The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC or the Commission) brought suit against Beverage Canners, Inc. (the Company) for violation of section 703(a)(1) of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, as amended, 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-2(a)(l)
7. The Facts Reveal A Racially Hostile Environment
Regarding the issue of racial hostility in the work place, the trial court found that Windholtz and one of the plant supervisors frequently made racially derogatory remarks. Because they are so flagrant, revolting, and inflammatory, and reflect— better than anything we could say — the deplorable atmosphere of open, hostile, and racially motivated discrimination, we set them out below.
II. Employment Hopes “Crushed”
Tina Wilson, a black female, was hired in February 1983. She worked in the Company’s plant as a machine operator producing one-liter plastic bottles used to contain soft drinks. On April 22, 1983, Tina Wilson and a white machine operator, Susan Gillespie, were laid off because of a surplus inventory of plastic containers. The layoff was ordered by Windholtz. At the same time Donald Hartwell, a white male machine operator, was transferred to a different job at another of the Company’s plants.
The supervisors of both Wilson and Gillespie testified that Windholtz told them that the layoffs were temporary and that both employees would be called back when production resumed. Windholtz, John Shurman, the President of the Company, and John Slocum, Executive Vice-President, however, all testified that the Company did not have a policy or practice of recalling laid off employees. The Company hired by placing signs outside the office, employing walkins, placing newspaper advertisements, or by using temporary placement services. According to Slocum, laid off employees were not barred from their jobs, but they did need to reapply.
Both of the white employees (Hartwell who had been transferred to another division, and Gillespie, who had been laid off) ultimately returned to the plant. Hartwell was transferred back to the plant two weeks after the layoff. It is unclear precisely when Gillespie was rehired. When the line that Hartwell, Gillespie, and Wilson had worked on returned to full capacity, another employee, a white female, was hired to fill Wilson’s former job. The trial court found that Wilson, along with Gillespie, had been laid off but that in the context of the Company’s employment policies, being laid off was equivalent to being fired or terminated because there was no policy of recalling former employees. The judge also determined that there was no entitlement to be called back to work and that Wilson had never been told by anyone with authority to set labor policy that she would be recalled to work.
The court concluded that because Wilson presented direct evidence of discrimination, the Company had the burden of proving by a preponderance of the evidence that it would have decided not to rehire Wilson even in the absence of any discriminatory motive. The court held that this burden was met on the simple ground that the Company did not have a “recall” policy. This finding was based on the theory that the Company fired (laid off) and then “rehired” former employees and did not “recall” them.
The EEOC appeals the determination that Wilson was not racially discriminated against and supports the trial court’s decision that the work place was racially hostile. The Company appeals the injunction and the determination that the work place
III. We Won’t Allow A Racially Hostile Environment
The trial court’s permanent injunction ordered the Company to refrain from maintaining terms and conditions of employment that discriminate on the basis of race or create a racially abusive or hostile atmosphere of employment.
A factual determination of a trial court can only be set aside if it is “clearly erroneous.” Lincoln v. Board of Regents of University System,
The Company contests the trial court’s factual findings on the ground that not all racial slurs rise to the level of Title VII violations. The Company stresses the Eighth Circuit’s requirement that there be a steady barrage of denigrating racial comments, as distinguished from offensive terms limited to casual conversation among employees, before such slurs rise to the level of a Title VII violation. Johnson v. Bunny Bread Co.,
This was no Bunny Bread situation where the court found that the use of racial terms was infrequent, limited to casual conversation, and not directed at black co-workers. Bunny Bread was poles apart from Beverage Canners. Here the trial court found that racist remarks were frequent, not part of casual conversation and were made to or about black employees. Additionally, the comments were made by the plant manager, not just coworkers. The trial court simply had to find that the racially derogatory remarks were “commonplace, overt and denigrating” and so pervasive and shocking in this more enlightened day that they “altered the conditions of employment and created an abusive working environment for blacks.”
The Company, ignoring the fact-finding role of the trial judge, stresses the contrary testimony of management personnel that they knew of no discriminatory conduct and that no such conduct was ever brought to their attention by way of employee complaints. How simple would be race discrimination cases if, as the Company argues, it cannot be held responsible for the remarks of its employees.
Despite this testimony, the court found that management was informed about events at the plant. This included testimony, some conflicting, that management was informed on several occasions about the racial hostility at the plant.
The trial court, whose role, not ours, was to determine facts, had the advantage of observing all the witnesses to make credibility determinations. It is “ ‘our duty to decide whether the district court could have entered the order that it did.’ ” Harris v. Amoco Production Co.,
We uphold the trial court’s findings that “the numerous racial epithets were not made sporadically, accidentally, or as part of casual conversation” and that management was informed but did nothing to correct the situation. The finding of a racially hostile environment was not clearly erroneous and the injunction at the hands of EEOC was fully justified.
IV. “Classic" Discrimination
The trial court, citing, Hishon v. King & Spalding,
Title VII applies to the hiring of employees, regardless of whether an employee recall policy exists.
Wilson, as a former employee with no right to be rehired before other applicants, merits the same protection in the hiring process as a prospective employee with no prior employment with the Company. To grant Wilson no Title VII protection because she had no right to be rehired misstates the law. The only issue is whether Ms. Wilson was denied employment because of her race.
This is a case of alleged disparate treatment. In such cases, if the plaintiff attempts to prove her claim through circumstantial evidence, then the analytical framework established in McDonnell Douglas Corp. v. Green,
Where, however, there is direct evidence of discrimination,
The Aliceville case is very similar to this one although it was decided on purely evi-dentiary grounds. In Aliceville a racial
It bears repeating: the trial court found a “racially hostile” environment; management was aware of the racial hostility; the discriminatory conduct was that of managers who were responsible for employment decisions. It enjoined these practices. This overwhelming evidence of racial hostility constitutes direct evidence of discriminatory intent in management decisions. The Company presented no evidence that it had put aside the illegal activities and motive. Instead, it continues to deny the existence of racial hostility. Accepting the trial court’s findings of fact and applying the direct evidence framework, we conclude that EEOC proved that Tina Wilson was discriminated against.
V. Discrimination “Un”done:
Title VII Revisited
The presence or absence of a “recall” policy does not legally defeat a direct evidence claim of discrimination in violation of Title VII. The Company had the final burden of proof, by a preponderance of the evidence standard, to prove that the illegal motive of discrimination had been set aside in its employment decision. It failed to meet this burden of proof. Therefore, the decision of the trial court in regard to Ms. Wilson must be reversed. We remand the case for a determination of the relief Ms. Wilson is entitled to including back pay,
We uphold the trial court’s injunction against the Company. As the first Justice Harlan stated in his dissent in the Civil Rights Cases,
AFFIRMED in part,
REVERSED and REMANDED in part.
Notes
. The relevant portion of Title VII states:
“(a) It shall be an unlawful employment practice for an employer—
(1) to fail or refuse to hire or to discharge any individual, or otherwise to discriminate against any individual with respect to his compensation, terms, conditions, or privileges of employment, because of such individual’s race, color, religion, sex, or national origin."
42 U.S.C. § 2000e-2(a).
.Windholtz used such language as: "niggers,” “ignorant niggers," and "swahilis.” The record also shows that Windholtz said "blacks were meant to be slaves” and were of lower intelligence. He proclaimed that "[t]hose niggers out there will not get anywhere in this company."
. The distinction drawn by the Company and adopted by the trial court between "recall” and "rehire” is at most legal fiction. We do not adopt this fiction. During oral argument, the Company acknowledged that the issue as pleaded at trial and now urged upon appeal includes both "rehire” and "recall.” The issue is one of discrimination in employment decisions. In addition, the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure require only that fair notice of the nature of the claim be given in the pleadings and was designed to avoid technical pleading. Therefore, the legal analysis was in error. See 5 C. Wright & A. Miller, Federal Practice And Procedure §§ 1202, 1215 (1969 & Supp.1989).
. See note 2, supra.
. Windholtz, referring to the Company's black warehouse manager, complained that "he had to go over and teach that stupid f.nigger how to count....” The record is replete with evidence of similar comments. There was testimony that such comments and incidents occurred "daily.”
. Title VII prohibits the failure to hire or the discharge of an employee on racially discriminatory grounds. 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-2(a)(l); See note 2, supra.
. See note 2, supra. (That issue is expressly covered by Title VII in the language: "to fail or refuse to hire or discharge any individual ... because of such individual’s race ... ”).
. Discriminatory motive may be proved by direct evidence of the hiring authority’s racially discriminatory attitudes, regardless of whether it relates to the employment decision at issue. Thompkins v. Morris Brown College,
. See abo, Miles v. M.N.C. Corp.,
. This framework is derived from Mt. Healthy City School District v. Doyle,
. The trial judge did not make any specific factual finding as to precisely when Ms. Wilson reapplied for her job at the Company. Ms. Wilson testified that she initiated contact after she heard that Gillespie was back at work. Williams (Wilson's supervisor), Windholtz, and Slocum all acknowledge that they were contacted by Ms. Wilson, but give conflicting testimony as to when that contact occurred. We find that Wilson did reapply for her position and is thus eligible for back pay. Back pay should be calculated from the time when the line went back to full capacity or thereafter when Wilson reapplied.
.
. Id.
