Workers claiming unequal pay have generally had a
right that no other discrimination claimants ever
had – the right to pursue those claims even after the
legal time frame for filing charges or lawsuits had
expired. Now, the United States Supreme Court has
ruled that most such claims are not indefinite and
must be pursued within the same time frame as all
other discrimination actions.
A series of unfortunate events
Over Lilly Ledbetter’s 19 years of work for
Goodyear Tire, she received several negative
performance reviews that resulted in diminished
wage increases and lower earnings than many of
her co-workers. Ledbetter thought that her
gender was the reason for the poor reviews and
that she should not have to a earn lower wage
because of it. She therefore sued the company for
a violation of Title VII and received a jury verdict
in the amount of nearly $4 million (although the
judge later reduced the award to $360,000).
Goodyear appealed to the 11th Circuit U.S. Court
of Appeals and was successful in getting the
$360,000 verdict overturned. Ledbetter then
appealed to the United States Supreme Court.
In seeking dismissal of the claim, Goodyear
argued that Ledbetter had not filed the required
charge with the EEOC in a timely fashion.
Ledbetter countered that courts had always
treated pay discrimination claims differently from
other discrimination cases. Unlike hiring,
promotion or discharge cases, where the act of
discrimination can be pinpointed to a single
decision, Courts had frequently viewed pay
discrimination cases as a series of discriminatory
acts that renewed Title VII’s charge-filing period
each time the claimant received a paycheck.
As a result, the time for filing such claims was
indefinite and employers would be unable ever to
“close their books” on pay decisions.
It’s about the decision, not the effects
The Supreme Court rejected this approach and
ruled that claims of unequal pay under Title VII
must be brought within the same statutory time
frame as all other discrimination claims. The
judges based their decision on
a review of a number of their
previous decisions addressing
the basic principle that charges
must be brought when the
discriminatory act occurs, not
when its effects are felt most painfully. In the
past, they had disallowed a claim by a college
professor who waited to challenge a tenure denial
until after his one-year “terminal teaching
assignment” ended, and had rejected claims from
airline employees challenging seniority decisions
years after they were made because those decisions
had only recently resulted in layoffs. The
justices ruled that the establishment of an
employee’s wage rate is no less a separate and
complete act than a termination or refusal to hire.
Simply stated, the Court ruled that pay
discrimination is not a continuing act, but rather
a singular act that can be traced to a particular
point in time. In this instance, the discriminatory
acts occurred when Ledbetter received her
performance reviews and reduced wage increases,
not when she got the paychecks reflecting those
decisions. The Court therefore ruled that
Ledbetter failed to bring her claim in a timely
fashion and that the lawsuit should be dismissed.
Ledbetter v. Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co., Inc. (U.S.
Supreme Court, May 29, 2007).
Bottom Line
This was definitely a win for employers but a few
cautionary notes are in order:
- This case was decided only under Title VII,
and does not affect claims under the Equal
Pay Act of 1963 or other federal or state laws.
Therefore, workers still can challenge pay
claims under other laws and benefit from
extended filing periods. Remember, though,
the Equal Pay Act only applies to claims of
differential pay based on sex and not on any
other protected classification.
- Second, the majority in Ledbetter was a razor
thin 5-4 ruling, with Justice Ginsburg taking the unusual step of reading her vehement dissent aloud from the
bench. One new appointee to the bench could change this outcome.
- Third, this decision assumes that employees will immediately recognize
that they have been victimized by possible discrimination when their
pay rate is set. Unlike other employment decisions, a pay discrepancy
is “often hidden from sight” (as the dissent asserts) and workers may
not comprehend the discriminatory act until the legal filing period has
expired. Future cases will probably resolve whether this is a valid
excuse for not complying with the statutory filing period.
Still, this decision seems to recognize the fundamental reality that
discrimination law addresses employer decisions. Experience tells us that
employees do not wait very long to file a discrimination charge if they feel
they have been wronged, and they don’t need a perpetually renewing filing
period to assist them. Ledbetter v. Goodyear Tire &
Rubber Co., Inc.
For additional information, please contact Dennis Merley (612-373-8434).
