Joy Rogers Thomas was fired by Metroflight, Inc. after she married a fellow employee, because of a Metroflight “no-spouse” employment rule. Thomas sued Metroflight for employment discrimination under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 42 U.S.C. §§ 2000e to 2000e-17. After a bench trial the district court entered judgment for Metroflight and ruled that Metroflight was entitled to attorney fees. The appeal was submitted on the briefs by agreement of the parties.
Metroflight is a small commercial airline doing business in Oklahoma and employing about 500 people. Metroflight hired Thomas as a secretary for its Lawton, Oklahoma
There was a “no-spouse” employment rule in effect at Metroflight at the time of Thomas’ marriage, under which no two persons in the same department could marry and then continue working for Metroflight. Any two such persons who did marry had the option of choosing which spouse would quit. If neither quit, the company would fire the employee with the lesser seniority. Neither Thomas nor her husband quit, so Thomas, who had less seniority than her spouse, was fired.
The record shows that before Thomas’ firing there had been eight other instances of intrafirm marriage at Metroflight. In seven of the previous instances, either the no-spouse rule was not violated because the spouses worked in different departments, or accommodations were made to retain both employees by reclassifying one spouse’s work assignment or simply allowing the violation. In one other instance the rule was enforced, also by firing the female employee.
After being fired, Thomas filed a discrimination complaint with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC), which found no violation but issued Thomas a “right-to-sue” letter. Thomas then initiated this Title VII suit in federal district court, relying at trial solely on a theory of the disparate impact of Metroflight’s no-spouse rule. 1
After hearing the evidence, the district court found that Metroflight’s no-spouse policy “is a good policy, a proper company business decision and is not discriminatory.” R. I, 204; R. XI, 121. The court held that Thomas did not establish any disparate impact of the policy, finding her “statistical evidence to be wholly inadequate and irrelevant in that the fact that salary differentials may be considered, among other factors, by a couple in deciding which will resign under the defendant’s rule is not a sufficient ground for any legally cognizable claim.” R. I, 204. The court rejected Thomas’ statistical analysis because of “gross overstatement of base data,” “small actual sample size,” “absence of any causal connection between spousal consideration of salary” and termination by Metroflight based on seniority, “failure to measure actual adverse impact rather than a purely conceptual potential adverse impact,” and “total disregard of the relevant, real world factors.” Id. at 205. At the same time, the court directed defendant Metroflight to file a motion for attorney’s fees with supporting affidavits, stating from the bench that there was “little reason or excuse, in my judgment, for having fooled with this case in the first place.” R. XI, 122. We construe this as a finding that plaintiff Thomas’ action was frivolous.
I
In Title VII cases based upon alleged discriminatory
intent
— disparate
treatment
— the plaintiff must present evidence giving rise to “an inference of unlawful discrimination.”
Texas Department of Community Affairs v. Burdine,
Proof of discriminatory intent is not necessary for liability under Title VII, however. In
Dothard v. Rawlinson,
In a disparate impact case, unlike a disparate treatment case, once a plaintiff makes out the prima facie case, the burden of proof shifts to the employer to show “business necessity:”
“In a disparate impact case, ... the employer must prove business necessity for the challenged practice to rebut the prima facie case. He bears a burden of proof. Moreover, in a disparate impact case, unlike a disparate treatment case, a rational or legitimate, nondiscriminatory reason is insufficient. The practice must be essential, the purpose compelling.”
Williams v. Colorado Springs, Colorado School District,
“ '[Establishing a prima facie case of disparate treatment is not onerous.’ Burdine,450 U.S. at 253 ,101 S.Ct. at 1094 . In making a prima facie case in a disparate impact suit, however, the plaintiff must not merely prove circumstances raising an inference of discriminatory impact; he must prove the discriminatory impact at issue.”
Johnson v. Uncle Ben’s, Inc.,
We emphasize the differences between the two types of cases because we agree with the district court that Thomas did not produce sufficient evidence to establish the discriminatory impact of the no-spouse rule. We do not agree, however, with all that the district court said in arriving at its conclusion. Indeed, we affirm on this issue reluctantly because we suspect, as others have claimed, 2 that “no-spouse” rules in practice often result in discrimination against women, and are generally unjustified. But we cannot accept our own speculations or others’ conclusions as a substitute for plaintiff’s required proof, nor may we take judicial notice of evidence that might have been but was not presented.
Thomas presented evidence that in the only two instances in which Metroflight enforced the “no-spouse” rule, female employees were fired. But that alone is insufficient to prove a violation of Title VII; a sample of two is too small to make even a 100% impact rate significant.
3
Compare Harper v. Trans World Airlines,
Thomas also presented statistical evidence to demonstrate the disparate impact of the no-spouse rule, through the testimony of a statistical expert, James Horrell. Using employment data provided by Metroflight, Horrell testified that considering all possible marriages between two employees in the same department of Metroflight, if the decision who would terminate were always made on the basis of preserving the higher salary, more women than men would terminate. To come to this conclusion the expert assumed that any employee in a Metroflight department might marry any other opposite-sex employee in the department, regardless of either employee’s age or current marital status. From a universe of 3687 possible marriages thus calculated, he found that in 62.1% of the marriages the woman would have the lesser salary. For a subset of 1283 possible marriages in which the annual salary differential would be more than $5000, the percentage of women receiving less, and thus terminating, would be 85.4%. PL Ex. 3.
The Metroflight no-spouse rule, of course, does not require that the spouse who receives the lower pay terminate. Horrell's assumption that salary differential would be the deciding factor in a couple’s decision is thus critical to Thomas’ case. But Horrell did not testify as an expert on spousal decision-making. On cross-examination, he admitted that other factors, such as availability of positions with other employers, could be a significant element in a married couple’s decision as to which should terminate. He stated, however, that he did not have information on such factors and would find them nearly impossible to quantify statistically.
Horrell also presented calculations— based upon the same assumption that every departmental employee was a potential spouse of every other opposite-sex departmental employee — that, if seniority were to be the sole basis of the decision, the woman would terminate in 52.4% of the cases. The no-spouse rule, of course, mandates that seniority will determine which spouse’s employment is terminated only if the couple does not make the decision. Thomas introduced no other evidence on what would affect a couple’s decision as to which spouse would terminate employment, except for her own somewhat ambiguous testimony: “We did discuss it somewhat at length, of course, I didn’t want to give up my job and because of economic reasons, the difference in the pay, there is really no decision as to who was going to be terminated, it definitely was going to be me, I was the most junior.” R. XI, 13.
The evidence Thomas presented is sufficient to prove disparate impact if salary is the controlling factor, and perhaps sufficient to prove disparate impact if seniority is the controlling factor.
4
But
We do not believe that the presence of choice is enough to make discriminatory impact unprovable. Many Title VII decisions involve employee choices.
See, e.g., International Brotherhood of Teamsters v. United States,
431. U.S. 324,
Proof of how the no-spouse rule affects the actual choices a couple makes may be difficult. This is acknowledged by commentators, including some who have suggested amendments to Title VII to eliminate the problem.
5
Whether it is impossible to prove or merely difficult, we cannot waive the requirement that the plaintiff show the disparate impact. Thomas’ evidence in this case was insufficient to do that. Therefore, we agree with the district court that Thomas did not establish the
II
The district court, sua sponte, found that plaintiff Thomas’ case was frivolous, and it directed Metroflight to make an application for attorney’s fees to be paid by Thomas.
On an issue on which the circuits are split, this court adopted a rule in December 1986 that a district court’s order awarding attorney’s fees is final for purposes of appeal only after the amount is determined.
Phelps v. Washburn University,
In the instant case, the judge determined Thomas’ liability for Metroflight’s attorney’s fees, though not the amount, at the same time he announced his findings and conclusions on the merits of the suit. Thomas’ brief on appeal challenged the frivolousness finding, as a part of her appeal on the merits. We understand that the district court set the amount of the fees at something over $30,000 sometime in 1985, and that Thomas filed no new appeal within the permitted time limits, which expired long before we entered our Phelps opinion.
Phelps
established a new rule for this circuit, imposing a requirement on Thomas that she had no opportunity to meet in timely fashion. Retroactive application of the rule would impose a substantial inequity on her.
See EEOC v. Gaddis,
Thomas’ challenge to a no-spouse rule as a discriminatory employment practice presents an issue of first impression in this circuit. It is error to assess fees against a civil rights plaintiff when a non-frivolous issue is one of first impression at the circuit level.
See Kiowa Tribe v. Lewis,
We therefore reverse the district court’s ruling that the case was frivolous and its order directing plaintiff to pay defendant’s attorney’s fees.
AFFIRMED IN PART, REVERSED IN PART, and REMANDED for further proceedings consistent herewith.
Notes
. Before trial, the parties jointly stipulated that Thomas would not attempt to prove or hold Metroflight liable under a previously alleged theory of disparate treatment, and that the no-spouse rule was the only reason for Thomas’ termination.
. See Bierman and Fisher, Antinepotism Rules Applied to Spouses: Business and Legal Viewpoints, 35 Lab.LJ. 634, 637 (1984); Wexler, Husbands and Wives: The Uneasy Case for Antinepotism Rules, B.U.L. Rev. 75, 79, 92 (1982); Comment, (Mrs.) Alice Doesn't Work Here Anymore: No-Spouse Rules and the American Working Woman, 29 UCLA L.Rev. 199, 201-02, 224 (1981).
. The size of a sample is of concern to statisticians insofar as it affects the possibility that a given statistical disparity resulted from chance. “When samples are very small, large differentials are necessary to obtain statistically significant results." Boardman & Vining, The Role of Probative Statistics in Employment Discrimination Cases, 46 Law & Contemp. Probs. 206 (1983).
. We say "perhaps” because if seniority were controlling we would have to consider whether as a determining basis for choice rather than the direct basis for termination it is protected
Moreover, if seniority were shown to be controlling, we would have to consider whether a statistically significant disparate impact is in all cases legally significant. Plaintiffs expert testified that the result showing potential husbands had more seniority than their potential wives in 52.4% of the hypothetical employee marriages is statistically significant; he reported the statistical significance in terms of "Z" factors, representing an "index of rarity” of result occurring by chance; the 52.4% represented a Z factor of 5.8296, which he testified is an index of rarity "on the order of one in a hundred thousand cases.” R. XI, 61.
The Supreme Court precedent may be read to suggest that statistical significance, measured in standard deviations, is sufficient to establish a prima facie case, at least in disparate treatment cases.
See Hazelwood School District
v.
United States,
But
Hazelwood
does not say that "statistically significant" is necessarily "significantly discriminatory" as used in
Dothard,
. See Wexler, supra note 2, at 140-41; Comment, supra note 2, at 237-43.
