Barbara Ashley began working for Boyle’s Famous Corned Beef Company in 1985. When she was laid off in 1992, Ashley filed a charge with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission and then sued Boyle’s under Title VII, the Age Discrimination in Employment Act, the Equal Pay Act, and the Missouri Human Rights Act, alleging systematic gender and age discrimination in job assignment, pay, seniority, and employee benefits. The district court concluded that all of Ashley’s claims stem from her initial assignment to a non-union position. It dismissed all her claims as barred by the doctrine of laches and ruled that some are also time-barred by the applicable statutes of limitations. A divided panel of this court affirmed, concluding that laches may bar a Title VII claim for unreasonable delay in filing the administrative charge, even though the charge was timely filed under the statute of limitations, just as laches may bar a claim for unreasonable delay between the filing of an administrative charge and the Title VII lawsuit.
Ashley v. Boyle’s Famous Corned Beef Co.,
Ashley then petitioned for rehearing, suggesting en bane consideration of the laches issue. She was supported by amicus briefs from the EEOC and the Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights under Law. We granted rehearing en banc. Concluding that most of Ashley’s claims are not barred by the applicable statute of limitations or by laches, we reverse and remand.
I. Factual and Procedural Background.
Because we are reviewing the district court’s grant of summary judgment, we will summarize the facts in the light most favorable to Ashley, the non-moving party.
In June 1985, Boyle’s hired Ashley and other women on a part-time basis to prepare specialty products. Boyle’s located this new opеration on the second floor of its Kansas City corned beef plant, above the meat processing facility on the first floor. In 1986, Ashley and two other women began working full time in the second floor specialty products operation. However, Boyle’s excluded this work from the collective bargaining agreement between Boyle’s and the union representing first floor workers. Thеrefore, Boyle’s unilaterally determined the second floor workers’ rates of pay, seniority rights, and employee benefits.
The two groups of production employees were segregated by gender. All first floor production workers were male, were members of the union, and were covered by the collective bargaining agreement. All second floor workers werе female; they were not union members and were not covered by the collective bargaining agreement. However, Boyle’s daily work assignments blurred the sharp physical division between the specialty products operation and the rest of the plant. As product demands fluctuated, male union members would be sent to help the women on the second floor, and ocсasionally women were sent to help meet a peak demand on the first floor. But regardless of what work they performed, the male union members were paid at significantly higher rates under the collective bargaining agreement than the rates paid female employees on the second floor. Moreover, the women were usually laid off first and recalled last during рeriods of reduced demand.
Ashley and the other women periodically complained to Boyle’s about the differences in pay and seniority rights. They asked to join the union to gain collective bargaining agreement benefits. In 1988 the union members voted to include the second floor workers in the collective bargaining unit, but Boyle’s refused to agree and the union did not submit the issue to thе National Labor Relations Board or to arbitration under the collective bargaining agreement. In response to the women’s periodic complaints, Boyle’s promised to equalize their wages and benefits, but nothing changed.
In June 1992, Boyle’s laid off Ashley, the other two full-time second floor females, and four first floor males. All of the males were soon recalled, and the сompany hired new first floor male employees in late 1992 without recalling the three women. Ashley filed a charge with the EEOC in November 1992 and received a timely right-to-sue letter. In March 1993, Boyle’s offered her a first floor *167 production job and she accepted, becoming the first female hired into a union position. The next day, she filed this lawsuit.
Ashley has abandoned her initial age discrimination claim. The ease now involves her claims of gender discrimination in violation of Title VII, 42 U.S.C. §§ 2000e et seq., the Equal Pay Act, 29 U.S.C. §§ 206 et seq., and the Missouri Human Rights Act (“MHRA”), Mo.Rev.Stat. §§ 213.101 et seq. She seeks legal and equitable remedies including compensatory and punitive damages, back pay, and injunctive relief. Although Ashley’s complaint did not specify the precise conduct complained of, a pretrial pleading entitled “Designation оf Discriminatory Incidents” clarified that she is challenging (i) her initial assignment to a non-union job and Boyle’s alleged refusal to let her join the union; (ii) Boyle’s on-going failure to pay her wages equal to those of the first floor male employees; and (iii) her alleged discriminatory lay-off in June 1992 and Boyle’s subsequent failure to recall or rehire her.
The district court initially denied Boyle’s post-discovery motion for summary judgment on statute of limitations and laches grounds, concluding that only Ashley’s claim “involving employee coverage under a union contract” is barred. Boyle’s moved for reconsideration, arguing that all claims should be time-barred because they derive from Ashley’s initial assignment to a full-time nonunion job. On the first day of trial, the district court agreed and dismissed all claims as barrеd by laches or the applicable statutes of limitations. In applying laches, the court concluded that Boyle’s would have resolved the dispute years ago if Ashley had promptly filed an EEOC charge, and that the resulting delay had prejudiced Boyle’s because two key witnesses recently died. It rejected Ashley’s contention that delay was justified by the company’s promises оf reform and her fear of job retaliation. On appeal, Ashley contends that her claims were timely filed under the relevant statutes of limitations,
that the laches defense is unavailable to bar claims governed by a statute of limitations, and that in any event she was not guilty of laches. We do not reach this last issue.
II. Statute of Limitations Issues.
Before turning to the central issue of lach-es, we must address the district court’s partial alternative ground — that Ashley’s Title VII and MHRA claims are barred for failure to file a timely charge with the appropriate administrative agency. 1 In Missouri, Title VII requires that a plaintiff file an administrative charge within 300 days of the alleged discriminatory act, and the MHRA requires filing within 180 days. See 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-5(e)(l); Mo.Rev.Stat. § 213.075.1. This issue requires careful attention to the specific nature of Ashley’s Title VII claims. 2
A. Thе district court correctly held that Ashley’s claims based on her initial assignment to a non-union position and her alleged exclusion from the union are time-barred. These events occurred in 1985 and 1986. “[T]he initial job assignment, like a hiring decision, in no respect constitutes a continuing violation.”
Heymann v. Tetra Plastics Corp.,
B. On the other hand, the district court erred in dismissing as time-barred Ashley’s claim that gender discrimination tainted her rate of pay. When an employer
*168
is accused of an ongoing practice that began prior to the statute of limitations period, the claim may nonetheless be timely under the “continuing violation” doctrine.
See Hukka-nen v. International Union of Operating Eng’rs Local 101,
Applying this test, it is well-settled that “[e]ach week’s paycheck that delivers less to a [woman] than to a similarly situated [man] is a wrong actionable under Title VII.”
Bazemore v. Friday,
Ashley’s Equal Pay Act claim is timely for the same reason. Therefore, if Ashley proves that Boyle’s violated the Equal Pay Act, she may recover for unequal paychecks received within two yeаrs of commencing the action, or within three years if the violations were willful.
See
29 U.S.C. §§ 206(d)(1), 255(a);
Gandy v. Sullivan County,
C. Ashley’s claims relating to her lay-off in June 1992 and Boyle’s subsequent failure to recall or rehire her are also not time-barred. Boyle’s argues that her administrative charge was untimely because the challenged employment actions flowed from Boyle’s initial decision to assign Ashley to a non-union job. We disagree. With the union’s acquiescence, Boyle’s treated the second floor as a separate operation to which the collective bargaining agreement did not apply. In this manner, Boyle’s reserved to itself the unilateral right to lay off, recall, and rehire second floor employees. Ashley claims that Boyle’s made decisions between June and November 1992 that were the product of gender discrimination. Those claims are obviously not time-barred. Boyle’s attempt to blame its unilateral decisions regarding Ashley on a collective bargaining agreement that covered other employees is without merit.
III. Laches.
The district court applied the equitable doctrine of laches to bar all of Ashley’s claims because she unreasonably delayed in filing her charge with the EEOC. The initial question is whether laches may bar a plaintiff for unreasonable delay when the EEOC charge was filed within Title VII’s 300-day statute of limitations, and the subsequent lawsuit was filed within the Equal Pay Act’s statute of limitations. Acknowledging that no court has ever barred a Title VII or Equal Pay Act claim on this ground, Boyle’s argues that laches should apply to pre-charge delay, just as it has frequently barred claimants guilty of post-charge delay in filing a Title VII lawsuit.
See Hukkanen,
Justice Cardozo succinctly stated the traditional rule: “Laches within the term of the statute of limitations is no defense at law.”
United States v. Mack,
We noted the general principle in
Sandobal v. Armour & Co.,
Despite this substantial precedent to the contrary, Boyle’s argues that laches should be available to bar a plaintiff who has unreasonably delayed but is still within the federal statute of limitations period. Boyle’s relies heavily on a concurring opinion by Chief Judge Posner of the Seventh Circuit in which he stated that “there is plenty of аuthority for applying laches in eases governed by a statute of limitations.”
Martin v. Consultants & Admin’rs, Ltd.,
the cases from jurisdictions which say that laches is a defense in suits at law as well as suits in equity turn out to be — every one we can find, at any rate — quasi-equitable suits ... and not pure damages suits, like this suit.
That distinction is at the heart of the other cases Judge Posner cited in
Martin,
and the additional cases cited by Boyle’s to support its much broader assertion. Judge Posner in
Martin
cited two federal court decisions involving claims for equitable relief that have traditionally been subject to a laches defense.
See K-Mart Corp. v. Oriental Plaza, Inc.,
Having surveyed these diverse cаses, we conclude there is good reason to follow the traditional rule, at least when dealing, as in this case, with a federal cause of action for which Congress has prescribed an express statute of limitations. Such statutes reflect a legislative “value judgment concerning the point at which the interests in favor of protecting valid claims are outweighed by the interests in prohibiting the prosecution of stale ones.”
Johnson v. Railway Express Agency, Inc.,
Congress built specific remedial time limits into Title VII and the Equal Pay Act, and we must respect the remedial compromise embodied in these statutes. See Mohasco Corp. v. Silver,
This general rule somewhat alters the role of laches when there is a governing federal statute of limitations-instead of being a complete defense to an equitable cause of action, laches becomes one of many principles relevant in fashioning whatever equitable relief may be sought. But we believe this shift is true to the traditional purpose of the doctrine. As the Supreme Court said long before federal law and equity merged, "Inches is not like limitation, a mere matter of time; but principally a question of the inequity of permitting the claim to be enforced." Galliher v. CadwelL
There may be unusual situations to which this general rule will not neatly apply. For example, if рlaintiff asserts that a federal statute of limitations should be extended by applying an equitable principle such as fraudulent concealment or tolling, plaintiffs unreasonable delay-whether or not it is called Inches-becomes relevant. Chief Judge Posner made this point most compellingly in Cada v. Baxter Healthcare Corp.,
*171 IV. Conclusion.
For the foregoing reasons, we conclude that Ashley’s claims for equal pay, wrongful layoff, and wrongful failure to recall or rehire are not barred by laches or by the applicable statutes of limitations. Ashley may recover damages for any Equal Pay Act violations affecting paychecks issued within the applicable limitations period. Her claims for equitable relief are not barred but may be аffected by laches principles if she seeks remedies that reach beyond the statute of limitations period or are otherwise affected by her delay in filing the administrative charge.
The judgment of the district court is reversed and the case is remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. The district court dismissed the Equal Pay Act claim as barred only by laches, not by the applicable statute of limitations.
. The parties have assumed without citation to authority that the Missouri courts construe the MHRA as incorporating Title VII statute of limitations and laches principles. We adopt that assumption but do not foreclose the issue on remand.
. Distinguishing between legal and equitable claims and remedies for purposes of applying laches has proven difficult.
See Cannon v. University of Health Sciences,
. On the other hand, when Congress by its silence borrows the most analogous State statute of limitations for a federal claim, there is something of a federal legislative void. Thus, sеparation of powers principles are less affected by a judicial decision to superimpose the doctrine of laches on the borrowed State statute of limitations. This issue was not presented in Johnson v. State Mut. Lift Assur. Co.,
. Historically, laches was developed by courts of equity for claims lacking a limitations periоd, whereas tolling was an integral part of the first comprehensive statute of limitations in seventeenth century England. See 21 Jac. I, ch. 16, ci. II (1623) (tolling for infancy, insanity, imprisonment, coverture, and absence from the reahn). But we see no reason why the two doctrines cannot be applied in tandem under modern practice. As Judge Posner observed, "[l]aches is a species of estoppel and can therefore be applied whenever the requirements for estoppel are satisfied." Martin,
