Plaintiffs claim that: (1) their employment placed them on a discriminatorily ordered seniority list with Caucasians at the top of the list and African-Americans at the bottom, and (2) they were discriminatorily laid
off.
The district court held that plaintiffs were barred from bringing their seniority list claim under Title VII, 42 U.S.C. §§ 2000e
et seq.,
since it was not a charge in their EEOC complaints; that the seniority list claim failed under 42 U.S.C. § 1981 pursuant to
Patterson v. McLean Credit Union,
BACKGROUND
This case has its genesis in a labor strike that took place at the warehouse of Godfrey Company in Waukesha, Wisconsin, during the summer of 1985. Godfrey is a wholesale food distributor and retailer that supplies food for stores located throughout Wisconsin. In anticipation of a strike by the regular warehousemen and drivers Godfrey began hiring and training strike replacements who were recruited from an employment agency and advertisements in local newspapers. This recruiting method, which varied from Godfrey’s usual method of recruitment, resulted in a work force with a much higher percentage of African-Americans (possibly in excess of 50%) than the pre-strike method. 1 Plaintiffs Gregory Harper, Alonzo Webber, and Steven Wright were all hired at this time.
*146 The strike began in June 1985 and lasted for six weeks. The situation was chaotic with 150-200 replacements hired and trained during the course of the strike. Striking workers engaged in violence, ranging from verbal harassment to death threats and a shot being fired at a worker.
The strike ended in mid-August, and a hierarchy of workers was created. Regular full-time employees were at the top; the previously striking workers comprised this group. Part-time workers, called “casuals,” comprised the second tier. Casuals substituted for vacationing or ill regular employees and supplemented the manpower of the regular employees. Additionally, casuals were hired as new regular employees were needed. Godfrey recruited the original casuals from the group of strike replacements remaining at the end of the strike. These casual employees represented the best of the strike replacements based on knowledge, performance, and attendance. Plaintiffs were among the strike replacements selected as casuals.
Godfrey employed plaintiffs for approximately two years before they were discharged. Plaintiffs do not contest their discharges. Rather they assert that: (1) the casual seniority list, by which casuals were hired as regular employees, was ordered dis-criminatorily so that African-American casuals were on the bottom half of the list; and (2) a “layoff” period of approximately 12 weeks in early 1986 discriminated against them on the basis of their race. Their claims were advanced pursuant to § 1981 and Title VII.
The district court issued a pre-trial order which effectively eliminated plaintiffs’ § 1981 claims. The remainder of the case proceeded to trial, and the court found for plaintiffs on their layoff claim and against plaintiffs on their casual seniority list claim under Title
VII. Judgment for plaintiffs was entered, and they appealed.
DISCUSSION
I. Seniority List Claim
A ¿2 U.S.C. § 1981
Following a motion to reconsider the denial of defendants’ motion for partial summary judgment,
2
the district court found that plaintiffs failed to state a claim under § 1981 because they failed to prove that moving from the casual seniority list to regular employee status would be a promotion under the test in
Patterson,
The Supreme Court laid out the original test in
Patterson:
“Only where the promotion rises to the level of an opportunity for a new and distinct relation between the employee and the employer is such a claim actionable under § 1981.”
Id.
at 185,
The district court (J. Randa) applied the outsider test and the job requirements test, reasoning that the Seventh Circuit has moved away from the original contract test. R. 94 at 8-10. To the contrary, we hold that the contract test is alive and well in the Seventh Circuit, as are the outsider test and the job requirements test.
See, e.g., Mojica v. Gannett Co.,
Upon the first consideration of this issue the district court (J. Stadtmueller) found that “elevation from casual to regular employee involves a new and distinct relation between employer and employee.” R. 43 at 13. The court considered many factors in reaching its decision. It noted that casual employees could be terminated at will, while regular employees could be terminated only for cause and also had review procedures available to them. The regular employees earned contractual seniority rights that casual employees did not earn. Regular employees earned better salaries and enjoyed fringe benefits that the casuals did riot. Id. at 12-13. These considerations most easily fit under the contract test.
When the district court (J. Randa) reconsidered the issue it primarily focused on factors that would fall within the confines of the job requirements test. The court noted that “the only qualification for becoming a regular employee was being the next in fine on the casual seniority list when a position became available.” R. 94 at 10. The court continued, stating that casual employees who had earned regular employee status often performed the same jobs in the same departments and for the same supervisor. Such an employee did not gain any supervisory responsibilities, his wage remained an hourly wage, and he stayed within the same collective bargaining unit. Id.
In the final analysis it appears that the promotion from casual to regular employee does not survive Patterson using the job requirements test. However, application of the contract test and the evidence of increased job security, seniority rights, better salary, and more fringe benefits present disputed material issues of fact that require submission to a jury.
B. Title VII
Generally a plaintiff may not bring claims under Title YII that were not originally brought among the charges made to the
*148
EEOC.
4
This rule serves two purposes: affording an opportunity for the EEOC to settle the dispute between the employee and employer and putting the employer on notice of the charges against it.
Rush v. McDonald’s Corp.,
To include a discrimination claim in a federal district court complaint that was not brought in the charges filed with the EEOC a plaintiff must pass the two prong test of
Jenkins:
(1) the claim is like or reasonably related to the EEOC charges, and (2) the claim in the complaint reasonably could develop from the EEOC investigation into the original charges.
“The claims are not alike or reasonably related unless there is a factual relationship between them. This means that the EEOC charge and the complaint must, at minimum, describe the
same conduct
and implicate the
same individuals.” Cheek,
II. Layoff Claim
The district court found that plaintiffs were discriminatorily laid off. However, the court limited the damages available to plaintiffs because it gave collateral estoppel effect to a state agency’s decision that plaintiffs were justifiably discharged. R. 94 at 18. Plaintiffs contest the limitations placed on their damages. 6
A. Collateral Estoppel
When plaintiffs were discharged they each filed for unemployment benefits. *149 Plaintiffs did not claim at the time, nor have they claimed at any time since, that the discharges were discriminatorily motivated. R. 94 at 11. Godfrey protested, contending that Harper, Webber, and Wright were all fired for good cause. The Unemployment Compensation Division (UCD) held hearings and determined that plaintiffs were all properly discharged and thus ineligible for benefits. Plaintiffs did not appeal the agency decision to state court. Id. at 11-12. The district court gave collateral estoppel effect to the UCD’s determination that plaintiffs were all discharged for just cause.
Section 1738 mandates that federal courts give full faith and credit to state court decisions to the same degree that the decisions would have in the courts of that state. 28 U.S.C. § 1738. Title VII permits plaintiffs to pursue their claims in federal court
de novo
after they have pursued their claims in state proceedings.
University of Tenn. v. Elliott,
Elliott,
however, does not apply to the present ease. The agency decision here was made by an unemployment benefits agency, not an employment discrimination agency. The issue involved was the reason for plaintiffs’ discharges, which were not alleged to have been discriminatory. Plaintiffs’ justifiable discharges have only an indirect effect on the damages available in their Title VII claims; the decision does not directly affect their discrimination allegations.
See also Gear v. Des Moines,
B. Damages
One purpose of Title VII is to put a plaintiff in the same position he/she would have been in had the discrimination not occurred, not in a better position. Regardless of whether the discrimination had occurred plaintiffs would have been fired in early 1987 for their misconduct. Accordingly, the district court correctly restricted their awards of back pay to the time preceding termination and disallowed their reinstatements.
See Bohen v. East Chicago,
CONCLUSION
The judgment is AFFIRMED insofar as it denies recovery under Title VII and denies damages for the layoffs, and it is REVERSED and REMANDED insofar as it denies recovery under § 1981.
Notes
. Prior to the strike the warehouse employed approximately 650 workers, of whom roughly 3.5% were minorities. R. 95 at 2.
. This case originally was assigned to District Judge J.P. Stadtmueller, who denied defendants' motion for partial summary judgment on the § 1981 failure to promote claim. The case then was reassigned to District Judge Rudolph Randa, who examined defendants’ motion for reconsideration and sat as judge for the remainder of the case.
. Whether an alleged promotion rises to the level of "a new and distinct relationship” is a question of fact.
Von Zuckerstein v. Argonne Nat'l Lab.,
. This is a condition precedent that Title VII plaintiffs must satisfy.
Cheek v. Western & S. Life Ins. Co.,
.
Witherspoon
created an exception to the general premise that any claim that is like or reasonably related to the charges made by a plaintiff in his EEOC grievance and that could grow out of the EEOC charges may be brought in the plaintiff's complaint. "[I]n those situations where an individual attempts to bring a federal court action for a discriminatory act not reported to the EEOC that occurred
prior
to a discriminatory act reported to and investigated by the EEOC, such claim should be barred for failure to exhaust administrative remedies.”
.The plaintiffs also assert that the district court erred in its decision to not award damages for a four-week period during which the plaintiffs did not work because the court found that the plaintiffs themselves delayed returning to work. The district court’s finding is not clearly erroneous.
