22 Fair empl.prac.cas. 1259, 23 Empl. Prac. Dec. P 30,921 Carmen v. Rodriguez v. Board of Education of Eastchester Union Free School District, Robert W. Young, Superintendent of Schools of the Eastchester Union Free School District, and Ronald S. Lockhart, President of the Board of Education of Eastchester Union Free School District

620 F.2d 362
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedMay 2, 1980
Docket954
StatusPublished
Cited by48 cases

This text of 620 F.2d 362 (22 Fair empl.prac.cas. 1259, 23 Empl. Prac. Dec. P 30,921 Carmen v. Rodriguez v. Board of Education of Eastchester Union Free School District, Robert W. Young, Superintendent of Schools of the Eastchester Union Free School District, and Ronald S. Lockhart, President of the Board of Education of Eastchester Union Free School District) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
22 Fair empl.prac.cas. 1259, 23 Empl. Prac. Dec. P 30,921 Carmen v. Rodriguez v. Board of Education of Eastchester Union Free School District, Robert W. Young, Superintendent of Schools of the Eastchester Union Free School District, and Ronald S. Lockhart, President of the Board of Education of Eastchester Union Free School District, 620 F.2d 362 (2d Cir. 1980).

Opinion

620 F.2d 362

22 Fair Empl.Prac.Cas. 1259,
23 Empl. Prac. Dec. P 30,921
Carmen V. RODRIGUEZ, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
BOARD OF EDUCATION OF EASTCHESTER UNION FREE SCHOOL
DISTRICT, Robert W. Young, Superintendent of Schools of the
Eastchester Union Free School District, and Ronald S.
Lockhart, President of the Board of Education of Eastchester
Union Free School District, Defendants-Appellees.

No. 954, Docket 80-7013.

United States Court of Appeals,
Second Circuit.

Argued March 26, 1980.
Decided May 2, 1980.

Lewis M. Steel, New York City (Eisner, Levy, Steel & Bellman, P. C., New York City, of counsel), for Plaintiff-Appellant.

Susanna E. Bedell, Poughkeepsie, N. Y. (Van De Water & Van De Water, Poughkeepsie, N. Y., of counsel), for Defendants-Appellees.

Before KAUFMAN, Chief Judge, MESKILL, Circuit Judge, and BRIEANT, District Judge.*

IRVING R. KAUFMAN, Chief Judge:

The principal goal of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 is to achieve true equality in employment opportunities for women and racial, religious and national minorities who hitherto have been barred from competing on an equal basis in the national marketplace. Recognizing that job discrimination may take many forms, Congress cast the prohibitions of Title VII broadly to include subtle distinctions in the terms and conditions of employment as well as gross salary differentials based on forbidden classifications. In the instant case the district court dismissed the sex discrimination suit of a junior high school art teacher who was transferred to an elementary school in the same system, allegedly on the basis of her sex, essentially because the transfer entailed no loss of salary or other monetary benefits. We reverse.

* Dr. Carmen Rodriguez is a junior high school art teacher with twenty years' experience. From September 1959 until June 1979, she taught in the Eastchester Union Free School District's single junior high school. During that period, she received both master's and doctoral degrees in art and art education from Columbia University, where her studies focused on programs for the junior high school student. Indeed, her doctoral dissertation was titled, "A Model Arts Program for the Middle School of Eastchester School District Number 1."

During the spring of 1979, it became apparent that, due to declining enrollment, the school district would no longer require the services of one of its art teachers. Accordingly, Superintendent Young decided that the art teacher with the least seniority who happened to be a woman assigned to the Anne Hutchinson Elementary School was not to be rehired the following year. On April 5, 1979, Dr. Rodriguez was informed by her principal, Dr. Mary Savage, that it would be necessary to replace the dismissed elementary school teacher, and that she was likely to be the teacher selected to fill the position. At that time, the junior high school employed two other art teachers, both males, neither of whom possessed Dr. Rodriguez's teaching credentials, and of whom one had less seniority. When Dr. Rodriguez protested that one of the male teachers would be better suited for the assignment, Dr. Savage allegedly replied, "They wouldn't have a male grade school art teacher." Indeed, it appears that in the last 22 years there has never been a male art teacher in the Eastchester elementary schools.

Dr. Rodriguez immediately wrote to the Superintendent of Schools, the President of the School Board, and to counsel for the school district, questioning "the legality, not to mention the insensitivity" of the decision. Superintendent Young's response was a formal notice dated May 3, 1979, informing Dr. Rodriguez of her transfer. (Young later stated that his decision was based, in part, upon the recommendation of Dr. Savage.) The following day Dr. Rodriguez learned that her position in the junior high was to be filled by a male art teacher with half her seniority who was to be transferred from the district's high school. When further protests on her part and on her behalf (from both her thesis advisor and her former principal) proved unavailing, Dr. Rodriguez filed charges with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, and instituted this suit against the school board, its President, Ronald Lockhart, and Superintendent Young, in the Southern District of New York.

The complaint alleges the facts summarized above and claims sex discrimination in violation of her constitutional and statutory rights protected by 42 U.S.C. § 1983 and Title VII, 42 U.S.C. § 2000e et seq. Further, the complaint demanded both damages and injunctive relief. On July 18, 1979, Dr. Rodriguez moved the district court for a preliminary injunction restraining her transfer, which was scheduled to become effective at the commencement of the school year. On the same day, defendants moved to dismiss for want of jurisdiction or for failure to state a claim upon which relief could be granted. Before any hearing on this motion, the plaintiff obtained a "right to sue" letter from the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission and thus cured the principal jurisdictional defect alleged in the motion to dismiss, see 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-5(f)(1), which was later denied by the district judge. Both parties then submitted affidavits and presented testimony at a preliminary hearing on Dr. Rodriguez's motion for the injunction pendente lite. Defendants' position was that Dr. Rodriguez, because of her expertise in "two-dimensional skills," was the junior high school teacher best qualified to teach in the elementary schools. These considerations, along with an apparent personality conflict between Dr. Rodriguez and her principal, Dr. Savage, were said to form the basis of the decision to transfer her. Affidavits and testimony presented by the appellant supported the not inconsistent proposition that she was also the system's best qualified junior high school teacher. In addition, Dr. Rodriguez offered statistics drawn from the school system's Teacher Directory purporting to show a disproportionate percentage of female teachers in the elementary grades, and presented affidavits and testimony demonstrating that the transfer was, in effect, a demotion that would constitute a serious professional setback and stigma to her career. She did not, however, contest the statement of Superintendent Young that "(t)he transfer of Dr. Rodriguez does not and will not diminish her salary; does not and will not reduce her benefits, her seniority rights, or add any increased load to her work performance. The difference is the site of her work and the age of her pupils."

The district court denied the motion for a preliminary injunction at the close of the hearing. Judge Werker stated, however, that if Dr. Rodriguez could present statistics showing the proportion of female applicants for elementary school positions, along with their qualifications to bolster her showing of disproportionate female representation in the lower grades, "there may be a cause of action."

Dr. Rodriguez, accordingly, filed extensive interrogatories designed, in part, to elicit the statistical evidence referred to by the district court.

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620 F.2d 362, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/22-fair-emplpraccas-1259-23-empl-prac-dec-p-30921-carmen-v-ca2-1980.