Opinion
This is а class action alleging gender-based wage discrimination in violation of the state and federal Equal Pay Acts and the California Fair Employment and Housing Act in which the employer prevailed by summary judgment. We affirm.
FACTS
A.
In 1984, the Los Angeles County juvenile court’s caseloads increased so rapidly that many additional lawyers were needed to represеnt minors and others subject to the court’s jurisdiction, thus triggering section 44.7 of article IX of the Los Angeles County Charter, which provides: “Nothing in this Article shall prevent the County, when the Board of Supervisors finds that work can more economically or feasibly be performed by independent contractors, from entering into contracts for the performance of such work.” In response to the caseload crisis, the board authorized “as-needed” contracts with lawyers for the juvenile court, and lawyers (including Danna Hall and others included in our references to Hall) entered contracts with the county in which they were designated as “independent contractors.”
In June 1989, county counsel informed the bоard that the juvenile court’s caseloads had stabilized so that it would be “administratively more efficient to acquire the needed [attorney] services through a single employer-provider,” and asked the board to approve the formation of Auxiliary Legal Services, Inc. (ALS), to provide “legal and related services to supplement nеcessary services” provided by county counsel. County counsel told the board that “a new infrastructure [was] needed to enable the County to continue to cost effectively manage and maintain [a] professional corps of service providers without increasing the number of permanent classified County employees.” The board adopted county counsel’s proposals, ALS was created, and the county and ALS then entered a contract pursuant to which ALS agreed to provide lawyers in “such number ... as [were] from time to time requested” to work “under the direction and control of County Counsel.” Under the terms of the contract, ALS was an “independent contractor” аnd the people provided by ALS were to be “employees solely of [ALS] and not of [the] County for any purpose.” Hall became an ALS employee and was thereafter paid by ALS.
B.
In 1999, Hall filed a class action against ALS, county counsel, and the county, alleging in her subsequently amended complaint that the “three defendants [were] ‘joint employers’ or a ‘single enterprise,’ ” and that ALS was merely a “payrolling scheme” that enabled county counsel to maintain a “two-tier [attorney] work force” notwithstanding that all lawyers did the same work under the same working conditions. As characterized by Hall, her “lawsuit ‘is a federal and state equal pay act and . . . sex discrimination case brought on bеhalf of a class of about 200 women attorneys channeled by the County into the predominantly female [ALS] unit while receiving substantially less pay and benefits than the predominantly male . . .“official” [county counsel] employee unit.’ ”
(Hall
v.
County of Los Angeles
(Feb. 9, 2005, B170447) [nonpub. opn.].) Hall alleged claims
C.
ALS, county counsel, and the county answered, conducted discovery, then moved for summary judgment, contending there were separate applicant pools for ALS and county counsel; that the hiring decisions were based on merit, not gender; that although there were more female lawyers at ALS than county сounsel, both groups were gender-integrated; that there were no gender-based barriers to entry into either group; and that similarly situated males and females within each group were treated the same in terms of pay and benefit^. 2 In support of its motion, the County presented the following evidence.
During the relevant time, the highest differential betweеn female and male lawyers at ALS was 71 percent female, 29 percent male; the lowest differential at county counsel was 22 percent female, 78 percent male. Similarly situated male and female lawyers at ALS were treated the same in terms of salary and benefits, and similarly situated male and female lawyers at county counsel were treated the same in terms of salary and benefits. 3
Between 1989 and 1999, there were more than 30 competitive examinations open to outside applicants (including ALS employees) for positions with county counsel. Notices of the exams were posted and otherwise publicly disseminated, and all qualified applicants were allowed to take the exams (which consisted of an oral interview, prior experience, education, and the other usual factors). An eligibility list was created and all attorney positions—181 (58 percent of whom were female, 42 percent male)—were filled from that list.
The county presented evidence to show that county counsel’s lawyers were paid more than ALS lawyers “due to cost-savings,” not gender—the very reason ALS was created back in 1989, as shown by the documents presented to and created by the board of supervisors, which entered into the contract with ALS because it was “an economical and cost effective way to provide . . . supplemental legаl services and representation for its officers and employees and for minors in dependency court proceedings.” Indeed, the county’s “auditor controller” had opined in 1989 that the ALS contract would result in “[ajlmost two million dollars in annual costs savings” to the county.
Hall opposed the motion, contending that county counsel’s “pervasive control of ALS” meant the ALS lawyers were county counsel’s “common law” employees and, as such, entitled to be paid “in accordance with civil service compensation rules.” Instead, claimed Hall, ALS’s female lawyers were paid lower salaries and given fewer benefits than their male civil service counterparts. Although Hall said she disputed the county’s evidence, the county’s objections to portions of her evidence were sustained (and she does not challenge those rulings on this appeal). As a result, there were no disputed material facts, and the trial court granted the county’s motion.
DISCUSSION
The EPA exists to ensure that employees performing equal work arе paid equal wages without regard to gender. To prove a violation of that basic principle, a plaintiff must establish that, based on gender, the employer pays different wages to employees doing substantially similar work under substantially similar conditions.
4
If that prima facie showing is made, the burden
shifts to the employer to prove the disparity is pеrmitted by one of the EPA’s statutory exceptions—here, that the disparity is based on a factor other than sex. (29 U.S.C. § 206(d)(1); Lab. Code, § 1197.5, subd. (a);
Corning Glass Works v. Brennan
(1974)
I.
Hall contends county counsel is her “common law” employer and that, therefore, the appropriate “comparator” (the person or group to whom the comparison is made) is male county counsel lawyers who earn more than she does.
5
We
A.
To establish her prima facie case, Hall had to show not only that she is paid lower wages than a male comparator for equal work, but that she has selected the proper comparator. “The EPA does not require perfect diversity between the comparison classes, but at a certain point, when the challenged policy effects [sic] both male and female employees equally, there can be no EPA violation. [Citation.] [A plaintiff] cannot make a comparison of one
classification composed of males and females with another classification of employees also composed of males and females.”
(Arthur
v.
College of St. Benedict
(D.Minn. 2001)
In
Schulte v. State of New York
(E.D.N.Y. 1981)
Because undisputed evidence establishes that, at any given time, ALS and county counsel both employed a substantial number of women and that, within ALS, women were paid the same as men, there is no basis for Hall’s use of a male county counsel lawyer as a comparator. For this reason alone, Hall’s claims fail as a matter of law.
(Strag
v.
Board of Trustees
(4th Cir. 1995)
B.
Assuming that Hall could justifiably compare ALS female lawyers to county counsel male lawyers, summary judgment was proper bеcause the undisputed evidence establishes that the wage disparity between ALS and county counsel was based on an acceptable business reason, which is a
recognized “factor other than sex.”
(Kouba v. Allstate Ins. Co.
(9th Cir. 1982)
The county’s undisputed evidence established that county counsel’s use of independent contractors was authorized by the county’s charter as a gender-neutral cost-saving
Assuming (as Hall insists) that county counsel is Hall’s common law employer, the two-tier wage and benefits system is not discriminatory because there was a legitimate аnd nondiscriminatory cost-savings purpose for ALS’s' existence.
(Prieto
v.
City of'Miami Beach
(S.D.Fla. 2002)
II.
Hall contends her FEHA claims for sex-based wage discrimination raise disparate treatment and disparate impact issues that were not properly resolved by summary judgment. 6 We disagree.
To establish a prima facie case of disparate
treatment,
Hall was required to show membership in a protected class, qualification for the position at issue, adverse employment action, and at least an inference of intentional discrimination from facts showing that the county chose the particular policy because of its effect on members of a protected class, not just that the county was aware that a given policy would lead to adverse
consequences for a given grоup.
(Hemmings v. Tidyman’s Inc.
(9th Cir. 2002)
Hall did not establish a prima facie case of disparate treatment or disparate impact because she did not present any evidence to show that the county created ALS because of its effect on female lawyers (or even that the county was aware that the use of independent contractors would lead to adverse consequences for female lawyers), or any evidence to show that the creation of ALS had a disproportionate adverse effect on women.
If we nevertheless assume for the sake of argument that Hall
had
made the required showing, it was met with the county’s undisputed evidence of a legitimate and gender-neutral business reason for its actions (cost savings). Hall’s claim that she showed pretext is not borne out by the record. Although her expert opined (based on his statistical analysis) that “the disparity in hiring between women into ALS versus [county counsel] is so significant that it can only be explained by external
Summary judgment was properly granted.
DISPOSITION
The judgment is affirmed. Respondents are entitled to their costs of appeal.
Mallano, Acting P. J., and Jackson, J., * concurred.
Appellants’ petition for review by the Supreme Court was denied May 9, 2007, S151466.
Notes
The class was certified in February 2002, at which time the trial court noted that, in 1999, “the County allegedly moved [Hall] to the County payroll but, aсcording to [Hall], the existing pay disparity was embedded into [her] employment relationships by fixing [her] title and salary at the County pay grade and step equivalent to [her] ALS rate[] existing at- the time of transfer.”
To be precise about the summary judgment motion, it was originally filed by the county and county counsel, then joined by ALS. Unless the context suggests otherwise, our subsequеnt references to the county include ALS and county counsel.
Before the summary judgment motion was filed, the trial court imposed discovery sanctions in the form of evidentiary rulings against Hall, including findings that “any difference in pay and benefits received by male and female attorneys who received paychecks from ALS were not the result of gender discrimination,” and “any difference in pay and benefits received by male and female attorneys who were recognized as members of the County’s classified Civil Service at County Counsel’s Office were not the result of gender-discrimination.” Hall does not challenge these rulings.
As relevant, subdivision (d)(1) of 29 United States Code section 206 provides that “[n]o employеr ... shall discriminate .. . between employees on the basis of sex by paying wages to employees ... at a rate less than the rate at which he pays wages to employees of the opposite sex . . . for equal work on jobs the performance of which requires equal skill, effort, and responsibility, and which are performed under similar working сonditions, except where such payment is made pursuant to (i) a seniority system; (ii) a merit system; (iii) a system which measures earnings by quantity or quality of production; or (iv) a differential based on any other factor other than sex . . . .” Because Labor Code section 1197.5 is substantively indistinguishable from its federal counterpart, California’s courts rely on federal authоrities construing the
federal statute.
(Green v. Par Pools, Inc.
(2003)
The concept of “common law employee” (a person over whom the employer has control about the details of the work) comes from
Metropolitan Water Dist.
v.
Superior Court
(2004)
Because FEHA has a federal counterpart (title .VII of the federal Civil Rights Act of 1964, 42 U.S.C. § 2000e et seq.) and the antidiscrimination objectives and public policy purpose of the two laws are the same, California’s courts routinely rely on federal decisions to interpret analogous parts of FEHA.
(Heard
v.
Lockheed Missiles & Space Co.
(1996)
The county’s objections to many of the opinions offered by Hall’s expert were sustained for lack of foundation, and those evidentiary rulings are not challenged on this appeal.
Judge of the Los Angeles Superior Court, assigned by the Chief Justice pursuant to article VI, section 6 of the California Constitution.
