This suit was filed as a class action on behalf of present or
former female employees of petitioner Los Angeles Department of
Water and Power, alleging that the Department's requirement that
female employees make larger contributions to its pension fund than
male employees violated § 703(a)(1) of Title VII of the Civil
Rights Act of 1964, which,
inter alia, makes it unlawful
for an employer to discriminate against any individual because of
such individual's sex. The Department's pension plan was based on
mortality tables and its own experience showing that female
employees had greater longevity than male employees, and that the
cost of a pension for the average female retiree was greater than
for the average male retiree because more monthly payments had to
be made to the female. The District Court held that the
contribution differential violated § 703(a)(1), and ordered a
refund of all excess contributions antedating an amendment to the
Department's pension plan, made while this suit was pending, that
eliminated sexual distinctions in the plan's contributions and
benefits. The Court of Appeals affirmed.
Held:
1. The challenged differential in the Department's former
pension plan violated § 703(a)(1). Pp.
435 U. S.
707-718.
(a) The differential was discriminatory in its "treatment of a
person in a manner which, but for that person's sex, would be
different." The statute, which focuses on fairness to individuals,
rather than fairness to classes, precludes treating individuals as
simply components of a group such as the sexual class here. Even
though it is true that women as a class outlive men, that
generalization cannot justify disqualifying an individual to whom
it does not apply. There is no reason, moreover, to believe that
Congress intended a special definition of discrimination in the
context of employee group insurance, since in that context, it is
common and not considered unfair to treat different classes of
risks as though they were the same. Pp.
435 U. S.
707-711.
(b) Though the Department contends that the different
contributions exacted from men and women were based on the factor
of longevity, rather than sex, and thus constituted a statutory
exemption authorized for a "differential based on any other factor
other than sex," there is no
Page 435 U. S. 703
evidence that any factor other than the employee's sex accounted
for the differential here. Pp.
435 U. S.
711-713.
(c) This case is readily distinguishable from
General
Electric Co. v. Gilbert, 429 U. S. 125, for
here the pension plan discriminates on the basis of sex, whereas
the plan in
Gilbert discriminated on the basis of a
special physical disability. Pp.
435 U. S.
714-717.
2. It was inappropriate for the District Court to allow a
retroactive monetary recovery in this case. Pp.
435 U. S.
718-723.
(a) Though a presumption favors retroactive relief where a Title
VII violation has been committed,
Albemarle Paper Co. v.
Moody, 422 U. S. 405, the
appropriateness of such relief in an individual case must be
assessed. Here the District Court gave insufficient attention to
the equitable nature of Title VII remedies. This was the first
litigation challenging pension fund contribution differences based
on valid actuarial tables, which the fund administrators may well
have assumed justified the differential, and the resulting
prohibition against sex-differentiated employee contributions
constituted a marked departure from past practice. Pp.
435 U. S.
719-721.
(b) In view of the grave consequences that drastic changes in
legal rules can have on pension funds, such rules should not be
given retroactive effect unless plainly commanded by legislative
action. Pp.
435 U. S.
721-723.
553 F.2d 581, vacated and remanded.
STEVENS, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which
STEWART, WHITE, and POWELL, JJ., joined, in all but Part IV of
which MARSHALL, J., joined, and in Part IV of which BURGER, C.J.,
and BLACKMUN and REHNQUIST, JJ., joined. BLACKMUN, J., filed an
opinion concurring in part and concurring in the judgment,
post, p.
435 U. S. 723.
BURGER, C.J., filed an opinion concurring in part and dissenting in
part, in which REHNQUIST, J., joined,
post, p.
435 U. S. 725.
MARSHALL, J., filed an opinion concurring in part and dissenting in
part.,
post, p.
435 U. S. 728.
BRENNAN, J., took no part in the consideration or decision of the
case.
Page 435 U. S. 704
MR. JUSTICE STEVENS delivered the opinion of the Court.
As a class, women live longer than men. For this reason, the Los
Angeles Department of Water and Power required its female employee
to make larger contributions to its pension fund than its male
employee. We granted certiorari to decide whether this practice
discriminated against individual female employees because of their
sex in violation of § 703(a)(1) of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, as
amended. [
Footnote 1]
For many years, the Department [
Footnote 2] has administered retirement,
Page 435 U. S. 705
disability, and death benefit programs for its employees. Upon
retirement, each employee is eligible for a monthly retirement
benefit computed as a fraction of his or her salary multiplied by
years of service. [
Footnote 3]
The monthly benefits for men and women of the same age, seniority,
and salary are equal. Benefits are funded entirely by contributions
from the employees and the Department, augmented by the income
earned on those contributions. No private insurance company is
involved in the administration or payment of benefits.
Based on a study of mortality tables and its own experience, the
Department determined that its 2,00 female employees, on the
average, will live a few years longer than its 10,000 male
employees. The cost of a pension for the average retired female is
greater than for the average male retiree because more monthly
payments must be made to the average woman. The Department
therefore required female employees to make monthly contributions
to the fund which were 14.84% higher than the contributions
required of comparable male employees. [
Footnote 4] Because employee contributions were withheld
from paychecks, a female employee took home less pay than a male
employee earning the same salary. [
Footnote 5]
Since the effective date of the Equal Employment Opportunity
Page 435 U. S. 706
Act of 1972, [
Footnote 6]
the Department has been an employer within the meaning of Title VII
of the Civil Rights Act of 1964.
See 42 U.S.C. § 2000e
(1970 ed., Supp. V). In 1973, respondents [
Footnote 7] brought this suit in the United States
District Court for the Central District of California on behalf of
a class of women employed or formerly employed by the Department.
They prayed for an injunction and restitution of excess
contributions.
While this action was pending, the California Legislature
enacted a law prohibiting certain municipal agencies from requiring
female employees to make higher pension fund contributions than
males. [
Footnote 8] The
Department therefore amended its plan, effective January 1, 1975.
The current plan draws no distinction, either in contributions or
in benefits, on the basis of sex. On a motion for summary judgment,
the District Court held that the contribution differential violated
§ 703(a)(1), and ordered a refund of all excess contributions made
before the amendment of the plan. [
Footnote 9] The United States Court of Appeals for the
Ninth Circuit affirmed. [
Footnote 10]
The Department and various
amici curiae contend that:
(1) the differential in take-home pay between men and women was not
discrimination within the meaning of § 703(a)(1), because it was
offset by a difference in the value of the pension benefits
provided to the two classes of employees; (2) the differential was
based on a factor "other than sex"
Page 435 U. S. 707
within the meaning of the Equal Pay Act of 1963, and was
therefore protected by the so-called Bennett Amendment; [
Footnote 11] (3) the rationale of
General Electric Co. v. Gilbert, 429 U.
S. 125, requires reversal; and (4) in any event, the
retroactive monetary recovery is unjustified. We consider these
contentions in turn.
I
There are both real and fictional differences between women and
men. It is true that the average man is taller than the average
woman; it is not true that the average woman driver is more
accident-prone than the average man. [
Footnote 12] Before the Civil Rights Act of 1964 was
enacted, an employer could fashion his personnel policies on the
basis of assumptions about the differences between men and women,
whether or not the assumptions were valid.
It is now well recognized that employment decisions cannot be
predicated on mere "stereotyped" impressions about the
characteristics of males or females. [
Footnote 13] Myths and purely habitual assumptions about
a woman's inability to perform certain kinds of work are no longer
acceptable reasons for refusing to employ qualified individuals, or
for paying them less. This case does not, however, involve a
fictional difference between men and women. It involves a
generalization that the parties accept as unquestionably true:
women, as a class, do live longer than men. The Department treated
its women employees differently from its men employees because the
two
Page 435 U. S. 708
classes are in fact different. It is equally true, however, that
all individuals in the respective classes do not share the
characteristic that differentiates the average class
representatives. Many women do not live as long as the average man,
and many men outlive the average woman. The question, therefore, is
whether the existence or nonexistence of "discrimination" is to be
determined by comparison of class characteristics or individual
characteristics. A "stereotyped" answer to that question may not be
the same as the answer that the language and purpose of the statute
command.
The statute makes it unlawful
"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."
42 U.S.C. § 2000e-2(a)(1) (emphasis added). The statute's focus
on the individual is unambiguous. It precludes treatment of
individuals as simply components of a racial, religious, sexual, or
national class. If height is required for a job, a tall woman may
not be refused employment merely because, on the average, women are
too short. Even a true generalization about the class is an
insufficient reason for disqualifying an individual to whom the
generalization does not apply.
That proposition is of critical importance in this case, because
there is no assurance that any individual woman working for the
Department will actually fit the generalization on which the
Department's policy is based. Many of those individuals will not
live as long as the average man. While they were working, those
individuals received smaller paychecks because of their sex, but
they will receive no compensating advantage when they retire.
It is true, of course, that, while contributions are being
collected from the employees, the Department cannot know which
individuals will predecease the average woman. Therefore, unless
women as a class are assessed an extra charge, they will be
subsidized, to some extent, by the class of male
Page 435 U. S. 709
employees. [
Footnote 14]
It follows, according to the Department, that fairness to its class
of male employees justifies the extra assessment against all of its
female employees.
But the question of fairness to various classes affected by the
statute is essentially a matter of policy for the legislature to
address. Congress has decided that classifications based on sex,
like those based on national origin or race, are unlawful.
Actuarial studies could unquestionably identify differences in life
expectancy based on race or national origin, as well as sex.
[
Footnote 15] But a statute
that was designed to make race irrelevant in the employment market,
see Griggs v. Duke Power Co., 401 U.
S. 424,
401 U. S. 436,
could not reasonably be construed to permit a take-home pay
differential based on a racial classification. [
Footnote 16]
Even if the statutory language were less clear, the basic policy
of the statute requires that we focus on fairness to individuals,
rather than fairness to classes. Practices that classify employees
in terms of religion, race, or sex tend to preserve traditional
assumptions about groups, rather than thoughtful scrutiny of
individuals. The generalization involved in this case illustrates
the point. Separate mortality tables are easily interpreted as
reflecting innate differences between the sexes, but a significant
part of the longevity
Page 435 U. S. 710
differential may be explained by the social fact that men are
heavier smokers than women. [
Footnote 17]
Finally, there is no reason to believe that Congress intended a
special definition of discrimination in the context of employee
group insurance coverage. It is true that insurance is concerned
with events that are individually unpredictable, but that is
characteristic of many employment decisions. Individual risks, like
individual performance, may not be predicted by resort to
classifications proscribed by Title VII. Indeed, the fact that this
case involves a group insurance program highlights a basic flaw in
the Department's fairness argument. For when insurance risks are
grouped, the better risks always subsidize the poorer risks.
Healthy persons subsidize medical benefits for the less healthy;
unmarried workers subsidize the pensions of married workers;
[
Footnote 18] persons who
eat, drink, or smoke to excess may subsidize pension benefits for
persons whose habits are more temperate. Treating different classes
of risks as though they were the same for purposes of group
insurance is a common practice that has never been considered
inherently unfair. To insure the flabby and the fit as though they
were equivalent risks may be more common than treating men and
women alike, [
Footnote 19]
but nothing more than habit makes one "subsidy" seem less fair than
the other. [
Footnote 20]
Page 435 U. S. 711
An employment practice that requires 2,000 individuals to
contribute more money into a fund than 10,000 other employees
simply because each of them is a woman, rather than a man, is in
direct conflict with both the language and the policy of the Act.
Such a practice does not pass the simple test of whether the
evidence shows "treatment of a person in a manner which, but for
that person's sex, would be different." [
Footnote 21] It constitutes discrimination, and is
unlawful unless exempted by the Equal Pay Act of 1963 or some other
affirmative justification.
II
Shortly before the enactment of Title VII in 1964, Senator
Bennett proposed an amendment providing that a compensation
differential based on sex would not be unlawful if it was
authorized by the Equal Pay Act, which had been passed a year
earlier. [
Footnote 22] The
Equal Pay Act requires employers to pay
Page 435 U. S. 712
members of both sexes the same wages for equivalent work, except
when the differential is pursuant to one of four specified
exceptions. [
Footnote 23]
The Department contends that the fourth exception applies here.
That exception authorizes a "differential based on any other factor
other than sex."
The Department argues that the different contributions exacted
from men and women were based on the factor of longevity, rather
than sex. It is plain, however, that any individual's life
expectancy is based on a number of factors, of which sex is only
one. The record contains no evidence that any factor other than the
employee's sex was taken into account in calculating the 14.84%
differential between the respective contributions by men and women.
We agree with Judge Duniway's observation that one cannot "say that
an
Page 435 U. S. 713
actuarial distinction based entirely on sex is
based on any
other factor other than sex.' Sex is exactly what it is based on."
53 F.2d 581, 588, (1976). [Footnote 24]
We are also unpersuaded by the Department's reliance on a
colloquy between Senator Randolph and Senator Humphrey during the
debate on the Civil Rights Act of 1964. Commenting on the Bennett
Amendment, Senator Humphrey expressed his understanding that it
would allow many differences in the treatment of men and women
under industrial benefit plans, including earlier retirement option
for women. [
Footnote 25]
Page 435 U. S. 714
Though he did not address differences in employee contributions
based on sex, Senator Humphrey apparently assumed that the 1964 Act
would have little, if any, impact on existing pension plans. His
statement cannot, however, fairly be made the sole guide to
interpreting the Equal Pay Act, which had been adopted a year
earlier; and it is the 1963 statute, with its exceptions, on which
the Department ultimately relies. We conclude that Senator
Humphrey's isolated comment on the Senate floor cannot change the
effect of the plain language of the statute itself. [
Footnote 26]
III
The Department argues that reversal is required by
General
Electric Co. v. Gilbert, 429 U. S. 125. We
are satisfied,
Page 435 U. S. 715
however, that neither the holding nor the reasoning of
Gilbert is controlling.
In
Gilbert, the Court held that the exclusion of
pregnancy from an employer's disability benefit plan did not
constitute sex discrimination within the meaning of Title VII.
Relying on the reasoning in
Geduldig v. Aiello,
417 U. S. 484, the
Court first held that the General Electric plan did not involve
"discrimination based upon gender as such." [
Footnote 27] The two groups of potential
recipients which that case concerned were pregnant women and
nonpregnant persons. "
While the first group is exclusively
female, the second includes members of both sexes.'" 429 U.S. at
429 U. S. 135.
In contrast, each of the two groups of employees involved in this
case is composed entirely and exclusively of members of the same
sex. On its face, this plan discriminates on the basis of sex,
whereas the General Electric plan discriminated on the basis of a
special physical disability.
In
Gilbert, the Court did note that the plan, as
actually administered, had provided more favorable benefits to
women as a class than to men as a class. [
Footnote 28] This evidence supported the conclusion
that not only had plaintiffs failed to establish a
prima
facie case by proving that the plan was discriminatory
Page 435 U. S. 716
on its face, but they had also failed to prove any
discriminatory effect. [
Footnote
29]
In this case, however, the Department argues that the absence of
a discriminatory effect on women as a class justifies an employment
practice which, on its face, discriminated against individual
employees because of their sex. But even if the Department's
actuarial evidence is sufficient to prevent plaintiffs from
establishing a
prima facie case on the theory that the
effect of the practice on women as a class was discriminatory, that
evidence does not defeat the claim that the practice, on its face,
discriminated against every individual woman employed by the
Department. [
Footnote
30]
In essence, the Department is arguing that the
prima
facie showing of discrimination based on evidence of different
contributions for the respective sexes is rebutted by its
demonstration that there is a like difference in the cost of
providing benefits for the respective classes. That argument might
prevail if Title VII contained a cost-justification defense
comparable to the affirmative defense available in a price
discrimination
Page 435 U. S. 717
suit. [
Footnote 31] But
neither Congress nor the courts have recognized such a defense
under Title VII. [
Footnote
32]
Although we conclude that the Department's practice violated
Title VII, we do not suggest that the statute was intended to
revolutionize the insurance and pension industries. All that is at
issue today is a requirement that men and women make unequal
contributions to an employer-operated pension fund. Nothing in our
holding implies that it would be unlawful for an employer to set
aside equal retirement contributions for each employee and let each
retiree purchase the largest benefit which his or her accumulated
contributions could command
Page 435 U. S. 718
in the open market. [
Footnote
33] Nor does it call into question the insurance industry
practice of considering the composition of an employer's workforce
in determining the probable cost of a retirement or death benefit
plan. [
Footnote 34] Finally,
we recognize that, in a case of this kind, it may be necessary to
take special care in fashioning appropriate relief.
IV
The Department challenges the District Court's award of
retroactive relief to the entire class of female employees and
retirees. Title VII does not require a district court to grant any
retroactive relief. A court that finds unlawful discrimination
"may enjoin [the discrimination] . . . and order such
affirmative action as may be appropriate, which may include, but is
not limited to, reinstatement . . . with or without back pay . . .
or any other equitable relief as the court deems appropriate."
42 U.S.C. § 2000e-5(g) (1970 ed., Supp. V).
Page 435 U. S. 719
To the point of redundancy, the statute stresses that
retroactive relief "may" be awarded if it is "appropriate."
In
Albemarle Paper Co. v. Moody, 422 U.
S. 405, the Court reviewed the scope of a district
court's discretion to fashion appropriate remedies for a Title VII
violation and concluded that
"backpay should be denied only for reasons which, if applied
generally, would not frustrate the central statutory purposes of
eradicating discrimination throughout the economy and making
persons whole for injuries suffered through past
discrimination."
Id. at
422 U. S. 421.
Applying that standard, the Court ruled that an award of backpay
should not be conditioned on a showing of bad faith.
Id.
at
422 U. S.
422-423. But the
Albemarle Court also held that
backpay was not to be awarded automatically in every case.
[
Footnote 35]
The
Albemarle presumption in favor of retroactive
liability can seldom be overcome, but it does not make meaningless
the district courts' duty to determine that such relief is
appropriate. For several reasons, we conclude that the District
Court gave insufficient attention to the equitable nature of Title
VII remedies. [
Footnote 36]
Although we now have no doubt about
Page 435 U. S. 720
the application of the statute in this case, we must recognize
that conscientious and intelligent administrators of pension funds,
who did not have the benefit of the extensive briefs and arguments
presented to us, may well have assumed that a program like the
Department's was entirely lawful. The courts had been silent on the
question, and the administrative agencies had conflicting views.
[
Footnote 37] The
Department's failure to act more swiftly is a sign not of its
recalcitrance, but of the problem's complexity. As commentators
have noted, pension administrators could reasonably have thought it
unfair -- or even illegal -- to make male employees shoulder more
than their "actuarial share" of the pension burden. [
Footnote 38] There is no
Page 435 U. S. 721
reason to believe that the threat of a backpay award is needed
to cause other administrators to amend their practices to conform
to this decision.
Nor can we ignore the potential impact which changes in rules
affecting insurance and pension plans may have on the economy.
Fifty million Americans participate in retirement plans other than
Social Security. The assets held in trust for these employees are
vast and growing -- more than $400 billion was reserved for
retirement benefits at the end of 1976, and reserves are increasing
by almost $50 billion a year. [
Footnote 39] These plans, like other forms of insurance,
depend on the accumulation of large sums to cover contingencies.
The amounts set aside are determined by a painstaking assessment of
the insurer's likely liability. Risks that the insurer foresees
will be included in the calculation of liability, and the rates or
contributions charged will reflect that calculation. The occurrence
of major unforeseen contingencies, however, jeopardizes the
insurer's solvency and, ultimately, the insureds' benefits. Drastic
changes in the legal rules governing pension and insurance funds,
like other unforeseen events, can have this effect. Consequently,
the rules that apply to these funds should not be applied
retroactively unless the legislature has plainly commanded that
result. [
Footnote 40] The
EEOC
Page 435 U. S. 722
itself has recognized that the administrators of retirement
plans must be given time to adjust gradually to Title VII's
demands. [
Footnote 41]
Courts have also shown sensitivity to the special dangers of
retroactive Title VII awards in this field.
See Rosen v. Public
Serv. Elec. & Gas Co., 328 F.
Supp. 454, 466-468 (NJ 1971).
There can be no doubt that the prohibition against
sex-differentiated employee contributions represents a marked
departure from past practice. Although Title VII was enacted in
1964, this is apparently the first litigation challenging
contribution differences based on valid actuarial tables.
Retroactive liability could be devastating for a pension fund.
[
Footnote 42] The
Page 435 U. S. 723
harm would fall in large part on innocent third parties. If, as
the courts below apparently contemplated, the plaintiffs'
contributions are recovered from the pension fund, [
Footnote 43] the administrators of the fund
will be forced to meet unchanged obligations with diminished
assets. [
Footnote 44] If the
reserve proves inadequate, either the expectations of all retired
employees will be disappointed or current employees will be forced
to pay not only for their own future security but also for the
unanticipated reduction in the contributions of past employees.
Without qualifying the force of the
Albemarle
presumption in favor of retroactive relief, we conclude that it was
error to grant such relief in this case. Accordingly, although we
agree with the Court of Appeals' analysis of the statute, we vacate
its judgment and remand the case for further proceedings consistent
with this opinion.
It is so ordered.
MR. JUSTICE BRENNAN took no part in the consideration or
decision of this case.
[
Footnote 1]
The section provides:
"It shall be an unlawful employment practice for an employer --
"
"(1) to fail or refuse to hire or to discharge any individual,
or otherwise to discriminate against any individual with respect to
his compensation, terms, conditions, or privileges of employment,
because of such individual's race, color, religion, sex, or
national origin. . . ."
78 Stat. 255, 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-2(a)(1).
[
Footnote 2]
In addition to the Department itself, the petitioners include
members of the Board of Commissioners of the Department and members
of the plan's Board of Administration.
[
Footnote 3]
The plan itself is not in the record. In its brief, the
Department states that the plan provides for several kinds of
pension benefits at the employee's option, and that the most common
is a formula pension equal to 2% of the average monthly salary paid
during the last year of employment times the number of years of
employment. The benefit is guaranteed for life.
[
Footnote 4]
The Department contributes an amount equal to 110% of all
employee contributions.
[
Footnote 5]
The significance of the disparity is illustrated by the record
of one woman whose contributions to the fund (including interest on
the amount withheld each month) amounted to $18,171.40; a similarly
situated male would have contributed only $12,843.53.
[
Footnote 6]
86 Stat. 103 (effective Mar. 24, 1972).
[
Footnote 7]
In addition to five individual plaintiffs, respondents include
the individuals' union, the International Brotherhood of Electrical
Workers, Local Union No. 18.
[
Footnote 8]
See Cal.Govt.Code Ann. § 7500 (West Supp. 1978).
[
Footnote 9]
The court had earlier granted a preliminary injunction.
387 F.
Supp. 980 (1975).
[
Footnote 10]
553 F.2d 581 (1976). Two weeks after the Ninth Circuit decision,
this Court decided
General Electric Co. v. Gilbert,
429 U. S. 125. In
response to a petition for rehearing, a majority of the Ninth
Circuit panel concluded that its original decision did not conflict
with
Gilbert. 553 F.2d at 592 (1977). Judge Kilkenny
dissented.
Id. at 594.
[
Footnote 11]
See nn.
22 and |
22 and S. 702fn23|>23,
infra.
[
Footnote 12]
See Developments in the Law, Employment Discrimination
and Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 84 Harv.L.Rev. 1109,
1174 (1971).
[
Footnote 13]
"In forbidding employers to discriminate against individuals
because of their sex, Congress intended to strike at the entire
spectrum of disparate treatment of men and women resulting from sex
stereotypes. Section 703(a)(1) subjects to scrutiny and eliminates
such irrational impediments to job opportunities and enjoyment
which have plagued women in the past."
Sprogis v. United Air Lines, Inc., 444 F.2d 1194, 1198
(CA7 1971).
[
Footnote 14]
The size of the subsidy involved in this case is open to doubt,
because the Department's plan provides for survivors' benefits.
Since female spouses of male employees are likely to have greater
life expectancies than the male spouses of female employees,
whatever benefits men lose in "primary" coverage for themselves
they may regain in "secondary" coverage for their wives.
[
Footnote 15]
For example, the life expectancy of a white baby in 1973 was
72.2 years; a nonwhite baby could expect to live 65.9 years, a
difference of 6.3 years.
See Public Health Service, IIA
Vital Statistics of the United States, 1973, Table 5-3.
[
Footnote 16]
Fortifying this conclusion is the fact that some States have
banned higher life insurance rates for blacks since the 19th
century.
See generally M. James, The Metropolitan Life --
A Study in Business Growth 338-339 (1947).
[
Footnote 17]
See R. Retherford, The Changing Sex Differential in
Mortality 71-82 (1975). Other social causes, such as drinking or
eating habit -- perhaps even the lingering effects of past
employment discrimination -- may also affect the mortality
differential.
[
Footnote 18]
A study of life expectancy in the United States for 1949-1951
showed that 20-year-old men could expect to live to 60.6 years of
age if they were divorced. If married, they could expect to reach
70.9 years of age, a difference of more than 10 years.
Id.
at 93.
[
Footnote 19]
The record indicates, however, that the Department has funded
its death benefit plan by equal contributions from male and female
employees. A death benefit -- unlike a pension benefit -- has less
value for persons with longer life expectancies. Under the
Department's concept of fairness, then, this neutral funding of
death benefits is unfair to women as a class.
[
Footnote 20]
A variation on the Department's fairness theme is the suggestion
that a gender-neutral pension plan would itself violate Title VII
because of its disproportionately heavy impact on male employees.
Cf. Griggs v. Duke Power Co., 401 U.
S. 424. This suggestion has no force in the sex
discrimination context, because each retiree's total pension
benefits are ultimately determined by his
actual life
span; any differential in benefits paid to men and women in
the aggregate is thus "based on [a] factor other than sex," and
consequently immune from challenge under the Equal Pay Act, 29 U.S.
C § 206(d);
cf. n
24
infra. Even under Title VII itself -- assuming
disparate impact analysis applies to fringe benefits,
cf.
Nashville Gas Co. v. Satty, 434 U. S. 136,
434 U. S.
144-145 -- the male employees would not prevail. Even a
completely neutral practice will inevitably have
some
disproportionate impact on one group or another.
Griggs
does not imply, and this Court has never held, that discrimination
must always be inferred from such consequences.
[
Footnote 21]
Developments in the Law,
supra, n 12, at 1170;
see also Sprogis v. United
Air Lines, Inc., 444 F.2d at 1205 (Stevens, J.,
dissenting).
[
Footnote 22]
The Bennett Amendment became part of § 703(h), which provides in
part:
"It shall not be an unlawful employment practice under this
title for any employer to differentiate upon the basis of sex in
determining the amount of the wages or compensation paid or to be
paid to employees of such employer if such differentiation is
authorized by the provisions of section 6(d) of the Fair Labor
Standards Act of 1938, as amended (29 U.S.C. § 206(d))."
78 Stat. 257, 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-2(h).
[
Footnote 23]
The Equal Pay Act provides, in part:
"No employer having employees subject to any provisions of this
section shall discriminate, within any establishment in which such
employees are employed, between employees on the basis of sex by
paying wages to employees in such establishment at a rate less than
the rate at which he pays wages to employees of the opposite sex in
such establishment for equal work on jobs the performance of which
requires equal skill, effort, and responsibility, and which are
performed under similar working conditions, except where such
payment is made pursuant to (i) a seniority system; (ii) a merit
system; (iii) a system which measures earnings by quantity or
quality of production; or (iv) a differential based on any other
factor other than sex:
Provided, That an employer who is
paying a wage rate differential in violation of this subsection
shall not, in order to comply with the provisions of this
subsection, reduce the wage rate of any employee."
77 Stat. 56, 29 U.S.C. § 206(d). We need not decide whether
retirement benefits or contributions to benefit plans are "wages"
under the Act, because the Bennett Amendment extends the Act's four
exceptions to all forms of "compensation" covered by Title VII.
See n 22,
supra. The Department's pension benefits, and the
contributions that maintain them, are "compensation" under Title
VII.
Cf. Peters v. Missouri-Pacific R. Co., 483 F.2d 490,
492 n. 3 (CA5 1973),
cert. denied, 414 U.S. 1002.
[
Footnote 24]
The Department's argument is specious. because its contribution
schedule distinguished only imperfectly between long-lived and
short-lived employees, while distinguishing precisely between male
and female employees. In contrast, an entirely gender-neutral
system of contributions and benefits would result in differing
retirement benefits precisely "based on" longevity, for retirees
with long lives would always receive more money than comparable
employees with short lives. Such a plan would also distinguish in a
crude way between male and female pensioners, because of the
difference in their average life spans. It is this sort of
disparity -- and not an explicitly gender-based differential --
that the Equal Pay Act intended to authorize.
[
Footnote 25]
"MR. RANDOLPH. Mr. President, I wish to ask of the Senator from
Minnesota [Mr. Humphrey], who is the effective manager of the
pending bill, a clarifying question on the provisions of title
VII."
"I have in mind that the social security system, in certain
respects, treats men and women differently. For example, widows'
benefits are paid automatically, but a widower qualifies only if he
is disabled or if he was actually supported by his deceased wife.
Also, the wife of a retired employee entitled to social security
receives an additional old age benefit, but the husband of such an
employee does not. These differences in treatment as I recall, are
of long standing."
"Am I correct, I ask the Senator from Minnesota, in assuming
that similar differences of treatment in industrial benefit plans,
including earlier retirement options for women, may continue in
operation under this bill if it becomes law?"
"MR. HUMPHREY. Yes. That point was made unmistakably clear
earlier today by the adoption of the Bennett amendment; so there
can be no doubt about it."
110 Cong.Rec. 13663-13664 (1964).
[
Footnote 26]
The administrative constructions of this provision look in two
directions. The Wage and Hour Administrator, who is charged with
enforcing the Equal Pay Act, has never expressly approved different
employee contribution rates, but he has said that either equal
employer contributions or equal benefits will satisfy the Act. 29
CFR § 800.116(d) (1977). At the same time, he has stated that a
wage differential based on differences in the average costs of
employing men and women is not based on a "
factor other than
sex.'" 29 CFR § 800.151 (1977). The Administrator's reasons for the
second ruling are illuminating:
"To group employees solely on the basis of sex for purposes of
comparison of costs necessarily rests on the assumption that the
sex factor alone may justify the wage differential -- an assumption
plainly contrary to the terms and purpose of the Equal Pay Act.
Wage differentials so based would serve only to perpetuate and
promote the very discrimination at which the Act is directed,
because, in any grouping by sex of the employees to which the cost
data relates, the group cost experience is necessarily assessed
against an individual of one sex without regard to whether it costs
an employer more or less to employ such individual than a
particular individual of the opposite sex under similar working
conditions in jobs requiring equal skill, effort, and
responsibility."
Ibid. To the extent that they conflict, we find that
the reasoning of § 800.151 has more "power to persuade" than the
ipse dixit of § 800.116.
Cf. Skidmore v. Swift &
Co., 323 U. S. 134,
323 U. S.
140.
[
Footnote 27]
Quoting from the
Geduldig opinion, the Court
stated:
"'[T]his case is thus a far cry from cases like
Reed v.
Reed, 404 U. S. 71 (1971), and
Frontiero v. Richardson, 411 U. S. 677 (1973), involving
discrimination based upon gender as such. The California insurance
program does not exclude anyone from benefit eligibility because of
gender, but merely removes one physical condition -- pregnancy --
from the list of compensable disabilities.'"
429 U.S. at
429 U. S. 134.
After further quotation, the Court added:
"The quoted language from
Geduldig leaves no doubt that
our reason for rejecting appellee's equal protection claim in that
case was that the exclusion of pregnancy from coverage under
California's disability benefits plan was not, in itself,
discrimination based on sex."
Id. at
429 U. S.
135.
[
Footnote 28]
See id. at
429 U. S.
130-131, n. 9.
[
Footnote 29]
As the Court recently noted in
Nashville Gas Co. v.
Satty, 434 U.S. at
434 U. S. 144,
the
Gilbert holding "did not depend on this evidence."
Rather, the holding rested on the plaintiff's failure to prove
either facial discrimination or discriminatory effect.
[
Footnote 30]
Some
amici suggest that the Department's discrimination
is justified by business necessity. They argue that, if no gender
distinction is drawn, many male employees will withdraw from the
plan, or even the Department, because they can get a better pension
plan in the private market. But the Department has long required
equal contributions to its death benefit plan,
see
n19,
supra, and,
since 1975, it has required equal contributions to its pension
plan. Yet the Department points to no "adverse selection" by the
affected employees, presumably because an employee who wants to
leave the plan must also leave his job, and few workers will quit
because one of their fringe benefits could theoretically be
obtained at a marginally lower price on the open market. In short,
there has been no showing that sex distinctions are reasonably
necessary to the normal operation of the Department's retirement
plan.
[
Footnote 31]
See 15 U.S.C. § 13(a) (1976 ed.). Under the
Robinson-Patman Act, proof of cost differences justifies otherwise
illegal price discrimination; it does not negate the existence of
the discrimination itself.
See FTC v. Morton Salt Co.,
334 U. S. 37,
334 U. S. 44-45.
So here, even if the contribution differential were based on a
sound and well recognized business practice, it would nevertheless
be discriminatory, and the defendant would be forced to assert an
affirmative defense to escape liability.
[
Footnote 32]
Defenses under Title VII and the Equal Pay Act are considerably
narrower.
See, e.g., n 30,
supra. A broad cost-differential defense
was proposed and rejected when the Equal Pay Act became law.
Representative Findley offered an amendment to the Equal Pay Act
that would have expressly authorized a wage differential tied to
the "ascertainable and specific added cost resulting from
employment of the opposite sex." 109 Cong.Rec. 9217 (1963). He
pointed out that the employment of women might be more costly
because of such matters as higher turnover and state laws
restricting women's hours.
Id. at 9205. The Equal Pay
Act's supporters responded that any cost differences could be
handled by focusing on the factors other than sex which actually
caused the differences, such as absenteeism or number of hours
worked. The amendment was rejected as largely redundant for that
reason.
Id. at 9217.
The Senate Report, on the other hand, does seem to assume that
the statute may recognize a very limited cost defense, based on
"all of the elements of the employment costs of both men and
women." S.Rep. No. 176, 88th Cong., 1st Sess., 4 (1963). It is
difficult to find language in the statute supporting even this
limited defense; in any event, no defense based on the total cost
of employing men and women was attempted in this case.
[
Footnote 33]
Title VII and the Equal Pay Act primarily govern relations
between employees and their employer, not between employees and
third parties. We do not suggest, of course, that an employer can
avoid his responsibilities by delegating discriminatory programs to
corporate shells. Title VII applies to "any agent" of a covered
employer, 42 U.S.C. § 2000e(b) (1970 ed., Supp. V), and the Equal
Pay Act applies to "any person acting directly or indirectly in the
interest of an employer in relation to an employee." 29 U.S.C. §
203(d). In this case, for example, the Department could not deny
that the administrative board was its agent after it successfully
argued that the two were so inseparable that both shared the city's
immunity from suit under 42 U.S.C. § 1983.
[
Footnote 34]
Title VII bans discrimination against an "individual" because of
"such individual's" sex. 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-2(a)(1). The Equal Pay
Act prohibits discrimination "within any establishment," and
discrimination is defined as "paying wages to employees . . . at a
rate less than the rate at which [the employer] pays wages to
employees of the opposite sex" for equal work. 29 U.S.C. §
206(d)(1). Neither of these provisions makes it unlawful to
determine the funding requirements for an establishment's benefit
plan by considering the composition of the entire force.
[
Footnote 35]
Specifically, the Court held that a defendant prejudiced by his
reliance on a plaintiff's initial waiver of any backpay claims
could be absolved of backpay liability by a district court. 422
U.S. at
422 U. S. 424.
The Court reserved the question whether reliance of a different
kind -- on state "protective" laws requiring sex differentiation --
would also save a defendant from liability.
Id. at
422 U. S. 423
n. 18.
[
Footnote 36]
According to the District Court, the defendant's liability for
contributions did not begin until April 5, 1972, the day the Equal
Employment Opportunity Commission issued an interpretation casting
doubt on some varieties of pension fund discrimination.
See 37 Fed.Reg. 6835-6837. Even assuming that the EEOC's
decision should have put the defendants on notice that they were
acting illegally, the date chosen by the District Court was too
early. The court should have taken into account the difficulty of
amending a major pension plan, a task that cannot be accomplished
overnight. Moreover, it should not have given conclusive weight to
the EEOC guideline.
See General Electric Co. v. Gilbert,
429 U.S. at
429 U. S. 141.
The Wage and Hour Administrator, whose rulings also provide a
defense in sex discrimination cases, 29 U.S.C. § 259, refused to
follow the EEOC.
See n 37,
infra.
Further doubt about the District Court's equitable sensitivity
to the impact of a refund order is raised by the court's decision
to award the full difference between the contributions made by male
employees and those made by female employees. This may give the
victims of the discrimination more than their due. If an
undifferentiated actuarial table had been employed in 1972, the
contributions of women employees would no doubt have been lower
than they were, but they would not have been as low as the
contributions actually made by men in that period. The District
Court should at least have considered ordering a refund of only the
difference between contributions made by women and the
contributions they would have made under an actuarially sound and
nondiscriminatory plan.
[
Footnote 37]
As noted earlier,
n 26,
supra, the position of the Wage and Hour Administrator has
been somewhat confusing. His general rule rejected differences in
average cost as a defense, but his more specific rule lent some
support to the Department's view by simply requiring an employer to
equalize either his contributions or employee benefits.
Compare 29 CFR § 800.151 (1977)
with §
800.116(d). The EEOC requires equal benefits.
See 29 CFR
§§ 1604.9(e) and (f) (1977). Two other agencies with responsibility
for equal opportunity in employment adhere to the Wage and Hour
Administrator's position.
See 41 CFR -§ 60.20.3(c) (1977)
(Office of Federal Contract Compliance); 45 CFR § 86.56(b)(2)
(1976) (Dept. of Health, Education, and Welfare).
See also
40 Fed.Reg. 24135 (1975) (HEW).
[
Footnote 38]
"If an employer establishes a pension plan, the charges of
discrimination will be reversed: if he chooses a money purchase
formula, women can complain that they receive less per month. While
the employer and the insurance company are quick to point out that
women as a group actually receive more when equal contributions are
made -- because of the long-term effect of compound interest --
women employees still complain of discrimination. If the employer
chooses the define benefit formula, his male employees can allege
discrimination because he contributes more for women as a group
than for men as a group. The employer is in a dilemma: he is damned
in the discrimination context no matter what he does."
Note, Sex Discrimination and Sex-Based Mortality Tables, 53
B.Y.U.L.Rev. 624, 633-634 (1973) (footnotes omitted).
[
Footnote 39]
American Council of Life Insurance, Pension Facts 1977, pp.
223.
[
Footnote 40]
In 1974, Congress underlined the importance of making only
gradual and prospective changes in the rules that govern pension
plans. In that year, Congress passed a bill regulating employee
retirement programs. Employee Retirement Income Security Act of
1974, 88 Stat. 829. The bill paid careful attention to the problem
of retroactivity. It set a wide variety of effective dates for
different provisions of the new law; some of the rules will not be
fully effective until 1984, a decade after the law was enacted.
See, e.g., in 1970 ed., Supp. V of 29 U.S.C. § 1061(a)
(Sept. 2, 1974); § 1031(b)(1) (Jan. 1, 1975); § 1086(b) (Dec. 31,
1975); § 1114(c)(4) (June 30, 1977); § 1381(c)(1) (Jan. 1, 1978); §
1061(c) (Dec. 31, 1980); § 1114(c) (June 30, 1984).
[
Footnote 41]
In February, 1968, the EEOC issued guidelines disapproving
differences in male and female retirement ages. In September of the
same year, EEOC's general counsel gave an opinion that retirement
plans could set gradual schedules for complying with the
guidelines, and that the judgment of the parties about how speedily
to comply "would carry considerable weight."
See Chastang v.
Flynn & Emrich Co., 541 F.2d 1040, 1045 (CA4 1976).
[
Footnote 42]
The plaintiffs assert that the award in this case would not be
crippling to these defendants, because it is limited to
contributions between 1972 and 1975. But we cannot base a ruling on
the facts of this case alone. As this Court noted in
Albemarle
Paper Co. v. Moody, 422 U. S. 405,
equitable remedies may be flexible but they still must be founded
on principle.
"Important national goals would be frustrated by a regime of
discretion that 'produce[d] different results for breaches of duty
in situations that cannot be differentiated in policy.'"
Id. at
422 U. S. 417.
Employers are not liable for improper contributions made more than
two years before a charge was filed with the EEOC. 42 U.S.C. §
2000e-5(g) (1970 ed., Supp. V). But it is not unusual for cases to
remain within the EEOC for years after a charge is filed,
see,
e.g., Occidental Life Ins. Co. v. EEOC, 432 U.
S. 355 (3 years, 2 months), and that delay is but a
prelude to the time inevitably consumed in civil litigation.
[
Footnote 43]
The Court of Appeals plainly expected the plan to pay the award,
for it noted that imposing retroactive liability "might leave the
plan somewhat under-funded." 553 F.2d at 592. After making this
observation, the Court of Appeals suggested a series of possible
solutions to the problem -- the benefits of all retired workers
could be lowered, the burden on current employees could be
increased, or the Department could decide to contribute enough to
offset the plan's unexpected loss.
Ibid.
[
Footnote 44]
Two commentators urging the illegality of gender-based pension
plans noted the danger of "staggering damage awards," and they
proposed as one cure the exercise of judicial "discretion [to]
refuse a backpay award because of the hardship it would work on an
employer who had acted in good faith. . . ." Bernstein &
Williams, Title VII and the Problem of Sex Classifications in
Pension Programs, 74 Colum.L.Rev. 1203, 1226, 1227 (1974).
MR. JUSTICE BLACKMUN, concurring in part and concurring in the
judgment.
MR. JUSTICE STEWART wrote the opinion for the Court in
Geduldig v. Aiello, 417 U. S. 484
(1974), and joined the Court's opinion in
General Electric Co.
v. Gilbert, 429 U. S. 125
Page 435 U. S. 724
(1976). MR. JUSTICE WHITE and MR. JUSTICE POWELL joined both
Geduldig and
General Electric. MR. JUSTICE
STEVENS, who writes the opinion for the Court in the present case,
dissented in
General Electric, 429 U.S. at
429 U. S. 160.
MR. JUSTICE MARSHALL, who joins the Court's opinion in large part
here, joined the dissent in both
Geduldig and
General
Electric. 417 U.S. at
417 U. S. 497; 429 U.S. at
429 U. S. 146.
My own discomfort with the latter case was apparent, I believe,
from my separate concurrence there.
Ibid.
These "lineups" surely are not without significance. The
participation of my Brothers STEWART, WHITE, and POWELL in today's
majority opinion should be a sign that the decision in this case is
not in tension with
Geduldig and
General
Electric, and, indeed, is wholly consistent with them. I am
not at all sure that this is so; the votes of MR. JUSTICE MARSHALL
and MR. JUSTICE STEVENS would indicate quite the contrary.
Given the decisions in
Geduldig and
General
Electric -- the one constitutional, the other statutory -- the
present case just cannot be an easy one for the Court. I might have
thought that those decisions would have required the Court to
conclude that the critical difference in the Department's pension
payments was based on life expectancy, a nonstigmatizing factor
that demonstrably differentiates females from males and that is not
measurable on an individual basis. I might have thought, too, that
there is nothing arbitrary, irrational, or "discriminatory" about
recognizing the objective and accepted (
see ante at
435 U. S. 704,
435 U. S. 707,
and
435 U. S. 722)
disparity in female-male life expectancies in computing rates for
retirement plans. Moreover, it is unrealistic to attempt to force,
as the Court does, an individualized analysis upon what is
basically an insurance context. Unlike the possibility, for
example, of properly testing job applicants for qualifications
before employment, there is simply no way to determine in advance
when a particular employee will die.
The Court's rationale, of course, is that Congress, by Title VII
of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, as amended, intended to
Page 435 U. S. 725
eliminate, with certain exceptions, "race, color, religion, sex,
or national origin," 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-2(a)(1), as factors upon
which employers may act. A program such as the one challenged here
does exacerbate gender consciousness. But the program under
consideration in
General Electric did exactly the same
thing, and yet was upheld against challenge.
The Court's distinction between the present case and
General
Electric -- that the permitted classes there were "pregnant
women and nonpregnant persons," both female and male,
ante
at
435 U. S. 715
-- seems to me to be just too easy.
*
It is probably the only distinction that can be drawn. For me, it
does not serve to distinguish the case on any principled basis. I
therefore must conclude that today's decision cuts back on
General Electric, and, inferentially, on
Geduldig, the reasoning of which was adopted there, 429
U.S. at
429 U. S.
133-136, and, indeed, makes the recognition of those
cases as continuing precedent somewhat questionable. I do not say
that this is necessarily bad. If that is what Congress has chosen
to do by Title VII -- as the Court today with such assurance
asserts -- so be it. I feel, however, that we should meet the
posture of the earlier cases head on, and not by thin
rationalization that seeks to distinguish but fails in its
quest.
I therefore join only Part IV of the Court's opinion, and concur
in its judgment.
* It is of interest that MR. JUSTICE STEVENS, in his dissent in
General Electric, strongly protested the very distinction
he now must make for the Court.
"It is not accurate to describe the program as dividing
"
potential recipients into two groups -- pregnant women and
nonpregnant persons.'" . . . The classification is between persons
who face a risk of pregnancy and those who do not."
429 U.S. at
429 U. S.
161-162, n. 5.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE BURGER, with whom MR. JUSTICE REHNQUIST joins,
concurring in part and dissenting in part.
I join Part IV of the Court's opinion; as to Parts I, II, and
III, I dissent.
Gender-based actuarial tables have been in use since at
least
Page 435 U. S. 726
1843, [
Footnote 2/1] and their
statistical validity has been repeatedly verified. [
Footnote 2/2] The vast life insurance, annuity, and
pension plan industry is based on these tables. As the Court
recognizes,
ante at
435 U. S. 707,
it is a fact that "women, as a class, do live longer than men." It
is equally true that employers cannot know in advance when
individual members of the classes will die.
Ante at
435 U. S. 708.
Yet, if they are to operate economically workable group pension
programs, it is only rational to permit them to rely on
statistically sound and proved disparities in longevity between men
and women. Indeed, it seems to me irrational to assume Congress
intended to outlaw use of the fact that, for whatever reasons or
combination of reasons, women as a class outlive men.
The Court's conclusion that the language of the civil rights
statute is clear, admitting of no advertence to the legislative
history, such as there was, is not soundly based. An effect upon
pension plans so revolutionary and discriminatory -- this time
favorable to women at the expense of men -- should not be read into
the statute without either a clear statement of that intent in the
statute, or some reliable indication in the legislative history
that this was Congress' purpose. The Court's casual dismissal of
Senator Humphrey's apparent assumption that the "Act would have
little, if any, impact on existing pension plans,"
ante at
435 U. S. 714,
is to dismiss a significant manifestation of what impact on
industrial benefit plans was contemplated. It is reasonably clear
there was no intention to abrogate an employer's right, in this
narrow and limited context, to treat women differently from men in
the face of historical reliance on mortality experience statistics.
Cf. ante at
435 U. S. 713
n. 25.
The reality of differences in human mortality is what mortality
experience tables reflect. The difference is the added
Page 435 U. S. 727
longevity of women. All the reasons why women statistically
outlive men are not clear. But categorizing people on the basis of
sex, the one acknowledged immutable difference between men and
women, is to take into account all of the unknown reasons, whether
biologically or culturally based, or both, which give women a
significantly greater life expectancy than men. It is therefore
true, as the Court says, "that any individual's life expectancy is
based on a number of factors, of which sex is only one."
Ante at
435 U. S. 712.
But it is not true that, by seizing upon the only constant,
"measurable" factor, no others were taken into account. All other
factors, whether known but variable or unknown -- are the elements
which automatically account for the actuarial disparity. And all
are accounted for when the constant factor is used as a basis for
determining the costs and benefits of a group pension plan.
Here, of course, petitioners are discriminating in take-home pay
between men and women.
Cf. General Electric Co. v.
Gilbert, 429 U. S. 125
(1976);
Nashville Gas Co. v. Satty, 434 U.
S. 136 (1977). The practice of petitioners, however,
falls squarely under the exemption provided by the Equal Pay Act of
1963, 29 U.S.C. § 206(d), incorporated into Title VII by the
so-called Bennett Amendment, 78 Stat. 27, now 42 U.S.C. §
2000e-2(h). That exemption tells us that an employer may not
discriminate between employees on the basis of sex by paying one
sex lesser compensation than the other "except where such payment
is made pursuant to . . . a differential based on any other factor
other than sex. . . ." The "other factor other than sex" is
longevity; sex is the umbrella constant under which all of the
elements leading to differences in longevity are grouped and
assimilated, and the only objective feature upon which an employer
-- or anyone else, including insurance companies -- may reliably
base a cost differential for the "risk" being insured.
This is in no sense a failure to treat women as "individuals" in
violation of the statute, as the Court holds. It is to treat
Page 435 U. S. 728
them as individually as it is possible to do in the face of the
unknowable length of each individual life. Individually, every
woman has the same statistical possibility of outliving men. This
is the essence of basing decisions on reliable statistics when
individual determinations are infeasible or, as here,
impossible.
Of course, women cannot be disqualified from, for example, heavy
labor just because the generality of women are thought not as
strong as men -- a proposition which perhaps may sometime be
statistically demonstrable, but will remain individually refutable.
When, however, it is impossible to tailor a program such as a
pension plan to the individual, nothing should prevent application
of reliable statistical facts to the individual, for whom the facts
cannot be disproved until long after planning, funding, and
operating the program have been undertaken.
I find it anomalous, if not contradictory, that the Court's
opinion tells us, in effect,
ante at
435 U. S.
717-718, and n. 33, that the holding is not really a
barrier to responding to the complaints of men employees, as a
group. The Court states that employers may give their employees
precisely the same dollar amount and require them to secure their
own annuities directly from an insurer, who, of course, is under no
compulsion to ignore 135 years of accumulated, recorded longevity
experience. [
Footnote 2/3]
[
Footnote 2/1]
See H. Moir, Sources and Characteristics of the
Principal Mortality Tables 10, 14 (1919).
[
Footnote 2/2]
See, e.g., United Nations, 1970 Demographic Yearbook
710-729 (1971).
[
Footnote 2/3]
This case, of course, has nothing to do with discrimination
because of race, color, religion, or national origin,
cf.
ante at
435 U. S. 709,
and nn. 15 and 16. The qualification the Bennett Amendment
permitted by its incorporation of the Equal Pay Act pertained only
to claims of discrimination because of sex.
MR. JUSTICE MARSHALL, concurring in part and dissenting in
part.
I agree that Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, as
amended, forbids petitioners' practice of requiring female
employees to make larger contributions to a pension fund than
Page 435 U. S. 729
do male employees. I therefore join all of the Court's opinion
except
435 U. S.
I also agree with the Court's statement in Part IV that, once a
Title VII violation is found,
Albemarle Paper Co. v.
Moody, 422 U. S. 405
(1975), establishes a "presumption in favor of retroactive
liability," and that this presumption "can seldom be overcome."
Ante at
435 U. S. 719.
But I do not agree that the presumption should be deemed overcome
in this case, especially since the relief was granted by the
District Court in the exercise of its discretion, and was upheld by
the Court of Appeals. I would affirm the decision below and
therefore cannot join Part IV of the Court's opinion or the Court's
judgment.
In
Albemarle Paper Co. v. Moody, supra, this Court made
clear that, subject to the presumption in favor of retroactive
relief, the District Court retains its "traditional" equitable
discretion "to locate
a just result,'" with appellate review
limited to determining "whether the District Court was `clearly
erroneous' in its factual findings and whether it `abused' its . .
. discretion." 422 U.S. at
422 U. S. 424. See also Fed.Rule Civ.Proc.
52(a) (district court findings "shall not be set aside unless
clearly erroneous"); Zenith Radio Corp. v. Hazeltine Research,
Inc., 395 U. S. 100,
395 U. S. 123
(199). The Court here does not assert that any findings of the
District Court were clearly erroneous, nor does it conclude that
there was any abuse of discretion. Instead, it states merely that
the District Court gave "insufficient attention" to certain factors
in striking the equitable balance. Ante at 435 U. S.
719.
The first such factor mentioned by the Court relates to the
"complexity" of the issue presented here, which may have led some
pension fund administrators to assume that "a program like the
Department's was entirely lawful," and that the alternative of
equal contributions was perhaps unlawful because of a perceived
"unfair[ness]" to men.
Ante at
435 U. S. 720.
The District Court found, however, that petitioners "should have
been placed on notice" of the illegality of requiring larger
Page 435 U. S. 730
contributions from women on April 5, 1972, when the Equal
Employment Opportunity Commission amended its regulations to make
this illegality clear. [
Footnote
3/1] The retrocative relief ordered by the District Court ran
from April 5, 1972, through December 31, 1974, after which date
petitioners changed to an equal contribution program.
See
ante at
435 U. S. 706.
Even if the April, 1972, beginning date were too early, a the Court
contends,
ante at
435 U. S. 719 n. 36, [
Footnote 3/2] during the nearly three-year period
involved, there surely was some point at which "conscientious and
intelligent administrators,"
ante at
435 U. S. 720,
should have responded to the EEOC's guidelines. Yet the Court today
denies all retroactive relief, without even knowing whether
petitioners made any efforts to ascertain their particular plan's
legality.
The other major factor relied on by the Court involves "the
potential impact . . . on the economy" that might result from
Page 435 U. S. 731
retroactive changes in "the rules" applying to pension and
insurance funds. According to the Court, such changes could
"jeopardiz[e] [an] insurer's solvency and, ultimately, the
insureds' benefits."
Ante at
435 U. S. 721.
As with the first factor, however, little reference is made by the
Court to the situation in this case. No claim is made by either
petitioners or the Court that the relief granted here would in any
way have threatened the plan's solvency, or indeed that risks of
this nature were not "foresee[n]," and thus "included in the
calculation of liability" and reflected in "the rates or
contributions charged,"
ibid. [
Footnote 3/3] No one has suggested, moreover, that the
relatively modest award at issue -- involving a small percentage of
the amounts withheld from respondents' paychecks for pension
purposes over a 33-month period,
see 553 F.2d 581, 592
(CA9 1976) -- could in any way be considered "devastating,"
ante at
435 U. S. 722.
And if a "devastating" award were made
Page 435 U. S. 732
in some future case, this Court would have ample opportunity to
strike it down at that time.
The necessarily speculative character of the Court's analysis in
Part IV is underscored by its suggestion that the retroactive
relief in this case would have led to a reduction in the benefits
paid to retirees or an increase in the contributions paid by
current employees.
Ante at
435 U. S.
722-723. It states that taking the award out of the
pension fund was "apparently contemplated" by the courts below,
ante at
435 U. S. 723,
but the District Court gave no indication of where it thought the
recovery would come from. The Court of Appeals listed a number of
ultimate sources of the money here involved, including increased
employer contributions to the fund or one lump-sum payment from the
Department 553 F.2d at 592. Indeed, the Department itself
contemplated that the money for the award would come from city
revenues, Pet. for Cert. 331, with the Department thereby paying
for this Title VII award in the same way that it would have to pay
any ordinary backpay award arising from its discriminatory
practices. Hence the possibility of "harm" falling on "innocent"
retirees or employees,
ante at
435 U. S. 723,
is here largely chimerical.
There are thus several factors mentioned by the Court that might
be important in some other case, but that appear to provide little
cause for concern in the case presently before us. To the extent
that the Court believes that these factors were not adequately
considered when the award of retroactive relief was made, moreover,
surely the proper course would be a remand to the District Court
for further findings and a new equitable assessment of the
appropriate remedy. When the District Court was found to have
abused its discretion by denying backpay in
Albemarle,
this Court did not take it upon itself to formulate an award; it
remanded to the District Court for this purpose. 422 U.S. at
422 U. S. 424,
422 U. S. 436.
There is no more reason for the Court here to deny all retroactive
relief on its own; once the relevant legal considerations are
established, the
Page 435 U. S. 733
task of finding the facts and applying the law to those facts is
best left to the District Court, particularly when an equitable
search for a "
just result'" is involved, id. at
422 U. S.
424.
In this case, however, I do not believe that a remand is
necessary. The District Court considered the question of when
petitioners could be charged with knowledge of the state of the
law,
see supra at
435 U. S. 729-730, and petitioners do not challenge the
particular date selected or claim that they needed time to adjust
their plan. As discussed above, moreover, no claim is made that the
Department's or the plan's solvency would have been threatened, and
it appears unlikely that either retirees or employees would have
paid any part of the award. There is every indication, in short,
that the factors which the Court thinks might be important in some
hypothetical case are of no concern to the petitioners who would
have had to pay the award in this case.
The Court today reaffirms "the force of the
Albemarle
presumption in favor of retroactive relief,"
ante at
435 U. S. 723,
yet fails to give effect to the principal reason why the
presumption exists. In
Albemarle, we emphasized that a
"central" purpose of Title VII is "making persons whole for
injuries suffered through past discrimination." 422 U.S. at
422 U. S. 421;
see id. at
422 U. S. 418,
422 U. S. 422.
Respondents in this case cannot be "made whole" unless they receive
a refund of the money that was illegally withheld from their
paychecks by petitioners. Their claim to these funds is more
compelling than is the claim in many backpay situations, where the
person discriminated against receives payment for a period when he
or she was not working. Here, as the Court of Appeals observed,
respondents "actually earned the amount in question, but then had
it taken from them in violation of Title VII." 553 F.2d at 592. In
view of the strength of respondents' "restitution"-like claim,
ibid., and in view of the statute's "central" make-whole
purpose,
Albemarle, 422 U.S. at
422 U. S. 421,
I would affirm the judgment of the Court of Appeals.
[
Footnote 3/1]
The District Court quoted the following from EEOC
regulations:
"'It shall not be a defense under Title [VII] to a charge of sex
discrimination in benefits that the cost of such benefits is
greater with respect to one sex than the other.' 29 CFR §
1604.9(e)."
387 F.
Supp. 980, 981 (CD Cal.1975).
See also 29 CFR §
1604.9(b) (1977) (employer may not "discriminate between men and
women with regard to fringe benefits") (also adopted Apr. 5, 1972);
§ 1604.9(f) (employer's pension plan may not "differentiat[e] in
benefits on the basis of sex") (adopted Apr. 5, 1972).
[
Footnote 3/2]
The Court also contends that respondents were not entitled to a
refund of the full difference between the contributions that they
made and the contributions made by similarly situated men, but
rather only to the difference between their contributions "and the
contributions they would have made under an actuarially sound and
nondiscriminatory plan."
Ante at
435 U. S. 720
n. 36. This point, like the question of the appropriate date
discussed in text, was not raised by petitioners, and would, in any
event, argue for some reduction in the retroactive relief awarded,
not for a complete denial of such relief. On its merits, moreover,
the District Court's decision to place the women employees on an
equal footing with their male coworkers surely was not
unreasonable; the alternative suggested by the Court would still
have left the women with higher pension payments than similarly
situated men for the relevant period.
[
Footnote 3/3]
When respondents filed their charge with the EEOC in June, 1973,
petitioners were put on notice of the possibility of retroactive
relief being awarded. At that point, they could have -- and, for
all we know, may have -- acted to ensure that the outcome of the
litigation did not affect the viability of the plan by, for
example, escrowing amounts to cover the contingency of losing to
respondents. A prudent pension plan administrator, however certain
of his legal position, could not reasonably have ignored such a
contingency.
Thus, while the Court is correct that years of litigation may
ensue after a charge is filed with the EEOC, this fact is largely
irrelevant to the Court's concern about "major unforeseen
contingencies," such as an award of retroactive relief adversely
affecting the financial integrity of the pension plan.
Ante at
435 U. S. 721,
722 n. 42. And it is hardly likely that a retroactive award for the
period prior to the filing of the EEOC charge would be
"devastating" for the plan, since, as the Court recognizes, this
period could not, in any case, be longer than two years.
Ante at
435 U. S. 722,
and n. 42;
see 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-5(g) (1970 ed., Supp. V).
In the instant case, the period from when the award began to run
until the charge was filed with the EEOC was just over one year,
from April, 1972, to June, 1973. Even the liability for this
period, moreover, at most would have involved only a small
percentage of the contributions made by women employees, as
discussed in text
infra.