Harper v. Godfrey Co.

839 F. Supp. 583, 1993 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 17019, 63 Empl. Prac. Dec. (CCH) 42,849, 63 Fair Empl. Prac. Cas. (BNA) 1223, 1993 WL 498896
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Wisconsin
DecidedNovember 23, 1993
Docket88-C-71
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 839 F. Supp. 583 (Harper v. Godfrey Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Wisconsin primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harper v. Godfrey Co., 839 F. Supp. 583, 1993 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 17019, 63 Empl. Prac. Dec. (CCH) 42,849, 63 Fair Empl. Prac. Cas. (BNA) 1223, 1993 WL 498896 (E.D. Wis. 1993).

Opinion

DECISION AND ORDER

RANDA, District Judge.

This Title VII action was tried to the Court' last April. The Court must issue formal Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law básed on those facts. Plaintiffs allege racial discrimination with regard to their placement on a seniority list and their temporary layoffs. The Court finds against the plaintiffs on their seniority list claims and for the plaintiffs on their layoff claims.

*588 FINDINGS OF FACT 1

I.THE GODFREY OPERATION

1. Godfrey Company (“Godfrey”) is a wholesale food distributor and retailer. (Trial Trans. (“TT.”), Vol. 2 at 196.) Godfrey supplies food and other products to 90 Sentry food stores located throughout Wisconsin, including 36 corporate stores owned by Godfrey itself. (TT., Vol. 2 at 196-98.) Godfrey also supplies products to various convenience stores and other smaller stores located throughout Wisconsin. (TT., Vol. 2 at 196-97.) Godfrey-owned facilities include the 36 corporate stores, a headquarters and large warehouse located in Waukesha, a Food-for-Less store in Kenosha, the Crestwood Bakery (which the Court believes is located in Milwaukee County) and the Hub City Distribution Center in Marshfield. (TT., Vol. 2 at 196-99.)

2. Godfrey employs a combined total of 4500-5000 workers at the foregoing facilities. (TT., Vol. 2 at 198-99.) 3300-3700 of these employees work at the 36 corporate stores (located predominantly in southeast Wisconsin but also in other surrounding areas), of which roughly 8.8% are minorities. (TT., Vol. 2 at 199, 204-05, 208.) 650 employees work at the Waukesha headquarters, of which roughly 3.5% are minorities. (TT., Vol. 2 at 199, 208.) 80-100 employees work at the Kenosha Food-for-Less store, of which almost 20% are minorities. (TT., Vol. 2 at 199, 208.) 270-330 employees work at Crest-wood Bakery, of which 4.5% are minorities. (TT., Vol. 2 at 199, 208.) The remaining employees work at the Hub City Distribution Center (located in Wood County, Wisconsin), of which 0% are minorities. (TT., Vol. 2 at 199, 208.) 2

3. This case focuses upon Godfrey’s warehouse operation in Waukesha. The warehouse is 560,000 square feet in size.and supplies all of the corporate stores in southeastern Wisconsin and the surrounding areas. (TT., Vol. 2 at 204-05, Vol. 3 at 13.) The warehouse employs roughly 150 warehouse-men and 60 drivers, of which roughly 3.5% are’ minorities (again, current statistics which Godfrey believes have not changed significantly since 1985). (TT., Vol. 2 at 199-200, 208.) Roughly 62% of the warehousemen reside in Waukesha County, which has a minority workforce availability of three-tenths of one percent (.003) (current and 1989 • figures). (TT.,' Vol. 2 at 215-18.) Roughly 22% of the warehousemen reside in Milwaukee County, which has a minority workforce availability of 13.5%. (Id.)

4.There are seven basic job positions in the warehouse. (TT., Vol. 3 at 76-79.) A “receiver” unloads incoming product off of trailer-trucks, stacks it on pallets in the staging area, checks the product in and labels the pallets. (Id.) A “hauler” operates a forklift and moves the pallets from the staging area to the reserve locations indicated on their respective labels. (Id.) A “let-down operator” also operates a forklift and moves product from the reserve areas to the picking slots as needed. (Id.) A “pick car operator” drives an electric car throughout the warehouse and selects specific products from the picking slots and places them on a mechanized conveyor belt system leading down to the front dock. (Id.) A “front dock” employee takes product off of the conveyor belts and stacks it on nearby pallets. (Id.) A “■loader” uses an electric pallet jack to load these pallets onto trailers for shipment to the various stores. (Id.) Finally, an “order selector” drives an electric powered jack throughout the warehouse to select products for shipment that are not in the conveyor system. (Id.) Of these seven, the most desirable positions are loader, let-down operator, hauler and receiver. (Id.) Employees must bid for these positions based on seniority. (Id.)

*589 II. THE PLAINTIFFS

5. Gregory Harper, Steven Wright 3 and Alonzo Webber are black residents of Milwaukee County. (TT., Vol. l at 27-28, 90, 143.) Harper and Wright grew up in Milwaukee and all three are high school graduates. (TT., Vol. 1 at 28, 90, 143; Ex. 37.) Webber served six (6) years in the United States Army and received an honorable discharge. (TT., Vol. 1 at 143.) All three were employed at the time of trial. Harper worked full-time as a custodian at the Milwaukee County Medical Complex and part-time as a salesman at a local retail clothing store. (TT., Vol. 1 at 28.) Wright worked full-time as a third-shift parking attendant and part-time as a painter. (TT., Vol: 1 at 90-91.) Webber worked full-time assembling control panels for a local company named Electech. (TT., Vol. 1 at 143-144.) All three plaintiffs were previously employed by Godfrey. Godfrey hired them in June of 1985 as replacements for striking warehousemen and drivers in Godfrey’s Waukesha warehouse. (TT., Vol. 1 at 28-29, 91-92, 144-145.)

III. THE 1985 STRIKE

6. Godfrey warehousemen and drivers are members of the Teamsters Union. (TT., Vol. 2 at 203-04.) Their employment with Godfrey is governed by a collective bargaining agreement between Godfrey and the Teamsters. (Id.) One such agreement was due to expire around the middle of 1985. Godfrey intended to seek wage concessions and higher productivity standards in the new agreement and therefore anticipated that the warehousemen would strike. (TT., Vol. 3 at 7-8.) Godfrey took a number of steps to prepare for that possibility. First, it increased security. Godfrey installed a chain link fence around the 100-acre lot surrounding its warehouse and headquarters. (TT., Vol. 3 at 8-9.) It contacted various security agencies to install security cameras at both its headquarters and the corporate Sentry stores. (Id.) It hired additional security personnel. .(Id.) Second, Godfrey recruited a strike replacement work force, using hiring methods quite different from those it typically used. (TT., Vol. 3 at 9-12.) Prior to the strike Godfrey hired informally, selecting from a pool of people — principally residents of Waukesha County — who personally came in to file applications on their own initiative dr because they had learned of possible openings through friends employed at Godfrey. (TT., Vol. 2 at 113-14.) To obtain strike replacements, however, Godfrey sought formal referrals from a Milwaukee employment agency called the Personnel Pool. (TT., Vol. 2 at 112, 141-42, 162-63.) Harper, Wright and Webber were all hired through this agency. (TT., Vol. 1 at 29, 91,144.) Godfrey also advertised in the Milwaukee Journal, the Milwaukee Sentinel and the Waukesha Freeman. (TT., Vol. 2 at 112, 141-42, 162-63.) This method of recruiting resulted in. a warehouse work force with a significantly higher percentage of black employees ’ (possibly in excess of 50%) than was obtained by the informal pre-strike method. (Id.)

7. Starting in late-March, 1985, Godfrey bussed hundreds of potential strike replacements, including the plaintiffs, to its Waukesha facilities on the weekends for. formal warehouse training. (TT., Vol.

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839 F. Supp. 583, 1993 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 17019, 63 Empl. Prac. Dec. (CCH) 42,849, 63 Fair Empl. Prac. Cas. (BNA) 1223, 1993 WL 498896, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harper-v-godfrey-co-wied-1993.