In this appeal by a local union of blacksmiths, we are asked to resolve two issues. First, whether the district court’s findings of fact concerning the seniority system contained in the union’s collective bargaining agreements with the Ladish Company of Cudahy, Wisconsin are clearly erroneous. Second, whether the district court erred in concluding that the seniority system in question is not bona fide within the meaning of Section 703(h) of Title VII because it was negotiated and maintained for the purpose, and with the intent and effect, of discriminating against Negroes employed by Ladish.
We hold that the district court’s findings are not clearly erroneous; they are supported by substantial evidence in the record. And, in our judgment, the court was correct in concluding that the union’s seniority system is not bona fide within the meaning of Section 703(h) of Title VII. Therefore, we affirm the district court. The following is a summary of its findings.
I
The Ladish Company is a major employer in the Milwaukee, Wisconsin area, the plant here involved being in Cudahy, a Milwaukee suburb. The company produces and finishes metal products; it does significant contractual work for federal agencies and has been in production since 1927. Ladish is a unionized employer; and during the time relevant to this case, it has had collective bargaining agreements with seven unions. However, the only one in this appeal is the appellant, Local # 1509 of the International Brotherhood of Boiler Makers, Iron Ship Builders, Blacksmiths, Forgers and Helpers (hereafter referred to as the Blacksmiths).
Prior to World War II, few Negroes lived in the Milwaukee area. But in the post-war period, they began to migrate from the
The minimum ability requirements for the greatest majority of jobs in the Ladish plant were simple literacy and good health. Although the company sought skilled craftsmen to fill certain of the journeyman jobs and apprenticeable trades, most of its employees at the entry level were hired with little, if any, skills; consequently, most of them learned while on the job. The Negroes hired between 1948 and 1968 were neither less skilled, less qualified, nor less apt to learn job skills than were the Caucasians hired during the same period. All Negroes, however, were assigned jobs in the Machinists’ unit, assignments that were solely made by Ladish, intentionally and based on race. The jobs to >which the Negroes were assigned were mainly as grinders and truckers: the dirtiest, lowest paid, and least desirable.
During the same period, Caucasians hired by Ladish were assigned jobs in the Blacksmiths’ bargaining unit, and under the jurisdiction of other union locals. It was Ladish’s policy to allow inter-bargaining unit transfers by all of its employees during the period in question; but the seniority system maintained by the Blacksmiths and the other unions discouraged transfers by employees who had been with the company for a significant period of time because the result subjected an employee to possible layoff, or forced him to accept the least desirable job in his new unit. At various times from August 1949, Caucasian employees of Ladish transferred from jobs within the jurisdiction of other bargaining units to those within the jurisdiction of the Blacksmiths, all of them, for a period at least, utilizing their carryover seniority for layoff and recall purposes. However, no Negro employee succeeded in effecting such a transfer despite existing advantages in jobs under the Blacksmiths.
In 1973 and 1974, the Office of Federal Contract Compliance (OFCC) conducted an audit of Ladish’s Cudahy facility which included an analysis of the company’s then existing workforce. In response to OFCC requests, and in compliance with its obligations as a federal contractor, Ladish prepared detailed information concerning its employees. It listed all of Cudahy’s hourly employees hired from August 1948 to December 1967, the distribution of those hirings by bargaining units, a list of those minorities the company hired prior to January 1, 1968 who were still employed in 1974, and a distribution of the company’s hirings by bargaining unit. The audit eventually focused on whether Ladish’s then existing workforce had an “affected class”; that is, a class consisting of employees who by virtue of past hiring discrimination, and by the nature of the limited seniority carryover provisions of the pertinent collective bargaining agreements, were in a position that they continued to suffer the present effects of past racially discriminatory acts. Based on its audit, its examination of documents and evidence furnished by Ladish, OFCC concluded that an affected class existed at Ladish, consisting of all Negroes who were hired by the company prior to January 22, 1968, and who were placed by Ladish in jobs under the jurisdiction of the Machinists.
II
Shortly after the OFCC reached the conclusion that Ladish had an affected class of Negro employees who had suffered employment discrimination, the first of 18 Negroes employed by Ladish filed a charge of employment discrimination with the Milwaukee office of the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, naming as respondents the Ladish Company and the seven unions with which it had collective bargaining agreements. He alleged that:
*589 Prior to 1968, Ladish Company maintained a segregated hiring policy wherein all Black workers were hired into Union contracted Machinists jobs, which were the lowest paying jobs available at the Company. Such a policy has led to a current and continuing system of discrimination in seniority, wages and promotion. As a Black employee, I and others similarly situated, have been discriminated against as a result of Ladish’s past policies of segregated hiring and resultant seniority and salary system. The affiliated Unions have contributed to this discrimination via the Union Contract.
On various dates thereafter, EEOC letters telling the complainants of their right to sue in the appropriate United States district court were issued; and on December 29, 1975, this suit was filed by 11 Negro employees of Ladish, on their behalf and on behalf of all others similarly situated. Later, seven other Negro employees filed similar EEOC charges, received letters concerning their right to sue; and on May 3, 1977, filed a motion for leave to intervene as plaintiffs in the suit. This was allowed; and on February 12, 1980, the district court granted, in part, plaintiffs’ motion to certify the class, the order stating that:
.. . [F]or the purpose of determining the first claim, i.e., whether the seniority system maintained by the defendants ... is a ‘bona fide seniority system’ within the meaning of Section 703(h) of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-2(h), this action is hereby certified as a class action on behalf of all blacks hired by the Ladish Company prior to January 22, 1968, who (1) were hired by the Ladish Company for jobs that were within the jurisdiction of the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers, Local 1862, and (2) were employed by the Ladish Company as of December 30, 1969.
On the same date, the court granted' a motion that severed the issue of liability from those of damages and remedies, in the event liability was established at trial. Then, at a conference held on November 3, 1980, plaintiffs, the Ladish Company, and four of the seven unions, informed the district judge that they were prepared to settle the case as to them.
The effect of the settlement was to remove the Ladish Company and the four unions from the suit. This having been done, the remaining issues between plaintiffs, the remaining union locals: the Machinists,
After hearing evidence, the district court made findings of fact and reached conclusions of law published in Wattleton v. Ladish Co.,
Having made these findings, the court then turned to the question whether the challenged seniority systems, after their genesis, were thereafter negotiated and maintained free from any illegal purpose.
The first change was included '.n the agreement effective August 22, 1949 to September 30, 1951 and provided that plantwide seniority would carry over to jobs under the jurisdiction of the Blacksmiths for purposes of layoff. This difference benefited only Caucasians who, without difficulty, transferred into the Blacksmiths’ bargaining unit; no Negro was successful in making such a transfer. The second was elimination, in the same collective bargaining agreement, of a nondiscrimination clause that was not again included in an agreement between Ladish and the Blacksmiths until passage of Title VII in 1964. The third was inclusion in the August 22, 1949 agreement of a provision regarding interbargaining unit transfers which stated that:
Permanent inter-bargaining unit transfers will be made by agreement between Management and the Bargaining Committee of the unit to which the employee is being transferred.
The district court found that on August 22, 1949 “and thereafter, [this provision] gave the Blacksmiths virtual veto power over interbargaining unit transfers.”
Ill
A
Rule 52(a), Fed.R.Civ.P., broadly requires that in a non-jury case the district court’s “ [findings of fact shall not be set aside unless clearly erroneous, and due regard shall be given to the opportunity of the trial court to judge the credibility of the witnesses [sic].” Pullman-Standard v. Swint, U.S. -,
In so deciding, we have reviewed the record in order to make sure that the trial court adequately performed its function. Ramey Const. Co., Inc. v. Apache Tribe, etc.,
With these principles in mind, we notice that the district court heard the following evidence. First, the testimony of the Negro employees of Ladish who described their
The court weighed the evidence, resolved testimonial conflicts, and made findings concerning the parties, the communities in which they lived, the people from whom Ladish drew its workforce, and the racially discriminatory impact of the company’s hiring and work assignment policies. It looked at the audit determinations made by the Office of Federal Contract Compliance in 1973, and the operation, over the years, of the challenged seniority systems. In judging the credibility of four of the Negroes who testified, the able and experienced district judge acknowledged,
This was a proper discharge of judicial functions. Neither our examination of the record nor any point raised in this appeal leaves us with a definite and firm conviction that a mistake was committed by the district court in its factual findings; we cannot say that they are clearly erroneous. Culbertson v. Jno. McCall Coal Company, Inc.,
B
Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 makes unlawful practices, procedures, or tests that “operate to ‘freeze’ the status quo of prior discriminatory employment practices.” Griggs v. Duke Power Co.,
[I]t shall not be an unlawful employment practice for an employer to apply different standards of compensation, or different terms, conditions, or privileges of employment pursuant to a bona fide seniority .. . system, ... provided that such differences are not the result of an intention to discriminate because of race....
California Brewers Ass’n v. Bryant,
Section 703(c)(1) of Title VII, 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-2(c)(l), provides that:
It shall be an unlawful employment practice for a labor organization— to exclude ... from its membership, or otherwise to discriminate against, any individual because of his race, col- or, religion, sex, or national origin;
Thus, it is clearly a violation of this section for a union, international or local, to maintain a seniority system for the purpose of excluding Negroes from membership because of their race; and certainly, such a system is not protected by the exception in section 703(f) of Title VII. Hameed v. Intern. Ass’n of Bridge, etc.,
Notes
. The unions were (1) International Federation of Professional and Technical Engineers, Local # 92 (IFPTE); (2) International Brotherhood of Firemen and Oilers, Local # 125 (IBFO); (3) International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers, Local # 494 (IBEW); and (4) Associated Unions of America, Local # 500 (AUA).
. The International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers, District No. 10, Local # 1862 (Machinists).
. International Die Sinkers Conference and Milwaukee Die Sinkers, Lodge # 140 (Die Sinkers).
