Joan FINNEGAN, Radford B. Clark, Glen L. Blum, individually
and on behalf of all similarly situated persons,
Plaintiffs-Appellants,
and
Harold Cottrell, Intervening Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
TRANS WORLD AIRLINES, INCORPORATED, Defendant-Appellee.
No. 91-2150.
United States Court of Appeals,
Seventh Circuit.
Argued Feb. 12, 1992.
Decided July 14, 1992.
Thomas R. Meites (argued), Lynn S. Frackman, Meites, Frackman, Mulder & Burger, Gregory N. Freerksen, Samuel W. Witwer, Jr., Witwer, Burlage, Poltrock & Giampietro, Chicago, Ill., Robert Balfour, Geneva, Ill., Rob Weiner, Jarett & Weiner, Northfield, Ill., plaintiffs-appellants and intervenor-appellant.
Joel H. Kaplan, Thomas J. Piskorski (argued), Seyfarth, Shaw, Fairweather & Geraldson, Chicago, Ill., Michael A. Katz, Trans World Airlines, Legal Dept., Mt. Kisco, N.Y., for defendant-appellee.
Before BAUER, Chief Judge, POSNER, Circuit Judge, and FAIRCHILD, Senior Circuit Judge.
POSNER, Circuit Judge.
In the fall of 1985, after years of heavy losses, TWA decided that it had to reduce its labor costs or go under. (TWA finally declared bankruptcy during the pendency of this appeal, but the bankruptcy judge lifted the automatic stay to permit the appeal to be argued and decided.) The measures it took included a 14 percent cut in the wages of its nonunionized employees and a reduction in those employees' fringe benefits. The reduction included capping paid vacations at 4 weeks a year. Previously, all employees who had more than 16 years of service with the company had been entitled to even more paid vacation--workers who had at least 30 years of service to 7 weeks. We do not understand this to have been a contractual entitlement. It was a practice that the company was free as a matter of contract law to change at any time, provided that the change was prospective--that is, that it did not take away vacation rights that the worker had accrued by working during the period in which the previous policy was in effect. If a worker who under the previous policy was entitled to 1 week's vacation for every 7 weeks that he worked had worked 35 weeks and thus had earned 5 weeks of vacation that he had not taken when the new policy was announced, the company could not confiscate a week of his vacation. Illinois Wage Payment and Collection Act, Ill.Rev.Stat. ch. 48, pp 39m-1 et seq.; National Metalcrafters v. McNeil,
Most workers having more than 16 years of service with the same company, and all workers with 30 years or more, are at least 40 years old. So the brunt of the vacation cap inevitably fell mainly on workers within the class protected by the Age Discrimination in Employment Act, 29 U.S.C. §§ 621 et seq., precipitating this suit by members of the protected class whose vacation rights were curtailed by the 1985 cost-cutting program. The district judge granted summary judgment for TWA on the grounds that the plaintiffs had presented no evidence of intentional discrimination ("disparate treatment") and that their disparate-impact claim was barred by section 4(f)(2) of the Act, which allows an employer "to observe the terms of a bona fide seniority system ... which is not a subterfuge to evade the purposes of this [Act]." 29 U.S.C. § 623(f)(2).
We have our doubts, unnecessary to resolve, whether the seniority provision is applicable here. The provision was modeled on a provision in Title VII, 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-2(h), where its function is plain--to protect workers' seniority rights notwithstanding that black and other minority workers will often have been hired more recently than white workers and hence may be disadvantaged by strict adherence to seniority in determining layoffs and rehires. International Brotherhood of Teamsters v. United States,
Section 4(f)(2) also provides protection for "bona fide employee benefit plan[s]," and here the function of the exemption (which has no counterpart in Title VII) is clearer. It allows the employer to take account of, and reflect in the compensation package that he offers his employees, the higher costs of certain fringe benefits, such as life and medical insurance, for older workers. Public Employees Retirement System v. Betts,
But even if section 4(f)(2) does not shield TWA from liability for curtailing benefits, the company's alternative ground--that the plaintiffs have not made out even a prima facie case of disparate impact--is solid. We need not speculate on how much of the theory of disparate impact, viewed as a judicial doctrine of general applicability to discrimination cases, survives Wards Cove Packing Co. v. Atonio,
The thinking behind the concept of disparate impact is that if an employment practice bears disproportionately against the members of a protected group, the employer ought to be required to justify it. Dothard v. Rawlinson,
The plaintiffs' counsel admitted that on their view of the law TWA cannot as a practical matter reduce its paid vacations to a maximum of 4 weeks, generous as that maximum is, because it would mean slashing 3 weeks off the vacations of the most senior workers, a result impossible to accomplish on an age-neutral basis. TWA cannot lop 3 weeks off the vacations of its most junior workers, because they are entitled to only 2 weeks. Even if a proportional reduction is considered nondisparate (but why should it be? A week is a week), there is no practical way to achieve it. A 3/7 reduction in the paid vacations of the junior employees (the proportional reduction necessary to knock the senior employees down to 4 weeks) would leave those employees with only 6 days of paid vacation a year and the plaintiffs' counsel concedes that TWA cannot give its junior employees less than 2 weeks and hope to retain them as employees; and it cannot give them 2 weeks without leaving the senior employees with more than 4. The next tier of employees, by seniority, get 3 weeks of vacation. Cut them by 3/7 and they will have less than 2 weeks. There is no way to bring the most senior employees down to 4 weeks that will maintain a rational system of paid vacations for all employees (a minimum of 2 weeks vacation for all) yet not cut the more senior workers' vacations more than the less senior ones' proportionately as well as absolutely. There is something wrong with an interpretation of the Age Discrimination in Employment Act that forbids a bankrupt corporation to adopt a companywide policy of limiting paid vacations to 4 weeks a year and that would as a practical matter forbid all firms to reduce wages or fringe benefits in periods of adversity.
The concept of disparate impact was developed for the purpose of identifying situations where, through inertia or insensitivity, companies were following policies that gratuitously--needlessly--although not necessarily deliberately, excluded black or female workers from equal employment opportunities. Griggs v. Duke Power Co.,
Across-the-board cuts in wages and fringe benefits necessitated by business downturns or setbacks are a far cry from the situations that brought the theory into being. These cuts are not a legacy of deliberate discrimination on grounds of age; they are not the product of inertia or insensitivity. They are an unavoidable response to adversity. Their adverse impact on older workers is unavoidable too, because it is impossible to reduce the costs of fringe benefits without making deeper cuts in the benefits of older workers, simply because, by virtue of being older, they have greater benefits. In this situation no inference of discrimination, whether deliberate or merely inadvertent (but avoidable), can be drawn from the greater impact of curtailing employees' benefits on older workers. Otherwise every time a company tried to reduce its labor costs the federal courts would be dragged in and asked to redesign the reduction so as to shift the burden to some unprotected class of workers--a shift that might incidentally be impossible to accomplish, as it might drive all the younger workers out of the company (the 6-days-a-year vacation problem).
An argument for the judicial assumption of such a role might be teased out of dicta in cases that apply the disparate impact approach to age cases, see, e.g., Abbott v. Federal Forge, Inc.,
We could accept the plaintiffs' approach to the extent of finding a disparate impact, and then rule that the employer's business justification was compelling. But that would not be a satisfactory approach. It would mean that every time an employer made an across-the-board cut in wages or benefits he was prima facie violating the age discrimination law. Practices so tenuously related to discrimination, so remote from the objectives of civil rights law, do not reach the prima facie threshold.
Alternatively, however, the plaintiffs argue that having set up a voluntary early-retirement plan designed (as such plans are, of course) to induce its older, and therefore generally more expensive, workers to leave voluntarily, TWA cut the vacations of the older workers as a way of prodding them to take early retirement under the plan. This would be deliberate discrimination, and clearly actionable, Bartman v. Allis-Chalmers Corp.,
AFFIRMED.
