While Title VII of the 1964 CM Rights Act, 42 U.S.C. § 2000e et seq., is rather straight-forward on its own terms (“It shall be an unlawful employment practice for an employer ... to discriminate against any individual with respect to his compensation, terms, conditions, or privileges of employment, because of such individual’s race, color religion, sex, or national origin_”), a rather thick judicial gloss, over twenty years deep, has developed, in part to accommodate difficult matters of proof in diverse factual settings. Sometimes, however, too rigid adherence to the formulaic prescriptions of the appellate courts (which are laid out with particular factual settings in mind and are seldom as generalizable as purported) blocks proper analysis of what should be uncomplicated issues of discrimination. Something of the sort may well have occurred in this case, resulting in judgment for the defendant although the plaintiffs entitlement to relief was apparent.
Sandra Loyd, the plaintiff in this case, was employed by Phillips Brothers, Inc., the defendant, as a bookbinder. Like many other binderies, Phillips maintains three classes of bindery employees: J-l workers, J-2 workers and GPWs (general production workers). Wages are set by collective bargaining with Graphic Communications International Union Local 132B. J-ls have always earned more than J-2s who in turn earn more than GPWs. According to the collective bargaining agreement, J-2s and GPWs are equally qualified and eligible to become J-l apprentices (one serves a four year apprenticeship, earning progressively higher percentages of J-l pay, before becoming a full-fledged J-l binder), and Loyd in particular was qualified for a J-1 apprentice position.
Traditionally, and at all times relevant to this litigation, all J-ls were men, all J-2s were women and all GPWs were men. (As of August 14, 1989, there were seventeen J-l journeymen and apprentices, eleven J-2 journeywomen and apprentices and six GPWs.) Hiring decisions at Phillips were made by the foreman, and the company had a policy of hiring from within for J-l apprentice positions. The foreman would generally fill these positions by approaching eligible company workers in order of seniority; no written applications were required or submitted by new hires from within the company. The foreman, however, would not approach all non-J-1 bindery employees; rather, only GPWs, never J-2s, were sought out for the J-l apprenticeships, although both are qualified and supposedly equally eligible. As a result, only men were solicited for vacant or new J-l positions.
There were three openings for J-l apprenticeships in the spring and summer of 1989. GPWs were asked in order of seniority if they wanted each position. Two GPWs, all with significantly less seniority than Loyd (in fact all of the GPWs at the time were much less senior than Loyd), and one male from outside the company, sought out because no GPWs were interested at the time (and in spite of Phillips’ policy of hiring from within), eventually accepted the slots. Loyd was never approached (nor was any other J-2), and had she been, she would have accepted one of the available J-l apprenticeships. The obvious consequence of the promotional system still in place in 1989 was that women workers at Phillips could not rise to the higher paying J-l positions.
The above is uncontested. (Indeed, the parties stipulated to these facts below.) Unsurprisingly, Loyd, after obtaining a right-to-sue letter from the EEOC, sued Phillips, alleging that illegal sex-discrimination denied her a J-l apprenticeship and identifying Phillips’ practice of approaching GPWs and not J-2s as intentionally discriminatory.
1
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After a bench trial,
2
the district court found for the defendant, not because it concluded that blanketly favoring GPWs over J-2s for J-l slots was not a dressed-up gender preference, but because “Plaintiff [did not] inform her superiors that she wished to be considered for a promotion” and “has not shown that she would have applied” had she known of the J-l openings. Citing
Box v. A & P Tea Co.,
A little background is in order. The expression “prima facie case” in Title VII litigation popularly refers to a common, but not exclusive,
see Troupe v. Lord & Taylor,
What constitutes the elements of a prima facie case presents a question of law. The basic formula is four-pronged and requires the plaintiff to establish his membership in a protected class, his eligibility for a position, adverse action taken against him
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with respect to that position, and the continued availability of that position to others of like qualifications. The specifics, however, will inevitably vary and are dependent upon the type and circumstances of employment action under attack.
See McDonnell Douglas,
So too (indeed more so) where an employer does not solicit and await applications but hands out promotions on its own initiative in a nonselective, serial fashion. If the plaintiff alleges that the employer’s decision not to approach people of her status was itself illegitimately motivated and shows that but for such a practice she likely would have been approached, then all she must do to complete the chain of causation that would permit an initial inference of discriminatory treatment actually affecting her job situation is establish that, had the employer approached her, she would have accepted the offered position. This is not a dramatic tailoring of McDonnell Douglas’ second element; in fact it is a logical one, but it is one the district court did not consider. The district court ■ concentrated on our opinion in Box, where we said that “[w]hen an employer uses a promotion system in which employees do not apply for promotions but rather are sought out by managers, ... the plaintiff can establish the application element of a prima facie case by showing that, had she known of an assistant manager opening, she would have applied.” Box, 772 F.2d at 1377. In Box, however, nothing suggested “anything more than a vague interest” in any one of the several positions in the company not offered to the plaintiff. It was impossible to identify the discriminatory harm, if any, suffered by the plaintiff without some firm indication of what her employment desires were. See id.
Here, by contrast, what would have been if not for the practice Loyd alleges was discriminatory is indisputable. Company policy was to hire from within; J-2s were equivalent to GPWs for J-l eligibility purposes; the foreman’s practice in filling the 1989 slots was to approach eligible workers strictly by seniority and give each position to the first taker; Loyd was the second-most senior J-2
or
GPW at the time;
she would have taken a J-l apprenticeship offered to her.
Indeed, the causal link between the allegedly discriminatory hiring process and Loyd’s nonpromotion is
stronger
than in the paradigmatic
McDonnell Douglas
situation where, even assuming away discriminatory
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motives, the submission of an application would not necessarily result in hiring.
Accord Carmichael v. Birmingham Saw Works,
We have the entire trial record before us and, having reviewed it thoroughly, we confidently conclude that Phillips did not carry its burden, and thus there is no need to remand this case to determine whether Loyd carried her ultimate burden of persuasion. The reasons put forward by Phillips through admissible evidence are neither legitimate nor nondiscriminatory. In fact, by and large, they are not reasons. Both in its brief to the district court and in its brief here, Phillips summarizes its position thusly: “The hiring of the most senior of the low-paid GPWs or the most qualified applicant when no in-house candidates apply are unquestionably legitimate non-discriminatory reasons for making an employment decision.” This is no more than a restatement of the challenged practice. We have scoured the record for other proffered reasons and none of the few to be found legitimately and nondiscriminatorily account for the practice of approaching all GPWs in order of seniority and, if none were interested, hiring from without, all the while bypassing J-2s. Exforeman Charlie Patterson testified that GPWs were traditionally preferred because, as a general matter, they would often express interest in J-l positions and because the opportunity for promotion would encourage people to accept the “bottom of the totem pole” GPW positions in the first instance and also would reward their hard work. 5 This, however, does not explain why Phillips would systematically approach all GPWs by seniority when several had previously and repeatedly declined J-l slots offered in the past, nor does it explain why Phillips would turn to outsiders, instead of J-2s, when no GPWs would accept an available J-l apprenticeship. Chris DiPasquale, foreman at the time of the contested 1989 hirings, also testified that he did not approach J-2s because he assumed they would not be interested in the J-l slots. He acknowledged that this assumption in part was based upon his belief that women did not want to get dirty and greasy. Because stereotypical attitudes about women are not legitimate “reasons” for treating them differently from men, and because Di-Pasquale offered no other basis for his assumption and neither he nor any other company witness presented any adequate reason for the manner in which Phillips preferred (male) GPWs and (male) outsiders to (female) J-2s in 1989, the presumption of discrimination raised under the circumstances of this case was never rebutted. Loyd is entitled to judgment in her favor on Count I of her complaint.
Count II of Loyd’s complaint challenged the wage differential between J-l and J-2 positions. Loyd does not attack the jury verdict for Phillips under the Equal Pay Act (essentially amounting to a finding that J — Is and J-2s do not perform “equal work”)
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but does appeal the district court’s rejection of her Title VII theory. Even when jobs are not sufficiently similar to constitute “equal work” under the Equal Pay Act, a Title VII claim for wage discrimination is not precluded.
See County of Washington v. Gunther,
We therefore affirm the judgment of the district court with respect to Count II. We reverse the judgment with respect to the promotion discrimination claim contained in Count I of the complaint and remand with instructions to enter judgment for the plaintiff. Pursuant to Circuit Rule 36, the case shall be assigned to a different district judge for determination of damages.
It is so ordered.
Notes
. Loyd also argued that the practice of turning only to GPWs for J-l slots alternatively supported Title VII liability on a “disparate impact” theory. In a second count, she argued that by purposely maintaining separate job categories with separate wage scales for men and women, Phillips violated both Tide VII and the Equal Pay Act, 29 U.S.C. § 206.
. Loyd’s claim under the Equal Pay Act was decided by a jury in Phillips’ favor.
. Judge Mills found the disparate impact theory wanting because of what he deemed an inadequate "statistical comparison between the gender composition of the pool of qualified applicants and the gender composition of Bindery I apprentices” (despite the stipulated facts apparently establishing the contrary). He also rejected Loyd’s other Title VII claim that Phillips paid J-2s less than J-ls out of an illicit desire to pay women less than men. See infra.
. The district court also erred by not considering the other evidence of intentional discrimination present in this case, implicitly concluding that the
McDonnell Douglas
mechanism was the only way by which a Title VII plaintiff can succeed. For instance, the 100% sex-segregated workforce is highly suspicious and is sometimes alone sufficient to support judgment for the plaintiff.
See Babrocky, 773
F.2d at 867 n. 7;
see also Teamsters,
. Hiram Phillips, the chief executive officer of the company, testified to the same general effect.
. By requiring "direct" proof of discriminatory intent, we do not mean to imply that circumstantial
evidence
(at least amounting to something more than the bare submission of comparable worth studies,
see Sears,
