Vaughn v. Westinghouse Electric Corp.

471 F. Supp. 281
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Arkansas
DecidedJune 12, 1979
DocketLR-74-C-215, LR-76-C-196
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 471 F. Supp. 281 (Vaughn v. Westinghouse Electric Corp.) 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
Vaughn v. Westinghouse Electric Corp., 471 F. Supp. 281 (E.D. Ark. 1979).

Opinion

OPINION

ARNOLD, District Judge.

This is a suit under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 42 U.S.C. § 2000e et seq., to redress alleged discrimination in employment on the ground of race. The two captioned cases have been consolidated. At a pretrial hearing, the motion of defendants to deny class certification was granted, and the case went to trial as three individual claims. Two of the plaintiffs, Marion Gee and Glenda Crutcher, are former employees of Westinghouse Electric Corporation. The other plaintiff, Christine Vaughn, is still employed by the defendant Westinghouse. The claims against the defendant labor organizations were settled before trial, and a consent decree has been entered embodying this settlement. The case was tried to the Court on April 24, 25, 26, 27, and 30, 1979. All parties have rested, and the case is now ready for decision.

Plaintiffs present a variety of claims of disparate treatment by their employer. The nature and order of proof in this kind of case are set out by the Supreme Court in McDonnell Douglas Corp. v. Green, 411 U.S. 792, 93 S.Ct. 1817, 36 L.Ed.2d 668 (1973). There, the Supreme Court held that the plaintiff must carry the initial burden of establishing a prima facie case of racial discrimination. In McDonnell Douglas, a failure-to-rehire case, the Court specified the following method of establishing such a case:

*284 This may be done by showing (i) that he [the plaintiff] belongs to a racial minority; (ii) that he applied and was qualified for a job for which the employer was seeking applicants; (iii) that, despite his qualifications, he was rejected; and (iv) that, after his rejection, the position remained open and the employer continued to seek applicants from persons of complainant’s qualifications. (Footnote omitted.) 411 U.S. at 802, 93 S.Ct. at 1824.

Here, no plaintiff claims that the employer discriminatorily failed to hire her. Each of these plaintiffs was at some point employed by Westinghouse. Instead, plaintiff Crutcher claims an unlawful discharge, and plaintiffs Vaughn and Gee claim that they were unlawfully disqualified from certain jobs they had been holding and made to take other, less desirable jobs. The Supreme Court has made clear that the McDonnell Douglas formulation should not be applied woodenly to every situation. “The facts necessarily will vary in Title VII cases, and the specification above of the prima facie proof required from respondent is not necessarily applicable in every respect to differing factual situations.” McDonnell Douglas Corp. v. Green, supra, 411 U.S. at 801 n.13, 93 S.Ct. at 1824. In the present situation, the McDonnell Douglas test, mutatis mutandis, requires plaintiffs, in order to establish a prima facie case of racial discrimination, to show that they belong to a racial minority, that they were employed by the defendant in a certain capacity, having been initially found to be qualified in that capacity, that they were discharged or disqualified from their jobs, and that following their discharge or disqualification defendant continued to seek and employ persons for the jobs in question. In addition, they have the burden of showing, either by statistical evidence or by testimony of specific racially motivated incidents, that there is probable cause to believe that their discharge or disqualification was motivated in substantial part by race.

This Court finds that the proof is more than sufficient to establish a prima facie case. Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 became effective on July 2, 1965. At that time almost no blacks were employed by the defendant Westinghouse. There was one black white-collar employee, a secretary. No blacks were in supervisory positions and only one black had been hired (in 1963) as a production employee. The situation has changed rather slowly. Out of 22 office and clerical employees, only three are black at the present time, none of them in a supervisory position. No black person has ever been employed as a supervisor in the defendant’s office force at its Lamp Operations Division plant in Little Rock, the plant involved in this case. Out of 25 or 26 supervisors, including manufacturing supervisors, who hold the entry-level management jobs, only two are now black. One of these has been a supervisor only a year or a year and a half. There is no regular program for allowing production employees to rise to supervisory ranks. When supervisory positions become open, •this fact is not systematically publicized, and these jobs are not posted. The only jobs posted are production or “bargaining unit” jobs. The defendant’s overall work force is roughly representative of the proportion of blacks and whites in the relevant population, but black employees are heavily, indeed almost exclusively, concentrated in production jobs, which are lower paying. In addition, many more black people than white people apply for jobs at Westinghouse. The following statistical table is illuminating:

Year Black Applicants Black Persons Hired White Applicants White Persons Hired

1970 175 56 303 118

1971 341 17 434 78

1972 1902 96 1124 149

1973 2209 90 1104 212

W. T. Hunnicutt, Personnel Manager for the Little Rock plant, testified that he did not know how to explain these figures, and the Court must agree. The inference is very strong indeed that the number of black people hired is being artificially depressed. No particular qualifications are required for production-level jobs at this plant. There is no reason whatever to suppose, to take 1972 as an example, that 149 *285 whites out of 1124 would be qualified, while only 96 blacks out of 1902, a much larger applicant pool, could make the grade. If objective criteria had been or could be prescribed for these jobs, the situation would be different, but apparently persons are hired simply because the employer wants them. Up until 1965 substantially all the employees were white, and perhaps the employer believes that harmony in its work force can best be preserved by not allowing the number of black employees to exceed by much their proportion in the general population, about 18 or 20%. This motivation is forbidden by law. The law requires not that black people be employed proportionately, but that each applicant, regardless of race, receive equal opportunity. The Supreme Court’s pronouncement in Furnco Constr. Corp. v. Waters, 438 U.S. 567, 579, 98 S.Ct. 2943, 2951, 57 L.Ed.2d 957, 969 (1978), is unmistakable:

It is clear beyond cavil that the obligation imposed by Title VII is to provide an equal opportunity for each applicant regardless of race, without regard to whether members of the applicant’s race are already proportionately represented in the workforce. (Emphasis in original.)

In addition, on February 1, 1974, an organizational chart of management positions at the Little Rock plant only listed one black person out of 31.

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Related

Levka v. City of Chicago
605 F. Supp. 197 (N.D. Illinois, 1985)
Vaughn v. Westinghouse Electric Corp.
523 F. Supp. 368 (E.D. Arkansas, 1981)
Farrakhan v. Sears, Roebuck & Co.
511 F. Supp. 893 (D. Nebraska, 1980)

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471 F. Supp. 281, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vaughn-v-westinghouse-electric-corp-ared-1979.