual intent to discriminate on
[statutorily proscribed] grounds on the part of those who
negotiated or maintained the [seniority] system."
Pullman-Standard v. Swint, 456 U.
S. 273,
456 U. S. 289
(1982).
Petitioners do not allege that the seniority system treats
similarly situated employees differently or that it has been
operated in an intentionally discriminatory manner. Rather, they
claim that its differential impact on the sexes is unlawful because
the system "ha[d] its genesis in [sex] discrimination."
Teamsters v. United States, 431 U.
S. 324,
431 U. S. 356
(1977). Specifically, the complaint alleges that respondents
"conspired
to change the seniority rules, in order to
protect incumbent male testers," and that the resulting agreement
effected a "
manipulation of seniority rules" for that
"purpose."
See App. 20-22 (emphasis added). This is in
essence a claim of intentionally discriminatory
alteration
of their contractual rights. Seniority is a contractual right,
Aaron, Reflections on the Legal Nature and Enforceability of
Seniority Rights, 75 Harv.L.Rev. 1532, 1533 (1962), and a
competitive seniority
system establishes a "hierarchy [of
such rights] . . . according to which . . . various employment
benefits are distributed,"
Franks v. Bowman Transportation
Co., 424 U. S. 747,
424 U. S. 768
(1976). Under the collective bargaining agreements in effect prior
to 1979, each petitioner had earned the
Page 490 U. S. 906
right to receive a favorable position in the hierarchy of
seniority among testers (if and when she became a tester), and
respondents eliminated those rights for reasons alleged to be
discriminatory. Because this diminution in employment status
occurred in 1979 -- well outside the period of limitations for a
complaint filed with the EEOC in 1983 -- the Seventh Circuit was
correct to find petitioners' claims time-barred under § 706(e).
We recognize, of course, that it is possible to establish a
different theoretical construct: to regard the employer as having
been guilty of a continuing violation which "occurred," for
purposes of § 706(e), not only when the contractual right was
eliminated, but also when each of the concrete effects of that
elimination was felt. Or it would be possible to interpret § 703 in
such fashion that, when the proviso of § 703(h) is not met
("provided that such differences are not the result of an intention
to discriminate because of race, color, religion, sex, or national
origin") and that subsection's protection becomes unavailable,
nothing
prevents suits against the later effects of the
system
on disparate-impact grounds under § 703(a)(2). The
answer to these alternative approaches is that our cases have
rejected them.
The continuing violation theory is contradicted most clearly by
two decisions,
Delaware State College v. Ricks,
449 U. S. 250
(1980), and
United Air Lines, Inc. v. Evans, 431 U.
S. 553 (1977). In
Ricks, we treated an
allegedly discriminatory denial of tenure -- rather than the
resulting nondiscriminatory termination of employment one year
later -- as the act triggering the limitations period under §
706(e). Because
Ricks did not claim that
"the manner in which his employment was terminated differed
discriminatorily from the manner in which the College terminated
other professors who also had been denied tenure,"
we held that
"the only alleged discrimination occurred -- and the filing
limitations periods therefore commenced -- at the time the tenure
decision was made and communicated to
Ricks."
449 U.S. at
Page 490 U. S. 907
449 U. S. 258.
"That is so," we found, "even though one of the
effects of
the denial of tenure -- the eventual loss of a teaching position --
did not occur until later."
Ibid. (emphasis in original).
We concluded that
"'[t]he proper focus is upon the time of the
discriminatory
acts, not upon the time at which the
consequences of
the acts became most painful.' [
Footnote 3]"
Ibid. (emphasis in original);
accord, Chardon v.
Fernandez, 454 U. S. 6,
454 U. S. 8 (1981)
(per curiam).
In
Evans, United Air Lines had discriminatorily
dismissed the plaintiff after she had worked several years as a
flight attendant, and, when it rehired her some years later, gave
her no seniority credit for her earlier service. Evans conceded
Page 490 U. S. 908
that the discriminatory dismissal was time-barred, but claimed
that the seniority system impermissibly gave "present effect to a
past act of discrimination." 431 U.S. at
431 U. S. 558.
While agreeing with that assessment, we concluded under § 703(h)
that
"a challenge to a neutral system may not be predicated on the
mere fact that a past event which has no present legal significance
has affected the calculation of seniority credit, even if the past
event might at one time have justified a valid claim against the
employer."
431 U.S. at
431 U. S. 560.
Like
Evans, petitioners in the present case have asserted
a claim that is wholly dependent on discriminatory conduct
occurring well outside the period of limitations, and cannot
complain of a continuing violation.
The second alternative theory mentioned above would view §
703(h) as merely providing an affirmative defense to a cause of
action brought under § 703(a)(2), rather than as making intentional
discrimination an element of any Title VII action challenging a
seniority system. The availability of this affirmative defense
would not alter the fact that the claim asserted is one of
discriminatory impact under § 703(a)(2), causing the statute of
limitations to run from the time that impact is felt. As an
original matter, this is a plausible, and perhaps even the most
natural, reading of § 703(h). (We have construed § 703(e), 42
U.S.C. § 2000e-2(e) -- which deals with bona fide occupational
qualifications -- in this fashion.
See Dothard v.
Rawlinson, 433 U. S. 321,
433 U. S. 333
(1977).) But such an interpretation of § 703(h) is foreclosed by
our cases, which treat the proof of discriminatory intent as a
necessary element of Title VII actions challenging seniority
systems. At least as concerns seniority plans, we have regarded
subsection (h) not as a defense to the illegality described in
subsection (a)(2), but as a provision that itself "delineates which
employment practices are illegal and thereby prohibited, and which
are not."
Franks, 424 U.S. at
424 U. S. 758.
Thus, in
American Tobacco Co., we determined § 703(h) to
mean that
"the fact that a seniority system has a discriminatory impact is
not
Page 490 U. S. 909
alone sufficient to invalidate the system; actual intent to
discriminate
must be proved."
456 U.S. at
456 U. S. 65
(emphasis added). "To be cognizable," we held, "a claim that a
seniority system has discriminatory impact
must be
accompanied by proof of a discriminatory purpose."
Id. at
456 U. S. 69
(emphasis added);
accord, Pullman-Standard, 456 U.S. at
456 U. S. 277,
456 U. S. 289;
Hardison, 432 U.S. at
432 U. S. 82.
Indeed, in
California Brewers Assn. v. Bryant,
444 U. S. 598
(1980), after deciding that a challenged policy was part of a
seniority system, we noted that, on remand to the District Court,
the plaintiff would
"remain free to show that . . . the seniority system . . . is
not 'bona fide' or that the differences in employment conditions
that it has produced are 'the result of an intention to
discriminate because of race,'"
id. at
444 U. S.
610-611. Thus, petitioners' claim depends on proof of
intentionally discriminatory adoption of the system, which occurred
outside the limitations period.
That being the case,
Machinists v. NLRB, 362 U.
S. 411 (1960), establishes that the limitations period
will run from the date the system was adopted (at least where the
adoption occurred after the effective date of Title VII, and a
cause of action against it was available).
Machinists was
a decision under the National Labor Relations Act (NLRA), but we
have often observed that the NLRA was the model for Title VII's
remedial provisions, and have found cases interpreting the former
persuasive in construing the latter.
See Ford Motor Co. v.
EEOC, 458 U. S. 219,
458 U. S. 226,
n. 8 (1982);
Teamsters, 431 U.S. at
431 U. S. 366;
Franks, supra, at
424 U. S. 768-770;
Albemarle Paper Co. v.
Moody, 422 U. S. 405,
422 U. S. 419
(1975). Such reliance is particularly appropriate in the context
presented here, since the highly unusual feature of requiring an
administrative complaint before a civil action can be filed against
a private party is common to the two statutes. The NLRA's statute
of limitations -- which provides that
"no complaint shall issue based upon any unfair labor practice
occurring more than six months prior to the filing of the charge
with
Page 490 U. S. 910
the Board,"
29 U.S.C. § 160(b) -- is even substantively similar to § 706(e)
-- which states that
"[a] charge . . . shall be filed [with the EEOC] within one
hundred and eighty days after the alleged unlawful employment
practice occurred,"
42 U.S.C. § 2000e-5(e). In
Zipes v. Trans World Airlines,
Inc., 455 U. S. 385
(1982), we specifically relied on cases construing the NLRA's
timely filing requirement in determining whether § 706(e) -- the
very provision we construe here -- constituted a waivable statute
of limitations or, rather, a jurisdictional prerequisite to a Title
VII action.
"Because the time requirement for filing an unfair labor
practice charge under the National Labor Relations Act operates as
a statute of limitations subject to recognized equitable doctrines,
and not as a restriction of the jurisdiction of the National Labor
Relations Board,"
we said, "the time limitations under Title VII should be treated
likewise." 455 U.S. at
455 U. S. 395,
n. 11 (citations omitted).
Machinists considered and rejected an approach to the
limitations period identical to that advanced here. The suit
involved the timeliness of an unfair labor practice complaint
directed at a so-called "union security clause," which required all
employees to join the union within 45 days of the contract's
execution. Under the NLRB's precedents, agreeing to such a clause
when the union lacked majority status constituted an unfair labor
practice, as did continued enforcement of the clause. 362 U.S. at
362 U. S.
413-414. The agreement at issue in Machinists had been
adopted more than six months before the complaint issued
(outside the limitations period), but had been
enforced
well within the period of limitations. "Conceding that a complaint
predicated on the
execution of the agreement here
challenged was barred by limitations," the NLRB contended that
"its complaint was nonetheless timely since it was 'based upon'
the parties' continued
enforcement, within the period of
limitations, of the union security clause."
Id. at
362 U. S. 415
(emphasis in original). We found,
Page 490 U. S. 911
however, that
"the entire foundation of the unfair labor practice charged was
the Union's time-barred lack of majority status when the original
collective bargaining agreement was signed,"
and that, "[i]n the absence of that fact, enforcement of this
otherwise valid union security clause was wholly benign."
Id. at
362 U. S. 417.
"[W]here a complaint based upon that earlier event is time-barred,"
we reasoned, "to permit the event itself" "to cloak with illegality
that which was otherwise lawful" "in effect results in reviving a
legally defunct unfair labor practice."
Ibid. [
Footnote 4] This analysis is squarely
in point here. Because the claimed invalidity of the facially
nondiscriminatory and neutrally applied tester seniority system is
wholly dependent on the alleged illegality of signing the
underlying agreement, it is the date of that signing which governs
the limitations period.
In holding that, when a seniority system is nondiscriminatory in
form and application, it is the allegedly discriminatory
adoption which triggers the limitations period, we respect
not only § 706(e)'s general
"'value judgment concerning the point at which the interests in
favor of protecting valid claims are outweighed by the interests in
prohibiting the prosecution of stale [claims],'"
Ricks, 449 U.S. at
449 U. S. 260
(citation omitted), but also the considerations underlying the
"special treatment" accorded to seniority systems under § 703(h),
see
Page 490 U. S. 912
Hardison, 432 U.S. at
432 U. S. 81.
This "special treatment" strikes a balance between the interests of
those protected against discrimination by Title VII and those who
work -- perhaps for many years -- in reliance upon the validity of
a facially lawful seniority system. There is no doubt, of course,
that a facially discriminatory seniority system (one that treats
similarly situated employees differently) can be challenged at any
time, [
Footnote 5] and that
even a facially neutral system, if it is adopted with unlawful
discriminatory motive, can be challenged within the prescribed
period after adoption. But allowing a facially neutral system to be
challenged, and entitlements under it to be altered, many years
after its adoption would disrupt those valid reliance interests
that § 703(h) was meant to protect. In the context of the present
case, a female tester could defeat the settled (and worked-for)
expectations of her coworkers whenever she is demoted or not
promoted under the new system, be that in 1983, 1993, 2003, or
beyond. Indeed, a given plaintiff could in theory sue successively
for not being promoted, for being demoted, for being laid off, and
for not being awarded a sufficiently favorable pension, so long as
these acts -- even if nondiscriminatory in themselves -- could be
attributed to the 1979 change in seniority. Our past cases, to
Page 490 U. S. 913
which we adhere today, have declined to follow an approach that
has such disruptive implications.
* * * *
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the Court of Appeals
is
Affirmed.
JUSTICE O'CONNOR took no part in the consideration or decision
of this case.
[
Footnote 1]
The type of seniority at issue here is not "benefit seniority,"
which is used to "compute
noncompetitive benefits earned
under the contract of employment,"
Franks v. Bowman
Transportation Co., 424 U. S. 747,
424 U. S. 766
(1976) (emphasis added), but "competitive seniority," which is
"used to allocate entitlements to scarce benefits" such as
promotion or nondemotion,
id. at
424 U. S.
766-767.
[
Footnote 2]
Under 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-5(e), a charge must be filed with the
EEOC within 180 days of the alleged unfair employment practice
unless the complainant has first instituted proceedings with a
state or local agency, in which case the period is extended to a
maximum of 300 days. Neither the District Court nor the Court of
Appeals ruled on the applicable limitations period in the present
case, since both courts concluded that petitioners' claims were
time barred even if the applicable period was 300 days.
See 827 F.2d 163, 165, and n. 2 (CA7 1987). We may for the
same reason avoid ruling on that point here.
[
Footnote 3]
The dissent attempts to distinguish
Delaware State College
v. Ricks, 449 U. S. 250
(1980), on the ground that there
"[t]he allegedly discriminatory denial of tenure . . . served
notice to the plaintiff that his termination a year later would
come as a 'delayed,
but inevitable, consequence.'"
Post at
490 U. S. 914
(emphasis in original) (citation omitted). This builds on its
earlier criticism that
"[o]n the day AT&T's seniority system was adopted, there was
no reason to believe that a woman who exercised her plantwide
seniority to become a tester would
ever be demoted as a
result of the new system,"
so that, at that point, the prospect of petitioners' suffering
"concret[e] harm" was "speculative."
Post at
490 U. S. 914
(emphasis in original). Of course, the benefits of a seniority
system, like those of an insurance policy payable upon the
occurrence of a noninevitable event, are by their nature
speculative -- if only because they depend upon the employee's
continuing desire to work for the particular employer. But it makes
no more sense to say that no "concrete harm" occurs when an
employer provides a patently less desirable seniority guarantee
than what the law requires than it does to say that no concrete
harm occurs when an insurance company delivers an accident
insurance policy with a face value of $10,000 when what has been
paid for is a face value of $25,000. It is true that the injury to
the employee becomes substantially
more concrete when the
less desirable seniority system causes his demotion, just as the
injury to the policyholder becomes substantially more concrete when
the accident occurs and the payment is $15,000 less than it should
be. But that is irrelevant to whether there was
any
concrete injury at the outset. What the dissent means by "concrete
harm" is what
Ricks, supra, at 258, referred to as the
point at which the injury becomes "most painful" -- and that case
rejected it as the point of reference for liability.
Accord,
Chardon v. Fernandez, 454 U. S. 6,
454 U. S. 8 (1981)
(per curiam).
[
Footnote 4]
Like
Ricks and
United Air Lines, Inc. v.
Evans, 431 U. S. 553
(1977), our decision in
Machinists v. NLRB, 362 U.
S. 411 (1960), also rejected an attempt to cure
untimeliness by asserting a continuing violation:
"The applicability of these principles cannot be avoided here by
invoking the doctrine of continuing violation. It may be conceded
that the continued enforcement, as well as the execution, of this
collective bargaining agreement constitutes an unfair labor
practice, and that these are two logically separate violations,
independent in the sense that they can be described in discrete
terms. Nevertheless, the vice in the enforcement of this agreement
is manifestly not independent of the legality of its execution, as
would be the case, for example, with an agreement invalid on its
face or with one validly executed, but unlawfully
administered."
Id. at
362 U. S.
422-423.
[
Footnote 5]
The dissent is mistaken to equate the application of a facially
neutral but discriminatorily adopted system with the application of
a system that is facially discriminatory.
See post at
490 U.S. 916-917. With a
facially neutral system, the discriminatory act occurs only at the
time of adoption, for each application is nondiscriminatory
(seniority accrues for men and women on an identical basis). But a
facially discriminatory system (
e.g., one that assigns men
twice the seniority that women receive for the same amount of time
served) by definition discriminates each time it is applied. This
is a material difference for purposes of the analysis we employed
in
Evans and
Ricks -- which focuses on the timing
of the discriminatory acts for purposes of the statute of
limitations. It is also why the dissent's citation,
post
at
490 U. S. 915,
of
Bazemore v. Friday, 478 U. S. 385
(1986) -- in which "[e]ach week's paycheck . . . deliver[ed] less
to a black than to a similarly situated white,"
id. at
478 U. S. 395
-- is misplaced.
JUSTICE STEVENS, concurring.
Although I remain convinced that the Court misconstrued Title
VII in
American Tobacco Co. v. Patterson, 456 U. S.
63 (1982),
see id. at
456 U. S. 86-90
(dissenting opinion), and in
Delaware State College v.
Ricks, 449 U. S. 250
(1980),
see id. at
449 U. S.
265-267 (dissenting opinion), the Court has correctly
applied those decisions to the case at hand. And it is the Court's
construction of the statute -- rather than the views of an
individual Justice -- that becomes a part of the law.
See
Johnson v. Transportation Agency, Santa Clara County,
480 U. S. 616,
480 U. S. 644
(1987) (STEVENS, J., concurring);
Dougherty County Bd. of
Education v. White, 439 U. S. 32,
439 U. S. 47
(1978) (STEVENS, J., concurring). Accordingly, I join the Court's
opinion.
JUSTICE MARSHALL, with whom JUSTICE BRENNAN and JUSTICE BLACKMUN
join, dissenting.
The majority holds today that, when it is alleged that an
employer and a union have negotiated and adopted a new seniority
system with the intention of discriminating against women in
violation of Title VII, 42 U.S.C. § 2000e
et seq., the
limitations period set forth in § 706(e), § 2000e-5(e), begins to
run immediately upon the adoption of that system.
Ante at
909-911. This is so even if the employee who subsequently
challenges that system could not reasonably have expected to be
demoted or otherwise concretely harmed by the
Page 490 U. S. 914
new system at the time of its adoption, and, indeed, even if the
employee was not working in the affected division of the company at
the time of the system's adoption. This severe interpretation of §
706(e) will come as a surprise to Congress, whose goals in enacting
Title VII surely never included conferring absolute immunity on
discriminatorily adopted seniority systems that survive their first
300 days. [
Footnote 2/1] Because
the harsh reality of today's decision, requiring employees to sue
anticipatorily or forever hold their peace, is so glaringly at odds
with the purposes of Title VII, and because it is compelled neither
by the text of the statute nor our precedents interpreting it, I
respectfully dissent.
The facts of this case illustrate the austere practical
consequences of the majority's holding. On the day AT&T's
seniority system was adopted, there was no reason to believe that a
woman who exercised her plantwide seniority to become a tester
would
ever be demoted as a result of the new system.
Indeed, under the new system, after five years, a woman tester
would regain her plantwide seniority; only in the intervening five
years was she potentially endangered. Patricia Lorance, who was
already a tester when the new system was adopted, almost made it;
only after four years as a tester was she demoted under the terms
of the new system. That the new system would concretely harm
petitioners Janice King and Carol Bueschen was even more
speculative. They became testers several months
after the
seniority system was modified, and, like Lorance, they were not
adversely affected by the restructured seniority system until 1982.
(Indeed, absent the nationwide recession in the early 1980's, the
petitioners might never have been affected.) Today, however, the
majority concludes that these women are barred from bringing this
suit because they failed to anticipate, within 300 days of the new
system's adoption, that
Page 490 U. S. 915
these contingencies would one day place them among the new
system's casualties.
Nothing in the text of Title VII compels this result. On the
contrary, even the majority concedes that a plausible reading of
Title VII would regard the employer as having violated § 703(a)(1),
42 U.S.C. § 2000e-2(a)(1), the disparate treatment wing of the
statute, not only at the time of the system's adoption but also
when each concrete effect of that system is felt.
Ante at
906;
see also 827 F.2d 163, 166 (CA7 1987) (describing
this interpretation as "logically appealing"). Under this
continuing violation theory, each time a discriminatory seniority
system is applied, like each time a discriminatory salary structure
is applied, an independent "unlawful employment practice" under §
703(a)(1) takes place, triggering the limitations period anew.
See Bazemore v. Friday, 478 U. S. 385,
478 U. S.
395-396 (1986) ("Each week's paycheck that delivers less
to a black than to a similarly situated white is a wrong actionable
under Title VII");
cf. Havens Realty Corp. v. Coleman,
455 U. S. 363,
455 U. S. 380
(1982) ("Where the challenged violation is a continuing one, the
staleness concern disappears"). Viewing each application of a
discriminatory system as a new violation serves the equal
opportunity goals of Title VII by ensuring that victims of
discrimination are not prevented from having their day in
court.
Today's decision is the latest example of how this Court,
flouting the intent of Congress, has gradually diminished the
application of Title VII to seniority systems. First, the Court
held that § 703(h), 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-2(h), requires special
treatment for bona fide seniority systems under Title VII so
that,
"absent a discriminatory purpose, the operation of a seniority
system cannot be an unlawful employment practice even if the system
has some discriminatory consequences."
Trans World Airlines, Inc. v. Hardison, 432 U. S.
63,
432 U. S. 82
(1977);
See also Pullman-Standard v.
Swint, 456
Page 490 U. S. 916
U.S. 273,
456 U. S. 289
(1982). [
Footnote 2/2] Then the
Court held by a narrow margin that § 703(h) protects even those
seniority systems put into place
after the passage of
Title VII.
American Tobacco Co v. Patterson, 456 U. S.
63,
456 U. S. 71
(1982).
The majority contends that the result it reaches today is
dictated by these and other ill-advised precedents involving
seniority systems, but, in my view, today's decision compounds the
Court's prior decisional errors by giving them unnecessarily broad
scope. This extension is particularly inappropriate because it
forces the Court to reach such a bizarre and impractical result.
Never have we held or even intimated that, in the context of a
statute of limitations inquiry, one must evaluate challenges to a
seniority system born of discriminatory intent as of the moment of
its adoption. Indeed, had we so held, the majority's concession
that a worker may
at any time challenge a facially
discriminatory seniority plan under § 703(a)(1) would be flatly
contradicted by precedent.
Ante at
490 U. S. 912.
The discriminatory intent that goes into the creation of even a
facially flawed seniority plan is, after all, no different than the
discriminatory intent that informs the creation of a facially
neutral one. To impute ongoing intent in the former situation but
not in the latter is untenable.
Page 490 U. S. 917
The distinction the majority erects today serves only to reward
those employers ingenious enough to cloak their acts of
discrimination in a facially neutral guise, identical though the
effects of this system may be to those of a facially discriminatory
one.
Neither
United Air Lines Inc. v. Evans, 431 U.
S. 553 (1977), nor
Delaware State College v.
Ricks, 449 U. S. 250
(1980), on which the majority premises its rejection of the
continuing violation theory, compels today's result. In
Evans, unlike the instant case, the plaintiff never
alleged that the seniority system itself was set up in order to
discriminate. Indeed, we observed that Evans "does not attack the
bona fides of United's seniority system," and "makes no charge that
the system is intentionally designed to discriminate." 431 U.S. at
431 U. S. 560;
see also id. at
431 U. S. 557.
The sole discrimination alleged in
Evans was in the
plaintiff's prior discharge, the impact of which, she alleged, had
been enhanced upon her return to work by the failure of the
seniority system to accord her credit for time she would have
served had she not been discharged. In denying her challenge to
that system, we held that
"a challenge to a neutral system may not be predicated on the
mere fact that a past event [Evan's prior discharge] which has no
present legal significance has affected the calculation of
seniority credit."
Id. at
431 U. S. 560.
That holding is plainly inapposite here, where the very essence of
petitioners' claim is that AT&T's discriminatorily adopted
seniority system is not neutral. Thus, the majority's conclusion
that the "past event" cited in this case -- the discriminatory
adoption of the very seniority system under legal challenge -- has
"
no present legal significance,'" ibid., quoted
ante at 908, is ipse dixit.
Ricks is likewise inapposite. The allegedly
discriminatory denial of tenure in that case served notice to the
plaintiff that his termination a year later would come as a
"delayed,
but inevitable consequence," 449 U.S. at
449 U. S.
257-258 (emphasis added). It was thus appropriate, as in
so many areas involving
Page 490 U. S. 918
statutes of limitations doctrine, to set the limitations clock
running upon the plaintiff's discovery of harm to herself.
Petitioners Lorance, King, and Bueschen, however, were given no
such advance warning. For them, the majority holds, the limitations
clock began running, and ran out, long before it was apparent that
they would be demoted by AT&T's discriminatory system. Like
Evans, Ricks stands for the proposition that neutral
employment practices that passively perpetuate the consequences of
prior, time-barred discrimination but are not themselves bred of
discriminatory intent do not constitute actionable wrongs under
Title VII. Neither case suggests that the operation of a seniority
system set up
in order to discriminate should be treated
the same way as a legitimate seniority (or tenure) system, born of
nondiscriminatory motives, which in a particular case may have the
effect of passively reinforcing prior time-barred acts of
discrimination.
Nor, finally, is it correct to say that
Machinists v.
NLRB, 362 U. S. 411
(1960), "establishes that the limitations period will run from the
date the system was adopted,"
ante at 909, and therefore
controls this case. Initially, it bears mention that
Machinists arose under a different statute, the National
Labor Relations Act (NLRA), 29 U.S.C. §§ 151-169, and that
Machinists did not involve a seniority system, but instead a union
security clause which, it was alleged, had been defectively
adopted. Significant though the role of the NLRA was as a model for
Title VII's remedial provisions, these are hardly the indicia of a
controlling precedent. Moreover, sound reasons support the finding
of a time bar in
Machinists, but no time bar here. In
Machinists, as in
Ricks, the enforcement of the
challenged security clause was the inevitable consequence of its
execution. The clause affected all nonunion employees alike, and,
from its very inception, there was no mystery about which employees
would be affected and about the impact it would have on them. By
contrast, in this case, the very essence of petitioners' claim
is
Page 490 U. S. 919
that AT&T's new seniority system was designed to have a
long-range discriminatory impact, hurting women employees as a
group but, as of the time of its inception, only theoretically
hurting particular woman employees. Unlike
Machinists,
there is no indication that anyone employed at AT&T was, during
the limitations period chosen by the majority, so tangibly affected
by the new plan as to create any incentive to sue. [
Footnote 2/3]
The majority today continues the process of immunizing seniority
systems from the requirements of Title VII. In addition to the
other hurdles previously put in place by the Court, employees must
now anticipate, and initiate suit to prevent, future adverse
applications of a seniority system, no matter how speculative or
unlikely these applications may be. This Court's observation
that
"limitations periods should not commence to run so soon that it
becomes difficult for a layman to invoke the protection of the
civil rights statutes,"
Ricks, 449 U.S. at
449 U. S. 262,
n. 16, has an increasingly hollow ring. Because I do not believe
that Congress, in framing Title VII, even remotely contemplated
putting employees into the predicament which the majority today
makes inevitable, I dissent.
[
Footnote 2/1]
Or, in the case of a complaint not previously filed with a state
or local agency, systems that survive their first 180 days. 42
U.S.C. § 2000e(5)(e);
ante at 903, n. 2.
[
Footnote 2/2]
It remains astonishing to me that seniority systems are
sheltered from disparate impact claims,
see Teamsters v. United
States, 431 U. S. 324,
431 U. S.
377-394 (1977) (opinion of MARSHALL, J.). Even the
majority concedes that "[a]s an original matter, . . . a plausible,
and perhaps even the most natural, reading of § 703(h)" regards
that subsection as merely providing an affirmative defense to a
disparate impact action brought under § 703(a) (2).
Ante
at 908.
But even accepting our precedents, I do not believe, as the
majority does, that they prohibit the Court from finding that
petitioners have made a timely and colorable claim of disparate
impact under § 703(a)(2). 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-2(a)(2). In
Trans
World Airlines v. Hardison, 432 U. S. 63
(1977), we held only that bona fide seniority systems were exempted
by § 703(h) from disparate impact claims. Accepting as true
petitioners' allegation that AT&T and its union restructured
the seniority system for discriminatory reasons, this system should
not qualify as a bona fide one entitled to immunity from disparate
impact claims.
[
Footnote 2/3]
Tellingly, none of the Courts of Appeals presented with a claim
of a continuing violation has reached the result the majority today
reaches. Indeed, two of the Courts of Appeals have interpreted our
precedents to permit claims of continuing violation.
Cook v.
Pan American World Airways, Inc., 771 F.2d 635, 646 (CA2
1985);
cf. Johnson v. General Electric, 840 F.2d 132, 135
(CA1 1988). Even the Seventh Circuit, finding petitioners' claim
time-barred in the judgment under review, adopted a far narrower
interpretation than the majority, under which the limitations
period begins to run on the date when the employee first becomes
subject to the seniority system. 827 F.2d 163, 167 (1987).