36 Fair Empl.Prac.Cas. 148,
Eugene SATTERWHITE, Plaintiff-Appellee,
and
Frank J. Howard, Ray E. Meeks, and John W. Smith,
Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v.
Richard Dale SMITH and Jane Doe Smith, his wife; Jack A.
Fabulich and Jane Doe Fabulich, his wife; Robert G. Earley
and Jane Doe Earley, his wife; S. Reed Jones and Jane Doe
Jones, his wife; William Ross and Jane Doe Ross, his wife;
and the Port of Tacoma, Defendants-Cross Appellants.
Nos. 83-3668, 83-3692.
United States Court of Appeals,
Ninth Circuit.
Argued and Submitted Sept. 5, 1984.
Decided Oct. 10, 1984.
Clair Mancini, Gerald L. Hulscher, Dolack, Hansler, Hulscher, Burrows, Dayhoff & Barline, Tacoma, Wash., for plaintiffs-appellants.
Jocelyn J. Lyman, Bergman & Bauer, Seattle, Wash., James J. Mason, Tacoma, Wash., for plaintiff-appellee.
On Appeal from the United States District Court for the Western District of Washington.
Before WRIGHT, Senior Circuit Judge, and PREGERSON and CANBY, Circuit Judges.
PREGERSON, Circuit Judge:
Four black men--Frank Howard, Ray Meeks, John Smith, and Eugene Satterwhite--sued the Port of Tacoma and several of its officers for violating their civil rights under 42 U.S.C. Secs. 1981, 1983, & 1985(3) (1982). After conducting a full trial on the merits, the United States District Court for the Western District of Washington dismissed the claims of Howard, Meeks, and Smith, but ruled that the Port had violated Sec. 1981 by discriminating against Satterwhite. The court awarded Satterwhite back pay, damages, prejudgment interest, and attorney's fees. From the judgments against them, Howard, Meeks, and Smith now appeal and assign numerous errors. The Port cross-appeals from the judgment in favor of Satterwhite.
For the reasons that the district court expressed, see Howard v. Smith, Civ. No. 80-492T (W.D.Wash. Dec. 30, 1982) (findings of fact and conclusions of law), we affirm each judgment. We write further only to analyze the constructive discharge issue in Satterwhite's case and to correct a minor error in his back pay award.
A. Constructive Discharge
1. Background. Eugene Satterwhite worked for the Port as a casual employee on the sweeper crew from July 1979 to January 1980. A casual sweeper fills in whenever a permanent employee is absent from work. Satterwhite says that when the Port hired him, it represented that he would get a permanent appointment, based on seniority, when an opening became available.
The district court found that the sweeper crew served as an important entry-level position. The Port cross-trained sweepers both on the job and in separate classes for work on the railroad switch crew pursuant to company policy and the collective bargaining agreement.
Satterwhite complains that the Port failed to promote him to the permanent sweeper crew because of his race.
The district court agreed. The court found that the Port never interviewed Satterwhite for the position but regularly interviewed and hired white men. Sometimes his supervisor even assigned Satterwhite to break in and train these men. The court also found that the Port's purported reason for passing over Satterwhite--that he lacked railroad experience--was simply a pretext for discrimination. This "experience" consisted of nothing more than the physical ability to get on and off moving rail cars. In fact, the Port did not list railroad experience as a qualification when it posted job openings.
2. Satterwhite's discharge. Satterwhite was not fired; instead, he resigned. He argues that he quit when he became convinced that the Port would never promote him to permanent status. Without explicitly saying so, the district court apparently treated his resignation as a constructive discharge, and the Port challenges this finding.1
Even though the district court did not make an explicit finding, we may determine the issue for ourselves because the comprehensive record before us on appeal provides the basis for our "complete understanding" of the matter. Swanson v. Levy,
To determine whether Satterwhite was constructively discharged on the basis of his race, we must find that a reasonable person in his position would have felt that he was forced to quit because of intolerable and discriminatory working conditions. Nolan v. Cleland,
In Muller v. United States Steel Corp.,
Later, in Irving v. Dubuque Packing Co.,
But in Clark v. Marsh,
Finally, in Nolan v. Cleland,
We think Satterwhite's case is more like Nolan or Clark v. Marsh than either Muller or Irving. There are at least two reasons.
First, the Tenth Circuit cases, in describing the proper test for determining whether the employee was constructively discharged, use language that focuses on the employer's subjective intent, rather than on the reasonable employee's perspective. See Muller,
Second, the record demonstrates that Satterwhite faced very poor working conditions. For example, he could not obtain a promotion to the permanent sweeper crew. This prevented him from gaining access to training and advancement opportunities that the Port had promised. Moreover, the Port regularly promoted white men ahead of him. Sometimes Satterwhite even had to train these men, a situation he found embarrassing and humiliating. Furthermore, the reason the Port offered for denying Satterwhite a promotion--that he lacked railroad experience--turned out to be a pretext for discriminating against him because he was black. Finally, his supervisor relegated him to working a disproportionate share of time in the rope room, where he was assigned the dull task of tying ropes. From this post, Satterwhite had virtually no hope of securing the opportunities for career advancement that white men on the permanent sweeper crew had. Instead, he was doomed to remain a temporary employee.
In light of these facts, as well as the atmosphere of occasional racial insults that all blacks working at the Port suffered, we conclude that the district court did not err in assuming that conditions at the Port were intolerable and discriminatory.
B. Back Pay Award
The Port contends that the district court arbitrarily gave Satterwhite $5,000 more than he asked for. At the court's request, plaintiffs' counsel calculated Satterwhite's back pay at $94,660.74 and his prejudgment interest at $13,440.71. But the court gave Satterwhite $99,660.74, plus the same sum, $13,440.71, in prejudgment interest.
Because the court had no basis in the record for awarding an extra $5,000, we reduce the award by that amount.
As so modified, the judgment is AFFIRMED.
Notes
An employee who quits cannot secure backpay unless his employer constructively discharged him. E.g., Muller v. United States Steel Corp.,
For example, a court may find a constructive discharge when the employer's act of discrimination consisted of continually subjecting his employee to racial insults. Cf., e.g., Cariddi v. Kansas City Chiefs Football Club, Inc.,
We recently considered the constructive discharge doctrine in an analagous, non-employment discrimination case. In Lojek v. Thomas,
The state of the law in the Tenth Circuit on this subject is confusing. Other language in the cases purports to embrace the reasonable employee standard as well as the employer's-subjective-intent standard. See, e.g., Irving,
