OPINION OF THE COURT
Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 prohibits companies employing “fifteen or more” persons from discriminating on the basis of sex in hiring, discharge, compensation, or terms of employment. 42 U.S.C. §§ 2000e(b), 2000e-2(a)(l). Norma Nesbit alleges that Gears Unlimited, Inc. (“Gears”) terminated her employment as a machine operator because of her sex. She concedes that Gears did not employ fifteen persons during the pertinent time period, but argues that we should also count the employees at a related entity, Winters Performance Products (“Winters”). Together, Gears and Winters had more than fifteen employees. We hold that the District Court properly refused to aggregate the number of employees at these companies. Because Title VII does not cover Gears by itself, we affirm the dismissal of Nesbit’s complaint. But we part with the
I. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
In 1973, Vaughn Winter, Sr. (“Vaughn Sr.”) founded Winters, which manufactures “rear ends” for high-performance automobiles. In 1990, he acquired Gears, a transmission parts manufacturer. Vaughn Sr. and his wife, Madeline Winter (“Madeline”), also formed Maverick Industries, Inc. (“Maverick”), which warehouses automotive parts, including parts produced at Winters. At the time of the events relating to this suit - December 1994 through August 1997 - Vaughn Sr. had a stake in three automotive companies: Gears, Winters, and Maverick.
The Winter family shares ownership and control of these three companies. Vaughn Sr. owns ten percent of Gears, with the remainder held in trust in equal shares for his children-Nina and Vaughn Jr. Vaughn Sr. is president of Gears and his children are corporate officers. He and Madeline own Winters and Maverick in equal shares. He is president of Winters and Maverick, and Madeline is the Secretary/Treasurer at Winters.
Gears and Winters occupy separate plants about one mile apart in York, Pennsylvania. In almost all respects, they operate independently. Their products are distinct-Gears produces transmissions and Winters produces automotive rear ends - and each company has its own equipment and production lines. Winters contracts to buy parts from Gears at market rates. The companies maintain separate financial records and payrolls, write separate checks, and file separate tax returns.
Vaughn Sr. monitors operations at both Gears and Winters. While he participates in day-to-day management at Winters, Gears is managed by Randy Lau. Vaughn Sr. testified that he visits the Gears facility only about twice a month, usually because a machine has broken down. Nesbit disputes this testimony, contending that Vaughn Sr. spends time at Gears “pretty much every day.”
The only area in which Gears and Winters cooperate considerably is in hiring. Typically, if either Gears or Winters has an opening, a Winters employee will place a “help wanted” sign on the street in front of the Winters building. Prospective employees obtain applications at the Winters front office and return them there as well. If Winters is hiring, either Vaughn Sr. or his wife will invite qualified applicants for an interview. If Gears has an opening, someone at Winters will communicate with the applicant on Lau’s behalf and then direct him or her to the Gears plant to interview with Lau. The hiring decision is then Lau’s “prerogative.” However, Vaughn Sr. (who, as noted above, normally does not participate in Gears management) can request that Gears hire a particular applicant and Gears will generally do so. Either Lau or the Winter children normally decide whether to terminate an employee, but Vaughn Sr. testified that he could ask Gears to fire an employee who engaged in significant misconduct.
On December 14, 1994, Nesbit submitted a standard employment application to Winters for a machine operator position. That day, either Vaughn Sr. or Madeline interviewed her.
1
The interviewer con-
Nesbit remained at Gears for two years and eight months. She perceived that Lau was her “boss” and was “more or less in charge” at Gears. Occasionally she also worked an extra shift at Winters following her regular shift at Gears. She would punch out on the time clock at Gears and then punch in at Winters. When working a Winters shift, she received a separate paycheck. Her hours at the two plants were not consolidated for overtime pay.
On August 19, 1997, Nesbit’s machine at Gears “crashed,” leaving it unusable without repairs. Nesbit became upset, which apparently caused her to develop a headache and neck pains. She informed the acting supervisor, Greg Pell, that she was leaving work to visit her chiropractor. When she returned the next day, Lau was on vacation, and Vaughn Sr. discharged her for insubordination.
After receiving permission from the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, Nesbit filed suit in the United States District Court for the Middle District of Pennsylvania alleging that Gears discriminated against her because of gender. Gears moved to dismiss the complaint under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(1) for lack of subject matter jurisdiction on the basis that it employed fewer than fifteen persons during the relevant time period and therefore was not an “employer” subject to Title VII.
Nesbit then filed an amended complaint alleging that Gears and its “associate corporation” Winters Transmission, Inc. - a company different from Winters that Vaughn Sr. owned from 1955 to 1985 - were really a single employer with more than fifteen employees. Gears moved again for a dismissal, this time observing that the entity called ‘Winters Transmission, Inc.” had ceased operation long before Nesbit began working at Gears. Nesbit then filed a second amended complaint, alleging that Gears and Winters are associate corporations that together meet the fifteen-employee threshold. On the basis of that allegation, the District Court ordered discovery limited to the question whether Gears and Winters constitute a single employer under Title VII. Following discovery, the District Court issued a memorandum and order in which it concluded that Gears and Winters are separate entities and, because Gears unquestionably employs fewer than fifteen persons by itself, dismissed Nesbit’s complaint for lack of subject matter jurisdiction. This appeal followed.
II. DISCUSSION
A. Is the Number of Employees a Jurisdictional Requirement?
We first address whether Title VIPs fifteen-employee threshold is a jurisdictional prerequisite - as the District Court believed it was in dismissing Nesbit’s complaint pursuant to Rule 12(b)(1) - or whether it is a substantive element of a Title VII claim. Whether an aspect of a claim concerns subject matter jurisdiction or the merits has at least three implications. First, because subject matter jurisdiction is non-waivable, courts have an independent obligation to satisfy themselves
1. Relevant Caselaw
The question whether Title VU’s fifteen-employee threshold is a jurisdictional prerequisite when a plaintiff brings a color-able Title VII claim has divided the courts of appeals.
3
The Second and Seventh Circuits conclude that it is a substantive element that the plaintiff must prove unless the claim that there are fifteen employees is so obviously unfounded that it fails to raise a genuine federal controversy.
Da Silva,
By contrast, the Fifth, Sixth,- Ninth, Tenth, and Eleventh Circuits have said that the fifteen-employee threshold is ju
The division is deeper than merely inter-circuit. Even within certain circuits that have held Title VII’s fifteen-employee threshold jurisdictional, there is conflict. While in
Owens
the Tenth Circuit assumed (without analysis) that the requirement is jurisdictional, in
Wheeler v. Hurdman,
The Eleventh Circuit is similarly conflicted. In
Garcia v. Copenhaver, Bell & Associates, M.D.’s, P.A.,
With this conflict in mind, we begin our determination by noting that subject matter jurisdiction is the “courts’ statutory or constitutional
power
to adjudicate” particular cases.
Steel Co. v. Citizens for a Better Env’t,
The District Court concluded that EP-CRA does not support suits for past violations and therefore dismissed the plaintiffs complaint under both Rules 12(b)(1) and 12(b)(6). The Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit reversed, holding that EPCRA permits such suits. The Supreme Court determined that the case raised (1) whether the plaintiff had constitutional standing and (2) whether allegations of past violations state a cause of action under EPCRA,
Steel Co.,
‘^Jurisdiction ... is not defeated ... by the possibility that the averments might fail to state a cause of action on which petitioners could actually recover.’ Rather, the district court has jurisdiction if ‘the right of the petitioners to recover under their complaint will be sustained if the Constitution and laws of the United States are given one construction and will be defeated if they are given another....’
Id.
at 89,
We presaged
Steel Co.
in a case decided five years earlier. In
Growth Horizons, Inc. v. Delaware County,
Turning to Title VII, we note that those courts that have held the fifteen-employee requirement jurisdictional have provided no reasons for their holding; rather, they
3. Most Plausible Arguments for Making Fifteen-Employee Requirement Jurisdictional
a. Commerce Clause Argument
Perhaps the most plausible reason for finding that the fifteen-employee requirement is jurisdictional is that it concerns a “dispute! ] as to the existence of a fact that is essential to a constitutional exercise of Congress’s power to regulate.”
Da Silva,
This argument, while well-made, nonetheless is unconvincing. First, the very wording of 42 U.S.C. § 2000e(b) suggests that the requirements that an employer be “in an industry affecting commerce” and have “fifteen or more employees” are separate and independent, and that it is a mistake to conflate the two. Even if a putative employer has twenty employees, it is not covered by Title VII if not in an industry affecting commerce. Second, while the preceding Commerce Clause-based justification for Title VII’s fifteen-employee requirement makes intuitive sense, it finds little support in the legislative history. We note that the 1972 amendments to Title VII lowered the minimum number of employees from twenty-five to fifteen. Patricia Davidson, Comment,
The Definition of “Employee” Under Title VII: Distinguishing Between Employees and Independent Contractors,
53 U. Cin. L.Rev. 203, 206 (1984) (noting this change). It lacks logic that, pre-1972, Congress believed that it took twenty-five employees for a substantial effect on interstate commerce but changed its mind in 1972. Furthermore, as initially proposed, the 1972 amendment to Title VII contained an eight-employee threshold.
See Armbruster,
Even assuming that Congress lacks authority to enact a statute does not mean that a federal court lacks jurisdiction to review actions brought under that statute. When disposing of a claim brought under an unconstitutional statute, courts ordinarily deny the claim on the merits, on the ground that the statute under which relief is sought is unconstitutional, rather than for lack of subject matter jurisdiction.
Martin v. United Way of Erie County,
b. Jurisdictional Statements in Other Supreme Court Cases
EEOC v. Arabian American Oil Co.,
By analogy, some may find
EEOC v. Commercial Office Products Co.,
4. Judicial Administration Reasons for Fifteen-Employee Requirement Being an Element of a Title VII Claim rather than a Jurisdictional Requirement
As a policy matter - which is ultimately the gut of our inquiry - it also makes little sense to regard the fifteen-employee threshold as jurisdictional. Such a holding would require a federal court to determine whether a company had fifteen employees during the relevant period, even if the parties so stipulated. To require a federal court to engage in such a fact-intensive inquiry
sua sponte -
which might in some cases require a federal appellate court to dig through an extensive record, including pay stubs and time sheets - appears to be a waste of scarce judicial resources, and we doubt that Congress intended such a result.
See Da Silva,
To hold the requirement jurisdictional also implies that a court would need to decide whether an entity employed more than fifteen individuals before reaching a Title VII action’s merits - even if the merits were more easily resolved than the “jurisdictional” question.
Steel Co.,
* sjt & * * *
In this context, we hold that, while the matter is not free from doubt, the fifteen-employee threshold is a substantive element (whether an “employer” exists) of a Title VII claim and is not jurisdictional. Federal jurisdiction is implicated only when the Title VII claim “clearly appears to be immaterial and made solely for the purpose of obtaining jurisdiction or where such a claim is wholly insubstantial or frivolous,”
Steel Co.,
As the District Court looked beyond Nesbit’s complaint and reviewed discovery on whether Gears employs more than fifteen people, it should have resolved the issue under the summary judgment standard rather than as a motion for judgment on the pleadings. Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(c). Nonetheless, we may affirm its disposition for any reason supported by the record.
Grayson v. Mayview State Hosp.,
1. The National Labor Relations Board’s “Integrated Enterprise” Test
Several courts of appeals have borrowed a four-part test - commonly called the “integrated enterprise” test or the “single employer” test - from the National Labor Relations Board (“NLRB”) to determine when two nominally distinct companies should be treated as a single entity under Title VII.
See Anderson v. Pacific Maritime Association,
The Seventh Circuit has rejected the NLRB’s four-factor test as unhelpful in the anti-discrimination context.
Papa v. Katy Indus., Inc.,
Because the NLRA and Title VII ask whether entities are a single enterprise for different reasons, it does not follow that the NLRB’s test is any more relevant to Title VII cases than any of the other tests for determining whether two companies should be regarded as one. To the contrary, for purposes of determining whether two companies are a single employer, the NLRA’s policy goals point in a different direction than Title VU’s. As discussed, a significant purpose of the fifteen-employee minimum in the Title VII context is to spare small companies the considerable expense of complying with the statute’s many-nuanced requirements.
See Papa,
2. Our Framework
In Papa, the Seventh Circuit developed its own test to determine whether two nominally distinct entities should be considered as one for Title VII purposes. The Court began with the “basic principle of affiliate liability[,] ... that an affiliate forfeits its limited liability only if it acts to forfeit it.” Id. at 941 (emphasis in original). It proceeded to find three situations in the Title VII context when a company and its affiliates forfeit limited liability and thus are deemed a single employer: (1) where a company has split itself into entities with less than fifteen employees with the intent to evade Title VII’s reach; (2) when a parent company has directed the subsidiary’s discriminatory act of which the plaintiff is complaining; or (3) when a court would otherwise pierce the corporate veil (i.e., look behind the corporate form to hold a corporation’s shareholders personally liable). Id. at 940-41.
We too will consider a company and its affiliates a single employer under Title VII(l) when a company has split itself into entities with less than fifteen employees intending to evade Title VII’s
a.Splitting a Single Company into Two or More to Evade Title VII
When a plaintiff proves that a company has split itself into multiple entities to evade coverage under Title VII, we consider those entities a single company for purposes of meeting the fifteen-employee threshold. “The privilege of separate incorporation is not intended to allow enterprises to duck their statutory duties.” Id. at 941.
A plaintiff need not prove that evading Title VII was the only reason that a business split itself into multiple entities. Rather, it must make a prima facie case that this was a substantial motivating factor, after which the burden will shift to the defendant to produce evidence rebutting the plaintiffs proof. Relevant to a prima facie case are considerations such as (1) lack of a reasonable business justification, (2) whether the business split was one that, as an operational matter, would more sensibly be contained within a single business entity (e.g., the two companies make the same product or inputs for the same product), and (3) statements from those familiar with the industry suggesting that the company was split into multiple entities to evade Title VII.
b. Parent Directing Subsidiary’s Act
When the companies sought to be aggregated for Title VII purposes are in a parent-subsidiary relationship, we shall deem a parent and subsidiary a single employer when the parent has directed the subsidiary to perform the allegedly discriminatory act in question. By directing such an act, the parent disregards the separate corporate existence of the subsidiary and thus forfeits the right to be treated as a separate entity for Title VII purposes. Moreover, in such a situation the parent itself has committed the act in question and thus should share responsibility with the subsidiary.
See Papa,
c. Substantive Consolidation
Absent either of the first two situations, we shall look to the factors courts use in deciding whether substantively to consolidate two or more entities in the bankruptcy context. While these factors vary from circuit to circuit, the test at base seeks to determine whether two or more entities’ affairs are so interconnected that they collectively caused the alleged discriminatory employment practice. More colloquially, the question is whether the “eggs” - consisting of the ostensibly separate companies - are so scrambled that we decline to unscramble them. We note, however, that substantive consolidation is an equitable remedy and is difficult to achieve. 7
S. Application of Our Disjunctive Test
Under the standard just discussed, and viewing the facts in the light most favorable to Nesbit, we nonetheless hold that no reasonable jury would consider Gears and Winters a single employer under Title VII for purposes of the fifteen-employee requirement. First, there is no record evidence that Gears and Winters split themselves into separate entities to evade Title VII. Nor has Nesbit alleged that Gears and Winters hold themselves out as one entity or that they remain separate only to evade anti-discrimination laws. On the contrary, such a claim is implausible, as Vaughn Sr. assumed his ownership interests in Gears and Winters seventeen years apart, and the two companies produce different products.
Second, because Gears and Winters do not have a parent-subsidiary relationship, the second situation for combining employees (a direction from the parent to the subsidiary to discriminate) does not exist. In any event, there is no evidence that one corporation (Winters) ordered the other (Gears) to commit a Title VII discriminatory act.
Finally, Nesbit sets out no evidence - other than Gears’ and Winters’ common ownership - suggesting that substantive consolidation would make sense under the factors discussed. The two companies have different management. Nesbit described Randy Lau as “her boss” and conceded he was “more or less in charge” at Gears. While Vaughn Sr. fired Nesbit, we do not consider this a significant indication that Winters and Gears do not operate at arms length. Because Vaughn Sr. is president of Gears and a ten percent shareholder, it is unsurprising that he occasionally participated in Gears’ management.
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He
That Gears and Winters coordinate in recruiting job applicants likewise does not make them a single entity under Title VII. Our outcome might be different if Gears had no say in hiring its own employees, if Gears and Winters held themselves out to job applicants as a single company, if the two companies’ human resources functions were entirely integrated, and/or if they did not maintain separate payrolls and finances. However, such a situation is not present here. Moreover, there is no record evidence that third parties dealt with Gears and Winters as one unit, that Gears and Winters covered the salaries of the other’s employees, or that Gears and Winters did business exclusively with each other.
In the absence of more significant operational entanglement, common ownership and de minimis coordination in hiring are insufficient bases to disregard the separate corporate forms of Gears and Winters. We therefore decline to view Gears and Winters as one entity for Title VII purposes. As Nesbit concedes that Gears alone employs fewer than fifteen employees, it is not an “employer” under 42 U.S.C. § 2000e(b) and Nesbit’s suit cannot succeed.
III. CONCLUSION
We hold that whether an entity employs fifteen or more workers is a merits question rather than a jurisdictional inquiry. Thus, because the District Court relied on materials external to the pleadings, it should have evaluated under the summary judgment standard Nesbit’s argument for viewing Gears and Winters collectively. Even under that standard, there is no basis to view Gears and Winters together as a single employer. Because Gears alone employs fewer than fifteen employees, we affirm the District Court’s dismissal of Nesbit’s complaint, albeit on the merits rather than for lack of subject matter jurisdiction.
Notes
. The parties dispute whether Vaughn Sr. or Madeline conducted the initial interview, though it is not important for our analysis.
. Nesbit is plaintiffs maiden name and the name she uses in this litigation. The name on her employment application and in Gears’ employment records is Norma J. Tran.
. In
Walters v. Metropolitan Educational Enterprises, Inc.,
Moreover, in
Hishon v. King & Spalding,
. Likewise, in
Trainor v. Apollo Metal Specialties,
. Moreover, all the circuits that have held the fifteen-employee threshold jurisdictional have also stated - in the same case or in other cases - that “where the jurisdictional facts are intertwined with the facts central to the merits of the disputed] [i]t is the better view that ... the entire factual dispute is appropriately resolved only by a proceeding on the merits.”
Adams v. Bain,
. The Restatement (Second) of Judgments: Subject Matter Jurisdiction § 11 (1982) also addresses the question whether an issue affects subject matter jurisdiction or the merits, ultimately concluding that there is no principled way to distinguish between the two. It notes that "[t]here is a strong tendency in procedural law to treat various kinds of serious procedural errors as defects in subject matter jurisdiction ... because characterizing a court’s departure in exercising authority as 'jurisdictional' permits an objection to the departure to be taken belatedly.” Restatement (Second) of Judgments: Subject Matter Jurisdiction § 11 cmt. e. Relevant to the question here, it goes on to note that
[t]he difficult problems are encountered when the issues on which the court's subject matter jurisdiction depends are not so clearcut. [For example,] if the court has jurisdiction of actions of more than a specified amount, there can be uncertainty in whether a particular claim exceeds that amount. The problem can be particularly difficult when the issue determining subject matter jurisdiction parallels an issue going to the merits.
Id. In those cases the Restatement concludes that "the matter in question can plausibly be characterized either as going to subject matter jurisdiction or as being one of merits or procedure.” Id.
. In addressing whether substantively to consolidate two entities in the bankruptcy context, courts have developed a number of different tests. Some have applied a seven-factor test, first set forth in
In re Vecco Construction Industries, Inc.,
The First Circuit, in
Pension Benefit Guaranty Corp. v. Ouimet Corp.,
In
In re Augie/Restivo Baking Co.,
The Eighth Circuit considers three factors: (1) "the necessity of consolidation due to the interrelationship among the [entities]”; (2) "whether the benefits of consolidation outweigh the harm to creditors”; and (3) "prejudice resulting from not consolidating the debtors.”
In re Giller,
Finally, the D.C. and Eleventh Circuits have adopted a two-part test. First, the proponent of consolidation must make a
prima facie
case, demonstrating: (1) that "there is substantial identity between the entities to be consolidated; and (2) [that] consolidation is necessary to avoid some harm or to realize some benefit.”
Eastgroup Props, v. S. Motel Assn, Ltd.,
. See generally Mary Elizabeth Kors, Altered Egos: Deciphering Substantive Consolidation, 49 U. Pitt. L.Rev. 381, 385 (1998) ("In cases where the disentanglement of the assets and liabilities of various entities is prohibitively expensive or even impossible, substantive consolidation may significantly increase creditor recoveries.”).
. Among them are (1) the degree of difficulty in segregating and ascertaining individual assets and liabilities, (2) the existence of transfers of assets without formal observance of corporate formalities, (3) the existence of parent and intercorporate loan guarantees, (4) whether the subsidiary is grossly undercapi-talized, and (5) the existence of consolidated financial statements.
. Employees or prospective employees are generally not sophisticated parties and typically do not have the opportunity to conduct extensive due diligence on employers to ascertain whether they will be protected by Title VII should they accept an offer of employment. This is in contrast to the arms-length commercial transactional process by which parties often become creditors in a bankruptcy case. In that context, the parties typically urging substantive consolidation are sophisticated and have had an opportunity to conduct due diligence on the debtor in question to determine its assets, liabilities, and corporate structure, and to bargain accordingly. Thus, absent exceptional circumstances, voluntary creditors should be able to recover only from the entity with which they have bargained. See Christopher W. Frost, Organizational Form, Misappropriation Risk, and the Substantive Consolidation of Corporate Groups, 44 Hastings L.J. 449, 453 (1993) (“[UJnlike voluntary creditors, tort claimants are unable to bargain for protection against, or compensation for, the increased risk limited liability imposes.”).
.While Vaughn Sr. is a director of both Gears and Winters, this fact does not aid Nesbit here. His directorships are likely inci
