California has a disability insurance system for private
employees temporarily disabled from working by an injury or illness
not covered by workmen's compensation, under which an employee
contributes to an Unemployment Compensation Disability Fund one
percent of his salary up to an annual maximum of $85. A disability
lasting less than eight days is not compensable, except when the
employee is hospitalized. Benefits are not payable for a single
disability exceeding 26 weeks. A disability resulting from an
individual's court commitment as a dipsomaniac, drug addict, or
sexual psychopath is not compensable, nor are certain disabilities
attributable to pregnancy. Appellees, four women otherwise
qualified under the program who have suffered employment disability
because of pregnancies, only one of which was normal, challenged
the pregnancy exclusion. A three-judge District Court upheld their
contention that the exclusion violated the Equal Protection Clause.
The court denied a motion to reconsider based on a state appellate
court ruling, in which appellant who administers the program has
acquiesced, confining the exclusion to only normal pregnancies. The
California program, in terms of the level of benefits and risks
insured, is structured to maintain the solvency of the Disability
Fund at a one-percent annual level of contribution. The District
Court acknowledged that coverage of disabilities resulting from
normal pregnancies would entail substantial additional expense. But
it concluded that this increased cost could be accommodated through
adjustments in the rate of employee contribution, the maximum
benefits payable, "and the other variables affecting the solvency
of the program."
Held:
1. The appellate ruling and administrative guidelines excluding
only normal pregnancies have mooted the case as to the three
appellees who had abnormal pregnancies and whose claims have now
been paid. Pp.
417 U. S.
491-492.
Page 417 U. S. 485
2. California's decision not to insure under its program the
risk of disability resulting from normal pregnancy does not
constitute an invidious discrimination violative of the Equal
Protection Clause. The program does not discriminate with respect
to the persons or groups eligible for its protection, and there is
no evidence that it discriminates against any definable group or
class in terms of the aggregate risk protection derived from the
program. The sole contention is the asserted underinclusiveness of
the program's coverage as a result of the exclusion of disabilities
resulting from normal pregnancy. The State is not required by the
Equal Protection Clause to sacrifice the self-supporting nature of
the program, reduce the benefits payable for covered disabilities,
or increase the maximum employee contribution rate just to provide
protection against another risk of disability, such as normal
pregnancy.
"[T]he Equal Protection Clause does not require that a State
must choose between attacking every aspect of a problem or not
attacking the problem at all."
Dandridge v. Williams, 397 U.
S. 471,
397 U. S.
486-487. Pp.
417 U. S.
492-497.
359 F.
Supp. 792, reversed.
STEWART, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which
BURGER, C.J., and WHITE, BLACKMUN, POWELL, and REHNQUIST, JJ.,
joined. BRENNAN, J., filed a dissenting opinion, in which DOUGLAS
and MARSHALL, JJ., joined,
post, p.
417 U. S.
497.
Page 417 U. S. 486
MR. JUSTICE STEWART delivered the opinion of the Court.
For almost 30 years, California has administered a disability
insurance system that pays benefits to persons in private
employment who are temporarily unable to work because of disability
not covered by workmen' compensation. The appellees brought this
action to challenge the constitutionality of a provision of the
California program that, in defining "disability," excludes from
coverage certain disabilities resulting from pregnancy. Because the
appellees sought to enjoin the enforcement of this State statute, a
three-judge court was convened pursuant to 28 U.S.C. §§ 2281 and
2284. [
Footnote 1] On
Page 417 U. S. 487
the appellees' motion for summary judgment, the District Court,
by a divided vote, held that this provision of the disability
insurance program violates the Equal Protection Clause of the
Fourteenth Amendment, and therefore enjoined its continued
enforcement.
359 F.
Supp. 792. The District Court denied a motion to stay its
judgment pending appeal. The appellant thereupon filed a similar
motion in this Court, which we granted. 414 U.S. 897. We
subsequently noted probable jurisdiction of the appeal. 414 U.S.
1110.
I
California's disability insurance system is funded entirely from
contributions deducted from the wages of participating employees.
Participation in the program is mandatory unless the employees are
protected by a voluntary private plan approved by the State.
[
Footnote 2] Each employee is
required to contribute one percent of his salary, up to an annual
maximum of $85. [
Footnote 3]
These contributions are placed in the Unemployment Compensation
Disability Fund, which is established and administered as a special
trust fund within the state treasury. [
Footnote 4] It is from this Disability Fund that benefits
under the program are paid.
An individual is eligible for disability benefits if, during a
one-year base period prior to his disability, he has contributed
one percent of a minimum income of $300 to the Disability Fund.
[
Footnote 5] In the event he
suffers a compensable disability, the individual can receive a
"weekly benefit amount" of between $25 and $105, depending on the
amount he earned during the highest quarter of the
Page 417 U. S. 488
base period. [
Footnote 6]
Benefits are not paid until the eighth day of disability, unless
the employee is hospitalized, in which case benefits commence on
the first day of hospitalization. [
Footnote 7] In addition to the "weekly benefit amount," a
hospitalized employee is entitled to receive "additional benefits"
of $12 per day of hospitalization. [
Footnote 8] "Weekly benefit amounts" for any one
disability are payable for 26 weeks, so long as the total amount
paid does not exceed one-half of the wages received during the base
period. [
Footnote 9]
"Additional benefits" for any one disability are paid for a maximum
of 20 days. [
Footnote
10]
In return for his one-percent contribution to the Disability
Fund, the individual employee is insured against the risk of
disability stemming from a substantial number of "mental or
physical illness[es] and mental or physical injur[ies]."
Cal.Unemp.Ins.Code § 2626. It is not every disabling condition,
however, that triggers the obligation to pay benefits under the
program. As already noted, for example, any disability of less than
eight days' duration is not compensable, except when the employee
is hospitalized. Conversely, no benefits are payable for any single
disability beyond 26 weeks. Further, disability is not compensable
if it results from the individual's court commitment as a
dipsomaniac, drug addict, or sexual psychopath. [
Footnote 11] Finally, § 2626 of the
Unemployment
Page 417 U. S. 489
Insurance Code excludes from coverage certain disabilities that
are attributable to pregnancy. It is this provision that is at
issue in the present case.
Appellant is the Director of the California Department of Human
Resources Development. [
Footnote
12] He is responsible for the administration of the State's
disability insurance program. Appellees are four women who have
paid sufficient amounts into the Disability Fund to be eligible for
benefits under the program. Each of the appellees became pregnant
and suffered employment disability as a result of her pregnancy.
With respect to three of the appellees, Carolyn Aiello, Augustina
Armendariz, and Elizabeth Johnson, the disabilities were
attributable to abnormal complications encountered during their
pregnancies. [
Footnote 13]
The fourth, Jacqueline Jaramillo, experienced a normal pregnancy,
which was the sole cause of her disability.
At all times relevant to this case, § 2626 of the Unemployment
Insurance Code provided:
"'Disability' or 'disabled' includes both mental or physical
illness and mental or physical injury. An individual shall be
deemed disabled in any day in which, because of his physical or
mental condition, he is unable to perform his regular or customary
work.
In no case shall the term 'disability' or 'disabled'
include any injury or illness caused by or arising in connection
with pregnancy up to the termination of such pregnancy and for a
period of 28 days thereafter."
(Emphasis added.)
Page 417 U. S. 490
Appellant construed and applied the final sentence of this
statute to preclude the payment of benefits for any disability
resulting from pregnancy. As a result, the appellees were ruled
ineligible for disability benefits by reason of this provision, and
they sued to enjoin its enforcement. The District Court,
finding
"that the exclusion of pregnancy-related disabilities is not
based upon a classification having a rational and substantial
relationship to a legitimate state purpose,"
held that the exclusion was unconstitutional under the Equal
Protection Clause. 359 F. Supp. at 801.
Shortly before the District Court's decision in this case, the
California Court of Appeal, in a suit brought by a woman who
suffered an ectopic pregnancy, held that § 2626 does not bar the
payment of benefits on account of disability that results from
medical complications arising during pregnancy.
Rentzer v.
Unemployment Insurance Appeals Board, 32 Cal. App. 3d
604, 108 Cal. Rptr. 336 (1973). [
Footnote 14] The state court construed the statute to
preclude only the payment of benefits for disability accompanying
normal pregnancy. [
Footnote
15] The appellant
Page 417 U. S. 491
acquiesced in this construction and issued administrative
guidelines that exclude only the payment of "maternity benefits" --
i.e., hospitalization and disability benefits for normal
delivery and recuperation.
Although
Rentzer was decided some 10 days before the
District Court's decision in this case, there was apparently no
opportunity to call the court's attention to it. The appellant
therefore asked the court to reconsider its decision in light of
the construction that the California Court of Appeal had given to §
2626 in the
Rentzer case. By a divided vote, the court
denied the motion for reconsideration. Although a more definitive
ruling would surely have been preferable, we interpret the District
Court's denial of the appellant's motion as a determination that
its decision was not affected by the limiting construction given to
§ 2626 in
Rentzer.
Because of the
Rentzer decision and the revised
administrative guidelines that resulted from it, the appellees
Aiello, Armendariz, and Johnson, whose disabilities were
attributable to causes other than normal pregnancy and delivery,
became entitled to benefits under the disability insurance program,
and their claims have since been paid. With respect to appellee
Jaramillo, however, whose disability stemmed solely from normal
pregnancy and childbirth, § 2626 continues to bar the
Page 417 U. S. 492
payment of any benefits. It is evident that only Jaramillo
continues to have a live controversy with the appellant as to the
validity of § 2626. The claims of the other appellees have been
mooted by the change that
Rentzer worked in the
construction and application of that provision. Thus, the issue
before the Court on this appeal is whether the California
disability insurance program invidiously discriminates against
Jaramillo and others similarly situated by not paying insurance
benefits for disability that accompanies normal pregnancy and
childbirth.
II
It is clear that California intended to establish this benefit
system as an insurance program that was to function essentially in
accordance with insurance concepts. [
Footnote 16] Since the program was instituted in 1946, it
has been totally self-supporting, never drawing on general state
revenues to finance disability or hospital benefits. The Disability
Fund is wholly supported by the one percent of wages annually
contributed by participating employees. At oral argument, counsel
for the appellant informed us that, in recent years between 90%
and
Page 417 U. S. 493
103% of the revenue to the Disability Fund has been paid out in
disability and hospital benefits. This history strongly suggests
that the one-percent contribution rate, in addition to being easily
computable, bears a close and substantial relationship to the level
of benefits payable and to the disability risks insured under the
program.
Over the years, California has demonstrated a strong commitment
not to increase the contribution rate above the one-percent level.
The State has sought to provide the broadest possible disability
protection that would be affordable by all employees, including
those with very low incomes. Because any larger percentage or any
flat dollar amount rate of contribution would impose an
increasingly regressive levy bearing most heavily upon those with
the lowest incomes, the State has resisted any attempt to change
the required contribution from the one-percent level. The program
is thus structured, in terms of the level of benefits and the risks
insured, to maintain the solvency of the Disability Fund at a one
percent annual level of contribution. [
Footnote 17]
In ordering the State to pay benefits for disability
accompanying normal pregnancy and delivery, the District Court
acknowledged the State's contention
"that coverage of these disabilities is so extraordinarily
expensive that it would be impossible to maintain a program
supported by employee contributions if these disabilities are
included."
359 F. Supp. at 798. There is considerable disagreement between
the parties with respect to how great the increased costs would
actually be, but they
Page 417 U. S. 494
would clearly be substantial. [
Footnote 18] For purposes of analysis, the District Court
accepted the State's estimate, which was in excess of $100 million
annually, and stated:
"[I]t is clear that including these disabilities would not
destroy the program. The increased costs could be accommodated
quite easily by making reasonable changes in the contribution rate,
the maximum benefits allowable, and the other variables affecting
the solvency of the program."
Ibid.
Each of these "variables" -- the benefit level deemed
appropriate to compensate employee disability, the risks selected
to be insured under the program, and the contribution rate chosen
to maintain the solvency of the program and at the same time to
permit low income employees to participate with minimal personal
sacrifice -- represents a policy determination by the State. The
essential issue in this case is whether the Equal Protection Clause
requires such policies to be sacrificed or compromised in order to
finance the payment of benefits to those whose disability is
attributable to normal pregnancy and delivery.
We cannot agree that the exclusion of this disability from
coverage amounts to invidious discrimination under the Equal
Protection Clause. California does not discriminate with respect to
the persons or groups which are eligible for disability insurance
protection under the program. The classification challenged in this
case relates to the asserted underinclusiveness of the set of risks
that the State has selected to insure. Although California has
created a program to insure most risks of employment
Page 417 U. S. 495
disability, it has not chosen to insure all such risks, and this
decision is reflected in the level of annual contributions exacted
from participating employees. This Court has held that,
consistently with the Equal Protection Clause, a State
"may take one step at a time, addressing itself to the phase of
the problem which seems most acute to the legislative mind. . . .
The legislature may select one phase of one field and apply a
remedy there, neglecting the others. . . ."
Williamson v. Lee Optical Co., 348 U.
S. 483,
348 U. S. 489
(1955);
Jefferson v. Hackney, 406 U.
S. 535 (1972). Particularly with respect to social
welfare programs, so long as the line drawn by the State is
rationally supportable, the courts will not interpose their
judgment as to the appropriate stopping point.
"[T]he Equal Protection Clause does not require that a State
must choose between attacking every aspect of a problem or not
attacking the problem at all."
Dandridge v. Williams, 397 U.
S. 471,
397 U. S.
486-487 (1970).
The District Court suggested that moderate alterations in what
it regarded as "variables" of the disability insurance program
could be made to accommodate the substantial expense required to
include normal pregnancy within the program's protection. The same
can be said, however, with respect to the other expensive class of
disabilities that are excluded from coverage -- short-term
disabilities. If the Equal Protection Clause were thought to compel
disability payments for normal pregnancy, it is hard to perceive
why it would not also compel payments for short-term disabilities
suffered by participating employees. [
Footnote 19]
It is evident that a totally comprehensive program would be
substantially more costly than the present program, and would
inevitably require state subsidy, a higher
Page 417 U. S. 496
rate of employee contribution, a lower scale of benefits for
those suffering insured disabilities, or some combination of these
measures. There is nothing in the Constitution, however, that
requires the State to subordinate or compromise its legitimate
interests solely to create a more comprehensive social insurance
program than it already has.
The State has a legitimate interest in maintaining the
self-supporting nature of its insurance program. Similarly, it has
an interest in distributing the available resources in such a way
as to keep benefit payments at an adequate level for disabilities
that are covered, rather than to cover all disabilities
inadequately. Finally, California has a legitimate concern in
maintaining the contribution rate at a level that will not unduly
burden participating employees, particularly low income employees
who may be most in need of the disability insurance.
These policies provide an objective and wholly noninvidious
basis for the State's decision not to create a more comprehensive
insurance program than it has. There is no evidence in the record
that the selection of the risks insured by the program worked to
discriminate against any definable group or class in terms of the
aggregate risk protection derived by that group or class from the
program. [
Footnote 20] There
is no risk from which men are protected
Page 417 U. S. 497
and women are not. Likewise, there is no risk from which women
are protected and men are not. [
Footnote 21]
The appellee simply contends that, although she has received
insurance protection equivalent to that provided all other
participating employees, she has suffered discrimination because
she encountered a risk that was outside the program's protection.
For the reasons we have stated, we hold that this contention is not
a valid one under the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth
Amendment.
The stay heretofore issued by the Court is vacated, and the
judgment of the District Court is
Reversed.
[
Footnote 1]
This litigation began as two separate suits on behalf of
California employees who had paid sufficient amounts into the
Disability Fund to be eligible generally for benefits under the
program. Carolyn Aiello brought her suit against appellant in the
Federal District Court. Augustina Armendariz, Elizabeth Johnson,
and Jacqueline Jaramillo jointly initiated their suit as a petition
for a writ of mandate in the California Supreme Court. Both suits
were brought as class actions, and asserted the unconstitutionality
of § 2626 of the California Unemployment Insurance Code under the
Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. The appellant
removed the state court suit to the Federal District Court, where
the two actions were consolidated.
See 28 U.S.C. §
1441(b).
[
Footnote 2]
Cal.Unemp.Ins.Code §§ 3251-3254.
[
Footnote 3]
§§ 984, 985, 2901.
[
Footnote 4]
§ 3001.
[
Footnote 5]
§ 2652.
[
Footnote 6]
§ 2655. This provision has been amended, effective July 1, 1974,
to provide for a maximum weekly benefit amount of $119.
[
Footnote 7]
§§ 2627(b) and 2802.
[
Footnote 8]
§ 2801.
[
Footnote 9]
§ 2653.
[
Footnote 10]
§ 2801. Section 2608 provides a formula for determining whether
a disabling condition that is intermittent is one disability or
more than one disability for purposes of applying the limitations
in §§ 2653 and 2801 on the maximum amount of benefits payable.
[
Footnote 11]
§ 2678. Sections 2675-2677 contain various other factors that
will disqualify an employee from receiving benefits but that relate
to matters other than the nature of the disabling condition.
[
Footnote 12]
Effective July 1, 1974, the Department of Human Resources
Development will be renamed the Department of Employment
Development.
See Cal.Unemp.Ins.Code § 301
et
seq.
[
Footnote 13]
Aiello and Johnson suffered ectopic and tubal pregnancies,
respectively, which required surgery to terminate the pregnancies.
Armendariz suffered a miscarriage.
[
Footnote 14]
In an earlier decision, the Court of Appeal had sustained § 2626
against an equal protection challenge by a female employee who had
suffered disability as a result of normal pregnancy and delivery.
Clark v. California Employment Stabilization
Comm'n, 166 Cal. App.
2d 326, 332 P.2d 716 (1958).
[
Footnote 15]
Section 2626 was later amended, and a new § 2626.2 was added, in
order clearly to reflect this interpretation. The two sections now
provide as follows:
§ 2626
"'Disability' or 'disabled' includes both mental or physical
illness, mental or physical injury, and, to the extent specified in
Section 2626.2, pregnancy. An individual shall be deemed disabled
in any day in which, because of his physical or mental condition,
he is unable to perform his regular or customary work."
§ 2626.2
"Benefits relating to pregnancy shall be paid under this part
only in accordance with the following:"
"(a) Disability benefits shall be paid upon a doctor's
certification that the claimant is disabled because of an abnormal
and involuntary complication of pregnancy, including but not
limited to: puerperal infection, eclampsia, casesarian section
delivery, ectopic pregnancy, and toxemia."
"(b) Disability benefits shall be paid upon a doctor's
certification that a condition possibly arising out of pregnancy
would disable the claimant without regard to the pregnancy,
including but not limited to: anemia, diabetes, embolism, heart
disease, hypertension, phlebitis, phlebothrombosis, pyelonephritis,
thrombophlebitis, vaginitis, varicose veins, and venous
thrombosis."
These amendments took effect on January 1, 1974.
[
Footnote 16]
In his message to the state legislature proposing the creation
of this program, Governor Earl Warren stated:
"It is not possible for employees to obtain from private
insurance companies protection against loss of wages or salary
during sickness as adequately or cheaply as that protection could
be obtained by diverting their present 1 per cent contribution for
the support of a Disability Benefits Program."
California Senate Journal, Jan. 23, 1946, p. 229. The California
Supreme Court has concluded
"that the legislative purpose in providing unemployment
disability benefits . . . was to provide an insurance program to
pay benefits to individuals who are unemployed because of illness
or injury. . . ."
Garcia v. Industrial Accident Comm'n, 41 Cal. 2d
689, 692, 263 P.2d 8, 10 (1953) (internal quotation marks
omitted).
[
Footnote 17]
Section 2604 of the Unemployment Insurance Code vests the
Governor and the appellant with authority to modify the payment of
benefits and to increase the waiting time for eligibility if such
steps are necessary to forestall insolvency of the Disability Fund.
But neither the Governor nor the appellant is authorized to
increase the contribution rate under any circumstances.
[
Footnote 18]
Appellant's estimate of the increased cost of including normal
pregnancy within the insured risks has varied between $120.2
million and $131 million annually, or between a 33% and 36%
increase in the present amount of benefits paid under the program.
On the other hand, appellee contends that the increased cost would
be $48.9 million annually, or a 12% increase over present
expenditures.
[
Footnote 19]
The same could be said of disabilities continuing beyond 26
weeks.
[
Footnote 20]
The dissenting opinion to the contrary, this 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. While it is true that only women can become pregnant,
it does not follow that every legislative classification concerning
pregnancy is a sex-based classification like those considered in
Reed, supra, and
Frontiero, supra. Normal
pregnancy is an objectively identifiable physical condition with
unique characteristics. Absent a showing that distinctions
involving pregnancy are mere pretexts designed to effect an
invidious discrimination against the members of one sex or the
other, lawmakers are constitutionally free to include or exclude
pregnancy from the coverage of legislation such as this on any
reasonable basis, just as with respect to any other physical
condition.
The lack of identity between the excluded disability and gender
as such under this insurance program becomes clear upon the most
cursory analysis. The program divides potential recipients into two
groups -- pregnant women and nonpregnant persons. While the first
group is exclusively female, the second includes members of both
sexes. The fiscal and actuarial benefits of the program thus accrue
to members of both sexes.
[
Footnote 21]
Indeed, the appellant submitted to the District Court data that
indicated that both the annual claim rate and the annual claim cost
are greater for women than for men. As the District Court
acknowledged, "women contribute about 28 percent of the total
disability insurance fund and receive back about 38 percent of the
fund in benefits."
359 F.
Supp. 792, 800. Several
amici curiae have represented
to the Court that they have had a similar experience under private
disability insurance programs.
MR. JUSTICE BRENNAN, with whom MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS and MR.
JUSTICE MARSHALL join, dissenting.
Relying upon
Dandridge v. Williams, 397 U.
S. 471 (1970), and
Jefferson v. Hackney,
406 U. S. 535
(1972),
Page 417 U. S. 498
the Court today rejects appellees' equal protection claim and
upholds the exclusion of normal pregnancy-related disabilities from
coverage under California's disability insurance program on the
ground that the legislative classification rationally promotes the
State's legitimate cost-saving interests in
"maintaining the self supporting nature of its insurance
program[,] . . . distributing the available resources in such a way
as to keep benefit payments at an adequate level for disabilities
that are covered, . . . [and] maintaining the contribution rate at
a level that will not unduly burden participating employees. . .
."
Ante at
417 U. S. 496.
Because I believe that
Reed v. Reed, 404 U. S.
71 (1971), and
Frontiero v. Richardson,
411 U. S. 677
(1973), mandate a stricter standard of scrutiny which the State's
classification fails to satisfy, I respectfully dissent.
California's disability insurance program was enacted to
supplement the State's unemployment insurance and workmen's
compensation programs by providing benefits to wage earners to
cushion the economic effects of income loss and medical expenses
resulting from sickness or injury. The legislature's intent in
enacting the program was expressed clearly in § 2601 of the
Unemployment Insurance Code:
"The purpose of this part is to compensate in part for the wage
loss sustained by individuals unemployed because of sickness or
injury and to reduce to a minimum the suffering caused by
unemployment resulting therefrom. This part shall be construed
liberally in aid of its declared purpose to mitigate the evils and
burdens which fall on the unemployed and disabled worker and his
family."
To achieve the Act's broad humanitarian goals, the legislature
fashioned a pooled-risk disability fund covering
Page 417 U. S. 499
all employees at the same rate of contribution, [
Footnote 2/1] regardless of individual risk.
[
Footnote 2/2] The only requirement
that must be satisfied before an employee becomes eligible to
receive disability benefits is that the employee must have
contributed one percent of a minimum income of $300 during a
one-year base period. Cal.Unemp.Ins.Code § 2652. The "basic
benefits," varying from $25 to $119 per week, depending upon the
employee's base-period earnings, begin on the eighth day of
disability or on the first day of hospitalization. §§ 2655,
2627(b), 2802. Benefits are payable for a maximum of 26 weeks, but
may not exceed one-half of the employee's total base-period
earnings. § 2653. Finally, compensation is paid for virtually all
disabling conditions without regard to cost, voluntariness,
uniqueness, predictability, or "normalcy" of the disability.
[
Footnote 2/3] Thus, for example,
workers are compensated for costly disabilities such as heart
attacks, voluntary disabilities such as cosmetic surgery
Page 417 U. S. 500
or sterilization, disabilities unique to sex or race such as
prostatectomies or sickle-cell anemia, preexisting conditions
inevitably resulting in disability such as degenerative arthritis
or cataracts, and "normal" disabilities such as removal of
irritating wisdom teeth or other orthodontia.
Despite the Code's broad goals and scope of coverage,
compensation is denied for disabilities suffered in connection with
a "normal" pregnancy -- disabilities suffered only by women.
Cal.Unemp.Ins.Code §§ 2626, 2626.2 (Supp. 1974). Disabilities
caused by pregnancy, however, like other physically disabling
conditions covered by the Code, require medical care, often include
hospitalization, anesthesia and surgical procedures, and may
involve genuine risk to life. [
Footnote
2/4] Moreover, the economic effects
Page 417 U. S. 501
caused by pregnancy-related disabilities are functionally
indistinguishable from the effects caused by any other disability:
wages are lost due to a physical inability to work, and medical
expenses are incurred for the delivery of the child and for
postpartum care. [
Footnote 2/5] In
my view, by singling out for less favorable treatment a
gender-linked disability peculiar to women, the State has created a
double standard for disability compensation: a limitation is
imposed upon the disabilities for which women workers may recover,
while men receive full compensation for all disabilities suffered,
including those that affect only or primarily their sex, such as
prostatectomies, circumcision, hemophilia, and gout. In effect, one
set of rules is applied to females and another to males. Such
dissimilar treatment of men and women, on the basis of physical
characteristics inextricably linked to one sex, inevitably
constitutes sex discrimination.
The same conclusion has been reached by the Equal Employment
Opportunity Commission, the federal agency charged with enforcement
of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, as amended by the
Equal Employment Opportunity Act of 1972, 42 U.S.C. § 2000e
et
seq. (1970 ed., Supp. II), which prohibits employment
discrimination on the basis of sex. In guidelines issued pursuant
to Title VII and designed to prohibit the disparate
Page 417 U. S. 502
treatment of pregnancy disabilities in the employment context,
[
Footnote 2/6] the EEOC has
declared:
"Disabilities caused or contributed to by pregnancy,
miscarriage, abortion, childbirth, and recovery therefrom are, for
all job-related purposes, temporary disabilities, and should be
treated as such under any health or temporary disability insurance
or sick leave plan available in connection with employment. Written
and unwritten employment policies and practices involving matters
such as the commencement and duration of leave, the availability of
extensions, the accrual of seniority and other benefits and
privileges, reinstatement, and payment under any health or
temporary disability insurance or sick leave plan, formal or
informal, shall be applied to disability due to pregnancy or
childbirth on the same terms and conditions as they are applied to
other temporary disabilities."
29 CFR § 1604.10(b). [
Footnote
2/7]
In the past, when a legislative classification has turned on
gender, the Court has justifiably applied a standard of judicial
scrutiny more strict than that generally accorded economic or
social welfare programs.
Compare
Page 417 U. S. 503
Reed v. Reed, 404 U. S. 71
(1971),
and Frontiero v. Richardson, 411 U.
S. 677 (1973),
with Dandridge v. Williams,
397 U. S. 471
(1970), and
Jefferson v. Hackney, 406 U.
S. 535 (1972). Yet, by its decision today, the Court
appears willing to abandon that higher standard of review without
satisfactorily explaining what differentiates the gender-based
classification employed in this case from those found
unconstitutional in
Reed and
Frontiero. The
Court's decision threatens to return men and women to a time when
"traditional" equal protection analysis sustained legislative
classifications that treated differently members of a particular
sex solely because of their sex.
See, e.g., Muller v.
Oregon, 208 U. S. 412
(1908);
Goesaert v. Cleary, 335 U.
S. 464 (1948);
Hoyt v. Florida, 368 U. S.
57 (1961).
I cannot join the Court's apparent retreat. I continue to adhere
to my view that
"classifications based upon sex, like classifications based upon
race, alienage, or national origin, are inherently suspect, and
must therefore be subjected to strict judicial scrutiny."
Frontiero v. Richardson, supra, at
411 U. S. 688.
When, as in this case, the State employs a legislative
classification that distinguishes between beneficiaries solely by
reference to gender-linked disability risks,
"[t]he Court is not . . . free to sustain the statute on the
ground that it rationally promotes legitimate governmental
interests; rather, such suspect classifications can be sustained
only when the State bears the burden of demonstrating that the
challenged legislation serves overriding or compelling interests
that cannot be achieved either by a more carefully tailored
legislative classification or by the use of feasible, less drastic
means."
Kahn v. Shevin, 416 U. S. 351,
416 U. S.
357-358 (1974) (BRENNAN, J., dissenting).
The State has clearly failed to meet that burden in the present
case. The essence of the State's justification for
Page 417 U. S. 504
excluding disabilities caused by a normal pregnancy from its
disability compensation scheme is that covering such disabilities
would be too costly. To be sure, as presently funded, inclusion of
normal pregnancies "would be substantially more costly than the
present program." [
Footnote 2/8]
Ante at
417 U. S. 495.
The present level of benefits for insured disabilities could not be
maintained without increasing the employee contribution rate,
raising or lifting the yearly contribution ceiling, or securing
state subsidies. But whatever role such monetary considerations may
play in traditional equal protection analysis, the State's interest
in preserving the fiscal integrity of its disability insurance
program simply cannot render the State's use of a suspect
classification constitutional. For while
"a State has a valid interest in preserving the fiscal integrity
of its programs[,] . . . a State may not accomplish such a purpose
by invidious distinctions between classes of its citizens. . . .
The saving of welfare costs cannot justify an otherwise invidious
classification."
Shapiro v. Thompson, 394 U. S. 618,
394 U. S. 633
(1969). Thus, when a statutory classification is subject to strict
judicial scrutiny, the State "must do more than show that denying
[benefits to the excluded class] saves money."
Memorial
Hospital v. Maricopa County, 415 U. S. 250,
415 U. S. 263
(1974).
See also Graham v. Richardson, 403 U.
S. 365,
403 U. S.
374-375 (1971). [
Footnote
2/9]
Page 417 U. S. 505
Moreover, California's legitimate interest in fiscal integrity
could easily have been achieved through a variety of less drastic,
sexually neutral means. As the District Court observed:
"Even using [the State's] estimate of the cost of expanding the
program to include pregnancy-related disabilities, however, it is
clear that including these disabilities would not destroy the
program. The increased costs could be accommodated quite easily by
making reasonable changes in the contribution rate, the maximum
benefits allowable, and the other variables affecting the solvency
of the program. For example, the entire cost increase estimated by
defendant could be met by requiring workers to contribute an
additional amount of approximately .364 percent of their salary and
increasing the maximum annual contribution to about $119."
359 F.
Supp. 792, 798.
I would therefore affirm the judgment of the District Court.
[
Footnote 2/1]
An employee must contribute one percent of his annual wages, not
exceeding a total contribution of $85 per year ($90 for calendar
year 1974 and thereafter). Cal.Unemp.Ins.Code §§ 984, 985, 2901.
The ceiling on wages subject to the one-percent contribution rate,
of course, introduces a regressive element in the contribution
scheme. Perhaps in recognition of this fact, the disability
benefits schedule is designed to grant proportionately greater
benefits to more poorly paid workers. § 2655.
[
Footnote 2/2]
California deliberately decided not to classify employees on the
basis of actuarial data. Thus, the contribution rate for a
particular group of employees is not tied to that group's predicted
rate of disability claims.
359 F.
Supp. 792, 800.
[
Footnote 2/3]
While the Code technically excludes from coverage individuals
under court commitment for dipsomania, drug addiction, or sexual
psychopathy, Cal.Unemp.Ins.Code § 2678, the Court was informed by
the Deputy Attorney General of California at oral argument that
court commitment for such disabilities is "a fairly archaic
practice," and that "it would be unrealistic to say that they
constitute valid exclusions." Tr. of Oral Arg. 13.
[
Footnote 2/4]
On March 2, 1974, the American College of Obstetricians and
Gynecologists adopted the following Policy Statement on
Pregnancy-related Disabilities:
"Pregnancy is a physiological process. All pregnant patients,
however, have a variable degree of disability on an individual
basis, as indicated below, during which time they are unable to
perform their usual activities. (1) In an uncomplicated pregnancy,
disability occurs near the termination of pregnancy, during labor,
delivery, and the puerperium. The process of labor and puerperium
is disabling in itself. The usual duration of such disability is
approximately six to eight weeks. (2) Complications of a pregnancy
may occur which give rise to other disability. Examples of such
complications include toxemia, infection, hemorrhage, ectopic
pregnancy, and abortion. (3) A woman with preexisting disease
which, in itself, is not disabling, may become disabled with the
addition of pregnancy. Certain patients with heart disease,
diabetes, hypertensive cardiovascular disease, renal disease, and
other systemic conditions may become disabled during their
pregnancy because of the adverse effect pregnancy has upon these
conditions."
"The onset, termination and cause of the disability, related to
pregnancy, can only be determined by a physician."
Brief for Appellees 59-60.
[
Footnote 2/5]
Nearly two-thirds of all women who work do so of necessity:
either they are unmarried or their husbands earn less than $7,000
per year.
See United States Department of Labor, Women's
Bureau, Why Women Work (rev. ed.1972); United States Department of
Labor, Employment Standards Administration, The Myth and the
Reality (May 1974 rev.). Moreover, this Court recognized in
Kahn v. Shevin, 416 U. S. 351,
416 U. S. 353
(1974), that
"data compiled by the Women's Bureau of the United States
Department of Labor show that, in 1972 a woman working full time
had a median income which was only 57.9% of the median for males --
a figure actually six points lower than had been achieved in
1955."
(Footnote omitted.)
[
Footnote 2/6]
"The Commission carefully scrutinized both employer practices
and their crucial impact on women for a substantial period of time,
and then issued its Guidelines after it became increasingly
apparent that systematic and pervasive discrimination against women
was frequently found in employers' denial of employment opportunity
and benefits to women on the basis of the childbearing role,
performed solely by women."
Brief for United States Equal Employment Opportunity Commission
as
Amicus Curie 10.
[
Footnote 2/7]
See also the proposed Sex Discrimination Guidelines
issued by the Department of Labor pursuant to Exec.Order 11246,
virtually adopting the EEOC's pregnancy-related disabilities
guideline, 38 Fed.Reg. 35337, 35338 (Dec. 27, 1973) (proposed 41
CFR § 6020.3(h)(2)).
[
Footnote 2/8]
However,
"[i]t is important to remember, especially in the cost context,
that, if an employee is being paid his regular pay while disabled,
he cannot collect disability pay. Therefore, it follows that any
alleged financial burden on the State will be greatly diminished
when employers adhere to Title VII and treat pregnancy-related
disabilities the same as other disabilities by allowing women to
use accumulated sick leave and possibly annual leave as well."
Brief for United States Equal Employment Opportunity Commission
as
Amicus Curiae 21 n. 12.
[
Footnote 2/9]
Similarly, under the EEOC's Guidelines on Discrimination Because
of Sex,
"[i]t shall not be a defense under title VIII 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).