Archangel Angelo v. Bacharach Instrument Company, a Division of American Bosch Arma Corporation, a New York Corporation

555 F.2d 1164, 14 Fair Empl. Prac. Cas. (BNA) 1778
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedMay 10, 1977
Docket76-1127
StatusPublished
Cited by63 cases

This text of 555 F.2d 1164 (Archangel Angelo v. Bacharach Instrument Company, a Division of American Bosch Arma Corporation, a New York Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Archangel Angelo v. Bacharach Instrument Company, a Division of American Bosch Arma Corporation, a New York Corporation, 555 F.2d 1164, 14 Fair Empl. Prac. Cas. (BNA) 1778 (3d Cir. 1977).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

ROSENN, Circuit Judge.

This case was brought under the Equal Pay Act of 1963 1 to eliminate wage differentials allegedly based on sex. The question presented is whether female plaintiffs, employed as Bench Assemblers by the defendant Bacharach Instrument Company (“Bacharach”), carried their burden of proving that for purposes of the Act their work was equal to the work of more highly paid males employed as Heavy Assemblers in the same plant. At the close of the plaintiffs’ case, the district court for the Western District of Pennsylvania ruled that there was not sufficient evidence to support an equation of the job categories at issue, and directed a verdict for the defendant. Plaintiffs have appealed from the judgment entered in defendant’s favor. We affirm.

I.

Bacharach, a division of AMBAC Industries, Inc., operates a manufacturing plant near Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, at which all of the fifty-four plaintiffs are employed. The plant produces such products as diesel automotive diagnostic equipment, instruments for the detection of combustible and toxic gases, and instruments for testing and recording temperature and humidity levels. At the time the instant case was tried, the *1167 collective bargaining agreement that covered the plant’s production and maintenance employees, including the plaintiffs, identified fifty-five job classifications applicable to employees in the bargaining unit. Ba-charach and the signatory unions 2 jointly assigned the fifty-five classifications to nine labor grades, and also assigned wage rates to the labor grades. Labor grade 1 was the highest paid, grade 9 the lowest.

Bacharach maintains two separate assembly departments at its Pittsburgh plant, Heavy Assembly and Light Assembly. All of the plaintiffs work in the Light Assembly area as Bench Assemblers; some are classified as Bench Assemblers-B (labor grade 6), while the others are classified as Bench Assemblers-A (labor grade 5). In Light Assembly, Bacharach produces a wide assortment of mechanical and electronic measurement and gas detection instruments. Among the devices manufactured by Bench Assemblers in Light Assembly are instruments that measure air flow, temperature, humidity, electrical current, gas pressure, and the presence or absence of certain gases in mines. Some Bench Assemblers also construct components known as sub-assemblies which are ultimately incorporated into the diesel fuel pump test stands that are built in Heavy Assembly. In addition to these test stands, workers in Heavy Assembly construct two other devices, comparators and methane monitors.

Plaintiffs allege that they are compensated at a rate of pay less than the rate paid to males in Heavy Assembly for the performance of equal work that requires equal skill, effort, and responsibility, and that is performed under similar working conditions. Specifically, the plaintiffs claim that Bench Assemblers-B (labor grade 6) should receive the same rate of pay as Intermediate Assemblers in Heavy Assembly (labor grade 5), or as Assemblers in Heavy Assembly (labor grade 3), and that Bench Assemblers-A (labor grade 5) should receive the same rate as Assemblers in Heavy Equipment (labor grade 3). 3 The complaint asserts that the difference in pay between the Bench Assemblers and the Heavy Assemblers is based solely on sex.

At the jury trial, the plaintiffs endeavored to equate the work of the Bench Assemblers with the work of the Heavy Assemblers by the testimony of witnesses employed in the two departments. Five female plaintiffs employed as Bench Assemblers-B (labor grade 6) testified that their work consisted of assembling certain instruments in accordance with blueprints and sequence sheets. In the course of doing their jobs, they said, they performed such tasks as cutting, wiring, soldering, drilling, aligning, gluing, reaming (enlarging pre-made holes), tapping (putting threads in already existing holes), filling (putting ink in recording instruments), testing, calibrating, reworking, and packing.

Among the instruments assembled by these witnesses were the Mini-Monitor, a gas detection device measuring about eight inches long and six inches wide, and the Canary, a small device used to detect the presence of gas in mines. One of the five testified that she did work on sub-assemblies that had previously been done by Intermediate Assemblers in Heavy Assembly, but she conceded on cross-examination that she did not know whether the work was performed in Light Assembly in the same manner that it had been performed in Heavy Assembly. None of the five witnesses could describe the work done in Heavy Assembly; the witnesses had rarely *1168 been in the Heavy Assembly area of the plant. One of the Bench Assemblers-B testified, however, that the devices produced in Heavy Assembly were “large,” and another testified that she thought that some of the instruments assembled in Heavy Assembly could be larger than the witness box in which she was sitting.

The plaintiffs then offered a male Intermediate Assembler in Heavy Assembly (labor grade 5) as a witness; this witness, Robert J. Mazzei, was also president of the local union. He testified that his work consisted of, inter alia, assembling diesel fuel pump test stands in accordance with blueprints and operation sheets. Photographs introduced into evidence depict these products as having the shape of, but being somewhat larger than, ordinary pinball machines. In the course of doing his job, Mazzei said, he performed such tasks as wiring, soldering, drilling, gluing, reaming, tapping, painting, filling containers with oil, testing, calibrating, reworking, and packing. The aligning that he did sometimes required the use of portable lifts. The witness further testified that he, like most Intermediate Assemblers, spent about fifty percent of his time working on assemblies and sub-assemblies at a bench. But, he averred, other exceptional employees in Heavy Assembly, both labor grades 3 and 5, spent between ninety and ninety-five percent of their time on bench work. There was no indication, however, that the devices assembled at benches in Heavy Assembly were of the same complexity as those assembled at benches in Light Assembly. Mazzei indicated that some jobs formerly performed by Heavy Assemblers, either grades 3 or 5, had been transferred to Bench Assemblers, grade 6, and that some jobs formerly performed by Assemblers in Heavy (grade 3) had been transferred to Bench Assemblers, either grades 5 or 6.

Three females employed as Bench Assemblers-A (labor grade 5) testified that their work consisted of assembling a variety of instruments. They said that their jobs encompassed such tasks as wiring, soldering, drilling, aligning, gluing, reaming, tapping, filling instrument bulbs with gas, rethread-ing dies, calibrating, and packing. Among the instruments assembled by these witnesses were Tempscribes, which measure and record temperature; Serdexes, which record temperature and humidity; gas detectors; and sub-assemblies for products completed in Heavy Assembly.

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Bluebook (online)
555 F.2d 1164, 14 Fair Empl. Prac. Cas. (BNA) 1778, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/archangel-angelo-v-bacharach-instrument-company-a-division-of-american-ca3-1977.