Donnelly v. RI Board of Governor ( 1997 )


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    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
    ____________________

    No. 96-1834

    DOROTHY F. DONNELLY, ET AL.,

    Plaintiffs, Appellants,

    v.

    RHODE ISLAND BOARD OF GOVERNORS
    FOR HIGHER EDUCATION, ET AL.,

    Defendants, Appellees.

    ____________________

    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

    FOR THE DISTRICT OF RHODE ISLAND

    [Hon. Ernest C. Torres, U.S. District Judge] ___________________

    ____________________

    Before

    Stahl, Circuit Judge, _____________

    Aldrich and Campbell, Senior Circuit Judges. _____________________

    ____________________

    Lynette Labinger with whom Roney & Labinger, Robert B. Mann and ________________ _________________ _______________
    Mann & Mitchell were on brief for appellants. _______________
    Jay S. Goodman and Fidelma Fitzpatrick with whom William G. ________________ ___________________ __________
    DeMagistris, Louis J. Saccoccio, General Counsel, The University of ___________ ___________________ __________________
    Rhode Island, Marc B. Gursky, Julie A. Thomas and Law Office of Marc _____________ ______________ ________________ __________________
    Gursky, were on brief for appellees. ______
    ____________________

    April 7, 1997
    ____________________



















    CAMPBELL, Senior Circuit Judge. This appeal is _____________________

    brought by certain women faculty members at the University of

    Rhode Island from the adverse judgment of the district court.

    They had sued in the district court for an injunction and

    damages pursuant to Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of

    1964, 42 U.S.C. 2000e et seq. (1994) and the Rhode Island __ ___

    Fair Employment Practices Act, R.I.G.L. 28-5-1 et seq. __ ___

    (1997). Plaintiffs contend that the University's three-tier

    faculty salary plan has a disparate impact upon the pay

    received by women faculty.1 Each tier of the challenged plan

    ____________________

    1. Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, as amended by
    the Civil Rights Act of 1991, provides, in pertinent part:
    (1)(A) An unlawful employment practice based on
    disparate impact is established under this subchapter only if
    --
    (i) a complaining party demonstrates that a
    respondent uses a particular employment practice that causes
    a disparate impact on the basis of race, color, religion,
    sex, or national origin and the respondent fails to
    demonstrate that the challenged practice is job related for
    the position in question and consistent with business
    necessity; or
    (ii) the complaining party makes the demonstration
    described in subparagraph (C) with respect to an alternative
    employment practice and the respondent refuses to adopt such
    alternative employment practice.
    42 U.S.C. 2000e-2(K)(1)(A) (West 1994).

    The Rhode Island Fair Employment Practices Act, as
    amended in 1991, states, in relevant part:
    (a) An unlawful employment practice prohibited by 28-
    5-7 may be established by proof of disparate impact. An
    unlawful employment practice by proof of disparate impact is
    established when:
    (1) A complainant demonstrates that an employment
    practice results in a disparate impact on the basis of race,
    color, religion, sex, sexual orientation, handicap, age, or
    country of ancestral origin, and the respondent fails to
    demonstrate that the practice is required by business

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    provides for different salary minimums derived, in large

    part, from data as to the average salaries paid nationally to

    professors in the same academic disciplines encompassed

    within that tier. Plaintiffs base their disparate impact

    claim on the fact that while only 27 percent of the

    University's entire faculty are women, 31 percent of the

    faculty clustered within the disciplines included in the

    lower paying tiers are women, while women make up only ten

    percent of those in the disciplines included in the highest

    paid tier.

    The district court held a bench trial and

    thereafter issued a comprehensive Opinion and Order, since

    published. Donnelly v. R.I. Bd. of Governors for Higher ________ ___________________________________

    Educ., 929 F. Supp. 583 (D.R.I. 1996). It denied relief on _____

    two independent grounds: (1) that the plaintiff faculty

    members had failed to establish a prima facie case of

    disparate impact; and (2) that, even had such a prima facie

    case been established, the University had sustained the

    burden of showing that the plan it followed was consistent

    with business necessity. Id. Because we agree with the ___

    district court that the plaintiffs have failed to meet their

    burden that the University's plan has a disparate impact on

    female faculty members, we do not reach the issue of business


    ____________________

    necessity.
    R.I.G.L. 28-5-7.2(a)(1) (West 1997).

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    necessity. We affirm the district court's judgment for

    substantially the same reasons it set out in Sections I, II,

    and IV of its Opinion and Order. As we adopt the district

    court's reasoning (other than in Section III of its opinion)

    we do not undertake a separate statement of our views except

    for the following brief comments.

    Plaintiffs, as the district court shows, have

    failed to establish all the necessary ingredients of their

    prima facie case of disparate impact, in particular the

    "disparateness" of the salary plan's impact on the protected

    group (women), and the existence of a causal relationship

    between the plan and any purported disparate impact. See ___

    E.E.O.C. v. Steamship Clerks Union, Local 1066, 48 F.3d 594, ________ __________________________________

    601 (1st Cir.), cert. denied, ___ U.S. ___, 116 S. Ct. 65 ____________

    (1995).

    Thus plaintiffs have not demonstrated that the

    challenged Plan A has any adverse impact either on women in

    general or themselves in particular (the latter being

    required in this non-class disparate impact action, Robinson ________

    v. Polaroid Corp., 732 F.2d 1010, 1016 (1st Cir. 1984) _______________

    (citing Coe v. Yellow Freight Sys., Inc., 646 F.2d 444, 451 ___ __________________________

    (10th Cir. 1981).)2 Nor have they shown that they, or the

    ____________________

    2. Contrary to the appellants' contentions, the weight of
    the authority, both before and after the enactment of the
    Civil Rights Act of 1991, suggests that the element of impact
    combines two components: adverseness and disparateness.
    Compare Mack A. Player, Employment Discrimination Law 5.41, _______

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    other female faculty members in Tier B (or Tier C) receive

    under the Plan salaries that are proportionately lower than

    those ordinarily paid to similarly situated males (i.e. males __________________

    teaching in the same or comparable academic disciplines) at

    the University of Rhode Island or at other institutions

    around the country. In fact, the record strongly indicates

    that the faculty members, both male and female, in Tier B,

    the lowest paid tier, are better off than they would be

    without Plan A and better off than are their academic

    counterparts in the national market due to features of Plan A

    that tend to improve the compensation of professors teaching

    in the lower paid disciplines.3 The appellants argue, to be

    ____________________

    at 356 ("Plaintiff carries the initial burden of proving that
    a particular device or system adversely affects employment _________
    opportunities of a defined protected class when compared to _____________
    the effect that device has upon the opportunities of other
    classes." (emphasis added)), and 5.54, at 419-21 (1988)
    with Walter B. Connolly, Jr. and Michael J. Connolly, A ____
    Practical Guide to Equal Employment Opportunity 1.02[1][a],
    at 1-18.1 (1996) ("Disparate impact . . . results from
    facially neutral employment practices that have a
    disproportionately negative effect on certain protected __________________ ________
    groups . . . ." (emphasis added)).

    It is also common sense that, to avail oneself of
    statutes, like Title VII and the RI-FEPA, which seek to
    redress the effects of discriminatory employment practices on
    protected groups, one would have to show, at the very least,
    an injury stemming from one or more of those practices
    (adverse impact) disproportionately borne by members of one
    or more of those groups (disparate impact).

    3. Under Plan A, each academic discipline starts with an
    index number, from the Oklahoma State University Survey,
    pegged to the average salary of assistant professors in that
    discipline compared to the average salary for all assistant
    professors. The disciplines are then categorized into tiers

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    sure, that failure to recalculate the index numbers has kept

    a few disciplines at the University of Rhode Island, like

    nursing, a predominately female discipline, in tiers that

    currently underestimate their actual worth in the national

    market. But there is no indication that other, male-

    dominated disciplines may not have suffered a similar fate,

    and, in any event, the fields where this has allegedly

    occurred are not ones within which appellants teach at the

    University of Rhode Island.

    The appellants' proof of the causation aspect of

    their prima facie case is also deficient. As the district

    court found, Donnelly, 929 F. Supp. at 591-92, the ________

    professors' choice of academic field and the workings of the

    national market, and not Plan A, as such, are basically ___

    responsible for compensatory differences between tiers within

    the Plan, these differences being generally established by

    reference to nationwide faculty salaries within the various

    ____________________

    and their index numbers are rounded off to the relational
    factor assigned to their particular tier. Those disciplines
    relegated to the lowest tier further benefit from Plan A's
    express goal of narrowing the salary disparities among tiers
    as careers progress. This goal of convergence has been
    achieved by allocating a higher portion of the Plan A raises
    to the faculty members in Tier B.

    Plan A actually accounts for only a small percentage of
    the salary increases annually awarded by the University of
    Rhode Island. The collective bargaining agreements provide
    for other salary increases, like performance and merit based
    awards, that enable exceptional professors in every
    discipline to earn more than their peers.


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    disciplines. Most, if not all, higher education institutions

    in this country display similar discipline-based compensatory

    disparities; without Plan A, faculty members in Tier B would,

    on the whole, continue to earn less (probably even less than

    currently) than those in the higher tiers.4

    The appellants take the disparate impact theory

    beyond its logical boundaries when they suggest that faculty

    members in Tier B should be compensated at the same minimum

    rates as those in the different academic disciplines embraced

    by Tier D. In so doing, they seem to be introducing a

    comparable worth argument into Title VII and RI-FEPA

    analyses. To make out a prima facie case of salary

    discrimination under Title VII, and also under the RI-FEPA,

    see Newport Shipyard, Inc. v. R.I. Comm'n for Human Rights, ___ _______________________ ______________________________

    et al., 484 A.2d 893, 898 (R.I. 1984) (looking at the _______

    decisions of the federal courts construing Title VII for

    guidance in interpreting the RI-FEPA), a female claimant

    needs proof that similarly situated males were better paid. __________________

    Johnson v. University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire, 70 F.3d 469, _______ __________________________________

    478 (9th Cir. 1995) (citing Weiss v. Coca-Cola Bottling Co. _____ _______________________

    ____________________

    4. One can imagine similar scenarios in other professions.
    For example, a hospital might set up a compensatory scheme in
    which, because of supply and demand dynamics, doctors in the
    obstetrics and gynecology department, a larger portion of
    whom might be female, get paid at a lower rate than those in
    the field of cardiology containing a higher proportion of
    males. See Jay Green, Doctors' Salaries Are Rising More ___ ___________________________________
    Slowly These Days, The Orange County Register, October 11, __________________
    1995, at Business Section.

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    of Chicago, 990 F.2d 333, 338 (7th Cir. 1993)).5 The ___________

    appellants in this case have failed to surmount this initial

    hurdle in the disparate impact analysis. We affirm the

    district court's holding that they have failed to make out a

    prima facie case of disparate impact.

    The district court, in Section III of its opinion,

    went on to address the issue of "business necessity,"

    Donnelly, 929 F. Supp. 592-94. As in the absence of a prima ________

    facie case there is no occasion to reach that issue, we take

    no position on it, nor do we join in the district court's

    reasoning on that score.

    Affirmed. Costs for appellees. ________ ___________________














    ____________________

    5. Unlike the respondents in Connecticut v. Teal, 457 U.S. ___________ ____
    440 (1982), the appellants in this case are in no way denied
    the opportunity to compete on equal terms with other
    professors, male and female, in their respective disciplines,
    nor, were they to satisfy the job-related criteria, to access
    positions in the higher-paying Tier D disciplines.

    In short, contrary to the situation presented in
    Liberles v. County of Cook, 709 F.2d 1122 (7th Cir. 1983), ________ ______________
    the University of Rhode Island, through its three-tiered
    scheme, is simply paying different people different salaries
    for different, not similar, work.

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