Larness Williams v. American Saint Gobain Corporation

447 F.2d 561
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedOctober 12, 1971
Docket176-70
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 447 F.2d 561 (Larness Williams v. American Saint Gobain Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Larness Williams v. American Saint Gobain Corporation, 447 F.2d 561 (10th Cir. 1971).

Opinion

447 F.2d 561

Larness WILLIAMS, Thessie Jones and Cleophus Minter, Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v.
AMERICAN SAINT GOBAIN CORPORATION, OKMULGEE, OKLAHOMA, and Local 10, United Glass and Ceramic Workers of North America, AFL-CIO, Defendants-Appellees.

No. 176-70.

United States Court of Appeals, Tenth Circuit.

June 15, 1971.

Rehearing and Rehearing En Banc Denied October 12, 1971.

Robert Belton, Charlotte, N. C., and James O. Goodwin, Okemah, Okl. (Jack Greenberg, Norman C. Amaker and William L. Robinson, New York City, on the brief), for plaintiffs-appellants.

David L. Fist, Tulsa, Okl. (Coleman Robinson, Tulsa, Okla., on the brief), for appellee American Saint Gobain Corp.

K. D. Bailey, Okmulgee, Okl. (Bailey & Ash, Okmulgee, Okl., on the brief), for appellee Local 10, United Glass and Ceramic Workers of North America, AFL-CIO.

George H. Darden (Stanley P. Hebert, Gen. Counsel, and Russell Specter, Deputy Gen. Counsel, on the brief), for amicus curiae Equal Employment Opportunity Commission.

Before LEWIS, Chief Judge, and PHILLIPS and JOHNSEN,* Circuit Judges.

JOHNSEN, Circuit Judge.

This is a suit under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 42 U.S.C. § 2000e et seq., for individual and class relief from an employment practice alleged to involve dicrimination because of race. Jurisdiction, both as to the district court and of the appeal, is clearly established. The district court denied leave to maintain the suit as a class action. On a trial of the merits, the court found against the plaintiffs and dismissed the action. We affirm.

The plaintiffs were three black employees in the Warehouse Department of the sheet and window glass manufacturing plant of the American Saint Gobain Corporation (herein the "Company"), located at Okmulgee, Oklahoma. Both the Company and Local 10, United Glass and Ceramic Workers of North America, AFL-CIO (herein the "Union") were made defendants. The Union was the collective bargaining representative of all employees at the plant engaged in production, maintenance, warehouse and shipping work. Plaintiffs were members of the Union.

The controversy relates to the Checker Department in the plant. This department had been created in 1950 or 1951. From the opening of the plant in 1948 until that time, the checking tasks in the Company's shipping processes had been performed by employees of the Warehouse Department (which consisted of all blacks) as part of the work of that department. This, however, left the work subject to what was known in the plant as "traffic through the job" — which meant that the most senior employee in the warehouse on the job on any given day had the right to claim the checker tasks, and which, as the court expressed it, "would result in frequent changes in the persons working as checkers".

The lack of stability thus occasioned in the checking responsibilities gave rise, according to the Company, to mistakes in shipments and to customer dissatisfactions, which led to a decision by the Company that the checker work should be removed from the channel of such job traffic and lodged in a department of its own. The court found that the setting up of the Checker Department was "intended specifically to prevent this [job traffic] and did", and further that "the evidence affords no basis for the court to conclude that this is not a good industrial practice". The Company's two principal competitors — Pittsburgh Plate Glass Company and Libby Owens — were shown to be thus handling their checker work.

The four jobs which were to exist in the new department were made the subject of general posting and plant-wide bidding and thus went to four white employees who were the persons having the greatest plant seniority among the employees who had bid. The three plaintiffs did not bid, although they had a few months more seniority than any of those who did. Plaintiffs admit that they knew of their right to choose to bid, and they make no contention, nor is there anything in the record to suggest, that they had in any way been deprived of the opportunity or induced not to bid.

A racial employment wrong would not be involved on the facts alone that the checker work was set up as a separate department; that the jobs therein were made the subject of plant-wide bidding; that they thus were awarded on a seniority basis among those who had bid; that this resulted in the jobs going to white employees; and that as it turned out, however, these white employees had somewhat less seniority than the plaintiffs did and could have asserted if they had chosen to bid. Moreover, since all this had occurred in 1950 or 1951, it would not be able in any event to have any significance under the Civil Rights Act of 1964 unless the continued existence of the Checker Department could be shown to "operate to `freeze' the status quo of prior discriminatory employment practices". Griggs v. Duke Power Co., 401 U.S. 424, 91 S.Ct. 849, 853, 28 L.Ed. 2d 158 (1971).

But in the carefulness with which a question of racial discrimination is entitled to be considered, the history and the collateral details of the situation will be given closer scrutiny. The Checker Department after its creation remained in existence until 1955. It was then abolished and the checking work was returned to the Warehouse Department employees. The Company at that time set up an incentive system in the Warehouse Department under which each gatherer and loader of customer orders was to do his own checking work on the shipments which he handled. The Company's evidence was to the effect that this plan was undertaken by it in the belief that such a merging of the shipping processes into complete single responsibilities would increase the efficiency of previous warehouse shipping performance and would obviate the checking difficulties which had been inherent in the former job traffic. After eight or nine months experience, however, the Company said, it turned out that the combined-responsibility plan did not produce the anticipated results as to the checking work and it decided that it would be necessary to re-establish the Checker Department in order once again to get rid of the checking problems.

The evidence of the Company as to the need for re-establishing the department showed that during the years 1951 to 1955, while the Checker Department was in existence, there had been very few complaints about mistakes in customer shipments; that after its adoption of the coordinating incentive system and the abolition of the department in 1955, complaints began again to come in from customers in substantial and increasing number of shortages and other mistakes which were occurring in their shipments; that reports also came in from some customers of overages, but the Company believed that most of the mistakes of this character were probably not being reported and it was sustaining an economic loss of unknown extent on this aspect; and that the flow of complaints from shipment mistakes once more virtually ceased after the Checker Department was re-established.

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447 F.2d 561, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/larness-williams-v-american-saint-gobain-corporation-ca10-1971.