OPINION AND ORDER
I. INTRODUCTION AND BACKGROUND
Bеfore the Court are Defendant’s SB Pharmco Puerto Rico, Inc.’s (“SmithKline”) Motion for Summary Judgment and Memorandum in Support thereof (docket No. 41), Plaintiffs Motion and Memorandum in Opposition thereto (docket No. 54), and SmithKline’s Reply to Plaintiffs Opposition. Plaintiff brought the Complaint in the above-captioned case claiming that her employer SmithKline, in violation of Title VII, 42 U.S.C. § 2000e, and the Equal Pay Act, 29 U.S.C. § 206(d) (“EPA”), discriminated against her because of her sex.
Plaintiff Hilda Rodriguez is a woman who lives in Cidra, Puerto Rico, and has worked at SmithKline since 1979. During her tenure at SmithKline, Plaintiff alleges that she has been the victim of gender-based discrimination. There are three parts to Plaintiffs case.
The first deals with an EPA claim. In 1986, Plaintiff began working at Smith-Kline’s Documentation Department as a Senior Documentation Monitor at a Level E. At the time she started there, Plaintiff had to report to the Documentation Leader, Gloria Valés (“Valés”), who occupied a Level 7 position. Levels represent Smith-Kline’s compensation scale. In 1989, Manuel Llivina (“Llivina”) substituted Valés, who had been transferred to handle other duties within the company. Like Valés, Llivina occupied a Level 7 position and was then the person to whom Plaintiff had to report. In 1991, Rodoberto Feo (“Feo”) was designated Manager at the Documentation Department. Feo, like Plaintiff, reported directly to Llivina but occupied a Lеvel 8 position. In 1992, both Llivina and Feo were transferred out of the Documentation Department.
With Llivina and Feo gone, James Sana-bia (“Sanabia”), Vice President for Quality Control/Quality Assurance, asked Plaintiff to propose a job description for a new position she would occupy, “Documentation Leader.” According to Plaintiff, this position would consolidate Llivina and Feo’s responsibilities with those she had in 1992. In January of 1993, Sanabia announced the approval of the job description. To Plaintiffs dismay, however, the position was approved at a Level 6. Plaintiff argues that because she was paid less than her predecessors at the Documеntation Department and performed the same job, SmithKline discriminated against her because of her gender and therefore violated the EPA. Plaintiff adds that as a Documentation Leader, she had less resources but more responsibilities than her predecessors.
The second cause of action results from the hiring in 1995 of Edwin López as SmithKline’s Analytical Services Leader. Plaintiff argues that SmithKline passed her over for the less experienced López and that such action constitutes a Title VII violation.
Third, Plaintiff states that as a result of organizational changes at SmithKline, both she and López were designated as Compliance Process Improvers. In September of 1996, however, Plaintiff learned that while both held the same position, López was paid more than she was. He was a Level 8 while she was a Level 6. Plaintiff asked the reason for this disparity and was told that Lopez’s title had been changed to “Strategist.” Plaintiff says that this change in title was merely a pretext to cover that both she and López performed
II. UNCONTESTED FACTS
Based on the pleadings, sworn statements, admissions, and uncontested documents on the record, the following facts are uncontroverted. Plaintiff Hilda Rodriguez began working at SmithKline in August of 1979 as an Analytical Chemist and а Level C employee. To this day, Plaintiff still works at SmithKline.
In December of 1985, Plaintiff was promoted to Senior Analyst as a Level E employee. In 1986, Plaintiff applied for the position of Senior Documentation Monitor in the Documentation Department with successful results, and was transferred there as a lateral change, not receiving an increase in salary. While at the Documentation Department, Plaintiff was reclassified as a Level F employee and worked under the supervision of the Documentation Manager Gloria Valés. In 1989, Valés was transferred out of the Documentation Department and was substituted by Manuel Llivina, who held a Level 7 position. Rodoberto Feо also worked as Records Management Leader at the Documentation Department and held a Level 8 position.
In January of 1991, Plaintiff was promoted to be the Administrator of the Quality Assurance Process Operation Management System. In 1992, Llivina was transferred out of the Documentation Department to Tablet Manufacturing. In January of 1993, Plaintiff was tapped as the candidate to fill the position of Documentation Leader. This position was approved at a Level 6. The Documentation Manager and Leader positions overlapped in some areas such as: reviewing, evaluating and approving standard operating procedures; maintaining records under strict control for their retrieval during audits; developing administrative and technical presentations; and serving as Smith-Kline’s contact for Food and Drug Administration investigations. Notwithstanding this overlap, in creating the Documentation Leader position, SmithKline eliminated some of the responsibilities the Documentation Manager position had, such as being in charge of the Microfilming Program, handling new drug applications, preparing annual reviews, evaluating significant abnormalities reported in manufacturing operations, and deciding whether “a particular situation presented a potential recall and initiating the necessary action.” (Defs Ex. 7).
On January 16, 1995, Edwin Lóрez was hired by SmithKline at a Level 8 as an Analytical Service Leader, the person in charge of managing SmithKline’s Quality Control Laboratories. This position requires a master’s degree in chemistry, a degree which López has and Plaintiff lacks. At one point, both López and Plaintiff were Compliance Process Improvers, for the Quality Control Area and Quality Assurance Area, respectively. While occupying the position of Compliance Process Improver, however, López retained his responsibilities of managing SmithKline’s Quality Control Laboratory. The responsibilities of the Compliance Process Improver and the Analytical Service leader are different and Plaintiff has never managed any of SmithKline’s laboratories. Thereafter, Lopez’s title was changed to Strategist.
On October 6, 1996, Plaintiff filed an intra-company discrimination claim in the form of a letter to Jan Leschly. Thereafter, Plaintiff filed an administrative complaint with the Puerto Rico Antidiscrimi-nation Unit on June 13,1997.
III. SUMMARY JUDGMENT STANDARD
Summary judgment serves to “assess the proof" in order to see whether there is a genuine need for a trial.”
Garside v. Osco Drug, Inc.,
In a summary judgment motion, the movant bears the initial burden of “informing the district court of the basis fоr its motion and identifying those portions of the [record] which it believes demonstrate the absence of a genuine issue of material fact.”
Celotex Corp. v. Catrett,
IV. DISCUSSION
A. Timeliness of the Title VII Claim Regarding Lopez’s Hiring
Defendant argues that the Cоurt should dismiss Plaintiffs Title VII claim relating to Lopez’s hiring as Analytical Service Leader as time-barred. López was hired on January 16, 1995, and therefore, in accordance with the law, Plaintiff had to file an administrative complaint with the Puerto Rico Anti-discrimination Unit within 240 days of that date. 1
An individual who seeks relief under Title VII must first file a charge with the EEOC “ “within one hundred and eighty days after the alleged employment practice occurred.’ ”
Johnson v. General Electric,
Further, even if the accrual date is more liberally construed as starting when Plaintiff knew or should have known that she was passed over for López as Analytical Service Leader, more than 300 days would have passed by the time the administrative complaint was filed. The Court finds that although the parties do not state when did Plaintiff learn of Lopez’s hiring, Plaintiff could not have learned of Lopez’s hiring so much time -after the fact so as to come within the 300 days leading up to the administrative filing. In order for Plaintiffs Title VII claim regarding Lopez’s hiring to be timely, she must have realized that he was hii-ed more than a year and a half after the fact. This is an unrealistic proposition, especially because both López and Plaintiff worked in the same plant dealing with areas which, according to Plaintiff, are overlapping. For this reason, the Court finds that Plaintiffs cause of action accrued more than 300 days before the filing of the administrative complaint.
In its reply, SmithKline points to Plaintiffs statement of uncontested facts for the proposition that an intra-company discrimination claim was filed by Plaintiff on October 6, 1996 in the form of a letter to Jan Leschly. (Pl.Mem.Ex.16). Even if it were argued that the filing of the letter tolled the statute of limitations in this case, the Court disagrees with such contention. This employer grievance procedure cannot toll the running of the limitations because the remedies under Title VII are independent from those obtainable through a company’s grievance procedure.
See International Union of Electrical, Radio and Machine Workers, AFL
—CIO,
Local 790 v. Robbins & Myers, Inc.,
Finally, SmithKline argues that Plaintiffs Title VII claim for the hiring of López is time-barred becаuse her claim is not subject to the continuing violation theory. The continuing violation doctrine creates an exception to the 300-day period of limitations to file the administrative complaint when the unlawful behavior is ongoing.
See Provencher v. CVS Pharmacy, Division of Melville Corp.,
Finally, the Court has already determined that Plaintiff could have realized at every step of the way that she was suffering acts which were allegedly discriminatory. Therefore, the case does not fall within the serial violation prong of the continuing violation theory, In view of the above, the Court hereby DISMISSES Plaintiffs Title VII claim pertaining to Lopez’s hiring.
B. Title VII Gender-Based Wage Discrimination
SmithKline further states that the Court should dismiss Plaintiffs Title VII claim alleging that SmithKline discriminated against her by paying López more • for dоing the same job. Before delving into the merits of SmithKline’s arguments, the Court must determine the applicable evi-dentiary structure for this type of claim in light of the Bennett Amendment to Title VII. The Bennett Amendment incorporated the EPA defenses into Title VII by stating that
It shall not be an unlawful employment practice under [Title VII] for any employer to differentiate upon the basis of sex in determining the amount of the wages or compensation paid or to be paid to employees of such employer if such differentiating is authorized by the provisions of [the EPA],
Mullenix v. Forsyth Dental Infirmary for Children,
The Sixth, Eighth, and Ninth Circuits state that the Bennett Amendment is a way to say that EPA liability automatically leads to Title VII liability for gender-based wage discrimination.
See Meeks v. Computer Associates International,
This Court is compelled by the conclusion reached by the Fourth, Fifth, Seventh, Tenth, and Eleventh Circuits, that Title VII liability does not necessarily flow from EPA liability. The Court finds that altering the evidentiary structure under Title VII just because the means used to discriminate dealt with compensation is nonsensical. The McDonnell Douglas structure seeks to establish disparate treatment discrimination. The evidence needed to prove discriminatory treatment should not vary just because an employer chose to discriminate against an employee by means of compensation rather than by not promoting or not hiring her. In view of the above, and because the Plaintiffs case is for disparate treatment, the Court shall analyze SmithKline’s Summary Judgment Motion through the McDonnell Douglas lens.
Under the
McDonnell Douglas
approach for gender-based wage discrimination, a Plaintiff must .establish a prima facie case by showing by a preponderance of the evidence that she has a job similar to that of higher paid males.
See Miranda v. B & B Cash Grocery,
The Court agrees with Smith-Kline, particularly because, as Plaintiff admitted in her deposition, her position as Compliance Process Improver was different than that of the Analytical Service Leader. (Defs Ex. 21 at III 121-122). Plaintiff did not occupy the position and did not have the responsibilities of Analytical Service Leader, who was in charge of managing the laboratories, and López did and does. (Defs Ex. 32 at 11-125, III 29-31, and III 121-22).
In her Opposition, Plaintiff relies on evidence that goes to the similarity between the Compliance Process Improver positions. Plaintiff cites José L. Rosado Man-zanet, the manager of SmithKline’s Cidra plant, who during his deposition stated that the Compliance Process Improvers positions “coincide except that they have different areas.” (Pi’s Ex. 19 at 100). Plaintiff also provides deposition testimony for the proposition that López and she both identified areas of process improvement in SmithKline’s laboratory area and that both approved of investigations performed in SmithKline’s laboratories. (Pi’s Ex. 6 at 60 and Ex. 1 at 69). The Court finds, however, that this testimony does not go to the heart of the matter, namely whether Plaintiff and López did the same things. Even if their positions overlapped in some areas, the fact remains that, as Plaintiff acknowledges in her deposition, she has never been in charge of Smith-Kline’s laboratories, and López did and does. Therefore, even if Plaintiff and Lopez’s responsibilities as Compliance Process Improvers may be similar, while he occupied the position of Compliance Process Improver, López remained handling the responsibilities of his first position, that of managing the laboratories.
Plaintiff also relies on Lopez’s deposition testimony for her position that his job did not change much when his title was changed to Strategist. (Pi’s Ex. 4 at 43). By citing to this testimony, Plaintiff reasons that if both López and she had similar jobs when both were Compliance Process Improvers, then working as a Strategist did not add much, and therefore, even as a Strategist, Plaintiff and López performed the same job. Because their jobs differed, however, Lopez’s deposition testimony stating that his duties did not change much when his title changed to Strategist supports SmithKline’s position. Because Ló-pez was handling the job of Compliance Process Improver and Analytical Service Leader, the change to Strategist was not meant as a promotion or addition of responsibilities, but as a way to reflect the reality of his double role. Thus, Lopez’s deposition serves to confirm SmithKline’s position.
Further, throughout her tenure Plaintiff has not occupied the Analytical Service Leader position because it requires a master’s degree in chemistry which López has and Plaintiff lacks. (Defs Ex. 1 at 2 & Ex. 21 at 11-125). Therefore, in view that the Court finds that it is uncontroverted that the jobs of López and Plaintiffs are
Further, even if Plaintiff had a prima facie case, she must present admissible and sufficient evidence to create an issue of fact that the reason advanced by the employer for the adverse action was a pretext to discriminate.
See LeBlanc v. Great American Insurance,
In the instant case, Plaintiff argues that SmithKline’s reasons for the difference in pay are a pretext because Lopez’s job did not entail more responsibilities and technical knowledge than hers. Further, Plaintiff states that she can prove that the discrimination against her is partly evidenced by the lоwer percentage of women in higher level positions at Smith-Kline than men. In particular, Plaintiff states that SmithKline’s selection of men for level 7 and higher managerial positions is more than 75% of the rate for women. Further, Plaintiff states that in the Compliance Department of SmithKline there are no women above level 6. The Court must therefore ask whether or not these allegations, as supported by the evidence, suffice to meet the third prong of the
McDonnell Douglas
test. The Court notes that statistical evidence cannot by itself prove a disparate treatment case and, therefore, cannot be presented in a vacuum.
See International Brotherhood of Tеamsters v. United States,
Furthermore, Plaintiff states that Lopez’s title was changed to Strategist upon her inquiring about their differences in pay and that such timing in the change is indicative of discrimination. The Court finds that such evidence is not enough to create an issue of fact. Such evidence does not suggest gender-based discrimination, but rather, that/SmithKline’s proffered reasons for not/ promoting Plaintiff are untrue. i
In some instances,/the First Circuit has interpreted the Supreme Court’s decision in
Hicks
as stating that evidence of pretext together with the evidence supporting the prima facie case might sustain a finding of discriminatory animus sufficient to survive summary judgment.
See Woods v. Friction Materials, Inc.,
In the instant case, the Court finds that the prima-facie case has not been established or presented any evidence that SmithKline’s actiоns were based on her gender. Even if there were enough evidence to survive summary judgment as to the prima facie case and Smith-Kline’s reasons for the pay disparity were untrue, Title VII does not prohibit a company from paying an employee less than another of the different sex “for any reason — fair or unfair — so long as the decision ... does not stem from a protected characteristic.” Rodrígu
ez-Cuervos v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.,
Because Plaintiff does not provide the Court with any evidence creating an issue of fact regarding whether SmithKline’s reasons for not promoting Plaintiff to a higher level are a pretext for discrimination, the Court hereby DISMISSES Plaintiffs Title VII gender-based wage discrimination сlaim.
C. EPA Claims
1. EPA Claim for Compliance Process Improver
The Court finds that the analysis above has the same effect on Plaintiffs claims under the EPA regarding Plaintiffs position as Compliance Process Improver. Although the burden of proof to establish a claim under the EPA is different from a Title VII gender-based wage discrimination claim, the fact remains that no EPA liability will be established if plaintiffs job is not substantially similar to her male counterpart or so long as the difference in pay results from a reason other than the plaintiffs gender. The Court finds that because there is no evidence on the record for the proposition that SmithKline acted with discriminatory intentions against Plaintiff or that Plaintiffs job was substantially similar to that of López, a reasonable finder of fact could only infer that the disparity in pay between Plaintiff and her counterpart is for a reason other than her sex. Therefore, the Court also dismisses Plaintiffs EPA claims as it relates to her job as Compliance Process Improver.
2. Equal Pay Claim Regarding Documentation Leader
Lastly, the Court addresses Plaintiffs EPA claim as it relates to her position as Documentation Leader. Plaintiff states that James Sanabia, Vice President for Quality Control/Quality Assurance, asked Plaintiff to propose a job description for a new position she would occupy, “Documentation Leader.” According to Plaintiff, this position would consolidate her responsibilities with those of her supervisor Manuel Llivina and Manager Rodoberto Feo. During their stint at the Documentation Department, Llivina, whose title was “Documentation Manager,” had a Level 7 position, and Feo a Level 8. Plaintiffs Documentation Leader position was approved, however, at a Level 6. Plaintiff argues that because she was paid less than Llivina and Feo, and had more responsibilities than them, SmithKline discriminated against her because of her gender and therefore violated the EPA.
SmithKline states that Plaintiffs EPA claim alleging that, as Documentation Leader, she was not paid as much as her male predecessors in that position should be dismissed because Plaintiff has not es
As discussed above, to prove an EPA claim, the plaintiff must first show that her job and that of her counterparts were substantially equal.
See Byrd v. Ronayne,
For instance, when the Documentation Manager position became that of Documentation Leader, SmithKline eliminated from the latter’s job profile the responsibilities of “the Microfilming Program,” “the handling of the N[ew] D[rug] Applications]”; and the preparation of the Annual Reviews. (Defs Ex. 9 & 26). Further, SmithKline states that, although the Documentation Leader and Documentation Manager positions dealt with managing SmithKline’s Documentation Department to ensure operational compliance with SmithKline standards and government regulations, the Documentation Manager was also responsible for evaluating significant abnormalities reported in manufacturing operations and recommending a course of action in to solve the matter. (Defs Ex. 3). The Documentation Leader was not in charge of these responsibilities. Further, the Documentation Manager was responsible for keeping management informed of significant deviations from standard operating procedures, and deciding whether a “particular situation presented a potential recall and initiating the necessary action.” (Defs Mem. at 16). From the evidence on the record, it is clear that the Documentation Leader and Documentation Manager positions were not substantially similar and therefore Plaintiffs EPA claim for not receiving higher сompensation as Documentation Leader is hereby DISMISSED.
Further, even if Plaintiff had a prima facie case, the defendant bears the burden of proof to establish that the disparity was based on a non-discriminatory reason. See 28 U.S.C. § 206(d)(1). The Court finds, that SmithKline has been able to present a non-discriminatory reason for the wage disparity, namely that Llivina and Feo were grand fathered to their compensation level, and therefore, even if they handled the responsibilities of someone with a lower pay level, their compensation would not be reduced. Therefore, in view of the facts relating to the extent of the similarity between the Documentation Leader and Manager positions and the veracity of SmithKline’s grand fathering policies to justify the difference in pay between Plaintiff and her predecessors, Plaintiffs EPA claim as it relates to the Documentation Leader position is hereby DISMISSED. Therefore, the Court hereby GRANTS SmithKline’s Summary Judgment Motion as it relates to this specific claim.
V. CONCLUSION
In view of the analysis above, the Court finds that Plaintiffs Title VII claim for Lopez’s hiring is time-barred. Further, because Plaintiff has not been able to show sufficient admissible evidence to prove that her job as Compliance Process Improver was substantially similar to Lopez’s job or to establish that her employment condi
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Notes
. The Court notes that Sonia Berrios' un-sworn declaration under penalty of perjury states that López was hired on January 16, 1995, and López states in an unsworn declaration under penalty of perjury that he started working on January 16, 1996. (Def's Ex. 26 & 27).
. According to their job profiles, the Documentation Leader and Manager positions have been in charge of reviewing, evaluating and approving standard operating procedures; maintaining records under strict control for their retrieval during audits; developing in administrative and technical presentations; serves as SmithKline’s contact for Food & Drug Administration investigation. (Defs Ex. 3 & 7).
