United States v. Brennan

650 F.3d 65, 2011 WL 1679850
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedMay 5, 2011
DocketDocket 08-5171-cv (L), 08-5172-cv (XAP), 08-5173-cv (XAP), 08-5375-cv (XAP), 08-5149-cv (CON), 08-4639-cv (CON)
StatusPublished
Cited by112 cases

This text of 650 F.3d 65 (United States v. Brennan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Brennan, 650 F.3d 65, 2011 WL 1679850 (2d Cir. 2011).

Opinions

CALABRESI, Circuit Judge:

Table of Contents

Introduction.....................................................................70

Factual and Procedural Background................................................72

I. The Parties...........................................................72

II. General Factual Background............................................73

A. Custodians and Custodian Engineers ................................73

B. The Importance of Seniority........................................73

1. Transfers.....................................................74

2. Temporary Care Assignments...................................75

3. Layoffs.......................................................76

C. The Hiring Process................................................76

D. Provisional Employees.............................................77

III. The Government’s Investigation and Lawsuit..............................77

IV. The Settlement........................................................78

A. Settlement Terms.................................................78

B. Court Approval...................................................79

V. The Settlement Is Implemented................. 80

VI. The Second Circuit Vacates and Remands................................80

VII. Proceedings on Remand................................................81

A. The Brennan Plaintiffs Intervene and File a Related Complaint.........81

B. The Government Changes Its Position; Offeree Interventions Result.........................................................82

VIII. The District Court’s Opinions...........................................83

A. The September 11, 2006 Opinion ....................................83

B. The April 20, 2007 Opinion .........................................86

C. The May 28, 2008 Opinion..........................................87

IX. The Miranda Lawsuit..................................................89

X. The Stay Applications..................................................89

Discussion.......................................................................89

I. Title VII Background..................................................89

II. Procedural Posture and Standard of Review..............................91

III. Prima Facie Case and Defenses.........................................92

[70]*70IV. Affirmative Action.....................................................96

A. Legal Background.................................................96
B. Application of Johnson and Weber to the Settlement Agreement......97

1.Ricci.........................................................97

' 2. Is the Implementation of the Settlement Agreement an Affirmative Action Plan?......................................99

a. What Is an Affirmative Action Plan?..........................99

b. The Employer Action in This Case..........................104

V. Strong Basis in Evidence..............................................109
A. What Is a Strong Basis in Evidence?................................110

1. Strong Basis in Evidence of Liability............................110

2. Strong Basis in Evidence of Necessity...........................113

B. The Government’s “Actual Violation” Standard.......................114

1. Ricci Does Not Require a Showing of Actual Liability or Actual Victims....................................................115

2. The Consent-Decree, Settlement-Approval, and § 706(g)

Cases Do Not Apply in the § 703(a) Context...................116

3. The Brennan Plaintiffs Have Another Remedy for Any Breach of Contract by the City Defendants...........................120

VI. Application of the Strong-Basis-in-Evidenee Standard....................124
A. Prima Facie Case................................................125

1. Testing Discrimination........................................125

2. Recruiting Discrimination......................................125

B. Job-Related and Less Discriminatory Alternative....................127
C. Necessity and Make-Whole Relief..................................128
VII. Equal Protection.....................................................134
VIII. Class Certification....................................................136
IX. Remedies ...........................................................137
X. Conclusion...........................................................140

Introduction

In 1996, the United States (the “Government”) sued the New York City Board of Education and related parties (the “City Defendants”) claiming a violation of Title VII’s prohibition of disparate impact selection measures. The suit alleged that the City had, in hiring Custodians and Custodian Engineers (“CEs”) for its schools, (1) used, on three separate occasions, civil service examinations which discriminated against blacks and Hispanics, and (2) used recruiting practices which discriminated against blacks, Hispanics, Asians, and women. The parties entered into a settlement agreement in 1999 and asked the district court to enter it as a consent decree. The magistrate judge (Levy, M.J.) — who had jurisdiction by consent— approved the entire agreement, despite objections that primarily came from incumbent employees who were denied leave to intervene in the suit. The incumbent employees were unaffected by many of the agreement’s provisions, but they objected to four paragraphs that provided permanent appointments and retroactive competitive seniority to 63 black, Hispanic, Asian, or female individuals, the “Offerees.”2 The City Defendants implemented the dis[71]*71puted parts of the settlement while the incumbent employees’ appeal from their exclusion was pending. In 2001, this Court vacated and remanded, holding that the district court should have permitted the incumbent employees to intervene.

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650 F.3d 65, 2011 WL 1679850, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-brennan-ca2-2011.