Respondent Hardison (hereafter respondent) was employed by Trans
World Airlines (TWA), petitioner in No. 75-1126, in a department
that operated 24 hours a day throughout the year in connection with
an airplane maintenance and overhaul base. Respondent was subject
to a seniority system in a collective bargaining agreement between
TWA and the International Association of Machinists & Aerospace
Workers (union), petitioner in No. 75-1385, whereby the most senior
employees have first choice for job and shift assignments as they
become available, and the most junior employees are required to
work when enough employees to work at a particular time or in a
particular job to fill TWA's needs cannot be found. Because
respondent's religious beliefs prohibit him from working on
Saturdays, attempts were made to accommodate him, and these were
temporarily successful mainly because, on his job at the time, he
had sufficient seniority regularly to observe Saturday as his
Sabbath. But when he sought, and was transferred to, another job
where he was asked to work Saturdays and where he had low
seniority, problems began to arise. TWA agreed to permit the union
to seek a change of work assignments, but the union was not willing
to violate the seniority system, and respondent had insufficient
seniority to bid for a shift having Saturdays off. After TWA
rejected a proposal that respondent work only four days a week on
the ground that this would impair critical function in the airline
operations, no accommodation could be reached, and respondent was
discharged for refusing to work on Saturdays. Then, having first
invoked the administrative remedy provided by Title VII of the
Civil Rights Act of 1964, respondent brought an action for
injunctive relief against TWA and the union, claiming that his
discharge constituted religious discrimination in violation of
§ 703(a)(1) of the Act, which makes it an unlawful employment
practice for an employer to discriminate against an employee on the
basis of his religion. He also made certain other charges against
the union. His claim of religious discrimination was based on
Page 432 U. S. 64
the 1967 Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC)
guidelines in effect at the time requiring an employer, short of
"undue hardship," to make "reasonable accommodations" to the
religious needs of its employees, and on similar language in the
1972 amendments to Title VII. The District Court ruled in favor of
both TWA and the union, holding that the union's duty to
accommodate respondent's religious beliefs did not require it to
ignore the seniority system, and that TWA had satisfied its
"reasonable accommodations" obligation. The Court of Appeals
affirmed the judgment for the union but reversed the judgment for
TWA, holding that TWA had not satisfied its duty to accommodate
respondent's religious needs under the EEOC guidelines. The court
took the view that TWA had rejected three reasonable alternatives,
any one of which would have satisfied its obligation without undue
hardship: (1) within the framework of the seniority system, TWA
could have permitted respondent to work a four-day week, utilizing
a supervisor or another worker on duty elsewhere, even though this
would have caused other shop functions to suffer; (2) TWA could
have filled respondent's Saturday shift from other available
personnel, even though this would have involved premium overtime
pay; and (3) TWA could have arranged a "swap" between respondent
and another employee either for another shift or for the Sabbath
days, even though this would have involved a breach of the
seniority system.
Held: TWA, which made reasonable efforts to accommodate
respondent's religious needs, did not violate Title VII, and each
of the Court of Appeals' suggested alternatives would have been an
undue hardship within the meaning of the statute as construed by
the EEOC guidelines. Pp.
432 U. S.
76-85.
(a) The seniority system itself represented a significant
accommodation to the needs, both religious and secular, of all of
TWA's employees. Pp.
432 U. S.
77-78.
(b) TWA itself cannot be faulted for having failed to work out a
shift or job swap for respondent. Both the union and TWA had agreed
to the seniority system; the union was unwilling to entertain a
variance over the objections of employees senior to respondent; and
for TWA to have arranged unilaterally for a swap would have
breached the collective bargaining agreement. An agreed-upon
seniority system is not required to give way to accommodate
religious observances, and it would be anomalous to conclude that,
by "reasonable accommodations," Congress meant that an employer
must deny the shift and job preferences of some employees, as well
as deprive them of their contractual rights, in order to
accommodate or prefer the religious needs of others. Title VII does
not require an employer to go that far. Pp.
432 U. S.
79-81.
Page 432 U. S. 65
(c) Under § 703(h) of Title VII, absent a discriminatory
purpose, the operation of a seniority system cannot be an unlawful
employment practice even if the system is discriminatory in its
effect. Pp.
432 U. S.
81-82.
(d) To require TWA to bear more than a
de minimis cost
in order to give respondent Saturdays off would be an undue
hardship, for, like abandonment of the seniority system, to require
TWA to bear additional costs when no such costs are incurred to
give other employees the days off that they want would involve
unequal treatment of employees on the basis of their religion.
Absent clear statutory language or legislative history to the
contrary, the statute, the paramount concern of which is to
eliminate discrimination in employment, cannot be construed to
require an employer to discriminate against some employees in order
to enable others to observe their Sabbath. Pp.
432 U. S.
84-85.
527 F.2d 33, reversed.
WHITE, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which BURGER,
C.J., and STEWART, BLACKMUN, POWELL, REHNQUIST, and STEVENS, JJ.,
joined. MARSHALL, J., filed a dissenting opinion, in which BRENNAN,
J., joined,
post, p.
432 U. S.
85.
Page 432 U. S. 66
MR. JUSTICE WHITE delivered the opinion of the Court.
Section 703(a)(1) of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, Title VII, 78
Stat. 255, 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-2(a)(i), makes it an unlawful
employment practice for an employer to discriminate against an
employee or a prospective employee on the basis of his or her
religion. At the time of the events involved here, a guideline of
the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC), 29 CFR §
1605.1(b) (1968), required, as the Act itself now does, 42 U.S.C.
§ 2000e(j) (1970 ed., Supp. V), that an employer, short of
"undue hardship," make "reasonable accommodations" to the religious
needs of its employees. The issue in this case is the extent of the
employer's obligation under Title VII to accommodate an employee
whose religious beliefs prohibit him from working on Saturdays.
I
We summarize briefly the facts found by the District Court.
375 F.
Supp. 877 (WD Mo.1974).
Petitioner Trans World Airlines (TWA) operates a large
maintenance and overhaul base in Kansas City, Mo. On June 5, 1967,
respondent Larry G. Hardison was hired by TWA to work as a clerk in
the Stores Department at its Kansas City base. Because of its
essential role in the Kansas City operation, the Stores Department
must operate 24 hours per day, 365 days per year, and whenever an
employee's job in that department is not filled, an employee must
be
Page 432 U. S. 67
shifted from another department, or a supervisor must cover the
job, even if the work in other areas may suffer.
Hardison, like other employees at the Kansas City base, was
subject to a seniority system contained in a collective bargaining
agreement [
Footnote 1] that TWA
maintains with petitioner International Association of Machinists
and Aerospace Workers (IAM). [
Footnote 2] The seniority system is implemented by the
union steward through a system of bidding by employees for
particular shift assignments as they become available. The most
senior employees have first choice for job and shift assignments,
and the most junior employees are required to work when the union
steward is unable to find enough people willing to work at a
particular time or in a particular job to fill TWA's needs.
In the spring of 1968 Hardison began to study the religion known
as the Worldwide Church of God. One of the tenets of that religion
is that one must observe the Sabbath by refraining from performing
any work from sunset on Friday until sunset on Saturday. The
religion also proscribes work on certain specified religious
holidays.
When Hardison informed Everett Kussman, the manager of the
Stores Department, of his religious conviction regarding
Page 432 U. S. 68
observance of the Sabbath, Kussman agreed that the union steward
should seek a job swap for Hardison or a change of days off; that
Hardison would have his religious holidays off whenever possible if
Hardison agreed to work the traditional holidays when asked; and
that Kussman would try to find Hardison another job that would be
more compatible with his religious beliefs. The problem was
temporarily solved when Hardison transferred to the 11 p.m.-7 a.m.
shift. Working this shift permitted Hardison to observe his
Sabbath.
The problem soon reappeared when Hardison bid for and received a
transfer from Building 1, where he had been employed, to Building
2, where he would work the day shift. The two buildings had
entirely separate seniority lists; and, while in Building 1,
Hardison had sufficient seniority to observe the Sabbath regularly,
he was second from the bottom on the Building 2 seniority list.
In Building 2, Hardison was asked to work Saturdays when a
fellow employee went on vacation. TWA agreed to permit the union to
seek a change of work assignments for Hardison, but the union was
not willing to violate the seniority provisions set out in the
collective bargaining contract, [
Footnote 3] and Hardison had insufficient seniority to bid
for a shift having Saturdays off.
A proposal that Hardison work only four days a week was rejected
by the company. Hardison's job was essential, and, on weekends, he
was the only available person on his shift to perform it. To leave
the position empty would have impaired supply shop functions, which
were critical to airline operations; to fill Hardison's position
with a supervisor or an
Page 432 U. S. 69
employee from another area would simply have undermanned another
operation; and to employ someone not regularly assigned to work
Saturdays would have required TWA to pay premium wages.
When an accommodation was not reached, Hardison refused to
report for work on Saturdays. A transfer to the twilight shift
proved unavailing since that schedule still required Hardison to
work past sundown on Fridays. After a hearing, Hardison was
discharged on grounds of insubordination for refusing to work
during his designated shift.
Hardison, having first invoked the administrative remedy
provided by Title VII, brought this action for injunctive relief in
the United States District Court against TWA and IAM, claiming that
his discharge by TWA constituted religious discrimination in
violation of Title VII, 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-2(a)(1). He also
charged that the union had discriminated against him by failing to
represent him adequately in his dispute with TWA and by depriving
him of his right to exercise his religious beliefs. Hardison's
claim of religious discrimination rested on 1967 EEOC guidelines
requiring employers "to make reasonable accommodations to the
religious needs of employees" whenever such accommodation would not
work an "undue hardship," 29 CFR § 1605.1 (1968), and on
similar language adopted by Congress in the 1972 amendments to
Title VII, 42 U.S.C. § 2000e(j) (1970 ed., Supp. V).
After a bench trial, the District Court ruled in favor of the
defendants. Turning first to the claim against the union, the
District Court ruled that, although the 1967 EEOC guidelines were
applicable to unions, the union's duty to accommodate Hardison's
belief did not require it to ignore its seniority system as
Hardison appeared to claim. [
Footnote 4] As for Hardison's
Page 432 U. S. 70
claim against TWA, the District Court rejected at the outset
TWA's contention that requiring it in any way to accommodate the
religious needs of its employees would constitute an
unconstitutional establishment of religion. As the District Court
construed the Act, however, TWA had satisfied its "reasonable
accommodations" obligation, and any further accommodation would
have worked an undue hardship on the company.
The Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit reversed the
judgment for TWA. 527 F.2d 33 (1975). It agreed with the District
Court's constitutional ruling, but held that TWA had not satisfied
its duty to accommodate. Because it did not appear that Hardison
had attacked directly the judgment in favor of the union, the Court
of Appeals affirmed that judgment without ruling on its substantive
merits.
In separate petitions for certiorari TWA and IAM contended that
adequate steps had been taken to accommodate Hardison's religious
observances and that to construe the statute to require further
efforts at accommodation would create an establishment of religion
contrary to the First Amendment of the Constitution. TWA also
contended that the Court of Appeals improperly ignored the District
Court's findings of fact.
We granted both petitions for certiorari. 429 U.S. 958 (1976).
Because we agree with petitioners that their conduct was not a
violation of Title VII, [
Footnote
5] we need not reach the other questions presented.
Page 432 U. S. 71
II
The Court of Appeals found that TWA had committed an unlawful
employment practice under § 703(a)(1) of the Act, 42 U.S.C.
§ 2000e-2(a)(1), which provides:
"(a) It shall be an unlawful employment practice for an employer
-- "
"(1) to fail or refuse to hire or to discharge any individual,
or otherwise to discriminate against any individual with respect to
his compensation, terms, conditions, or privileges of employment,
because of such individual's race, color, religion, sex, or
national origin."
The emphasis of both the language and the legislative history of
the statute is on eliminating discrimination in employment;
similarly situated employees are not to be treated differently
solely because they differ with respect to race, color, religion,
sex, or national origin. [
Footnote
6] This is true regardless of whether
Page 432 U. S. 72
the discrimination is directed against majorities or minorities.
McDonald v. Santa Fe Trail Transportation Co.,
427 U. S. 273,
427 U. S. 280
(1976).
See Griggs v. Duke Power Co., 401 U.
S. 424,
401 U. S. 431
(1971).
The prohibition against religious discrimination soon raised the
question of whether it was impermissible under § 703(a)(1) to
discharge or refuse to hire a person who for religious reasons
refused to work during the employer's normal workweek. In 1966, an
EEOC guideline dealing with this problem declared that an employer
had an obligation under the statute
"to accommodate to the reasonable religious needs of employees .
. . where such accommodation can be made without serious
inconvenience to the conduct of the business."
29 CFR § 1605.1 (1967).
In 1967, the EEOC amended its guidelines to require
employers
"to make reasonable accommodations to the religious needs of
employees and prospective employees where such accommodations can
be made without undue hardship on the conduct of the employer's
business."
29 CFR § 1605.1 (1968). The EEOC did not suggest what sort
of accommodations are "reasonable" or when hardship to an employer
becomes "undue." [
Footnote
7]
Page 432 U. S. 73
This question -- the extent of the required accommodation --
remained unsettled when this Court, in
Dewey v. Reynolds Metals
Co., 402 U. S. 689
(1971), affirmed by an equally divided Court the Sixth Circuit's
decision in 429 F.2d 324 (1970). The discharge of an employee who,
for religious reasons, had refused to work on Sundays was there
held by the Court of Appeals not to be an unlawful employment
practice because the manner in which the employer allocated Sunday
work assignments was discriminatory in neither its purpose nor
effect; and, consistent with the 1967 EEOC guidelines, the employer
had made a reasonable accommodation of the employee's beliefs by
giving him the opportunity to secure a replacement for his Sunday
work. [
Footnote 8]
In part "to resolve by legislation" some of the issues raised in
Dewey, 118 Cong.Rec. 706 (1972) (remarks of Sen.
Randolph), Congress included the following definition of religion
in its 1972 amendments to Title VII:
"The term 'religion' includes all aspects of religious
observance and practice, as well as belief, unless an employer
demonstrates that he is unable to reasonably accommodate
Page 432 U. S. 74
to an employee's or prospective employee's religious observance
or practice without undue hardship on the conduct of the employer's
business."
§ 701(j), 42 U.S.C. § 2000e(j) (1970 ed., Supp. V).
The intent and effect of this definition was to make it an unlawful
employment practice under § 703(a)(1) for an employer not to
make reasonable accommodations, short of undue hardship, for the
religious practices of his employees and prospective employees. But
like the EEOC guidelines, the statute provides no guidance for
determining the degree of accommodation that is required of an
employer. The brief legislative history of § 701(j) is
likewise of little assistance in this regard. [
Footnote 9] The proponent of the measure, Senator
Jennings
Page 432 U. S. 75
Randolph, expressed his general desire "to assure that freedom
from religious discrimination in the employment of workers is for
all time guaranteed by law," 118 Cong.Rec. 705 (1972), but he made
no attempt to define the precise circumstances under which the
"reasonable accommodation" requirement would be applied. [
Footnote 10]
In brief, the employer's statutory obligation to make reasonable
accommodation for the religious observances of its employees, short
of incurring an undue hardship, is clear, but the reach of that
obligation has never been spelled out by Congress or by EEOC
guidelines. With this in mind, we turn to a consideration of
whether TWA has met its obligation
Page 432 U. S. 76
under Title VII to accommodate the religious observances of its
employees.
III
The Court of Appeals held that TWA had not made reasonable
efforts to accommodate Hardison's religious needs under the 1967
EEOC guidelines in effect at the time the relevant events occurred.
[
Footnote 11] In its view,
TWA had rejected three reasonable alternatives, any one of which
would have satisfied its obligation without undue hardship. First,
within the framework of the seniority system, TWA could have
permitted Hardison to work a four-day week, utilizing in his place
a supervisor or another worker on duty elsewhere. That this would
have caused other shop functions to suffer was insufficient to
amount to undue hardship in the opinion of the Court of Appeals.
Second -- according to the Court of Appeals, also within the bounds
of the collective bargaining contract -- the company could have
filled Hardison's Saturday shift from other available personnel
competent to do the job, of which the court said there were at
least 200. That this would have involved premium overtime pay was
not deemed an undue hardship. Third, TWA could have arranged a
"swap between Hardison and another employee either for another
shift or for the Sabbath days." In response to the assertion that
this would have involved a breach of the seniority
Page 432 U. S. 77
provisions of the contract, the court noted that it had not been
settled in the courts whether the required statutory accommodation
to religious needs stopped short of transgressing seniority rules,
but found it unnecessary to decide the issue because, as the Court
of Appeals saw the record, TWA had not sought, and the union had
therefore not declined to entertain, a possible variance from the
seniority provisions of the collective bargaining agreement. The
company had simply left the entire matter to the union steward,
who, the Court of Appeals said, "likewise did nothing."
We disagree with the Court of Appeals in all relevant respects.
It is our view that TWA made reasonable efforts to accommodate, and
that each of the Court of Appeals' suggested alternatives would
have been an undue hardship within the meaning of the statute as
construed by the EEOC guidelines.
A
It might be inferred from the Court of Appeals' opinion and from
the brief of the EEOC in this Court that TWA's efforts to
accommodate were no more than negligible. The findings of the
District Court, supported by the record, are to the contrary. In
summarizing its more detailed findings, the District Court
observed:
"TWA established as a matter of fact that it did take
appropriate action to accommodate as required by Title VII. It held
several meetings with plaintiff at which it attempted to find a
solution to plaintiff's problems. It did accommodate plaintiff's
observance of his special religious holidays. It authorized the
union steward to search for someone who would swap shifts, which
apparently was normal procedure."
375 F. Supp. at 890-891. It is also true that TWA itself
attempted without success to find Hardison another job. The
District Court's view was that TWA had done all that could
reasonably be expected within the bounds of the seniority
system.
Page 432 U. S. 78
The Court of Appeals observed, however, that the possibility of
a variance from the seniority system was never really posed to the
union. This is contrary to the District Court's findings and to the
record. The District Court found that, when TWA first learned of
Hardison's religious observances in April, 1968, it agreed to
permit the union's steward to seek a swap of shifts or days off,
but that
"the steward reported that he was unable to work out scheduling
changes ,and that he understood that no one was willing to swap
days with plaintiff."
Id. at 888. Later, in March, 1969, at a meeting held
just two days before Hardison first failed to report for his
Saturday shift, TWA again
"offered to accommodate plaintiff's religious observance by
agreeing to any trade of shifts or change of sections that
plaintiff and the union could work out. . . . Any shift or change
was impossible within the seniority framework, and the union was
not willing to violate the seniority provisions set out in the
contract to make a shift or change."
Id. at 889. As the record shows, Hardison himself
testified that Kussman was willing, but the union was not, to work
out a shift or job trade with another employee. App. 76-77.
We shall say more about the seniority system, but, at this
juncture, it appears to us that the system itself represented a
significant accommodation to the needs, both religious and secular,
of all of TWA's employees. As will become apparent, the seniority
system represents a neutral way of minimizing the number of
occasions when an employee must work on a day that he would prefer
to have off. Additionally, recognizing that weekend work schedules
are the least popular, the company made further accommodation by
reducing its workforce to a bare minimum on those days.
B
We are also convinced, contrary to the Court of Appeals, that
TWA itself cannot be faulted for having failed to work
Page 432 U. S. 79
out a shift or job swap for Hardison. Both the union and TWA had
agreed to the seniority system; the union was unwilling to
entertain a variance over the objections of men senior to Hardison;
and for TWA to have arranged unilaterally for a swap would have
amounted to a breach of the collective bargaining agreement.
(1)
Hardison and the EEOC insist that the statutory obligation to
accommodate religious needs takes precedence over both the
collective bargaining contract and the seniority rights of TWA's
other employees. We agree that neither a collective bargaining
contract nor a seniority system may be employed to violate the
statute, [
Footnote 12] but
we do not believe that the duty to accommodate requires TWA to take
steps inconsistent with the otherwise valid agreement. Collective
bargaining, aimed at effecting workable and enforceable agreements
between management and labor, lies at the core of our national
labor policy, and seniority provisions are universally included in
these contracts. Without a clear and express indication from
Congress, we cannot agree with Hardison and the EEOC that an
agreed-upon seniority system must give way when necessary to
accommodate religious observances. The issue is important and
warrants some discussion.
Page 432 U. S. 80
Any employer who, like TWA, conducts an around-the-clock
operation is presented with the choice of allocating work schedules
either in accordance with the preferences of its employees or by
involuntary assignment. Insofar as the varying shift preferences of
its employees complement each other, TWA could meet its manpower
needs through voluntary work scheduling. In the present case, for
example, Hardison's supervisor foresaw little difficulty in giving
Hardison his religious holidays off, since they fell on days that
most other employees preferred to work, while Hardison was willing
to work on the traditional holidays that most other employees
preferred to have off.
Whenever there are not enough employees who choose to work a
particular shift, however, some employees must be assigned to that
shift even though it is not their first choice. Such was evidently
the case with regard to Saturday work; even though TWA cut back its
weekend workforce to a skeleton crew, not enough employees chose
those days off to staff the Stores Department through voluntary
scheduling. In these circumstances, TWA and IAM agreed to give
first preference to employees who had worked in a particular
department the longest.
Had TWA nevertheless circumvented the seniority system by
relieving Hardison of Saturday work and ordering a senior employee
to replace him, it would have denied the latter his shift
preference so that Hardison could be given his. The senior employee
would also have been deprived of his contractual rights under the
collective bargaining agreement.
It was essential to TWA's business to require Saturday and
Sunday work from at least a few employees even though most
employees preferred those days off. Allocating the burdens of
weekend work was a matter for collective bargaining. In considering
criteria to govern this allocation, TWA and the union had two
alternatives: adopt a neutral system, such as seniority, a lottery,
or rotating shifts; or allocate days off in
Page 432 U. S. 81
accordance with the religious needs of its employees. TWA would
have had to adopt the latter in order to assure Hardison and others
like him of getting the days off necessary for strict observance of
their religion, but it could have done so only at the expense of
others who had strong, but perhaps nonreligious, reasons for not
working on weekends. There were no volunteers to relieve Hardison
on Saturdays, and to give Hardison Saturdays off, TWA would have
had to deprive another employee of his shift preference at least in
part because he did not adhere to a religion that observed the
Saturday Sabbath.
Title VII does not contemplate such unequal treatment. The
repeated, unequivocal emphasis of both the language and the
legislative history of Title VII is on eliminating discrimination
in employment, and such discrimination is proscribed when it is
directed against majorities, as well as minorities.
See
supra at
432 U. S. 71-72.
Indeed, the foundation of Hardison's claim is that TWA and IAM
engaged in religious discrimination in violation of 703(a)(1) when
they failed to arrange for him to have Saturdays off. It would be
anomalous to conclude that, by "reasonable accommodation," Congress
meant that an employer must deny the shift and job preference of
some employees, as well as deprive them of their contractual
rights, in order to accommodate or prefer the religious needs of
others, and we conclude that Title VII does not require an employer
to go that far.
(2)
Our conclusion is supported by the fact that seniority systems
are afforded special treatment under Title VII itself. Section
703(h) provides in pertinent part:
"Notwithstanding any other provision of this subchapter, it
shall not be an unlawful employment practice for an employer to
apply different standards of compensation, or different terms,
conditions, or privileges of employment
Page 432 U. S. 82
pursuant to a bona fide seniority or merit system . . . provided
that such differences are not the result of an intention to
discriminate because of race, color, religion, sex, or national
origin. . . ."
42 U.S.C. § 2000e-2(h).
"[T]he unmistakable purpose of § 703(h) was to make clear
that the routine application of a bona fide seniority system would
not be unlawful under Title VII."
Teamsters v. United States, 431 U.
S. 324,
431 U. S. 352
(1977).
See also United Air Lines, Inc. v. Evans,
431 U. S. 553
(1977). Section 703(h) is
"a definitional provision; as with the other provisions of
§ 703, subsection (h) delineates which employment practices
are illegal, and thereby prohibited, and which are not."
Franks v. Bowman Transportation Co., 424 U.
S. 747,
424 U. S. 758
(1976). Thus, absent a discriminatory purpose, the operation of a
seniority system cannot be an unlawful employment practice even if
the system has some discriminatory consequences.
There has been no suggestion of discriminatory intent in this
case.
"The seniority system was not designed with the intention to
discriminate against religion, nor did it act to lock members of
any religion into a pattern wherein their freedom to exercise their
religion was limited. It was coincidental that, in plaintiff's
case, the seniority system acted to compound his problems in
exercising his religion."
375 F. Supp. at 883. The Court of Appeals' conclusion that TWA
was not limited by the terms of its seniority system was, in
substance, nothing more than a ruling that operation of the
seniority system was itself an unlawful employment practice even
though no discriminatory purpose had been shown. That ruling is
plainly inconsistent with the dictates of § 703(h), both on
its face and as interpreted in the recent decisions of this Court.
[
Footnote 13]
Page 432 U. S. 83
As we have said, TWA was not required by Title VII to carve out
a special exception to its seniority system in order to help
Hardison to meet his religious obligations. [
Footnote 14]
Page 432 U. S. 84
C
The Court of Appeals also suggested that TWA could have
permitted Hardison to work a four-day week if necessary in order to
avoid working on his Sabbath. Recognizing that this might have left
TWA short-handed on the one shift each week that Hardison did not
work, the court still concluded that TWA would suffer no undue
hardship if it were required to replace Hardison either with
supervisory personnel or with qualified personnel from other
departments. Alternatively, the Court of Appeals suggested that TWA
could have replaced Hardison on his Saturday shift with other
available employees through the payment of premium wages. Both of
these alternatives would involve costs to TWA, either in the form
of lost efficiency in other jobs or higher wages.
To require TWA to bear more than a
de minimis cost in
order to give Hardison Saturdays off is an undue hardship.
[
Footnote 15] Like
abandonment of the seniority system, to require TWA to bear
additional costs when no such costs are incurred to give other
employees the days off that they want would involve unequal
treatment of employees on the basis of their religion. By
suggesting that TWA should incur certain costs in order to give
Hardison Saturdays off, the Court of Appeals would, in effect,
require TWA to finance an additional Saturday off and then to
choose the employee who will enjoy it on the basis of his religious
beliefs. While incurring extra costs to secure a replacement for
Hardison might remove the necessity of compelling another employee
to work involuntarily
Page 432 U. S. 85
in Hardison's place, it would not change the fact that the
privilege of having Saturdays off would be allocated according to
religious beliefs.
As we have seen, the paramount concern of Congress in enacting
Title VII was the elimination of discrimination in employment. In
the absence of clear statutory language or legislative history to
the contrary, we will not readily construe the statute to require
an employer to discriminate against some employees in order to
enable others to observe their Sabbath.
Reversed.
* Together with No. 75-1385,
International Assn. of
Machinists & Aerospace Workers, AFL-CIO, et al. v. Hardison et
al., also on certiorari to the same court.
[
Footnote 1]
The TWA-IAM agreement provides in pertinent part:
"The principle of seniority shall apply in the application of
this Agreement in all reductions or increases of force, preference
of shift assignment, vacation period selection, in bidding for
vacancies or new jobs, and in all promotions, demotions, or
transfers involving classifications covered by this Agreement."
"
* * * *"
"Except as hereafter provided in this paragraph, seniority shall
apply in selection of shifts and days off within a classification
within a department. . . ."
App. 214.
[
Footnote 2]
TWA is the petitioner in No. 71126. Petitioners in No. 75-1385
are the international, local, and district levels of IAM,
hereinafter collectively referred to as IAM or the union.
[
Footnote 3]
The union did have a Relief Committee organized to deal with the
emergency problems of its members. The record reveals that, in the
past, this Committee had been instrumental in arranging for
temporary adjustments in work schedules to meet the needs of union
members; but the record also reveals that the Relief Committee had
almost never arranged permanent changes in work assignments, and
that Hardison never sought the assistance of that Committee.
[
Footnote 4]
The District Court voiced concern that, if it did not find an
undue hardship in such circumstances, accommodation of religious
observances might impose " a priority of the religious over the
secular" and thereby raise significant questions as to the
constitutional validity of the statute under the Establishment
Clause of the First Amendment.
375 F.
Supp. 877, 883 (WD Mo.1974), quoting Edwards & Kaplan,
Religious Discrimination and the Role of Arbitration Under Title
VII, 69 Mich.L.Rev. 599, 628 (1971).
[
Footnote 5]
Because the judgment in its favor was affirmed by the Court of
Appeals, the union was a prevailing party below; and Hardison has
not filed a petition for certiorari seeking to change that
judgment. It may thus appear anomalous to have granted the union's
petition for certiorari as well as that of TWA. But the union's
view is that the judgment below against TWA seriously involves
union interests, because the rationale of the Court of Appeals'
opinion, as the union understands it,
"necessarily and explicitly assumes that petitioner Unions are
legally obligated to waive or vary provisions of their collective
bargaining agreement in order to accommodate respondent Hardison's
beliefs, if called upon by TWA to do so."
Pet. for Cert. in No. 75-1385, p. 2. This would appear to be the
position of Hardison and the EEOC m this Court. Since we reverse
the judgment against TWA, we need not pursue further the union's
status in this Court.
[
Footnote 6]
See McDonald v. Santa Fe Trail Transportation Co.,
427 U. S. 273,
427 U. S.
278-279 (1976);
Franks v. Bowman Transportation
Co., 424 U. S. 747,
424 U. S. 763
(1976);
McDonnell Douglas Corp. v. Green, 411 U.
S. 792,
411 U. S. 800
(1973);
Griggs v. Duke Power Co., 401 U.
S. 424,
401 U. S.
429-430 (1971).
From the outset, Congress has said that
"[t]he purpose of [Title VII] is to eliminate, through the
utilization of formal and informal remedial procedures,
discrimination in employment based on race, color, religion, or
national origin."
H.R.Rep. No. 914, 88th Cong., 1st Sess., 26 (1963).
See
110 Cong.Rec. 13079-13080 (1964) (remarks of Sen. Clark). When
Congress amended Title VII in 1972, it did not waver from its
principal goal. While Congressmen differed on the best methods to
eliminate discrimination in employment, no one questioned the
desirability of seeking that goal.
Compare H.R.Rep. No.
92-238 (1971) (majority report of the Committee of the Whole
House),
with id. at 58 (minority report).
[
Footnote 7]
The EEOC expressed the view that
"undue hardship, for example, may exist where the employee's
needed work cannot be performed by another employee of
substantially similar qualifications during the period of absence
of the Sabbath observer,"
29 CFR § 1605.1 (1968). This single example was by no means
intended to be exhaustive. In substance, the EEOC left further
definition of its guidelines to its review of
"each case on an individual basis in an effort to seek an
equitable application of these guidelines to the variety of
situations which arise due to the varied religious practices of the
American people."
Ibid. The EEOC at that time did not purport to change
the view expressed in its 1966 guidelines that work schedules
generally applicable to all employees may not be unreasonable, even
if they do not "operate with uniformity . . . upon the religious
observances of [all] employees." The EEOC's present view, expressed
in an
amicus curiae brief filed in support of Hardison and
the Court of Appeals' judgment, is now otherwise, at least to some
extent.
[
Footnote 8]
Judgment entered by an equally divided Court is not "entitled to
precedential weight,"
Neil v. Biggers, 409 U.
S. 188,
50 U. S. 192
(1972). Our ruling in
Dewey thus does not resolve the
questions there presented. Other factors, as well, make the impact
of
Dewey inconclusive. The conduct alleged to be an
unlawful employment practice occurred prior to the promulgation of
the 1967 guidelines, and the Court of Appeals expressed the view
that those guidelines should not be given retroactive effect. Also,
an earlier ruling by an arbitrator was held to have conclusively
resolved the religious discrimination question in favor of the
employer.
But see Alexander v. Gardner-Denver Co.,
415 U. S. 36
(1974). Finally, the employer in
Dewey was not excused
from a duty to accommodate; the Court of Appeals simply held that
the employer had satisfied any obligation that it might have had
under the statute.
[
Footnote 9]
Section 701(j) was added to the 1972 amendments on the floor of
the Senate. The legislative history of the measure consists chiefly
of a brief floor debate in the Senate, contained in less than two
pages of the Congressional Record and consisting principally of the
views of the proponent of the measure, Senator Jennings Randolph.
118 Cong.Rec. 705-706 (1972).
The Congressional Record, 118 Cong.Rec. 706-713 (1972), also
contains reprints of
Dewey and
Riley v. Bendix
Corp., 330 F. Supp. 583 (MD Fla.1971),
rev'd, 464
F.2d 1113 (CA5 1972), as well as a brief synopsis of the new
provision, which makes reference to
Dewey, 118 Cong.Rec.
7167 (1972). The significance of the legislative references to
prior case law is unclear. In
Riley, the District Court
ruled that an employer who discharged an employee for refusing to
work on his Sabbath had not committed an unfair labor practice even
though the employer had not made any effort whatsoever to
accommodate the employee's religious needs. It is clear from the
language of § 701(j) that Congress intended to change this
result by requiring some form of accommodation; but this tells us
nothing about how much an employer must do to satisfy its statutory
obligation.
The reference to
Dewey is even more opaque:
"The purpose of this subsection is to provide the statutory
basis for EEOC to formulate guidelines on discrimination because of
religion such as those challenged in
Dewey v. Reynolds Metals
Company, 429 F.2d 325 (6th Cir.1970),
affirmed by an
equally divided court, 402 U. S. 689 (1971)."
118 Cong.Rec. 7167 (1972). Clearly, any suggestion in
Dewey that an employer may not be required to make
reasonable accommodation for the religious needs of its employees
was disapproved by § 701(j); but Congress did not indicate
that "reasonable accommodation" requires an employer to do more
than was done in
Dewey, apparently preferring to leave
that question open for future resolution by the EEOC.
See
also n 8,
supra.
[
Footnote 10]
Cases decided by the Courts of Appeals since the enactment of
the 1972 amendments to Title VII similarly provide us with little
guidance as to the scope of the employer's obligation. In
circumstances where an employer has declined to take steps that
would burden some employees in order to permit another employee or
prospective employee to observe his Sabbath, the Fifth, Sixth, and
Tenth Circuits have found no violation for failure to accommodate.
Williams v. Southern Union Gas Co., 529 F.2d 483 (CA10
1976);
Reid v. Memphis Publishing Co., 521 F.2d 512 (CA6
1975),
cert. denied, 429 U.S. 964 (1976),
pet. for
rehearing pending, No. 75-1105;
Johnson v. U.S. Postal
Service, 497 F.2d 128 (CA5 1974). But the Fifth and Sixth
Circuits have also reached the opposite conclusion on similar
facts.
Draper v. United States Pipe & Foundry Co., 527
F.2d 515 (CA6 1975);
Cummins v. Parker Seal Co., 516 F.2d
544 (CA6 1975),
aff'd by equally divided Court,
429 U. S. 65
(1976);
Riley v. Bendix Corp., 464 F.2d 1113 (CA5 1972).
These apparent intra-Circuit conflicts may be explainable on the
basis of the differing facts of each case, but neither the Fifth
nor the Sixth Circuit has suggested a theory of decision to justify
the differing results that have been reached.
[
Footnote 11]
Ordinarily, an EEOC guideline is not entitled to great weight
where, as here, it varies from prior EEOC policy and no new
legislative history has been introduced in support of the change.
General Electric Co. v. Gilbert, 429 U.
S. 125,
429 U. S.
140-145 (1976). But where "Congress has not just kept
its silence by refusing to overturn the administrative
construction, but has ratified it with positive legislation,"
Red Lion Broadcasting Co. v. FCC, 395 U.
S. 367,
395 U. S.
381-382 (1969) (footnote omitted), the guideline is
entitled to some deference, at least sufficient in this case to
warrant our accepting the guideline as a defensible construction of
the pre-1972 statute,
i.e., as imposing on TWA the duty of
"reasonable accommodation" in the absence of "undue hardship." We
thus need not consider whether § 701(j) must be applied
retroactively to the facts of this litigation.
[
Footnote 12]
"This Court has long held that employee expectations arising
from a seniority system agreement may be modified by statutes
furthering a strong public policy interest."
Franks v. Bowman Transportation Co., 424 U.S. at
424 U. S. 778.
Cf. Alexander v. Gardner-Denver Co., 415 U. S.
36 (1974). In
Franks, we held that it was
permissible to award retroactive seniority to victims of past
discrimination in order to implement the strong congressional
policy of making victims of discrimination whole.
Franks
is not dispositive of the present case, since here there is no
evidence of past discrimination that must be remedied. Not only is
the "make-whole" policy not present in this case, but, as we shall
see, the strong congressional policy against discrimination in
employment argues against interpreting the statute to require the
abrogation of the seniority rights of some employees in order to
accommodate the religious needs of others.
[
Footnote 13]
Franks v. Bowman Transportation Co. is not to the
contrary. In
Franks, we held that, "once an illegal
discriminatory practice occurring after the effective date of the
Act is proved," 424 U.S. at
424 U. S. 762,
§ 703(h) does not bar an award of retroactive seniority status
to victims of that discriminatory practice. Here the suggested
exception to the TWA-IAM seniority system would not be remedial;
the operation of the seniority system itself is said to violate
Title VII. In such circumstances, § 703(h) unequivocally
mandates that there is no statutory violation in the absence of a
showing of discriminatory purpose.
See United Air Lines, Inc.
v. Evans, 431 U. S. 553,
431 U. S.
558-560 (1977).
[
Footnote 14]
Despite its hyperbole and rhetoric, the dissent appears to agree
with -- at least it stops short of challenging -- the fundamental
proposition that Title VII does not require an employer and a union
who have agreed on a seniority system to deprive senior employees
of their seniority rights in order to accommodate a junior
employee's religious practices. This is the principal issue on
which TWA and the union came to this Court. The dissent is thus
reduced to (1) asserting that the statute requires TWA to
accommodate Hardison even though substantial expenditures are
required to do so; and (2) advancing its own view of the record to
show that TWA could have done more than it did to accommodate
Hardison without violating the seniority system or incurring
substantial additional costs. We reject the former assertion as an
erroneous construction of the statute. As for the latter, we prefer
the findings of the District Judge who heard the evidence. Thus,
the dissent suggests that, through further efforts, TWA or the
union might have arranged a temporary or permanent job swap within
the seniority system, despite the District Court's express finding,
supported by the record, that "[t]he seniority provisions . . .
precluded the possibility of plaintiff's changing his shift." 375
F. Supp. at 884. Similarly, the dissent offers two alternatives --
sending Hardison back to Building 1 or allowing him to work extra
days without overtime pay -- that it says could have been pursued
by TWA or the union, even though neither of the courts below even
hinted that these suggested alternatives would have been feasible
under the circumstances. Furthermore, Buildings 1 and 2 had
separate seniority lists, and insofar as the record shows, a return
to Building 1 would not have solved Hardison's problems. Hardison
himself testified that he "gave up" his Building 1 seniority when
he came to Building 2, App. 104, and that the union would not
accept his early return to Building 1 in part "because the problem
of seniority came up again."
Id. at 71. We accept the
District Court's findings that TWA had done all that it could do to
accommodate Hardison's religious beliefs without either incurring
substantial costs or violating the seniority rights of other
employees.
See 375 F. Supp. at 891.
[
Footnote 15]
The dissent argues that "the costs to TWA of either paying
overtime or not replacing respondent would [not] have been more
than
de minimis."
Post at
432 U. S. 92 n.
6. This ignores, however, the express finding of the District Court
that "[b]oth of these solutions would have created an undue burden
on the conduct of TWA's business," 375 F. Supp. at 891, and it
fails to take account of the likelihood that a company as large as
TWA may have many employees whose religious observances, like
Hardison's, prohibit them from working on Saturdays or Sundays.
MR JUSTICE MARSHALL, with whom MR JUSTICE BRENNAN joins,
dissenting.
One of the most intractable problems arising under Title VII of
the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 42 U.S.C. § 2000e
et
seq., has been whether an employer is guilty of religious
discrimination when he discharges an employee (or refuses to hire a
job applicant) because of the employee's religious practices.
Particularly troublesome has been the plight of adherents to
minority faiths who do not observe the holy days on which most
businesses are closed -- Sundays, Christmas, and Easter -- but who
need time off for their own days of religious observance. The Equal
Employment Opportunity Commission has grappled with this problem in
two sets of regulations and in a long line of decisions. Initially
the Commission concluded that an employer was "free under Title VII
to establish a normal workweek . . . generally applicable to all
employees," and that an employee could not "demand any alteration
in [his work schedule] to accommodate his religious needs." 29 CFR
§§ 1605.1(a)(3), (b)(3) (1967). Eventually, however, the
Commission changed its view and decided that employers must
reasonably accommodate such requested schedule changes except where
"undue hardship" would result -- for example,
"where the employee's needed work cannot be performed
Page 432 U. S. 86
by another employee of substantially similar qualifications
during the period of absence."
29 CFR § 1605.1(b) (1976). [
Footnote 2/1] In amending Title VII in 1972, Congress
confronted the same problem, and adopted the second position of the
EEOC. Pub.L. 92-261, § 2(7), 86 Stat. 103, codified at 42
U.S.C. § 2000e(j) (1970 ed., Supp. V). Both before and after
the 1972 amendment, the lower courts have considered at length the
circumstances in which employers must accommodate the religious
practices of employees, reaching what the Court correctly describes
as conflicting results,
ante at
432 U. S. 75 n.
10. And on two occasions, this Court has attempted to provide
guidance to the lower courts, only to find ourselves evenly
divided.
Parker Seal Co. v. Cummins, 429 U. S.
65 (1976);
Dewey v. Reynolds Metals Co.,
402 U. S. 689
(1971). Today's decision deals a fatal blow to all efforts under
Title VII to accommodate work requirements to religious practices.
The Court holds, in essence, that, although the EEOC regulations
and the Act state that an employer must make reasonable adjustments
in his work demands to take account of religious observances, the
regulation and Act do not
Page 432 U. S. 87
really mean what they say. An employer, the Court concludes,
need not grant even the most minor special privilege to religious
observers to enable them to follow their faith. As a question of
social policy, this result is deeply troubling, for a society that
truly values religious pluralism cannot compel adherents of
minority religions to make the cruel choice of surrendering their
religion or their job. And, as a matter of law, today's result is
intolerable, for the Court adopts the very position that Congress
expressly rejected in 1972, as if we were free to disregard
congressional choices that a majority of this Court thinks unwise.
I therefore dissent.
I
With respect to each of the proposed accommodations to
respondent Hardison's religious observances that the Court
discusses, it ultimately notes that the accommodation would have
required "unequal treatment,"
ante at
432 U. S. 81,
432 U. S. 84-85,
in favor of the religious observer. That is quite true. But if an
accommodation can be rejected simply because it involves
preferential treatment, then the regulation and the statute, while
brimming with "sound and fury," ultimately "signif[y] nothing."
The accommodation issue by definition arises only when a neutral
rule of general applicability conflicts with the religious
practices of a particular employee. In some of the reported cases,
the rule in question has governed work attire; in other cases, it
has required attendance at some religious function; in still other
instances, it has compelled membership in a union; and in the
largest class of cases, it has concerned work schedules. [
Footnote 2/2] What all these cases have in
common is an employee who could comply with the rule only by
violating what the employee views as a religious commandment. In
each
Page 432 U. S. 88
instance, the question is whether the employee is to be exempt
from the rule's demands. To do so will always result in a privilege
being "allocated according to religious beliefs,"
ante at
432 U. S. 85,
unless the employer gratuitously decides to repeal the rule
in
toto. What the statute says, in plain words, is that such
allocations are required unless "undue hardship" would result.
The point is perhaps best made by considering a not altogether
hypothetical example.
See CCH EEOC Decisions (1973)
� 6180. Assume that an employer requires all employees to
wear a particular type of hat at work in order to make the
employees readily identifiable to customers. Such a rule obviously
does not, on its face, violate Title VII, and an employee who
altered the uniform for reasons of taste could be discharged. But a
very different question would be posed by the discharge of an
employee who, for religious reasons, insisted on wearing over her
hair a tightly fitted scarf which was visible through the hat. In
such a case, the employer could accommodate this religious practice
without undue hardship -- or any hardship at all. Yet, as I
understand the Court's analysis -- and nothing in the Court's
response,
ante at
432 U. S. 83 n. 14, 84 n. 15, is to the contrary -- the
accommodation would not be required, because it would afford the
privilege of wearing scarfs to a select few based on their
religious beliefs. The employee thus would have to give up either
the religious practice or the job. This, I submit, makes a mockery
of the statute.
In reaching this result, the Court seems almost oblivious of the
legislative history of the 1972 amendments to Title VII which is
briefly recounted in the Court's opinion,
ante at
432 U. S. 73-75.
That history is far more instructive than the Court allows. After
the EEOC promulgated its second set of guidelines requiring
reasonable accommodations unless undue hardship would result, at
least two courts issued decisions questioning, whether the
guidelines were consistent with Title VII.
Dewey v. Reynolds
Metals Co., 429 F.2d 324 (CA6 1970),
Page 432 U. S. 89
aff'd by equally divided Court, 402 U.
S. 689 (1971);
Riley v. Bendix Corp., 330 F.
Supp. 583 (MD Fla.1971),
rev'd, 464 F.2d 1113 (CA5 1972).
These courts reasoned, in language strikingly similar to today's
decision, that to excuse religious observers from neutral work
rules would "discriminate against . . . other employees" and
"constitute unequal administration of the collective bargaining
agreement."
Dewey v. Reynolds Metals Co., supra, at 330.
They therefore refused to equate "religious discrimination with
failure to accommodate." 429 F.2d at 335. When Congress was
reviewing Title VII in 1972, Senator Jennings Randolph informed the
Congress of these decisions which, he said, had "clouded" the
meaning of religious discrimination. 118 Cong.Rec. 706 (1972). He
introduced an amendment, tracking the language of the EEOC
regulation, to make clear that Title VII requires religious
accommodation even though unequal treatment would result. The
primary purpose of the amendment, he explained, was to protect
Saturday Sabbatarians like himself from employers who refuse
"to hire or to continue in employment employees whose religious
practices rigidly require them to abstain from work in the nature
of hire on particular days."
Id. at 705. His amendment was unanimously approved by
the Senate on a roll-call vote,
id. at 731, and was
accepted by the Conference Committee, H.R.Rep. No. 92-899, p. 15
(1972); S.Rep. No. 92-681, p. 15 (1972), whose report was approved
by both Houses, 118 Cong.Rec. 7169, 7573 (1972). Yet the Court
today, in rejecting any accommodation that involves preferential
treatment, follows the
Dewey decision in direct
contravention of congressional intent.
The Court's interpretation of the statute, by effectively
nullifying it, has the singular advantage of making consideration
of petitioners' constitutional challenge unnecessary. The Court
does not even rationalize its construction on this ground, however,
nor could it, since
"resort to an alternative construction to avoid deciding a
constitutional question is appropriate
Page 432 U. S. 90
only when such a course is 'fairly possible' or when the statute
provides a 'fair alternative' construction."
Swain v. Pressley, 430 U. S. 372,
430 U. S. 378
n. 11 (1977). Moreover, while important constitutional questions
would be posed by interpreting the law to compel employers (or
fellow employee) to incur substantial costs to aid the religious
observer, [
Footnote 2/3] not all
accommodations are costly, and the constitutionality of the statute
is not placed in serious doubt simply because it sometimes requires
an exemption from a work rule. Indeed, this Court has repeatedly
found no Establishment Clause problems in exempting religious
observers from state-imposed duties,
e.g., Wisconsin v.
Yoder, 406 U. S. 205,
406 U. S.
234-235, n. 22 (1972);
Sherbert v. Verner,
374 U. S. 398,
374 U. S. 409
(1963);
Zorach v. Clauson, 343 U.
S. 306 (1952), even when the exemption was in no way
compelled by the Free Exercise Clause,
e.g., Gillette v. United
States, 401 U. S. 437
(1971);
Welsh v. United States, 398 U.
S. 333,
398 U. S.
371-372 (1970) (WHITE, J., dissenting);
Sherbert v.
Verner, supra, at
374 U. S. 422
(Harlan, J., dissenting);
Braunfeld v. Brown, 366 U.
S. 599,
366 U. S. 608
(1961) (dictum);
McGowan v. Maryland, 366 U.
S. 420,
366 U. S. 520
(1961) (opinion of Frankfurter, J.). [
Footnote 2/4] If the State does not establish
Page 432 U. S. 91
religion over nonreligion by excusing religious practitioners
from obligations owed the State, I do not see how the State can be
said to establish religion by requiring employers to do the same
with respect to obligations owed the employer. Thus, I think it
beyond dispute that the Act does -- and, consistently with the
First Amendment, can -- require employers to grant privileges to
religious observers as part of the accommodation process.
II
Once it is determined that the duty to accommodate sometimes
requires that an employee be exempted from an otherwise valid work
requirement, the only remaining question is whether this is such a
case: did TWA prove that it exhausted all reasonable
accommodations, and that the only remaining alternatives would have
caused undue hardship on TWA's business? To pose the question is to
answer it, for all that the District Court found TWA had done to
accommodate respondent's Sabbath observance was that it "held
several meetings with [respondent] . . . [and] authorized the union
steward to search for someone who would swap shifts." 37 F. Supp.
877, 890-891 (WD Mo.1974). To conclude that TWA, one of the largest
air carriers in the Nation, would have suffered undue hardship had
it done anything more defies both reason and common sense.
The Court implicitly assumes that the only means of
accommodation open to TWA were to compel an unwilling employee to
replace Hardison; to pay premium wages to a voluntary substitute;
or to employ one less person during
Page 432 U. S. 92
respondent's Sabbath shift. [
Footnote 2/5] Based on this assumption, the Court
seemingly finds that each alternative would have involved undue
hardship not only because Hardison would have been given a special
privilege, but also because either another employee would have been
deprived of rights under the collective bargaining agreement,
ante at
432 U. S. 80-81,
or because "more than a
de minimis cost,"
ante at
432 U. S. 84,
would have been imposed on TWA. But the Court's myopic view of the
available options is not supported by either the District Court's
findings or the evidence adduced at trial. Thus, the Court's
conclusion cannot withstand analysis, even assuming that its
rejection of the alternatives it does discuss is justifiable.
[
Footnote 2/6]
Page 432 U. S. 93
To begin with; the record simply does not support the Court's
assertion, made without accompanying citations, that "[t]here were
no volunteers to relieve Hardison on Saturdays,"
ante at
432 U. S. 81.
Everett Kussman, the manager of the department in which respondent
worked, testified that he had made no effort to find volunteers,
App 136, [
Footnote 2/7] and the
union stipulated that its steward had not done so either,
id. at 158. [
Footnote 2/8]
Thus, contrary to the Court's assumption, there may have been one
or more employees who, for reasons of either sympathy or personal
convenience, willingly would have substituted
Page 432 U. S. 94
for respondent on Saturdays until respondent could either regain
the non-Saturday shift he had held for the three preceding months
[
Footnote 2/9] or transfer back to
his old department, where he had sufficient seniority to avoid
Saturday work. Alternatively, there may have been an employee who
preferred respondent's Thursday-Monday daytime shift to his own; in
fact, respondent testified that he had informed Kussman and the
union steward that the clerk on the Sunday-Thursday night shift
(the "graveyard" shift) was dissatisfied with his hours.
Id. at 70. Thus, respondent's religious observance might
have been accommodated by a simple trade of days or shifts without
necessarily depriving any employee of his or her contractual rights
[
Footnote 2/10] and without
Page 432 U. S. 95
imposing significant costs on TWA. Of course, it is also
possible that no trade -- or none consistent with the seniority
system -- could have been arranged. But the burden under the EEOC
regulation is on TWA to establish that a reasonable accommodation
was not possible. 29 CFR § 1605.1(c) (1976). Because it failed
either to explore the possibility of a voluntary trade or to assure
that its delegate, the union steward, did so, TWA was unable to
meet its burden.
Nor was a voluntary trade the only option open to TWA that the
Court ignores; to the contrary, at least two other options are
apparent from the record. First, TWA could have paid overtime to a
voluntary replacement for respondent -- assuming that someone would
have been willing to work Saturdays for premium pay -- and passed
on the cost to respondent. In fact, one accommodation Hardison
suggested would have done just that by requiring Hardison to work
overtime when needed at regular pay. Under this plan, the total
overtime cost to the employer -- and the total number of overtime
hours available for other employees -- would not have reflected
Hardison's Sabbath absences. Alternatively, TWA could have
transferred respondent back to his previous department where he had
accumulated substantial seniority, as respondent also suggested.
[
Footnote 2/11] Admittedly, both
options would have violated the collective bargaining agreement;
the former because the agreement required that employees working
over 40 hours per week receive premium pay, and the latter because
the agreement prohibited employees from transferring
Page 432 U. S. 96
departments more than once every six months. But neither
accommodation would have deprived any other employee of rights
under the contract or violated the seniority system in any way.
[
Footnote 2/12] Plainly an
employer cannot avoid his duty to accommodate by signing a contract
that precludes all reasonable accommodations; even the Court
appears to concede as much,
ante at
432 U. S. 79.
Thus, I do not believe it can be even seriously argued that TWA
would have suffered "undue hardship" to its business had it
required respondent to pay the extra costs of his replacement, or
had it transferred respondent to his former department. [
Footnote 2/13]
What makes today's decision most tragic, however, is not that
respondent Hardison has been needlessly deprived of his livelihood
simply because he chose to follow the dictates of his conscience.
Nor is the tragedy exhausted by the impact it will have on
thousands of Americans like Hardison who could be forced to live on
welfare as the price they must pay for
Page 432 U. S. 97
worshiping their God. [
Footnote
2/14] The ultimate tragedy is that despite Congress' best
efforts, one of this Nation's pillars of strength -- our
hospitality to religious diversity -- has been seriously eroded.
All Americans will be a little poorer until today's decision is
erased.
I respectfully dissent.
[
Footnote 2/1]
The Court's statement that in promulgating the second
guidelines
"[t]he EEOC . . . did not purport to change the view expressed
in its 1966 guidelines that work schedules generally applicable to
all employees may not be unreasonable,"
ante at
432 U. S. 72 n.
7, is incomprehensible. The preface to the later guidelines, 32
Fed.Reg. 10298 (1967), states that the
"Commission hereby amends § 1605.1, Guidelines on
Discrimination Because of Religion. . . . Section 1605.1 as amended
shall read as follows. . . ."
Thus the later guidelines expressly repealed the earlier
guidelines. Moreover, the example of "undue hardship" given in the
new guidelines and quoted in text makes clear that the Commission
believed, contrary to its earlier view, that in certain instances
employers would be required to excuse employees from work for
religious observances.
In its decisions subsequent to the formulation of the
guidelines, the Commission has consistently held that employers
must accommodate Sabbath observances where substitute employees are
available.
Compare CCH EEOC Decisions (1973)
�� 6060, 6154,
with, e.g., � 6120,
6310, 6367.
[
Footnote 2/2]
Many of the cases are collected in Annot., 22 ALR Fed. 580
(1975). For a perceptive discussion of the issues posed by the
cases,
see Note, Accommodation of an Employee's Religious
Practices Under Title VII, 1976 U.Ill.L.Forum 867.
[
Footnote 2/3]
Because of the view I take of the facts,
see
432 U. S.
infra I find it unnecessary to decide how much cost an
employer must bear before he incurs "undue hardship." I also leave
for another day the merits of any constitutional objections that
could be raised if the law were construed to require employers (or
employees) to assume significant costs in accommodating.
[
Footnote 2/4]
The exemption here, like those we have upheld, can be claimed by
any religious practitioner, a term that the EEOC has sensibly
defined to include atheists,
e.g., CCH EEOC Decisions
(1973) � 6316,
see also Young v. Southwestern Savings
& Loan Assn., 509 F.2d 140 (CA5 1975), and persons not
belonging to any organized sect but who hold
"'[a] sincere and meaningful belief which occupies in the life
of its possessor a place parallel to that filled by the God of
those admittedly qualifying for the exemption,'"
CCH Employment Practices 6500, quoting
United States v.
Seeger, 380 U. S. 163,
380 U. S. 176
(1965). The purpose and primary effect of requiring such exemptions
is the wholly secular one of securing equal economic opportunity to
members of minority religions.
Cf., e.g., Lemon v.
Kurtzman, 403 U. S. 602
(1971). And the mere fact that the law sometimes requires special
treatment of religious practitioners does not present the dangers
of "sponsorship, financial support, and active involvement of the
sovereign in religious activity," against which the Establishment
Clause is principally aimed,
Walz v. Tax Comm'n,
397 U. S. 664,
397 U. S. 668
(1970).
[
Footnote 2/5]
It is true that these are the only options the Court of Appeals
discussed. But that court found that TWA could have adopted these
options without undue hardship; once that conclusion is rejected,
it is incumbent on this Court to decide whether any other
alternatives were available that would not have involved such
hardship.
[
Footnote 2/6]
I entertain grave doubts on both factual and legal grounds about
the validity of the Court's rejection of the options it considers.
As a matter of fact, I do not believe the record supports the
Court's suggestion that the costs to TWA of either paying overtime
or not replacing respondent would have been more than
de
minimis. While the District Court did state, as the Court
notes,
ante at
432 U. S. 84 n.
15, that both alternatives "would have created an undue burden on
the conduct of TWA's business," 375 F. Supp. at 891, the court did
not explain its understanding of the phrase "undue burden," and may
have believed that such a burden exists whenever any cost is
incurred by the employer, no matter how slight. Thus, the District
Court's assertion falls far short of a factual "finding" that the
costs of these accommodations would be more than
de
minimis. Moreover, the record is devoid of any evidence
documenting the extent of the "efficiency loss" TWA would have
incurred had it used a supervisor or an already scheduled employee
to do respondent's work, and while the stipulations make clear what
overtime would have cost, the price is far from staggering: $150
for three months, at which time respondent would have been eligible
to transfer back to his previous department. The Court's suggestion
that the cost of accommodation must be evaluated in light of the
"likelihood that . . . TWA may have many employees whose religious
observances . . . prohibit them from working on Saturdays or
Sundays,"
anteat
432 U. S. 84 n.
15, is not only contrary to the record, which indicates that only
one other case involving a conflict between work schedules and
Sabbath observance had arisen at TWA since 1945, Tr. 312-314, but
also irrelevant, since the real question is not whether such
employees exist, but whether they could be accommodated without
significant expense. Indeed, to the extent that TWA employed Sunday
as well as Saturday Sabbatarians, the likelihood of accommodation
being costly would diminish, since trades would be more
feasible.
As a matter of law, I seriously question whether simple English
usage permits "undue hardship" to be interpreted to mean "more than
de minimis cost," especially when the examples the
guidelines give of possible undue hardship is the absence of a
qualified substitute,
supra at
432 U. S. 85-86.
I therefore believe that in the appropriate case we would be
compelled to confront the constitutionality of requiring employers
to bear more than
de minimis costs. The issue need not be
faced here, however, since an almost cost-free accommodation was
possible.
[
Footnote 2/7]
Wilbur Stone, Director of Industrial Relations, Technical
Service, at TWA confirmed Kussman's testimony. App. 157-158. In its
Response to Plaintiff's Suggested Findings of Fact, TWA conceded
that it "did not attempt to find a replacement for plaintiff." App.
in No. 74-1424 (CA6), p. 191, � 3(1).
[
Footnote 2/8]
The Court relies,
ante at
432 U. S. 78, on
the District Court's conclusory assertion that "[a]ny shift or
change was impossible within the seniority framework." 375 F. Supp.
at 889. But the District Court also found that "TWA did not take
part in the search for employees willing to swap shifts . . . , and
it was admitted at trial that the Union made no real effort."
Id. at 888. Thus, the District Court's statement
concerning the impact of "the seniority framework" lends no support
to the Court's assertion that there were no volunteers.
See
also 432 U.S.
63fn2/10|>n. 10,
infra.
[
Footnote 2/9]
Respondent lost the non-Sabbath shift when an employee junior to
him went on vacation. The vacation was to last only two weeks,
however, and the record does not explain why respondent did not
regain his shift at the end of that time.
[
Footnote 2/10]
If, as appears likely, no one senior to the substitute employee
desired respondent's Sabbath assignment or his Thursday-Monday
shift, then the substitute could have transferred to respondent's
position without depriving anyone of his or her seniority
expectations. Similarly, if, as also appears probable, no one
senior to respondent desired the substitute's spot, respondent
could have assumed it. Such a trade would not have deprived any
employee of seniority expectations. The trade apparently still
would have violated the collective bargaining agreement, however,
since the agreement authorized transfers only to vacant jobs. This
is undoubtedly what the District Court meant when it found that
"the seniority framework" precluded shift changes.
See
432 U.S.
63fn2/8|>n. 8,
supra. Indeed, the first time in the
District Court's opinion that such a finding appears, it is
preceded by the finding that "there were no jobs open for bid." 375
F.Supp. t 884.
Even if a trade could not have been arranged without disrupting
seniority expectations, TWA could have requested the Union Relief
Committee to approve an exemption. The record reveals that the
Committee's function was to ameliorate the rigidity of the system,
App. 130, and that, on at least one occasion, it had approved a
permanent transfer apparently outside the seniority system,
id. at 144.
[
Footnote 2/11]
The Court states,
ante at
432 U. S. 83 n.
14, that, because of TWA's departmental seniority system, such a
transfer "would not have solved Hardison's problems." But
respondent testified without contradiction that, had he returned to
his previous department, he would have regained his seniority in
that department, and thereby could have avoided work on his
Sabbath. App. 771. According to respondent, the only objection that
was raised to this solution was that it violated the rule
prohibiting transfers twice within six months.
Ibid.
[
Footnote 2/12]
The accommodations would have disadvantaged respondent to some
extent, but since he suggested both options I do not consider
whether an employer would satisfy his duty to accommodate by
offering these choices to an unwilling employee.
Cf. Draper v.
United States Pipe & Foundry Co., 527 F.2d 515 (CA6 1975)
(employer does not discharge his duty to accommodate by offering to
transfer an electrician to an unskilled position).
[
Footnote 2/13]
Of course, the accommodations discussed in the text would have
imposed some administrative inconvenience on TWA. Petitioners do
not seriously argue, however, that this consequence of
accommodation makes the statute violative of the Establishment
Clause. Were such an argument to be made, our prior decision
upholding exemptions from state-created duties,
see supra
at
432 U. S. 90,
would provide a complete answer, since the exemptions we have
sustained have placed not inconsiderable burdens on private
parties. For example, the effect of excusing conscientious
objectors from military conscription is to require a nonobjector to
serve instead, yet we have repeatedly upheld this exemption.
E.g., Selective Draft Law Cases, 245 U.
S. 366,
245 U. S.
389-390 (1918).
See also Gallagher v. Crown Kosher
Market, 366 U. S. 617,
366 U. S. 627
(1961) (upholding law prohibiting private citizens from engaging in
specified activities within a fixed distance from places of public
worship).
[
Footnote 2/14]
Ironically, the fiscal costs to society of today's decision may
exceed the costs that would accrue if employers were required to
make all accommodations without regard to hardship, since it is
clear that persons on welfare cannot be denied benefits because
they refuse to take jobs that would prevent them from observing
religious holy days,
see Sherbert v. Verner, 374 U.
S. 398 (1963).