This is аn appeal from a final judgment in favor of the appellee, Reynolds Metal Company (“Reynolds”), entered by the Únited States District Court for the Northern District of Alabama on the appellant’s complaint alleging sex discrimination in employment.
Carolyn Welborn, a white female, was employed by Reynolds as a production employee at its Reduction Plant in Colbert County, Alabama, from June 19, 1978, to July 13, 1980, when she was laid off due to a general reduction in force. At all times herein pertinent Reynolds owned and operated six separate plants in Colbert County. In March 1981 Welborn applied for employment at one of Reynolds’ five other plants, specifically the Reclamаtion Plant. She was not hired on this occasion and filed no complaint following the rejection of her application.
In March 1982 Welborn again sought employment at the Reclamation Plant. Other male and female formеr employees of the Reduction Plant who were in layoff status also applied at the same time. Although Welborn was not offered employment at this time, twenty-four individuals, sixteen males and eight females, were hired. In April 1982, following the fаilure of her latest effort, Welborn spoke to the personnel manager at the Reclamation Plant, inquiring as to why no female applicants in layoff status at the Reduction Plant had been among those twenty-four individuals hired at thе Reclamation Plant, although similarly situated males had been hired. She testified that the personnel manager informed her that he could not employ her at the Reclamation Plant because of an agreement with the Equal Emрloyment Opportunity Commission (“EEOC”). In this respect, the district court found that Reynolds’ Reclamation Plant entered into a settlement agreement with the EEOC on January 1, 1982. This agreement was unrelated to any claim of the appellant, and rеsolved all Title YII disputes arising or allegedly arising prior to January 1, 1982, at that facility. Under the terms of the agreement certain specifically identified blacks and females were designated by the EEOC as persons who had been advеrsely affected by Reynolds’ hiring practices at the Reclamation Plant. Reynolds agreed to attempt to place nineteen of these individuals in subsequent vacancies (EEOC Settlement Agreement, Defendant’s Exhibit 2, p. 18,11E) 1 and to give quаlified black/female applicants preferential consideration for hiring in an attempt to meet certain numerical affirmative action goals. (Id. at pp. 8-10.)
On May 27,1982, Welborn filed a charge of sex discrimination with the EEOC against the Reсlamation Plant. The EEOC issued a right-to-sue letter to her on August 6, 1982, after which she filed a pro se “Application under Section 706(f) of Civil Rights Act of 1964.” In this “application” Welborn described in her own words the employment practices about whiсh she was complaining:
Because of an agreement between Reynolds and the EEOC, which is a highly secret and confidential matter, I was denied my right to work at the Reclamation Plant. I had a personal talk with the plant’s personnеl manager, Martin Hardy, and he expressed regrets because I am qualified and came recommended highly from Reynolds Reduction Plant which is where I am laid off. He hired 16 men from the Reduction Plant but told me that he could not consider me *1028 because I am female and that he had to comply with secret agreement.
The district court treated this application as a timely complaint under Title VII, but required the appellant to file an amended complaint complying with the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. Counsel was appointed and an amended complaint was filed as ordered by the court. On November 27, 1984, the district court held a final bench trial and at the conclusion of thе case orally announced that final judgment would be rendered in favor of Reynolds. On February 11, 1986, the district court filed its findings of fact and conclusions of law and judgment was entered for Reynolds on February 12, 1986.
The sole issue on appeal is whеther the district court was correct in concluding that 1) Welborn failed to present a prima facie case of sex discrimination and 2) even if she had made out a prima facie case, Reynolds articulated a legitimаte nondiscriminatory reason for its failure to hire her.
The law establishing the various burdens of proof borne by the parties to a so-called “disparate treatment” action such as the present one was set forth by the United States Supreme Court in
McDonnell Douglas Corp. v. Green,
In the present case we conclude that the appellant did prove a prima facie case of sex discrimination. As a female she is certainly within a protected class as defined by Title VII, she did seek a position for which Reynolds was offering employment, she was rejected, and Reynolds did continue hiring for this position and, in fact, filled the position. Moreover, it is clear that Wеlborn was qualified for the job for which she applied. The district court explicitly found that she was qualified to do the work required for the position,
Welborn v. Reynolds Metals Co.,
In addition to determining that Welborn had not presented a prima facie case of sex discrimination, the district court also held that Reynolds had “articulated a legitimate nondiscriminatory reason for its failure to hire plaintiff at its Reclamation Plant, namely that it was acting pursuant to and in compliance with a valid affirmative action Settlement Agreement with EEOC.”
Welborn,
Once an individual has presented a prima facie case of discrimination the burden shifts to the employer to rebut the presumption of discrimination by producing evidence that the complainant was rejected, or someone else was preferred, for a legitimate nondiscriminatory reason.
Burdine,
The district court’s determinatiоn that Reynolds had articulated a legitimate nondiscriminatory reason for its actions is premised on an erroneous finding of fact. 3 According to the district court,
[t]he Reclamation Plant was obligated under its Settlement Agreement with EEOC to hire only designated blacks and females who had unsuccessfully applied for employment with the Reclamation Plant and who had been adversely impacted by the Reclamation Plant’s alleged discriminatory hiring practices before January 1, 1982.
Welborn,
Notes
. The settlement agreement was introduced by the defendant into evidence during the trial in the district court (Transcript, p. 57), but was not made a part of the Record on Appeal. Bеcause its contents are crucial to a determination of this case, we ordered that the agreement be made a part of the Record in this court.
. Although counsel for Welborn characterized this action as оne alleging disparate impact (see Transcript, p. 75) we disagree. A disparate impact case is one in which the plaintiff alleges that a facially neutral test or employment criterion which disproportionаtely disqualifies a protected class from employment, promotion, or the like is not job related.
See e.g., Dothard v. Rawlinson,
. In reviewing findings of fact by a district court we utilize the clearly erroneous standard,
United States v. United States Gypsum Co.,
