Samuel CARROLL, Et Al., Plaintiffs-Appellants, v. SEARS, ROEBUCK & COMPANY, Defendant-Appellee

708 F.2d 183
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 6, 1983
Docket81-3292
StatusPublished
Cited by61 cases

This text of 708 F.2d 183 (Samuel CARROLL, Et Al., Plaintiffs-Appellants, v. SEARS, ROEBUCK & COMPANY, Defendant-Appellee) 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
Samuel CARROLL, Et Al., Plaintiffs-Appellants, v. SEARS, ROEBUCK & COMPANY, Defendant-Appellee, 708 F.2d 183 (5th Cir. 1983).

Opinion

WISDOM, Circuit Judge:

This case raises issues related to hiring, job assignment, training, promotion, compensation, and termination at the Shreveport facilities of the defendant, Sears, Roebuck & Company (“Sears”). The plaintiffs, two black employees of Sears in Shreveport, filed this class action under Title VII, Civil Rights Act of 1964, 42 U.S.C. § 2000e to 2000e-17 (1976), alleging that employment practices at Sears discriminated against blacks. The district court rejected these allegations. We affirm in part and reverse in part.

I. Background

Sears is a national chain of department stores and related facilities which employs 375,000 people. It has divided the nation into five administrative areas, or territories, which report directly to Sears’s corporate headquarters in Chicago. During the time period relevant to this lawsuit, the Shreveport facilities were located in the Southwest Territory, with headquarters in Dallas. The Shreveport facilities consist of the Southern Avenue Store, the Retail Distribution Center, the Central Service Unit, and the Southside Store. Sears employs ap *187 proximately 600 people in Shreveport in seven EEO job categories, although most of its employees work in sales. 1

In November 1971, Sears hired Samuei Carroll as a part-time truck helper after Carroll had requested full-time employment. Sears never promoted Carroll to a full-time position despite numerous requests on Carroll’s part for promotion. In April 1973, Sears terminated Carroll for insubordination after Carroll was involved in a heated argument over failing to report for work on what was usually his day off. Carroll contends that he was terminated because he is black.

Sears hired Charles W. Grant in August 1971 as a part-time truck helper. Grant, after repeated requests for promotion to full-time status, was promoted to a full-time position. Sears laid-off Grant in 1975 during a large-scale reduction in force, and Sears did not rehire him when he reapplied for work. Grant contends that he was refused promotion and laid off by Sears because he is black. Sears contends that Grant’s layoff was based solely on his lack of seniority and that he was not rehired because he failed to comply with Sears’s policy that all applicants for employment must pass a certified physical examination by a company physician. Carroll and Grant filed this class action under Title VII on July 5, 1977. Their complaint alleged that Sears discriminated across the board in its employment practices. The district court certified the following class on May 14, 1980:

All present black employees of defendant Sears, Roebuck and Company’s Shreveport facilities on or after December 22, 1972; all future black employees of defendant’s Shreveport store; and all unsuccessful black applicants who applied for employment at defendant’s Shreveport facilities and who were rejected on or after December 22, 1972.

At trial, the plaintiffs largely relied on statistics and expert testimony to establish their prima facie case. Sears responded with extensive statistical evidence and expert testimony.

The district court rejected all the charges of discrimination against Sears. The district court held that the plaintiffs failed to show that Sears’s employment practices had a disparate impact on blacks in hiring, job placement, promotion, training, testing, or termination. The district court found the plaintiffs’ statistical evidence to be flawed or inconclusive. The district court concluded that the presence of a successful affirmative action program at Sears was proof that Sears did not discriminate and that the plaintiffs’ allegation of disparate treatment, including the individual Title VII claim of Carroll, was meritless.

On appeal, Carroll contests a number of the district court’s factual findings and legal conclusions. Carroll contends that the district court erred in accepting testimony that directly contradicted pre-trial stipulations and in refusing to give any credence to the testimony of a former personnel manager at Sears in Shreveport. Carroll’s main contention is that the district court erred in failing to find that the plaintiffs established a prima facie case of racial discrimination in defendant’s hiring, promotion, job classification, training, termination, and testing practices. Carroll argues' that the district court misinterpreted the statistics presented to it and erred in assessing the effect of Sears’s use of subjective employment criteria on hiring, job classifi-. 1 cation, and promotion decisions. Sears contends that the district court properly found that there was no discrimination based on the statistical evidence and testimony before it.

II. Preliminary Issues

Two preliminary issues must be resolved before we turn our attention to the evidence on discrimination. First, Carroll *188 contends that the district court erred in not giving any credibility to the testimony of Ms. Esther Colbert Wilkins, the personnel manager of Sears from June 1972 to October 1977, because she had resigned from Sears and unsuccessfully conducted a sex discrimination suit against Sears in 1980. Second, Carroll contends that the district court made evidentiary rulings that were erroneous. According to Carroll, the district court allowed Sears to introduce a wage book as evidence which was wrongfully withheld from the plaintiffs by Sears. The district court also allowed testimony that Sears usually promoted and transferred its employees within EEO job categories. Carroll argues that allowing this testimony was contrary to facts stipulated to in the pre-trial order and to the testimony in the case.

On issues of credibility, the district court’s findings cannot be reversed unless they are clearly erroneous. Robbins v. White-Wilson Medical Clinic, Inc., 5 Cir. 1981, 660 F.2d 1064, 1066. The district court’s determination that Ms. Wilkins’s testimony that was unfavorable to Sears would not be given credence is not clearly erroneous. In April 1980 the district judge ruled that Ms. Wilkins’s allegations of sex discrimination against Sears were unfounded. The district court concluded, based on her earlier trial and on her testimony in this litigation, that she “harbors strong feelings of animosity and resentment toward Sears.” Carroll v. Sears, Roebuck and Company, 514 F.Supp. 788, 795 n. 4 (W.D.La.1981). The district court had a reasonable basis for its conclusion, and its credibility determination with respect to Ms. Wilkins is not clearly erroneous.

We also reject Carroll’s contentions that other evidentiary rulings were in error. The district court did not err in allowing the wage book into evidence. Sears stated at trial that the wage book was never requested during discovery, and it gave the information in the wage book to the plaintiffs in answers to interrogatories and in a computer tape containing hiring statistics. Record on Appeal at 2088-97, 2133.

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