13 Fair Empl.Prac.Cas. 705,
EQUAL EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY COMMISSION et al., Appellants,
v.
ENTERPRISE ASSOCIATION STEAMFITTERS LOCAL NO. 638 of U. A.
et al., Appellees.
George RIOS et al., Appellants,
v.
ENTERPRISE ASSOCIATION STEAMFITTERS LOCAL No. 638 of U. A.
et al., Appellees.
Nos. 976, 975, 1286 to 1289, Dockets 75-6132, 75-6140,
75-7646, 75-7668,75-7699 and 75-7011.
United States Court of Appeals,
Second Circuit.
Argued June 16, 1976.
Decided Sept. 7, 1976.
Louis G. Corsi, Asst. U. S. Atty., New York City (Robert B. Fiske, Jr., U. S. Atty. for the Southern District of New York, Steven J. Glassman, Asst. U. S. Atty., New York City, Abner W. Sibal, Gen. Counsel, EEOC, Joseph T. Eddins, Jr., Associate Gen. Counsel, EEOC, Beatrice Rosenberg, Atty., EEOC, Washington, D.C., of counsel), for appellant EEOC.
Dennis R. Yeager, National Employment Law Project, Inc., New York City (Marilyn R. Walter and Robert P. Roberts, National Employment Law Project, Inc., Tufo, Johnston & Allegaert, New York City, of counsel), for appellants Rios, and others.
Richard Brook, Delson & Gordon, New York City, for appellee Local 638.
Thomas A. Shaw, Jr., Breed, Abbott & Morgan, New York City (Robert B. Kuhback, Breed, Abbott & Morgan, New York City, of counsel), for appellee Mechanical Contractors Ass'n of New York, Inc.
Before MANSFIELD, OAKES and GURFEIN, Circuit Judges.
OAKES, Circuit Judge:
Cross appeals, challenging backpay and attorney's fees orders in a case involving unlawful discrimination in union membership and related employment, raise a congeries of questions relating to remedial relief under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. The underlying question of discrimination has been a matter of protracted litigation,1 with quite careful consideration given to the issues by a district judge whose exercise of remedial discretion2 we are, needless to say, reluctant to reverse. Separate actions brought by the Government and by individual plaintiffs ("the Rios plaintiffs") against Enterprise Association Steamfitters Local 638 of U.A. (hereinafter "Local 638" or "the union"), the Joint Steamfitters Apprenticeship Committee of the Steamfitters Industry (JAC), and the Mechanical Contractors Association of New York, Inc. (MCA), have been consolidated for the trial below, and for these appeals. The orders appealed from were entered in the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York by Dudley B. Bonsal, Judge. See
I. BACKPAY
The district court's assorted holdings in respect to backpay may be summarized as follows. First, backpay was to be awarded to qualified members who applied in writing for membership in A Branch4 of Local 638, and were denied admission after October 15, 1968, but before June 21, 1973, the date of the order granting injunctive relief. See
Second, while ability to pay is an equitable factor to be taken into account in awarding backpay under Title VII, and the union in this case has only limited financial resources, the court concluded that the union is nevertheless liable. Id. at 991-92. In light of the union's financial situation, however, the court reserved the right to make a pro rata reduction of each claimant's award, or to provide for payments in installments, after the court has reviewed the total impact of the backpay orders. Id. at 993.
Third, the MCA is not responsible for all of the unlawful or discriminatory practices indeed, there has been no specific MCA discrimination shown, the only showing being that there has been a lack of nonwhite employment in the industry generally with the result that industry referral practices must be changed. Id. at 992. MCA was, therefore, found not liable for backpay.
Fourth, the district court held that the JAC, a joint committee composed of four members chosen by MCA and four members chosen by Local 638 which has conducted the Steamfitters Apprenticeship Program throughout the years, had no "demonstrated responsibility for direct admissions to the A Branch of Local 638 of persons already qualified as journeymen steamfitters." Id. Thus it too was found not liable. Id.
Fifth, the court adopted the two-year statute of limitations which was set forth in Pub.L. No. 92-261, §§ 4(a) (Mar. 24, 1972), 14; see 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-5(g), a statute enacted after the suit was brought and its classes defined.6 The court also limited forward recovery of backpay to the period predating the court's order granting a permanent injunction against the unlawful discriminatory practices.
Sixth, the court limited backpay recovery to residents of a county within the geographical jurisdiction of Local 638 at the time of their application for membership in the Local 638 A Branch.7
And seventh, the court ordered that income from other employment or from public assistance is to be deducted from any backpay award. Id.
The EEOC and the Rios plaintiffs claim that in each of the above respects the district court's order was too narrowly drawn to accord with the dictates of Albemarle Paper Co. v. Moody,
A. Liability of Union for Backpay. We agree with the Government and the Rios plaintiffs that the union's arguments against a backpay award amount to a claim for special treatment for unions and special immunity for the discriminatory practices in which they engage. This claim has no support in equity or law. The statute, which refers to "back pay (payable by the employer, employment agency, or labor organization, as the case may be, responsible for the unlawful employment practice) . . .," 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-5(g), is directly to the contrary. To be sure, Albemarle, supra, did approve a backpay award against an employer rather than a union. But the Court quoted with evident approval from United States v. N. L. Industries, Inc.,
The union, however, makes the special claim that it should be exempted from the backpay award issued in this case because the amount of the award is potentially so large that the union may be driven into bankruptcy, thereby destroying its capability to provide affirmative relief for its new minority members. This claim of financial exigency seems premature at this stage. It is by no means apparent that the backpay award will wreak the disastrous consequences and summon forth the parade of horrors that the union envisages. The record lacks any evidence showing that the union faces imminent financial distress should backpay be awarded; any evidence on this issue the district court may consider prior to its entry of a final backpay order. Therefore we do not now pass upon the propriety of any reduction, either under the law or the facts as they may be developed. Indeed, it may not be amiss to point out that the union and its pre-1968 membership have financially benefited from its policy of excluding minority applicants from access to employment opportunities which the union has historically controlled. It is, therefore, no abuse of discretion to require relief for appellees which may, if only indirectly, adversely affect the interests of other union members. See Franks v. Bowman Transportation Co.,
Ample authority exists in other circuits for the award of backpay against unions for Title VII violations, either solely, where the union was primarily responsible, Guerra v. Manchester Terminal Corp.,
B. Limitation of Relief to Persons Applying In Writing to Branch A for Membership. The Rios plaintiffs and the EEOC challenge this portion of the district court's order on two bases first, that the limitation to those who can prove they applied in writing for membership is invalid as too restrictive as to those who have applied, and, second, that many of the people discriminated against, but who never actually applied for union membership, will be precluded from recovery. The first issue raised is easy to resolve, the second more difficult.
Judge Bonsal's order denies backpay to persons who do not possess written evidence of their application for union membership. His order was handed down prior to this court's decision in Sheet Metal Workers, supra, which in reliance on Albemarle, supra, disapproved a similar order in the sheet metal-workers' case. As the court said in Sheet Metal Workers, limiting backpay to those who apply in writing or can provide documentary proof would serve to "frustrate the central statutory purposes" of Title VII, especially since one reason that there may be no documentary proof is that the Local and the Joint Apprenticeship Council there, as here, kept incomplete records of their membership applications.
Appellants' second claim is that specific classes of persons who may be able to present evidence of individual discrimination are excluded from recovery by the district court's backpay order. The court's order limits recovery to those who applied for A Branch membership. Two other very significant groups are excluded by this order: those who were discriminatorily denied work referrals both before and after they were finally admitted to the A Branch,
We are agreed that the force of Albemarle and other Title VII case law requires that any nonwhite steamfitter, whether a union member or not, who claims that he was discriminated against by work referral practices is entitled to prove the discrimination against him and any resulting damages. Presumably he would have to show that despite his efforts to find work with a contractor or with a steamfitting subcontractor he was turned down. He would also have to show that the union referred only white union members, "permit men"8 or B Branch men to the jobs the nonwhite steamfitter sought, which were filled by those referred. There will be, obviously, difficult problems of proof for any individual plaintiff, but we see no valid reason for precluding these persons from attempting to produce such proof. As the Fourth Circuit said in Hairston v. McLean Trucking Co.,
The writer of this opinion would apply the same principles to those who were victims of discrimination in the apprenticeship program. While their problems of proof might be even greater, individuals should not be precluded from establishing loss of pay by appropriate proof where as here, admission to the program by test was not job-related. The JAC has kept a record of all persons who applied for the apprenticeship program, and the results obtained by those who took the written test. The writer fails to perceive any reason to distinguish the situation of nonwhites who were discriminatorily denied apprenticeship, or who became indentured apprentices, but who lost wages as a result of illegal employment discrimination, from the situation of nonwhite journeymen who lost wages for the same reason. See Pettway v. American Cast Iron Pipe Co., supra,
My brothers Mansfield and Gurfein, however, feel quite otherwise. They believe it to be within the proper exercise of the conceded discretion of the district court, Albemarle, supra,
That if nondiscriminatory tests for admission to the program had been formulated and administered (which, of course, never occurred), the applicant would have passed them;
That he would have progressed satisfactorily through the three- or four-year program to graduation; and
That he would then have obtained employment as a steamfitter.
My brothers emphasize the Supreme Court's recognition in Albemarle that "the trial court will often have the keener appreciation of those facts and circumstances peculiar to particular cases." Id. at 421-22,
We are all agreed that those who were deterred from applying to the A Branch but who were not discriminated against in work referral practices should be denied recovery. It is one thing to grant retroactive or constructive seniority to discriminatees deterred from applying for jobs or promotions, as in Acha v. Beame,
We all recognize the administrative burdens that the trial of a backpay suit necessarily imposes upon the district court. We fully recommend that the court utilize its full powers under 28 U.S.C. § 636 and Fed.R.Civ.P. 53, to refer these matters to a special master, who may under the statute be a magistrate if permitted by local rule, for a comprehensive report. Pettway v. American Cast Iron Pipe Co., supra,
C. Liability of MCA. MCA is a trade association of approximately 60 out of the some 300 heating, ventilating and air conditioning contractors in the New York area which employ steamfitters. The 60 MCA members employ the major share of the steamfitter labor force and MCA represents its members in collective bargaining negotiations and other labor relations.
D. Liability of the JAC. The JAC as we have said is a joint labor management committee composed of four members chosen by MCA and four members chosen by Local 638. The major function of the JAC is to supervise the steamfitters' apprenticeship program. The four management trustees are designated by MCA and serve at the will of MCA, which can at any time terminate the designation of a trustee by resolution of the MCA board of directors. One of the JAC directors is the MCA executive secretary. The union trustees on the JAC are three of the principal union officers. The district court found that the apprenticeship program conducted by the JAC did not "fully meet the requirements of Title VII."
JAC has "no" demonstrated responsibility for direct admissions to the A Branch of Local 638 of persons already qualified as journeymen steamfitters.
Therefore, only Local 638 is liable for back pay.
The reasoning of the district court is evidently premised on its view, fully supported in the record, that the union was the dominant factor in creating and perpetuating the discriminatory membership criteria. The court could well have concluded from the record before it that although JAC was a participant in the lesser of the discriminatory practices, the major blame for both the discriminatory examinations and the more invidious direct admission policy lay squarely with the union. This consideration, in addition to the fact that it was the union and its members, rather than the JAC itself, which profited from the unlawful practices,9 indicates that it was no abuse of discretion for the district court to require the union to shoulder the entire responsibility for backpay. See Guerra v. Manchester Terminal Corp., supra,
E. Statute of Limitations. In these combined actions, the Government filed suit on June 29, 1971, under Title VII and the private plaintiffs filed suit on February 26, 1971, under Title VII and also under42 U.S.C. §§ 1981, 1983. The Rios plaintiffs had initially filed their charge of discrimination with the New York Division of Human Rights on August 19, 1970, and with the EEOC on October 15, 1970. When these actions were first brought there was no specific applicable federal statute of limitations. On March 24, 1972, Congress enacted the Equal Employment Opportunity Act of 1972, § 706(g) of which provides for a statute of limitations barring actions arising more than two years prior to the filing of a charge with the EEOC. 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-5(g). The district court applied the 1972 statute retroactively to this case, reasoning that the amendment had "a bearing on Congressional intent as to the limitation to be imposed in granting back pay awards."
We disagree with this retroactive application of the new statute of limitations rule, as have the Fifth and Sixth Circuits. See EEOC v. Detroit Edison Co.,
Prior to the enactment of the federal statute, we would, of course, look to the analogous state statute of limitations. See Chevron Oil Co. v. Hudson,
We also agree with appellants that since the purpose of backpay is to make whole the victims of discrimination, Albemarle Paper Co. v. Moody, supra, the district court erred in setting June 21, 1973, the day when it ordered injunctive relief, as the termination date for the backpay award. Obviously, the injunctive relief did not provide for immediate entry into the A Branch for all identifiable victims of past discrimination (much less immediate job placement of those who had been denied equal job referrals). It is the date of actual remedying of discrimination, rather than the date of the district court's order, which should govern. Patterson v. American Tobacco Co.,
F. Residence Requirement. The district court required backpay claimants to prove residence within the geographic jurisdiction of the union at the time of the application for membership. The union argues that this limitation lies within the district court's discretion on the basis that residence is an indication of an individual's availability for work within the union's geographic jurisdiction. We fail to see the logical relationship of this argument to the issue whether a given individual is entitled to backpay. During the relevant period there was no residence requirement for admission of qualified journeymen directly into A Branch. The membership requirements were that the applicant have five years' experience in the plumbing and pipefitting industry and good moral character. But the class, as defined by Judge Tenny, note 6 supra, entitled to relief is limited to those nonwhites residing in New York City and the Counties of Suffolk and Nassau, so that Judge Bonsal's order simply reflects that definition, and we therefore do not disturb it.
G. Deduction of Public Assistance. The district court ordered that "public assistance" was to be deducted from any backpay awarded. Title VII provides only that "(i)nterim earnings or amounts earnable with reasonable diligence by the person or persons discriminated against shall operate to reduce the back pay otherwise allowable." 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-5(g). The Rios plaintiffs object to the offset of public assistance payments from backpay, and refer us to the NLRB model, so extensively relied upon by the Supreme Court in Albemarle. In the NLRB context, the Supreme Court held in NLRB v. Gullett Gin Co.,
The weight of common law authority is that collateral sources are not deductible from a tort damage award. See 2 F. Harper & F. James, The Law of Torts § 25.22, at 1343 n.1 (1956). But see Coyne v. Campbell,
As a matter of policy, however, we are inclined to agree with the Satty case and the rulings in other circuits which have held it not an abuse of discretion to deduct sums received from collateral sources such as unemployment compensation. While it was employer rather than union contributions that went toward the underlying payments of unemployment compensation by the Government, absent such a governmental scheme the bargaining power of unions would surely be increased and their own wages (and hence dues) very probably greater. We see no compelling reason for providing the injured party with double recovery for his lost employment; no compelling reason of deterrence or retribution against the responsible party in this case; and we are not in the business of redistributing the wealth beyond the goal of making the victim of discrimination whole.
H. Pro Rata Modification. The district court reserved the right in the event that the total award for backpay was too great for the union to pay either to modify the award on a pro rata basis or to provide for payments in installments. The district court has thus indicated that ability to pay is a factor it may consider in its determination of appropriate equitable relief under Title VII. See United States v. Georgia Power Co., supra,
II. ATTORNEY'S FEES
The district court found that on the Rios plaintiffs' motion for attorney's fees in the sum of $128,092.50 would ordinarily be awarded on the basis of the hours spent and rates suggested if the fees were to be paid by a profit-making defendant.
But we read the statute to proscribe less than the union claims. The statutory prohibition applies only where the EEOC or the United States Government is the prevailing party. Here the Rios plaintiffs are the prevailing parties and their attorney, the Project, is neither a party nor a branch of the United States Government; rather, the Project is a nonprofit corporation which receives some of its funding from non-governmental sources. Even though that nonfederal funding is very small, we have no idea how long the federal funding may continue. Indeed, it may have been the intent of Congress that at some point public interest firms that are awarded fees will be able to function on their own, to carry out the beneficent purposes of the Act. Moreover, even if federal funding were to continue at pre-existing levels, an award of attorney's fees would presumably enable the Project to expand its activities beyond those possible under the federal grant. Accordingly we hold that the Project is entitled to an award.
The making of an attorney's fees award is discretionary under the statute. We do not think that the district court has abused its discretion by awarding the Project less than might have been paid to a non-federally funded law firm. As it turns out, dividing the fee by the total number of hours spent it appears that the rate per hour is approximately what defense counsel receive under the Criminal Justice Act.12 This seems to us a permissible pay scale under all the circumstances.13
Judgment in accordance with opinion.
Notes
See Rios v. Enterprise Ass'n Steamfitters Local 638,
A discretion which, however, must be "measured against the purposes which inform Title VII," including "the purpose . . . to make persons whole for injuries suffered on account of unlawful employment discrimination." Albemarle Paper Co. v. Moody,
See also Fed.R.App.P. 5
The A Branch is the construction branch of the union. Its members have the status of journeymen and do mainly construction work. The metal trades or B Branch members generally work in shops and do repair work. But see Rios v. Enterprise Ass'n Steamfitters Local 638,
It is to be noted that two days before the district court's decision the Supreme Court held that " 'good faith' is 'not a sufficient reason for denying backpay,' " and that "the mere absence of bad faith simply opens the door to equity; it does not depress the scales in the employer's favor." Albemarle Paper Co. v. Moody,
The classes defined by Judge Tenney were two: (A) all nonwhites residing in New York City and the Counties of Suffolk and Nassau in the State of New York who now or at any time in the future have the skills necessary to work as journeymen steamfitters; and (B) all nonwhites residing in New York City and the Counties of Suffolk and Nassau in the State of New York who now or at any time in the future are capable of learning such skills and who wish to obtain access to steamfitting work in New York City and said counties. See memorandum filed in Rios v. Enterprise Ass'n Steamfitters Local 638,
That includes the five New York City counties, as well as Nassau and Suffolk
"Permit men" are those who work with union "permits," often relatives and friends of union members
By artificially limiting the number of qualified union members, the union placed itself in a stronger bargaining position for wage increases in its negotiations with the contractors. Thus, while the union members economically benefited from the discrimination (not only in possible higher hourly rates or access to overtime pay, but also in the restriction of steamfitter employment to "whites only"), the contractor members of the MCA were no better off and may well have had to pay higher wages than they would have in a freer labor market. The JAC is not shown to have received any economic benefit from the discrimination
There was full compliance with the stringent record-keeping requirements of City of Detroit v. Grinnell Corp.,
42 U.S.C. § 2000e-5(k) which provides in part:
In such action or proceeding under this subchapter the court, in its discretion, may allow the prevailing party, other than the Commission or the United States, a reasonable attorney's fee as part of the costs . . . .
This takes the case out of the scope of Alyeska Pipeline Service Co. v. Wilderness Society,
Fifty thousand dollars divided by 2449.75 hours, see
In Torres v. Sachs,
