Melvin Bullard appeals from a judgment for the defendants, Sercon Corporation and Local 81 of the International Laborers’ Union, entered after a bench trial in which Bullard tried to prove that the defendants had discriminated against him because of his race, in violation of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 42 U.S.C. §§ 2000e et seq., and 42 U.S.C. § 1981. Bullard was employed by Sercon, which had a contract with Bethlehem Steel Corporation to maintain various facilities at Bethlehem’s steel works in Burns Harbor, Indiana. Between 1977 and his layoff on April 30, 1982, Bul-lard worked at the coke ovens. At the time of his layoff he was one of a crew of 10 or 11 workers, four of whom, including Bul-lard, were black. In 1982 Bethlehem closed one of the coke ovens for repairs, and as a result fewer workers were needed at the ovens. Jim Lehner, Bethlehem’s maintenance foreman at the Burns Harbor works, decided that Bullard should go, because he was a slow worker and was spending too much time in the bathroom. Bullard was not the least senior member of the crew, but, oddly, Sercon's contract with Local 81 gave workers no rights based on seniority. Sercon did not assign Bullard to any other work, instead placing him on indefinite layoff status from which he has never been recalled.
In arguing that Sercon’s failure to assign him to other work at the Bums Harbor Works was due to his being black, Bullard notes that only 13 of the 117 workers whom Sercon employed at the Bums Harbor works in 1982 — 11 percent — were black although 41 percent of Local 81’s members were black. Bullard had never been disciplined or formally warned about being too slow (though there was testimony that he had once been told to “speed it up a little”), and his supervisor at Sercon testified that Bullard was a good worker and would have been reassigned had the union referred him. Although 1982 saw a drastic reduction in the number of hours that Sercon’s employees put in at the Bums Harbor works (April in particular was a big month for layoffs), foremen’s reports show, according to Bullard, that there was work that he could have done in other departments served by Sercon at the Bums Harbor works.
Even if we could say that Lehner was lying, this would not carry the day for Bullard-indeed, might advance his case very little. Lehner was not an employee o Sercon. Since his employer, Bethlehem Steel Corporation, is not a defendant, we need not decide whether Bethlehem might have been the indirect employer of both Lehner and Bullard and hence both a proper defendant in a Title VII suit (see the discussion of that issue in Shrock v. Altru Nurses Registry,
Bullard argues that since there is no evidence that Sercon itself regarded him as a slow or otherwise substandard worker, its failure to reassign him to work elsewhere in the plant when Lehner ejected him from the coke ovens must have been based on his race. But this is a non sequi-tur. The fact that a black worker is fired or laid off without good cause does not establish racial discrimination. It may in some cases be evidence of discrimination, see, e.g., Pollard v. Rea Magnet Wire Co.,
Granted, if Bullard had proved that Sercon replaced him with a white, Sercon would have had to produce a nondiscriminatory reason for its action, or lose. See McDonnell-Douglas Corp. v. Green,
Bullard could have tried to show that whites who were made redundant by the reduction in demand for Sercon’s services,
We turn to Bullard’s Title VII case against the union. See 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-2(c). Local 81 runs a nonexclusive hiring hall — meaning that employers, even if they have a collective bargaining contract with the union, do not have to hire from the hall and workers are free to seek work on their own outside of the referral system. Nevertheless, when workers who belong to the union (as Bullard did when he was laid off by Sercon) are laid off, they usually register with the hiring hall. Bul-lard did, and in June 1982 was referred to a construction company where he worked until being laid off in September of that year. He kept calling the hiring hall for additional referrals, but received none. In January 1983, Virgil Goin, the union’s business manager, told Bullard that he would get no more referrals, because he was no longer a member of the union in good standing, not having paid dues since November 1982.
Bullard’s story is different. He testified that in May 1982, the month after he had been laid off by Sercon, he filed a grievance against Sercon with the union, and Goin refused to prosecute it. When Bul-lard threatened to sue the union, Goin told him (again according to Bullard’s testimony) that if Bullard sued he would never work in construction again. As a result, says Bullard, he did not file administrative charges against the union, instead bringing this suit against both Sercon and the union in 1983 after he had given up any hope of job referrals from the union’s hiring hall. Bullard produced testimony from other union members that Goin was hostile to blacks, testimony that Goin referred jobs to whites and not blacks — including whites who, just like Bullard, were delinquent in their dues — and testimony that Goin was trying to make the union “whiter.” Although the union was, as we said, 41 percent black, 95 percent of the members under 30 were white. (The figure for blacks is for 1982, that for young whites for 1986, by which time the percentage of blacks in the union had fallen to 17.) The district judge found no racial discrimination, another finding that Bullard asks us to set aside as being clearly erroneous.
The union asks us not to reach that issue, arguing that the suit against it is barred by Bullard’s failure to file an administrative complaint with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, which Title VII requires as a condition precedent to bringing suit, 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-5(e). Bullard counters that if the union wanted to alter the judgment of the district court it had to file a cross-appeal attacking the judgment, which it did not do, and that not having done so it cannot urge the point in its brief in response to Bullard’s opening brief. But the union is not attacking the judgment, which dismissed the suit and so is just what the union wanted. The union is advancing an additional ground for that judgment. Appellees who were defendants in the district court — -that is, who are defending the dismissal of the action — will often add, to their arguments on the merits, jurisdictional arguments (failing to file administrative charges is a jurisdictional defect, as we shall see) for dismissal. See, e.g., DiLiberti v. United States,
The requirement of cross-appealing even in cases where the appellee is seeking to
So we cannot duck the jurisdictional issue on the ground that it should have been raised by way of cross-appeal; and let us turn to that issue. Title VIPs requirement that the plaintiff exhaust the administrative remedies provided by the statute is jurisdictional; that is, a court is obligated to enforce the requirement even if the defendant has overlooked it. This is not because requirements of exhausting administrative remedies are always jurisdictional; they are not, see, e.g., Granberry v. Greer, - U.S. -,
The requirement of a timely filing is subject to the same defense of equitable tolling that a statute of limitations is subject to; it is a statute of limitations. Zipes v. Trans World Airlines, Inc.,
At all events, Bullard’s defense must fail on its facts. He testified that Goin told him that if he sued the union he would never work in the construction industry again, but Goin testified that he said no such thing, and the district judge stated in his opinion that he believed Goin. By then the trial was over and the judge went on to decide the case on the merits in favor of the union. That was the wrong way to proceed. The judge should have held a hearing on the jurisdictional issue before the trial. Bullard and Goin would have testified and the judge would have decided whom he believed. If he believed Goin, as in the end he did, he would have dismissed the action against the union and saved himself and the parties the bother of a trial on the Title VII claim. In some cases a jurisdictional issue may be so entwined with the merits that it cannot feasibly or conveniently be resolved in a separate proceeding but must be deferred to trial, cf. Janowiak v. Corporate City of South Bend, supra,
Our jurisdictional analysis, though unavoidable, is also to some extent a matter merely of shadow-boxing, for Bullard sued the union not only under Title VII but also under section 16 of the Civil Rights Act of 1870, now 42 U.S.C. § 1981 — a Reconstruction-era civil rights statute that, when employed as a vehicle for attacking employment discrimination, has been held to be substantively parallel to Title VII, see Hunter v. Allis-Chalmers Corp.,
Modified and Affirmed.
