Parker v. Siemens-Allis, Inc.

601 F. Supp. 1377
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Arkansas
DecidedFebruary 21, 1985
DocketLR-C-83-203
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 601 F. Supp. 1377 (Parker v. Siemens-Allis, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Parker v. Siemens-Allis, Inc., 601 F. Supp. 1377 (E.D. Ark. 1985).

Opinion

FINDINGS OF FACT AND CONCLUSIONS OF LAW

ROY, District Judge.

1. The Plaintiff, Linda Parker was employed by the Defendant Siemens-Allis on April 6, 1970, and continued her employment with the Defendant until her termination on September 2, 1980. The present lawsuit was brought as a result of the termination. 1 Plaintiff alleges she was terminated on the basis of her sex.

2. Defendant’s Little Rock plant manufactures small motors. It is divided into the following departments: Electrical Assembly, Machine Shop and Final Assembly. The first line supervisors in these areas are foremen who at the time of Parker’s employment reported to superintendents. The superintendents reported to the production manager.

3. Plaintiff made application at Siemens-Allis in February of 1970. Although she was not offered a job at that time, she was offered a slot to participate in the company training program with no pay for her participation and no guarantee of a job.

4. Upon opening its new facility in Little Rock, Defendant hired Plaintiff on April 6, 1970.

5. Defendant contends that Plaintiff misrepresented her employment history on her application. Specifically, Plaintiff failed to acknowledge her prior employment with Timex. Plaintiff was employed twice at Timex but failed to note such on her application. Apparently, Plaintiff had been counseled for excess absenteeism during her first employment at Timex, and was terminated from her second employment at Timex because she walked off the job. The Court took the above information into consideration when assessing credibility, and, considering the evidence as a whole, placed little weight on the deletion.

6. Plaintiff's initial job assignment was stator winder in the electrical department. Plaintiff’s application shows that she applied for a “machine or assembly or inspec *1379 tor” position. Defendant contends Plaintiff did not request employment in the machine shop. The Court finds Defendant’s construction of the application unreasonable. Further, Plaintiff testified that she applied for the machine shop or assembly as her first choice because she had worked in the electrical industry before and knew that the machine shop positions paid more than positions in the electrical department. Despite her application, she was assigned to work in the electrical department.

7. From the time of Plaintiff’s hire to the present, the majority of the machine shop and stator assembly employees have been male, while the majority of the electrical department employees have been typically female. This is evidence of a pattern and practice of discrimination in job assignment and steering.

8. Further steering and job assignment was evidenced by the Plaintiff’s unrebutted testimony that there are certain jobs in even the electrical department which are held by males, the dip and bake, set up, leadman and foreman positions. No evidence was presented indicating that females were not capable of performing those jobs.

9. Ten years after Plaintiff’s hire, the machine shop was 95 percent male and assembly was 80 percent male, while the electrical department was 85 percent female.

10. Plaintiff remained in the position of stator winder for four to six months and was promoted to stator testor, a position which she held for two years before being promoted to foreman. Next, Plaintiff was promoted to foreman in the electrical department on March 16, 1974, and held that position until 1980 when she was terminated.

11. Plaintiff stated that she cross-trained in the machine shop. Plaintiff contends that she was discriminated against because of her sex since Carl Garmon was promoted to foreman in 1972. Although Plaintiff failed to list this alleged discrimination on her EEOC charge, the promotion claim is like or related to the substance of the Plaintiff’s charge.

12. Carl Garmon, a male whose initial hire date is April 13,1970 (seven days after that of the Plaintiff) and who had never worked in the electrical department, was promoted to foreman in her department in 1972. It took Plaintiff twice as long to reach the position of foreman as the time required for Garmon. Defendant contends that Garmon was asked to take a foreman’s position over both Final Assembly and the Electrical Assembly Department on the second shift — 3:30 p.m. — 11:00 p.m., and that Plaintiff was not intersted in a second shift position because she wanted to work the same hours as her husband. Although Plaintiff testified she wanted to work the same day hours as her husband, no evidence was presented showing that Defendant asked Plaintiff if she would be willing to work a shift other than the day shift. In fact, Plaintiff testified she would have accepted Garmon’s position if it had been offered to her.

13. Both the testimony and the exhibits introduced by Plaintiff indicate that six of the nine male foremen were promoted to foreman at a rate faster than Plaintiff.

14. The Court finds it significant that there had never been a female foreman in the plant’s history before the promotion of the Plaintiff. Further, there have been no female foremen since her termination.

15. The Affirmative Action Plan and Defendant’s Answers to Interrogatories show the work force is 30-40 percent female.

16. Promotions to first line supervisor are made from within the work force.

17. Plaintiff complained to Fred Quick, her immediate supervisor, that Garmon had less seniority and no prior experience in the electrical department, but no action was taken with respect to her complaint.

18. Defendant contends that while Plaintiff was a collective bargaining unit employee, jobs were posted and any employee could bid on any opening. Defendant contends that under the collective bargaining agreement procedure, if a bargaining unit employee feels he or she has been *1380 discriminated against, they could file a grievance, and there is no evidence that Plaintiff filed a grievance. Defendant further contends that during Parker’s tenure as foreman, she never sought a transfer to the machine shop. However, Betty Stoner, a female presently employed by the Defendant, testified that she has never sought a position outside the electrical department because she believes Defendant’s managerial staff and personnel in the predominately male departments do not want women in those departments. She also testified that when she was hired by Defendant she was interviewed for positions in the electrical department only. She was not informed of any positions available in any other department. Jean Smith, who presently works for Defendant, testified that she made an effort to bid on a promotion in the machine shop. However, Carl Garmon, her male supervisor at the time, took her to the machine shop and showed her the heaviest machine in the department and told her she would have to lift it to do the job. He failed to tell her, which she later learned, that a hoist was used to lift that object. Kitty Wood, presently an employee of Defendant, testified that another employee, Katherine Pfeiffer, was going to bid on a job and Fred Quick asked her not to pursue the position.

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Bluebook (online)
601 F. Supp. 1377, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parker-v-siemens-allis-inc-ared-1985.