Allison v. Citgo Petro Corp

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedAugust 27, 1998
Docket16-20268
StatusPublished

This text of Allison v. Citgo Petro Corp (Allison v. Citgo Petro Corp) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Allison v. Citgo Petro Corp, (5th Cir. 1998).

Opinion

Revised August 20, 1998

IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS

FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT

_____________________

No. 96-30489 _____________________

JAMES E. ALLISON; RAY ANDERSON; JOANNE ANDREPONT; RAYMOND ARTIS; JOSEPH AUSTIN; CHARLES AVERY; RONALD BALLOU; LEROY BALLOU; DANIEL BARRON; ARNOLD BATISTE; REGINALD BILBO; DAVID L. BLANEY; ALEX BROUSSARD; CALVIN BROUSSARD; NORTHERN BROWN; SANDRA BROWN; SOLOMON BUTLER; JESSE L. CARMEN; CHARLES CARRIER; JUNIUS CARTER; DONALD CEASAR; AUDREY T. CELESTINE; ANTHONY CHAMPAGE; REID CHAMPMAN; JAQUELINE CLEMONS; LEONARD COLE; GLENNETH COLEMAN; LESTER COLEMAN; CLEVELAND J. COLLINS; LARRY A. COMBEST; LYNETTE CORMIER; GEORGE DARBONNE; PATRICIA DARBONNE; XAVIER DARBONNE; WILLIE DEJEAN; LOUIS A DUDLEY; JOSEPH DUGAR; LONEY M. DUGAR; CHARLES ELLIS; PETER EVANS; CLYDE FELIX; CHARLES FOBB, JR.; CLINTON FOBBS, JR; GILBERT FOOTE; HOWARD DEE FOREMAN; VELMA M. GALLIEN; RAY A. GARLAND; MCARTHUR GILLIAM; PAUL GOODWIN; MARION R. GREENE; SHELTON GUILLORY; WILTON GUILLORY; WILLIE RAY HAMILTON; DONALD HARRIS; EDWINA M. HARRIS; SILVER RAY HARRIS; RAY HARRIS; DONALD HARRISON; HENRY G. HAWKINS; HELEN G. HENRY; WILLIE IRVING; DONALD D. JACKSON; JACK JOHNSON; SAMUEL JOHNSON; LAWRENCE JONES; EDWARD JORDAN; HORACE J. LAMBERT; ANGEL LEBLANC; ALBERT LEDAY, JR.; CLIFFORD LEDAY; ARTHUR K. LEE; EARL J. LEMELL; JOSEPH LEMELL, JR.; WILBERT J. LEWIS; HAROLD J. LOCKETT; KATHLEEN V. MANUEAL; PAUL D. MATTHEWS; AUBREY MATTHEWS; CHARLET L. MCCAIN; LOUIS E. METOYER; WESLEY J. MONROE; MELVIN MOREAU; MARK A. MOTT; WILLIE MOUTON; JOSEPH LARRY NELSON; MOSES NELSON; HERBERT L. OLIVER; EDWARD OLIVER; MARK H. PAPPION; CORNELIUS PAPPION; FREDERICK PERRODIN; JOSEPH PERRON, JR.; AUGUST PETE; DARRELL PETE; GUSSIE PITRE; PATRICIA PITRE; GEORGE POLK, JR; LINTON POULLARD, JR.; JOSEPH PRUDHOMME; LARRY PRUDHOMME, JR.; HARVEY C. PULLARD; CHARLES W. RAWL; FREDERICK RIDEAUX; JOSEPH A. RILEY; VIRGINIA RILEY; NANCY RYAN; NATHANIEL H. SAPP; LOUIS SEMIEN, JR.; CHESTER SENEGAL; JOSEPH SENIEN, JR.; JESSIE L. SHAW; HOWARD W. SHERMAN; WANDA F. SMITH; GEORGE STENSON; GERALD STERLING; RICHARD STERLING; CHARLES A. TALBERT; PATRICIA TAYLOR; GEORGE E. TAYLOR; MARTIN THOMAS; WARREN G. THOMAS; DONALD THOMPSON; HUEY P. TOLSTON; ELRAY VICTORIAN; SHEILA WARD; CYNTHIA WASHINGTON; VICTOR WASHINGTON; WARREN WASHINGTON; WILSON WASHINGTON; HUEY WILLIAM; WILBERT WILLIAMS; ERROL WILSON; ARMOND WYATT,

Plaintiffs-Appellants,

JONATHAN ANDERSON; DANIEL COX; RUSSELL METOYER; HILLERY RANDELL; LEO P. REEDER,

Intervenors Plaintiffs-Appellants,

versus

CITGO PETROLEUM CORP.,

Defendant-Appellee. _________________________________________________________________

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Western District of Louisiana

_________________________________________________________________ August 18, 1998

Before JOLLY, SMITH, and DENNIS, Circuit Judges.

E. GRADY JOLLY, Circuit Judge:

This interlocutory appeal presents the question whether the

district court properly refused to certify a class action

challenging employment practices by the Citgo Petroleum Corporation

2 _____________________

On May 15, 1998, the panel issued its opinion in this case. The earlier opinion is withdrawn and this opinion is substituted therefor. The primary modifications from the previous opinion appear in Part VII of this substituted opinion.

(“Citgo”) under Title VII (as amended in 1991) and the Civil Rights

Act of 1866, 42 U.S.C. § 1981. The plaintiffs, Allison and over

130 other named plaintiffs and intervenors, filed suit on behalf of

black employees and applicants for employment alleging that Citgo

engaged in class-wide racial discrimination with respect to general

hiring, promotion, compensation, and training policies at its

manufacturing facilities in Lake Charles, Louisiana. The

plaintiffs challenged these policies under disparate impact and

systemic disparate treatment theories of discrimination. Seeking

injunctive, declaratory, and monetary relief, the plaintiffs moved

for class certification under Rule 23 of the Federal Rules of Civil

Procedure, which Citgo opposed. The district court denied the

motion. On appeal, the plaintiffs contend that the district

court’s denial of class certification was an abuse of discretion.

Before the passage of the Civil Rights Act of 1991, which for the

first time provided plaintiffs with a right to compensatory and

punitive damages as well as a jury trial (each demanded here),

aspects of this case clearly would have qualified for class

certification. As we shall explain, however, the plaintiffs’

claims for money damages and the constitutional right of both

3 parties to a jury trial, with all its substantive rights and

procedural complications, ultimately render this case unsuitable

for class certification under Rule 23. We therefore affirm and

hold that the district court did not abuse its discretion in

denying class certification.

4 I

This race discrimination case involves a potentially huge and

wide-ranging class action lawsuit concerning employment practices

at Citgo’s Lake Charles manufacturing complex. Specifically, the

plaintiffs identified the following employment practices as

resulting in unlawful race discrimination: (1) failure to post or

announce job vacancies; (2) use of an informal word-of-mouth

announcement process for filling job vacancies; (3) use of racially

biased tests to evaluate candidates for hire or promotion; and (4)

use of a subjective decision-making process by a predominantly

white supervisory staff in reviewing applicants for hire and

employees for promotion. The plaintiffs challenged each of these

policies under both the disparate impact and systemic disparate

treatment theories of Title VII.

In September 1993, the plaintiffs filed a motion for the

certification of a class estimated to contain more than 1000

potential members. The class was identified as “[a]ll African-

American employees and applicants of Citgo Petroleum Corporation

(Citgo) from April 11, 1979 until the present.” Its members are

current and former employees and unsuccessful applicants for

employment in “hourly” positions at Citgo’s Lake Charles complex.

They are spread across two separate facilities. They are

represented by six different unions, come from five different skill

5 groups, and work in seven different functional areas at the

complex. Nevertheless, the plaintiffs maintain that a class action

is appropriate because they are challenging general hiring,

training, and promotional policies applied uniformly throughout the

complex.

To remedy the alleged discrimination, the plaintiffs seek

every available form of injunctive, declaratory, and monetary

relief. In terms of affirmative injunctive relief, the plaintiffs

seek restructuring of offending policies, instatement into existing

jobs, and retroactive seniority and benefits. As for monetary

relief traditionally available under Title VII, the plaintiffs

request back pay, front pay, pre-judgment interest, and attorneys’

fees. Furthermore, invoking the provisions added to Title VII by

the Civil Rights Act of 1991, the plaintiffs seek compensatory and

punitive damages to the maximum amount permissible under the law.

Finally, the plaintiffs demand a jury trial on their claims of

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