While Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 makes it
unlawful for an employer to discriminate in his employment
practices on the basis of sex, the last sentence of § 703(h)
of Title VII (Bennett Amendment) provides that it shall not be an
unlawful employment practice for any employer to differentiate upon
the basis of sex in determining the amount of its employees' wages
if such differentiation is "authorized" by the Equal Pay Act of
1963. The latter Act, 29 U.S.C. § 206(d), prohibits employers
from discriminating on the basis of sex by paying lower wages to
employees of one sex than to employees of the other for performing
equal work,
"except where such payment is made pursuant to (i) a seniority
system; (ii) a merit system; (iii) a system which measures earnings
by quantity or quality of production; or (iv) a differential based
on any other factor other than sex."
Respondents, women who were employed as guards in the female
section of petitioner county's jail until this section was closed,
filed suit under Title VII for backpay and other relief, alleging,
inter alia, that they had been paid lower wages than male
guards in the male section of the jail and that part of this
differential was attributable to intentional sex discrimination,
since the county set the pay scale for female guards, but not for
male guards, at a level lower than that warranted by its own survey
of outside markets and the worth of the jobs. The District Court
rejected this claim, ruling as a matter of law that a sex-based
wage discrimination claim cannot be brought under Title VII unless
it would satisfy the equal work standard of the Equal Pay Act. The
Court of Appeals reversed.
Held: The Bennett Amendment does not restrict Title
VII's prohibition of sex-based wage discrimination to claims for
equal pay for "equal work." Rather, claims for sex-based wage
discrimination can also be brought under Title VII even though no
member of the opposite sex holds an equal but higher paying job,
provided that the challenged wage rate is not exempted under the
Equal Pay Act's affirmative defenses as to wage differentials
attributable to seniority, merit, quantity or quality of
production, or any other factor other than sex. Pp.
452 U. S.
167-181.
Page 452 U. S. 162
(a) The language of the Bennett Amendment -- barring sex-based
wage discrimination claims under Title VII where the pay
differential is "authorized" by the Equal Pay Act -- suggests an
intention to incorporate into Title VII only the affirmative
defenses of the Equal Pay Act, not its prohibitory language
requiring equal pay for equal work, which language does not
"authorize" anything at all. Nor does this construction of the
Amendment render it superfluous. Although the first three
affirmative defenses are redundant of provisions elsewhere in
§ 703(h) of Title VII, the Bennett Amendment guarantees a
consistent interpretation of like provisions in both statutes. More
importantly, incorporation of the fourth affirmative defense could
have significant consequences for Title VII litigation. Pp.
452 U. S.
168-171.
(b) The Bennett Amendment's legislative background is fully
consistent with this interpretation, and does not support an
alternative ruling. Pp.
452 U. S.
171-176.
(c) Although some of the earlier interpretations of the Bennett
Amendment by the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission may have
supported the view that no claim of sex discrimination in
compensation may be brought under Title VII except where the Equal
Pay Act's "equal work" standard is met, other Commission
interpretations frequently adopted the opposite position. And the
Commission, in its capacity as
amicus curiae, now supports
respondents' position. Pp.
452 U. S. 177-178.
(d) Interpretation of the Bennett Amendment as incorporating
only the affirmative defenses of the Equal Pay Act draws additional
support from the remedial purposes of the statutes, and
interpretations of Title VII that deprive victims of discrimination
of a remedy, without clear congressional mandate, must be avoided.
Pp.
452 U. S.
178-180.
(e) The contention that respondents' interpretation of the
Bennett Amendment places the pay structure of virtually every
employer and the entire economy at risk and subject to scrutiny by
the federal courts is inapplicable here. Respondents contend that
the county evaluated the worth of their jobs and determined that
they should be paid approximately 95% as much as the male officers;
that it paid them only about 70% as much, while paying the male
officers the full evaluated worth of their jobs; and that the
failure of the county to pay respondents the full evaluated worth
of their jobs can be proved to be attributable to intentional sex
discrimination. Thus, the suit does not require a court to make its
own subjective assessment of the value of the jobs, or to attempt
by statistical technique or other method to quantify the effect of
sex discrimination on the wage rates. Pp.
452 U. S.
180-181.
602 F.2d 882 and 623 F.2d 1303, affirmed.
Page 452 U. S. 163
BRENNAN, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which WHITE,
MARSHALL, BLACKMUN, and STEVENS, JJ., joined. REHNQUIST, J., filed
a dissenting opinion, in which BURGER, C.J., and, STEWART and
POWELL, JJ., joined,
post, p.
452 U. S.
181.
JUSTICE BRENNAN delivered the opinion of the Court.
The question presented is whether § 703(h) of Title VII of
the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 78 Stat. 257, 42 U.S.C. §
2000e-2(h), restricts Title VII's prohibition of sex-based wage
discrimination to claims of equal pay for equal work.
I
This case arises over the payment by petitioner County of
Washington, Ore., of substantially lower wages to female
Page 452 U. S. 164
guards in the female section of the county jail than it paid to
male guards in the male section of the jail. [
Footnote 1] Respondents are four women who were
employed to guard female prisoners and to carry out certain other
functions in the jail. [
Footnote
2] In January, 1974, the county eliminated the female section
of the jail, transferred the female prisoners to the jail of a
nearby county, and discharged respondents. 20 FEP Cases 788, 790
(Ore.1976).
Respondents filed suit against petitioners in Federal District
Court under Title VII, 42 U.S.C. § 2000e
et seq.,
seeking backpay and other relief. [
Footnote 3] They alleged that they were paid unequal wages
for work substantially equal to that performed by male guards, and
in the alternative, that part of the pay differential was
attributable to intentional sex discrimination. [
Footnote 4] The latter allegation was based
on a claim
Page 452 U. S. 165
that, because of intentional discrimination, the county set the
pay scale for female guards, but not for male guards, at a level
lower than that warranted by its own survey of outside markets and
the worth of the jobs.
After trial, the District Court found that the male guards
supervised more than 10 times as many prisoners per guard as did
the female guards, and that the females devoted much of their time
to less valuable clerical duties. It therefore held that
respondents' jobs were not substantially equal to those of the male
guards, and that respondents were thus not entitled to equal pay.
20 FEP Cases, at 791. The Court of Appeals affirmed on that issue,
and respondents do not seek review of the ruling.
The District Court also dismissed respondents' claim that the
discrepancy in pay between the male and female guards was
attributable in part to intentional sex discrimination. It held as
a matter of law that a sex-based wage discrimination claim cannot
be brought under Title VII unless it would satisfy the equal work
standard of the Equal Pay Act of 1963, 29 U.S.C. § 206(d).
[
Footnote 5] 20 FEP Cases at
791. The court therefore permitted no additional evidence on this
claim, and made no findings on whether petitioner county's pay
scales for female guards resulted from intentional sex
discrimination.
The Court of Appeals reversed, holding that persons alleging sex
discrimination "are not precluded from suing under Title VII to
protest . . . discriminatory compensation practices" merely because
their jobs were not equal to higher paying jobs held by members of
the opposite sex. 602 F.2d 882, 891 (CA9 1979), supplemental
opinion on denial of rehearing, 623 F.2d 1303, 1313, 1317 (1980).
The court remanded to the District Court with instructions to take
evidence on respondents' claim that part of the difference between
their rate of pay and that of the male guards is attributable to
sex
Page 452 U. S. 166
discrimination. We granted certiorari 449 U.S. 950 (1980), and
now affirm.
We emphasize at the outset the narrowness of the question before
us in this case. Respondents' claim is not based on the
controversial concept of "comparable worth," [
Footnote 6] under which plaintiffs might claim
increased compensation on the basis of a comparison of the
intrinsic worth or difficulty of their job with that of other jobs
in the same organization or community. [
Footnote 7] Rather, respondents seek to prove, by direct
evidence, that their wages were depressed because of intentional
sex discrimination, consisting of setting the wage scale for female
guards, but not for male guards, at a level lower than its own
survey of outside markets and the worth of the jobs warranted. The
narrow question in this case is whether such a claim is precluded
by the last sentence of § 703(h) of Title VII, called the
"Bennett Amendment." [
Footnote
8]
Page 452 U. S. 167
II
Title VII makes it an unlawful employment practice for an
employer
"to discriminate against any individual with respect to his
compensation, terms, conditions, or privileges of employment,
because of such individual's . . . sex. . . ."
42 U.S.C. § 2000e-2(a). The Bennett Amendment to Title VII,
however, provides:
"It shall not be an unlawful employment practice under this
subchapter for any employer to differentiate upon the basis of sex
in determining the amount of the wages or compensation paid or to
be paid to employees of such employer if such differentiation is
authorized by the provisions of section 206(d) of title 29."
42 U.S.C. § 2000e-2(h). To discover what practices are
exempted from Title VII's prohibitions by the Bennett Amendment, we
must turn to § 206(d) -- the Equal Pay Act -- which provides
in relevant part:
"No employer having employees subject to any provisions of this
section shall discriminate, within any establishment in which such
employees are employed, between employees on the basis of sex by
paying wages to employees in such establishment at a rate less than
the rate at which he pays wages to employees of the opposite sex in
such establishment for equal work on jobs the performance of which
requires equal skill, effort, and responsibility, and which are
performed under similar working conditions, except where such
payment is made pursuant to (i) a seniority system; (ii) a merit
system; (iii) a system which measures earnings by quantity or
quality of production; or (iv) a differential based on any other
factor other than sex."
77 Stat. 56, 29 U.S.C. § 206(d)(1). On its face, the Equal
Pay Act contains three restrictions pertinent to this case. First,
its coverage is limited to those
Page 452 U. S. 168
employers subject to the Fair Labor Standards Act. S.Rep. No.
176, 88th Cong., 1st Sess., 2 (1963). Thus, the Act does not apply,
for example, to certain businesses engaged in retail sales,
fishing, agriculture, and newspaper publishing.
See 29
U.S.C. §§ 203(s), 213(a) (1976 ed. and Supp. III).
Second, the Act is restricted to cases involving
"equal work on jobs the performance of which requires equal
skill, effort, and responsibility, and which are performed under
similar working conditions."
29 U.S.C. § 206(d)(1). Third, the Act's four affirmative
defenses exempt any wage differentials attributable to seniority,
merit, quantity or quality of production, or "any other factor
other than sex."
Ibid.
Petitioners argue that the purpose of the Bennett Amendment was
to restrict Title VII sex-based wage discrimination claims to those
that could also be brought under the Equal Pay Act, and thus that
claims not arising from "equal work" are precluded. Respondents, in
contrast, argue that the Bennett Amendment was designed merely to
incorporate the four affirmative defenses of the Equal Pay Act into
Title VII for sex-based wage discrimination claims. Respondents
thus contend that claims for sex-based wage discrimination can be
brought under Title VII even though no member of the opposite sex
holds an equal but higher paying job, provided that the challenged
wage rate is not based on seniority, merit, quantity or quality of
production, or "any other factor other than sex." The Court of
Appeals found respondents' interpretation the "more persuasive."
623 F.2d at 1311. While recognizing that the language and
legislative history of the provision are not unambiguous, we
conclude that the Court of Appeals was correct.
A
The language of the Bennett Amendment suggests an intention to
incorporate only the affirmative defenses of the Equal Pay Act into
Title VII. The Amendment bars sex-based wage discrimination claims
under Title VII where the
Page 452 U. S. 169
pay differential is "authorized" by the Equal Pay Act. Although
the word "authorize" sometimes means simply "to permit," it
ordinarily denotes affirmative enabling action. Black's Law
Dictionary 122 (5th ed.1979) defines "authorize" as "[t]o empower;
to give a right or authority to act." [
Footnote 9]
Cf. 18 U.S.C. § 1905
(prohibiting the release by federal employees of certain
information "to any extent not authorized by law"); 28 U.S.C.
§ 1343 (1976 ed., Supp. III) (granting district courts
jurisdiction over "any civil action authorized by law"). The
question, then, is what wage practices have been affirmatively
authorized by the Equal Pay Act.
The Equal Pay Act is divided into two parts: a definition of the
violation, followed by four affirmative defenses. The first part
can hardly be said to "authorize" anything at all: it is purely
prohibitory. The second part, however, in essence "authorizes"
employers to differentiate in pay on the basis of seniority, merit,
quantity or quality of production, or any other factor other than
sex, even though such differentiation might otherwise violate the
Act. It is to these provisions, therefore, that the Bennett
Amendment must refer.
Petitioners argue that this construction of the Bennett
Amendment would render it superfluous.
See United States v.
Mensche, 348 U. S. 528,
348 U. S.
538-539 (1955). Petitioners claim that the first three
affirmative defenses are simply redundant of the provisions
elsewhere in § 703(h) of Title VII that already exempt bona
fide seniority and merit systems and systems measuring earnings by
quantity or quality of production, [
Footnote 10] and that the fourth defense -- "any
other
Page 452 U. S. 170
factor than sex" -- is implicit in Title VII's general
prohibition of sex-based discrimination.
We cannot agree. The Bennett Amendment was offered a "technical
amendment" designed to resolve any potential conflicts between
Title VII and the Equal Pay Act.
See infra at
452 U. S. 173.
Thus, with respect to the first three defenses, the Bennett
Amendment has the effect of guaranteeing that courts and
administrative agencies adopt a consistent interpretation of like
provisions in both statutes. Otherwise, they might develop
inconsistent bodies of case law interpreting two sets of nearly
identical language.
More importantly, incorporation of the fourth affirmative
defense could have significant consequences for Title VII
litigation. Title VII's prohibition of discriminatory employment
practices was intended to be broadly inclusive, proscribing "not
only overt discrimination, but also practices that are fair in
form, but discriminatory in operation."
Griggs v. Duke Power
Co., 401 U. S. 424,
401 U. S. 431
(1971). The structure of Title VII litigation, including
presumptions, burdens of proof, and defenses, has been designed to
reflect this approach. The fourth affirmative defense of the Equal
Pay Act, however, was designed differently, to confine the
application of the Act to wage differentials attributable to ex
discrimination. H.R.Rep. No. 309, 88th Cong., 1st Sess., 3 (1963).
Equal Pay Act litigation, therefore, has been structured to permit
employers to defend against charges of discrimination where their
pay differentials are based on a bona fide use of "other factors
other than sex." [
Footnote
11] Under the Equal
Page 452 U. S. 171
Pay Act, the courts and administrative agencies are not
permitted to "substitute their judgment for the judgment of the
employer . . . who [has] established and applied a bona fide job
rating system," so long as it does not discriminate on the basis of
sex. 109 Cong.Rec. 929 (1963) (statement of Rep. Goodell, principal
exponent of the Act). Although we do not decide in this case how
sex-based wage discrimination litigation under Title VII should be
structured to accommodate the fourth affirmative defense of the
Equal Pay Act,
see n
8,
supra, we consider it clear that the Bennett Amendment,
under this interpretation, is not rendered superfluous.
We therefore conclude that only differentials attributable to
the four affirmative defenses of the Equal Pay Act are "authorized"
by that Act within the meaning of § 703(h) of Title VII.
B
The legislative background of the Bennett Amendment is fully
consistent with this interpretation.
Title VII was the second bill relating to employment
discrimination to be enacted by the 88th Congress. Earlier, the
same Congress passed the Equal Pay Act "to remedy what was
perceived to be a serious and endemic problem of [sex-based]
employment discrimination in private industry,"
Corning Glass
Works v. Brennan, 417 U. S. 188,
417 U. S. 195
(1974). Any possible inconsistency between the Equal Pay
Page 452 U. S. 172
Act and Title VII did not surface until late in the debate over
Title VII in the House of Representatives, because, until then,
Title VII extended only to discrimination based on race, color
religion, or national origin,
see H.R.Rep. No. 914, 88th
Cong., 1st Sess., 10 (1963), while the Equal Pay Act applied only
to sex discrimination. Just two days before voting on Title VII,
the House of Representatives amended the bill to proscribe sex
discrimination, but did not discuss the implications of the
overlapping jurisdiction of Title VII, as amended, and the Equal
Pay Act.
See 110 Cong.Rec. 2577-2584 (1964). The Senate
took up consideration of the House version of the Civil Rights bill
without reference to any committee. Thus, neither House of Congress
had the opportunity to undertake formal analysis of the relation
between the two statutes. [
Footnote 12]
Page 452 U. S. 173
Several Senators expressed concern that insufficient attention
had been paid to possible inconsistencies between the statutes.
See id. at 7217 (statement of Sen. Clark);
id. at
13647 (statement of Sen. Bennett). In an attempt to rectify the
problem, Senator Bennett proposed his amendment.
Id. at
13310. The Senate leadership approved the proposal as a "technical
amendment" to the Civil Rights bill, and it was taken up on the
floor on June 12, 1964, after cloture had been invoked. The
Amendment engendered no controversy, and passed without recorded
vote. The entire discussion comprised a few short statements:
"Mr. BENNETT. Mr. President, after many years of yearning by
members of the fair sex in this country, and after very careful
study by the appropriate committees of Congress, last year Congress
passed the so-called Equal Pay Act, which became effective only
yesterday."
"By this time, programs have been established for the effective
administration of this act. Now, when the civil rights bill is
under consideration, in which the word 'sex' has been inserted in
many places, I do not believe sufficient attention may have been
paid to possible conflicts between the wholesale insertion of the
word 'sex' in the bill and in the Equal Pay Act."
"The purpose of my amendment is to provide that, in the event of
conflicts, the provisions of the Equal Pay Act shall not be
nullified."
"I understand that the leadership in charge of the bill have
agreed to the amendment as a proper technical correction of the
bill. If they will confirm that understand [
sic], I shall
ask that the amendment be voted on without asking for the yeas and
nays. "
Page 452 U. S. 174
"Mr. HUMPHREY. The amendment of the Senator from Utah is
helpful. I believe it is needed. I thank him for his
thoughtfulness. The amendment is fully acceptable."
"Mr. DIRKSEN. Mr. President, I yield myself 1 minute."
"We were aware of the conflict that might develop, because the
Equal Pay Act was an amendment to the Fair Labor Standards Act. The
Fair Labor Standards Act carries out certain exceptions."
"All that the pending amendment does is recognize those
exceptions, that are carried in the basic act."
"Therefore, this amendment is necessary, in the interest of
clarification."
Id. at 13647.
As this discussion shows, Senator Bennett proposed the Amendment
because of a general concern that insufficient attention had been
paid to the relation between the Equal Pay Act and Title VII,
rather than because of a
specific potential conflict
between the statutes. [
Footnote
13] His explanation that the Amendment assured that the
provisions of the Equal Pay Act "shall not be nullified" in the
event of conflict with Title VII may be read as referring to the
affirmative defenses of the Act. Indeed, his emphasis on the
"technical" nature of the Amendment and his concern for not
disrupting the "effective
Page 452 U. S. 175
administration" of the Equal Pay Act are more compatible with an
interpretation of the Amendment as incorporating the Act's
affirmative defenses, as administratively interpreted, than as
engrafting all the restrictive features of the Equal Pay Act onto
Title VII. [
Footnote 14]
Senator Dirksen's comment that all that the Bennett Amendment
does is to "recognize" the exceptions carried in the Fair Labor
Standards Act, suggests that the Bennett Amendment was necessary
because of the exceptions to coverage in the Fair Labor Standards
Act, which made the Equal Pay Act applicable to a narrower class of
employers than was Title VII.
See supra at
452 U. S.
167-168. The Bennett Amendment clarified that the
standards of the Equal Pay Act would govern even those wage
discrimination cases where only Title VII would otherwise apply. So
understood, Senator Dirksen's remarks are not inconsistent with our
interpretation. [
Footnote
15]
Page 452 U. S. 176
Although there was no debate on the Bennett Amendment in the
House of Representatives when the Senate version of the Act
returned for final approval, Representative Celler explained each
of the Senate's amendments immediately prior to the vote. He stated
that the Bennett Amendment "[p]rovides that compliance with the
Fair Labor Standards Act as amended satisfies the requirement of
the title barring discrimination because of sex. . . ." 110
Cong.Rec. 15896 (1964). If taken literally, this explanation would
restrict Title VII's coverage of sex discrimination more severely
than even petitioners suggest: not only would it confine
wage
discrimination claims to those actionable under the Equal Pay
Act, but it would block
all other sex discrimination
claims as well. We can only conclude that Representative Celler's
explanation was not intended to be precise, and does not provide a
solution to the present problem. [
Footnote 16]
Thus, although the few references by Members of Congress to the
Bennett Amendment do not explicitly confirm that its purpose was to
incorporate into Title VII the four affirmative defenses of the
Equal Pay Act in sex-based wage discrimination cases, they are
broadly consistent with such a reading, and do not support an
alternative reading.
Page 452 U. S. 177
C
The interpretations of the Bennett Amendment by the agency
entrusted with administration of Title VII -- the Equal Employment
Opportunity Commission -- do not provide much guidance in this
case.
Cf. Griggs v. Duke Power Co., 401 U.S. at
433 U. S.
433-434. The Commission's 1965 Guidelines on
Discrimination Because of Sex stated that
"the standards of 'equal pay for equal work' set forth in the
Equal Pay Act for determining what is unlawful discrimination in
compensation are applicable to Title VII."
29 CFR § 1604.7(a) (1966). In 1972, the EEOC deleted this
portion of the Guideline,
see 37 Fed.Reg. 6837 (1972).
Although the original Guideline may be read to support petitioners'
argument that no claim of sex discrimination in compensation may be
brought under Title VII except where the Equal Pay Act's "equal
work" standard is met, EEOC practice under this Guideline was
considerably less than steadfast.
The restrictive interpretation suggested by the 1965 Guideline
was followed in several opinion letters in the following years.
[
Footnote 17] During the
same period, however, EEOC decisions frequently adopted the
opposite position. For example, a reasonable cause determination
issued by the Commission in 1968 stated that
"the existence of separate and different wage rate schedules for
male employees on the one hand, and female employees, on the other,
doing reasonably comparable work, establishes discriminatory wage
rates based solely on the sex of the workers."
Harrington v. Picadilly Cafeteria, Case No. AU 7-3-173
(Apr. 25, 1968). [
Footnote
18]
Page 452 U. S. 178
The current Guideline does not purport to explain whether the
equal work standard of the Equal Pay Act has any application to
Title VII,
see 29 CFR § 1604.8 (1980), but the EEOC
now supports respondents' position in its capacity as
amicus
curiae. In light of this history, we feel no hesitation in
adopting what seems to us the most persuasive interpretation of the
Amendment in lieu of that once espoused, but not consistently
followed, by the Commission.
D
Our interpretation of the Bennett Amendment draws additional
support from the remedial purposes of Title VII and the Equal Pay
Act. Section 703(a) of Title VII makes it unlawful for an
employer
"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 sex. 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-2(a)
(emphasis added). As Congress itself has indicated, a "broad
approach" to the definition of equal employment opportunity is
essential to overcoming and undoing the effect of discrimination.
S.Rep. No. 867, 88th Cong., 2d Sess., 12 (1964). We must therefore
avoid interpretations of Title VII that deprive victims of
discrimination of a remedy without clear congressional mandate.
Under petitioners' reading of the Bennett Amendment, only those
sex-based wage discrimination claims that satisfy the "equal work"
standard of the Equal Pay Act could be brought under Title VII. In
practical terms, this means that a woman who is discriminatorily
underpaid could obtain no relief -- no matter how egregious the
discrimination might be -- unless her employer also employed a man
in an equal job in the same establishment, at a higher rate of pay.
Thus, if
Page 452 U. S. 179
an employer hired a woman for a unique position in the company
and then admitted that her salary would have been higher had she
been male, the woman would be unable to obtain legal redress under
petitioners' interpretation. Similarly, if an employer used a
transparently sex-biased system for wage determination, women
holding jobs not equal to those held by men would be denied the
right to prove that the system is a pretext for discrimination.
Moreover, to cite an example arising from a recent case,
Los
Angeles Dept. of Water & Power v. Manhart, 435 U.
S. 702 (1978), if the employer required its female
workers to pay more into its pension program than male workers were
required to pay, the only women who could bring a Title VII action
under petitioners' interpretation would be those who could
establish that a man performed equal work: a female auditor thus
might have a cause of action, while a female secretary might not.
Congress surely did not intend the Bennett Amendment to insulate
such blatantly discriminatory practices from judicial redress under
Title VII. [
Footnote 19]
Moreover, petitioners' interpretation would have other
far-reaching consequences. Since it rests on the proposition that
any wage differentials not prohibited by the Equal Pay Act are
"authorized" by it, petitioners' interpretation would lead to the
conclusion that discriminatory compensation by employers not
covered by the Fair Labor Standards Act is "authorized" -- since
not prohibited -- by the Equal Pay Act. Thus, it would deny Title
VII protection against sex-based wage discrimination by those
employers not subject to the Fair Labor Standards Act but covered
by Title VII.
See supra at
452 U. S.
167-168. There is no persuasive evidence that
Congress
Page 452 U. S. 180
intended such a result, and the EEOC has rejected it since at
least 1965.
See 29 CFR § 1604.7 (1966). Indeed
petitioners themselves apparently acknowledge hat Congress intended
Title VII's broader coverage to apply to equal pay claims under
Title VII, thus impliedly admitting the fallacy in their own
argument. Brief for Petitioners 48.
Petitioners' reading is thus flatly inconsistent with our past
interpretations of Title VII as
"prohibib[ing] all practices in whatever form which create
inequality in employment opportunity due to discrimination on the
basis of race, religion, sex, or national origin."
Franks v. Bowman Transportation Co., 424 U.
S. 747,
424 U. S. 763
(1976). As we said in
Los Angeles Dept. of Water Power v.
Manhart, supra, at
435 U. S. 707,
n. 13:
"In forbidding employers to discriminate against individuals
because of their sex, Congress intended to strike at the
entire
spectrum of disparate treatment of men and women resulting
from sex stereotypes."
(Emphasis added.) We must therefore reject petitioners'
interpretation of the Bennett Amendment.
III
Petitioners argue strenuously that the approach of the Court of
Appeals places "the pay structure of virtually every employer and
the entire economy . . . at risk and subject to scrutiny by the
federal courts." Brief for Petitioners 99-100. They raise the
specter that
"Title VII plaintiffs could draw any type of comparison
imaginable concerning job duties and pay between any job
predominantly performed by women and any job predominantly
performed by men."
Id. at 101. But whatever the merit of petitioners'
arguments in other contexts, they are inapplicable here, for claims
based on the type of job comparisons petitioners describe are
manifestly different from respondents' claim. Respondents contend
that the County of Washington evaluated the worth of their jobs;
that the county determined that they should be paid approximately
95% as much as the male correctional officers; that it paid them
only about 70% as much, while paying the male
Page 452 U. S. 181
officers the full evaluated worth of their jobs; and that the
failure of the county to pay respondents the full evaluated worth
of their jobs can be proved to be attributable to intentional sex
discrimination. Thus, respondents' suit does not require a court to
make its own subjective assessment of the value of the male and
female guard jobs, or to attempt by statistical technique or other
method to quantify the effect of sex discrimination on the wage
rates. [
Footnote 20]
We do not decide in this case the precise contours of lawsuits
challenging sex discrimination in compensation under Title VII. It
is sufficient to note that respondents' claims of discriminatory
undercompensation are not barred by § 73(h) of Title VII
merely because respondents do not perform work equal to that of
male jail guards. The judgment of the Court of Appeals is
therefore
Affirmed.
[
Footnote 1]
Prior to February 1, 1973, the female guards were paid between
$476 and $606 per month, while the male guards were paid between
$668 and $853. Effective February 1, 1973, the female guards were
paid between $525 and $668, while salaries for male guards ranged
from $701 to $940. 20 FEP Cases 788, 789 (Ore.1976).
[
Footnote 2]
Oregon requires that female inmates be guarded solely by women,
Ore.Rev.Stat. §§ 137.350, 137.360 (1979), and the
District Court opinion indicates that women had not been employed
to guard male prisoners. 20 FEP Cases, at 789, 792, nn. 8, 9. For
purposes of this litigation, respondents concede that gender is a
bona fide occupational qualification for some of the female guard
positions.
See 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-2(e)(1),
Dothard
v. Rawlinson, 433 U. S. 321
(1977).
[
Footnote 3]
Respondents could not sue under the Equal Pay Act because the
Equal Pay Act did not apply to municipal employees until passage of
the Fair Labor Standards Amendments of 1974, 88 Stat. 55, 58-62.
Title VII has applied to such employees since passage of the Equal
Employment Opportunity Act of 1972, § 2(1), 86 Stat. 103.
[
Footnote 4]
Respondents also contended that they were discharged and not
rehired in retaliation for their demands for equal pay. Respondent
Vander Zanden also contended that she was denied medical leave in
retaliation for such demands. The District Court rejected those
contentions, and the Court of Appeals affirmed. Those claims are
not before this Court.
[
Footnote 5]
See infra at
452 U. S.
168.
[
Footnote 6]
The concept of "comparable worth" has been the subject of much
scholarly debate, as to both its elements and its merits as a legal
or economic principle.
See, e.g., E. Livernash, Comparable
Worth: Issues and Alternatives (1980); Blumrosen, Wage
Discrimination, Job Segregation, and Title VII of the Civil Rights
Act of 1964, 12 U.Mich.J.L.Ref. 397 (1979); Nelson, Opton, Wilson,
Wage Discrimination and the "Comparable Worth" Theory in
Perspective, 13 U.Mich.J.L.Ref. 231 (1980). The Equal Employment
Opportunity Commission has conducted hearings on the question,
see BNA Daily Labor Report Nos. 83-85 (Apr. 28-30, 1980),
and has commissioned a study of job evaluation systems,
see D. Treiman, Job Evaluation: An Analytic Review (1979)
(interim report).
[
Footnote 7]
Respondents thus distinguish
Lemons v. City and County of
Denver, 620 F.2d 228 (CA10),
cert. denied, 449 U.S.
888 (1980), on the ground that the plaintiffs, nurses employed by a
public hospital, sought increased compensation on the basis of a
comparison with compensation paid to employees of comparable value
-- other than nurses -- in the community, without direct proof of
intentional discrimination.
[
Footnote 8]
We are not called upon in this case to decide whether
respondents have stated a
prima facie case of sex
discrimination under Title VII,
cf. Christensen v. Iowa,
563 F.2d 353 (CA8 1977), or to lay down standards for the further
conduct of this litigation. The sole issue we decide is whether
respondents' failure to satisfy the equal work standard of the
Equal Pay Act, in itself, precludes their proceeding under Title
VII.
[
Footnote 9]
Similarly, Webster's Third New International Dictionary 147
(1976) states that the word "authorize" "indicates endowing
formally with a power or right to act, usu. with discretionary
privileges." (Examples deleted.)
[
Footnote 10]
Section 703(h), as set forth in 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-2(h),
provides in relevant 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
pursuant to a bona fide
seniority or merit system, or a system which measures earnings by
quantity or quality of production . . . provided that such
differences are not the result of an intention to discriminate
because of . . . sex. . . ."
[
Footnote 11]
The legislative history of the Equal Pay Act was examined by
this Court in
Corning Glass Works v. Brennan, 417 U.
S. 188,
417 U. S.
198-201 (1974). The Court observed that earlier versions
of the Equal Pay bill were amended to define equal work and to add
the fourth affirmative defense because of a concern that bona fide
job evaluation systems used by American businesses would otherwise
be disrupted.
Id. at
410 U. S.
199-201. This concern is evident in the remarks of many
legislators. Representative Griffin, for example, explained that
the fourth affirmative defense is a "broad principle," which "makes
clear and explicitly states that a differential based on any factor
or factors other than sex would not violate this legislation." 109
Cong.Rec. 9203 (1963).
See also id. at 9196 (remarks of
Rep. Frelinghuysen);
id. at 9197-9198 (remarks of Rep.
Griffin);
ibid., (remarks of Rep. Thompson);
id.
at 9198 (remarks of Rep. Goodell);
id. at 9202 (remarks of
Rep. Kelly);
id. at 9209 (remarks of Rep. Goodell),
id. at 9217 (remarks of Reps. Pucinski and Thompson).
[
Footnote 12]
To answer certain objections raised by Senators concerning the
House version of the Civil Rights bill, Senator Clark, principal
Senate spokesman for Title VII, drafted a memorandum, printed in
the Congressional Record. One such objection and answer concerned
the relation between Title VII and the Equal Pay Act:
"
Objection: The sex antidiscrimination provisions of
the bill duplicate the coverage of the Equal Pay Act of 1963. But
more than this, they extend far beyond the scope and coverage of
the Equal Pay Act. They do not include the limitations in that act
with respect to equal work on jobs requiring equal skills in the
same establishments, and thus, cut across different jobs."
"
Answer: The Equal Pay Act is a part of the wage hour
law, with different coverage and with numerous exemptions unlike
title VII. Furthermore, under title VII, jobs can no longer be
classified as to sex, except where there is a rational basis for
discrimination on the ground of bona fide occupational
qualification. The standards in the Equal Pay Act for determining
discrimination as to wages, of course, are applicable to the
comparable situation under title VII."
110 Cong.Rec. 7217 (1964) . This memorandum constitutes the only
formal discussion of the relation between the statutes prior to
consideration of the Bennett Amendment. It need not concern us
here, because it relates to Title VII before it was amended by the
Bennett Amendment. The memorandum obviously has no bearing on the
meaning of the terms of the Bennett Amendment itself.
[
Footnote 13]
The dissent finds it "obvious" that the "principal way" the
Equal Pay Act might have been "nullified" by enactment of Title VII
is that the "equal pay for equal work standard" would not apply
under Title VII.
Post at
452 U. S. 193.
There is, however, no support for this conclusion in the
legislative history: not one Senator or Congressman discussing the
Bennett Amendment during the debates over Title VII so much as
mentioned the "equal pay for equal work" standard. Rather, Senator
Bennett's expressed concern was for preserving the "programs" that
had "been established for the effective administration" of the
Equal Pay Act. 110 Cong.Rec. 13647 (1964). This suggests that the
focus of congressional concern was on administrative interpretation
and enforcement procedures, rather than on the "equal work"
limitation.
[
Footnote 14]
The argument in the dissent that under our interpretation, the
Equal Pay Act would be impliedly repealed and rendered a nullity,
post at
452 U. S. 193,
is mistaken. Not only might the substantive provisions of the Equal
Pay Act's affirmative defenses affect the outcome of some Title VII
sex-based wage discrimination cases,
see supra at
452 U. S.
170-171, but the procedural characteristics of the Equal
Pay Act also remain significant. For example, the statute of
limitations for backpay relief is more generous under the Equal Pay
Act than under Title VII, and the Equal Pay Act, unlike Title VII,
has no requirement of filing administrative complaints and awaiting
administrative conciliation efforts. Given these advantages, many
plaintiffs will prefer to sue under the Equal Pay Act, rather than
Title VII.
See B. Babcock, A. Freedman, E. Norton, &
S. Ross, Sex Discrimination and the Law 507 (1975).
[
Footnote 15]
In an exchange during the debate on Title VII, Senator Randolph
asked Senator Humphrey whether certain differences in treatment in
industrial retirement plans, including earlier retirement options
for women, would be permissible. Senator Humphrey responded: "Yes.
That point was made unmistakably clear earlier today by the
adoption of the Bennett amendment; so there can be no doubt about
it." 110 Cong.Rec. 13663-13664 (1964). Apparently, Senator Humphrey
believed that the discriminatory provisions to which Senator
Randolph referred were authorized by the Equal Pay Act. His answer
does not reveal whether he believed such plans to fall within one
of the affirmative defenses of the Act, or whether they simply did
not violate the Act.
[
Footnote 16]
The parties also direct our attention to several comments by
Members and Committees of Congress made after passage of Title VII.
See 111 Cong.Rec. 13359 (1965) (statement by Senator
Bennett that "compensation on account of sex does not violate title
VII unless it also violates the Equal Pay Act");
id. at
18263 (statement by Senator Clark criticizing Senator Bennett's
attempt to create
post hoc legislative history and adding
his own interpretation); S.Rep. No. 95-331, p. 7 (1977) (stating
that the Bennett Amendment authorizes only those practices within
the four affirmative defenses of the Equal Pay Act).
We are normally hesitant to attach much weight to comments made
after the passage of legislation.
See Teamsters v. United
States, 431 U. S. 324,
431 U. S. 354,
n. 39 (1977). In view of the contradictory nature of these cited
statements, we give them no weight at all.
[
Footnote 17]
See General Counsel's opinion of December 29, 1965,
App. to Brief for Petitioners 7a; General Counsel's opinion of May
4, 1966,
id. at 11a-13a; Commissioner's opinion of July
23, 1966,
id. at 16a, BNA Daily Labor Report No. 171, pp.
A-3 to A-4 (Sept. 1, 1966); Acting General Counsel's Memorandum of
June 6, 1967, App. to Brief for Petitioners 21a-22a .
[
Footnote 18]
See also Dec. No. 6-6-5762, CCH EEOC Decisions (1973)
� 6001, pp. 4008-4009, n. 22 (1968); Dec. No. 71-2629, CCH
EEOC Decisions (1973) � 6300, pp. 4538-4539 (1971).
[
Footnote 19]
The dissent attempts to minimize the significance of the Title
VII remedy in these cases on the ground that the Equal Pay Act
already provides an action for sex-based wage discrimination by
women who hold jobs not
currently held by men .
Post at
452 U. S.
201-202. But the dissent's position would still leave
remediless all victims of discrimination who hold jobs
never held by men.
[
Footnote 20]
See Treiman,
supra, n 6, at 35-36 (interim report to the EEOC); Fisher,
Multiple Regression in Legal Proceedings, 80 Colum.L.Rev. 702
721-725 (1980); Nelson, Opton, & Wilson,
supra,
n 6, at 278-288, Schwab, Job
Evaluation and Pay Setting: Concepts and Practices, in Livernash,
supra, n 6, at 49,
52-70.
JUSTICE REHNQUIST, with whom THE CHIEF JUSTICE, JUSTICE STEWART,
and JUSTICE POWELL join, dissenting.
The Court today holds a plaintiff may state a claim of sex-based
wage discrimination under Title VII without even establishing that
she has performed "equal or substantially equal work" to that of
males, as defined in the Equal Pay Act. Because I believe that the
legislative history of both the Equal Pay Act of 1963 and Title VII
clearly establish that there can be no Title VII claim of sex-based
wage discrimination without proof of "equal work," I dissent.
I
Because the Court never comes to grips with petitioners'
argument, it is necessary to restate it here. Petitioners argue
Page 452 U. S. 182
that Congress in adopting the Equal Pay Act specifically
addressed the problem of sex-based wage discrimination and
determined that there should be a remedy for claims of unequal pay
for equal work, but not for "comparable" work. Petitioners further
observe that nothing in the legislative history of Title VII,
enacted just one year later in 1964, reveals an intent to overrule
that determination. Quite the contrary, petitioners note that the
legislative history of Title VII, including the adoption of the
so-called Bennett Amendment, demonstrates Congress' intent to
require all sex-based wage discrimination claims, whether brought
under the Equal Pay Act or under Title VII, to satisfy the "equal
work" standard. Because respondents have not satisfied the "equal
work" standard, petitioners conclude that they have not stated a
claim under Title VII.
In rejecting that argument, the Court ignores traditional canons
of statutory construction and relevant legislative history.
Although I had thought it well settled that the legislative history
of a statute is a useful guide to the intent of Congress, the Court
today claims that the legislative history "has no bearing on the
meaning of the [Act],"
ante at
452 U. S. 173,
n. 12, "does not provide a solution to the present problem,"
ante at
452 U. S. 176,
and is simply of "no weight."
Ante at
452 U. S. 176,
n. 16. Instead, the Court rests its decision on its unshakable
belief that any other result would be unsound public policy. It
insists that there simply
must be a remedy for wage
discrimination
beyond that provided in the Equal Pay Act.
The Court does not explain
why that must be so, nor does
it explain
what that remedy might be. And, of course, the
Court cannot explain why it, and not Congress, is charged with
determining what is and what is not sound public policy.
The closest the Court can come in giving a reason for its
decision is its belief that interpretations of Title VII which
"deprive victims of discrimination of a remedy, without clear
congressional mandate" must be avoided.
Ante at
452 U. S. 178.
But that analysis turns traditional canons of statutory
construction
Page 452 U. S. 183
on their head. It has long been the rule that, when a
legislature enacts a statute to protect a class of persons, the
burden is on the plaintiff to show statutory coverage, not on the
defendant to show that there is a "clear congressional mandate" for
excluding the plaintiff from coverage. Such a departure
from traditional rules is particularly unwarranted in this case,
where the doctrine of
in pari materia suggests that all
claims of sex-based wage discrimination are governed by the
substantive standards of the previously enacted and more specific
legislation, the Equal Pay Act.
Because the decision does not rest on any reasoned statement of
logic or principle, it provides little guidance to employers or
lower courts as to what types of compensation practices might now
violate Title VII. The Court correctly emphasizes that its decision
is narrow, and indeed one searches the Court's opinion in vain for
a hint as to what pleadings or proof other than that adduced in
this particular case,
see ante at
452 U. S.
180-181, would be sufficient to state a claim of
sex-based wage discrimination under Title VII. To paraphrase
Justice Jackson, the Court today does not, and apparently cannot,
enunciate any legal criteria by which suits under Title VII will be
adjudicated, and it lays "down no rule other than our passing
impression to guide ourselves or our successors."
Bob-Lo
Excursion Co. v. Michigan, 333 U. S. 28,
333 U. S. 45
(1948). All we know is that Title VII provides a remedy when, as
here, plaintiffs seek to show by direct evidence that their
employer
intentionally depressed their wages. And, for
reasons that go largely unexplained, we also know that a Title VII
remedy may not be available to plaintiffs who allege theories
different than that alleged here, such as the so-called "comparable
worth" theory. One has the sense that the decision today will be
treated like a restricted railroad ticket, "good for this day and
train only."
Smith v. Allwright, 321 U.
S. 649,
321 U. S. 669
(1944) (Roberts, J., dissenting).
In the end, however, the flaw with today's decision is not so
much that it is so narrowly written as to be virtually
Page 452 U. S. 184
meaningless, but rather that its legal analysis is wrong. The
Court is obviously more interested in the consequences of its
decision than in discerning the intention of Congress. In reaching
its desired result, the Court conveniently and persistently ignores
relevant legislative history, and instead relies wholly on what it
believes Congress
should have enacted.
II
The Equal Pay Act
The starting point for any discussion of sex-based wage
discrimination claims must be the Equal Pay Act of 1963, enacted as
an amendment to the Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938, 29 U.S.C.
§§ 201-219 (1976 ed., Supp. III). It was there that
Congress, after 18 months of careful and exhaustive study,
specifically addressed the problem of sex-based wage
discrimination. The Equal Pay Act states that employers shall not
discriminate on the basis of sex by paying different wages for jobs
that require equal skill, effort, and responsibility. In adopting
the "equal pay for equal work" formula, Congress carefully
considered and ultimately rejected the "equal pay for comparable
worth" standard advanced by respondents and several
amici.
As the legislative history of the Equal Pay Act amply demonstrates,
Congress realized that the adoption of the comparable worth
doctrine would ignore the economic realities of supply and demand
and would involve both governmental agencies and courts in the
impossible task of ascertaining the worth of comparable work, an
area in which they have little expertise.
The legislative history of the Equal Pay Act begins in 1962 when
Representatives Green and Zelenko introduced two identical bills,
H.R. 8898 and H.R. 10226 respectively, representing the Kennedy
administration's proposal for equal pay legislation. Both bills
stated in pertinent part:
"SEC. 4. No employer . . . shall discriminate . . . between
employees on the basis of sex by paying wages to
Page 452 U. S. 185
any employee at a rate less than the rate at which he pays wages
to any employee of the opposite sex
for work of comparable
character on jobs the performance of which requires comparable
skills, except where such payment is made pursuant to a
seniority or merit increase system which does not discriminate on
the basis of sex."
H.R. 8898, 87th Cong., 1st Sess. (1961); H.R. 10226, 87th Cong.,
2d Sess. (1962) (emphasis supplied). [
Footnote 2/1]
During the extensive hearings on the proposal, the
administration strenuously urged that Congress adopt the
"comparable" language, noting that the comparability of different
jobs could be determined through job evaluation procedures.
Hearings on H.R. 8898, H.R. 10226 before the Select Subcommittee on
Labor of the House Committee on Education and Labor, 87th Cong., 2d
Sess., 16, 27 (1962) (testimony of Secretary of Labor Arthur
Goldberg and Assistant Secretary of Labor Esther Peterson). A bill
containing the comparable work formula, then denominated H.R.
11677, was reported out of the House Committee on Education and
Labor and reached the full House. Once there, Representative St.
George objected to the "comparable work" language of the bill and
offered an amendment which limited equal pay claims to those "for
equal work on jobs, the performance of which requires equal
skills." 108 Cong.Rec. 14767 (1962): As she explained, her purpose
was to limit wage discrimination claims
Page 452 U. S. 186
to the situation where men and women were paid differently for
performing the same job.
"What we want to do in this bill is to make it exactly what it
says. It is called equal pay for equal work in some of the
committee hearings.
There is a great difference between the
word 'comparable' and the word 'equal.'"
"
* * * *"
". . .
The word 'comparable' opens up great vistas. It
gives tremendous latitude to whoever is to be arbitrator in these
disputes."
Ibid. (Emphasis supplied.) Representative Landrum
echoed those remarks. He stressed that the St. George amendment
would prevent
"the trooping around all over the country of employees of the
Labor Department harassing business with their various
interpretations of the term 'comparable' when 'equal' is capable of
the same definition throughout the United States."
Id. at 14768. The administration, represented by
Representatives Zelenko and Green, vigorously urged the House to
reject the St. George amendment. They observed that the "equal
work" standard was narrower than the existing "equal pay for
comparable work" language, and cited correspondence from Secretary
of Labor Goldberg that "comparable is a key word in our proposal."
Id. at 14768-14769. The House, however, rejected that
advice and adopted the St. George amendment. When the Senate
considered the bill, it too rejected the "comparable work" theory
in favor of the "equal work" standard.
Because the Conference Committee failed to report a bill out of
Committee, enactment of equal pay legislation was delayed until
1963. Equal pay legislation, containing the St. George amendment,
was reintroduced at the beginning of the session. The congressional
debate on that legislation leaves no doubt that Congress clearly
rejected the entire notion of "comparable worth." For example,
Representative
Page 452 U. S. 187
Goodell, a cosponsor of the Act, stressed the significance of
the change from "comparable work" to "equal work." [
Footnote 2/2]
"I think it is important that we have clear legislative history
at this point.
Last year, when the House changed the word
'comparable' to 'equal,' the clear intention was to narrow the
whole concept. We went from 'comparable' to 'equal,' meaning
that the jobs involved should be virtually identical, that is, that
they would be very much alike or closely related to each
other."
"We do not expect the Labor Department to go into an
establishment and attempt to rate jobs that are not equal. We do
not want to hear the Department say, 'Well, they amount to the same
thing,' and evaluate them so that they come up to the same skill or
point. We expect this to apply only to jobs that are substantially
identical or equal."
109 Cong.Rec. 9197 (1963) (emphasis supplied). Representative
Frelinghuysen agreed with those remarks.
"[W]e can expect that the administration of the equal pay
concept, while fair and effective, will not be excessive nor
excessively wide-ranging. What we seek to insure, where men and
women are doing the same job under the same working conditions[,]
that they will receive the same pay. It is not intended that either
the Labor Department or individual employees will be equipped with
hunting licenses."
"
* * * *"
". . .
[The EPA] is not intended to compare unrelated jobs,
or jobs that have been historically and normally considered by the
industry to be different."
Id. at 9196 (emphasis supplied). [
Footnote 2/3]
Page 452 U. S. 188
Thus, the legislative history of the Equal Pay Act clearly
reveals that Congress was unwilling to give either the Federal
Government or the courts broad authority to determine comparable
wage rates. Congress recognized that the adoption of such a theory
would ignore economic realities and would result in major
restructuring of the American economy. Instead, Congress concluded
that governmental intervention to equalize wage differentials was
to be undertaken only within one circumstance: when men's and
women's jobs were identical or nearly so, hence unarguably of equal
worth. It defies common sense to believe that the same Congress --
which, after 18 months of hearings and debates, had decided in 1963
upon the extent of federal involvement it desired in the area of
wage rate claims -- intended
sub silentio to reject all of
this work and to abandon the limitations of the equal work approach
just one year later, when it enacted Title VII.
Title VII
Congress enacted the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 42 U.S.C. §
2000a
et seq., one year after passing the Equal Pay Act.
Title VII prohibits discrimination in employment on the basis of
race, color, national origin, religion, and sex. 42 U.S.C. §
2000e-2(a)(1). The question is whether Congress intended to
completely turn its back on the "equal work" standard enacted in
the Equal Pay Act of 1963 when it adopted Title VII only one year
later.
Page 452 U. S. 189
The Court answers that question in the affirmative, concluding
that Title VII must be read more broadly than the Equal Pay Act. In
so holding, the majority wholly ignores this Court's repeated
adherence to the doctrine of
in pari materia, namely,
that
"[w]here there is no clear intention otherwise, a specific
statute will not be controlled or nullified by a general one,
regardless of the priority of enactment."
Radzanower v. Touche Ross & Co., 426 U.
S. 148,
426 U. S. 153
(1976), citing
Morton v. Mancari, 417 U.
S. 535,
417 U. S.
550-551 (1974);
United States v. United Continental
Tuna Corp., 425 U. S. 164,
425 U. S. 169
(1976). In
Continental Tuna, for example, the lower court
held that an amendment to the Suits in Admiralty Act allowed
plaintiffs to sue the United States under that Act and ignore the
applicable and more stringent provisions of the previously enacted
Public Vessels Act. We rejected that construction because it
amounted to a repeal of the Public Vessels Act by implication. We
recognized that such an evasion of the congressional purpose
reflected in the restrictive provisions would not be permitted
absent some clear statement by Congress that such was intended by
the later statute. Similarly, in
Train v. Colorado Public
Interest Research Group, 426 U. S. 1 (1976),
this Court rejected a construction of the Federal Water Control Act
which would have substantially altered the regulation scheme
established under the Atomic Energy Act, without a "clear
indication of legislative intent."
Id. at
426 U. S. 24.
When those principles are applied to this case, there can be no
doubt that the Equal Pay Act and Title VII should be construed
in pari materia. The Equal Pay Act is the more specific
piece of legislation, dealing solely with sex-based wage
discrimination, and was the product of exhaustive congressional
study. Title VII, by contrast, is a general antidiscrimination
provision, passed with virtually no consideration of the specific
problem of sex-based wage discrimination.
See General Electric
Co. v. Gilbert, 429 U. S. 125,
429 U. S. 143
(1976) (the legislative history of the sex discrimination
amendment
Page 452 U. S. 190
is "notable primarily for its brevity"). [
Footnote 2/4] Most significantly, there is absolutely
nothing in the legislative history of Title VII which reveals an
intent by Congress to repeal by implication the provisions of the
Equal Pay Act. Quite the contrary, what little legislative history
there is on the subject -- such as the comments of Senators Clark
and Bennett and Representative Celler, and the contemporaneous
interpretation of the EEOC -- indicates that Congress intended to
incorporate the substantive standards of the Equal Pay Act into
Title VII so that sex-based wage discrimination claims would be
governed by the equal work standard of the Equal Pay Act, and by
that standard alone.
See discussion
infra at
452 U. S.
190-197.
In order to the reach the result it so desperately desires, the
Court neatly solves the problem of this contrary legislative
history by simply giving it "no weight."
Ante at
452 U. S. 172,
n. 12, 176, and n. 16. But it cannot be doubted that Chief Justice
Marshall stated the correct rule that "[w]here the mind labours to
discover the design of the legislature, it seizes every thing from
which aid can be derived. . . ."
United
States v. Fisher, 2 Cranch 358,
6 U. S. 386
(1805). In this case, when all of the pieces of legislative history
are considered
in toto, the Court's version of the
legislative history of Title VII is barely plausible, say nothing
of convincing.
Title VII was first considered by the House, where the
prohibition against sex discrimination was added on the House
floor. When the bill reached the Senate, it bypassed the
Page 452 U. S. 191
Senate Committee system and was presented directly to the full
Senate. It was there that concern was expressed about the relation
of the Title VII sex discrimination ban to the Equal Pay Act. In
response to questions by Senator Dirksen, Senator Clark, the floor
manager for the bill, prepared a memorandum in which he attempted
to put to rest certain objections which he believed to be
unfounded. Senator Clark's answer to Senator Dirksen reveals that
Senator Clark believed that all cases of wage discrimination under
Title VII would be treated under the standards of the Equal Pay
Act:
"
Objection. The sex antidiscrimination provisions of
the bill duplicate the coverage of the Equal Pay Act of 1963. But
more than this, they extend far beyond the scope and coverage of
the Equal Pay Act.
They do not include the limitations in that
act with respect to equal work on jobs requiring equal skills in
the same establish ments, and thus, cut across different
jobs."
"
Answer. The Equal Pay Act is a part of the wage-hour
law, with different coverage and with numerous exemptions unlike
title VII. Furthermore, under title VII, jobs can no longer be
classified as to sex, except where there is a rational basis for
discrimination on the ground of bona fide occupational
qualification.
The standards in the Equal Pay Act for
determining discrimination as to wages, of course, are applicable
to the comparable situation under title VII."
110 Cong.Rec. 7217 (1964) (emphasis added).
In this passage, Senator Clark asserted that the sex
discrimination provisions of Title VII were necessary,
notwithstanding the Equal Pay Act, because (a) the Equal Pay Act
had numerous exemptions for various types of businesses, and (b)
Title VII covered discrimination in access (
e.g.,
assignment and promotion) to jobs, not just compensation. In
addition, Senator Clark made clear that in the compensation area
the equal work standard would continue to be the applicable
Page 452 U. S. 192
standard. He explained, in answer to Senator Dirksen's concern,
that, when different jobs were at issue, the Equal Pay Act's legal
standard -- the "equal work" standard -- would apply to limit the
reach of Title VII. Thus Senator Clark rejected as unfounded the
objections that the sex provisions of Title VII were unnecessary,
on the one hand, or extended beyond the equal work standard, on the
other.
Notwithstanding Senator Clark's explanation, Senator Bennett
remained concerned that, absent an explicit cross-reference to the
Equal Pay Act, the "wholesale insertion" of the word "sex" in Title
VII could nullify the carefully conceived Equal Pay Act standard.
110 Cong.Rec. 13647 (1964). Accordingly, he offered, and the Senate
accepted, the following amendment to Title VII:
"It shall not be an unlawful employment practice under this
subchapter for any employer to differentiate upon the basis of sex
in determining the amount of the wages or compensation paid or to
be paid to employees of such employer if such differentiation is
authorized by the provisions of [§ 6(d) of the Equal Pay
Act]."
Although the language of the Bennett Amendment is ambiguous, the
most plausible interpretation of the Amendment is that it
incorporates the substantive standard of the Equal Pay Act -- the
equal pay for equal work standard -- into Title VII. A number of
considerations support that view. In the first place, that
interpretation is wholly consistent with, and in fact confirms,
Senator Clark's earlier explanation of Title VII. Second, in the
limited time available to Senator Bennett when he offered his
amendment -- the time for debate having been limited by cloture --
he explained the Amendment's purpose. [
Footnote 2/5]
"Mr. President, after many years of yearning by members
Page 452 U. S. 193
of the fair sex in this country, and after very careful study by
the appropriate committees of Congress, last year Congress passed
the so-called Equal Pay Act, which became effective only
yesterday."
"By this time, programs have been established for the effective
administration of this act. Now, when the civil rights bill is
under consideration, in which the word 'sex' has been inserted in
many places, I do not believe sufficient attention may have been
paid to possible conflicts between the wholesale insertion of the
word 'sex' in the bill and in the Equal Pay Act."
"
The purpose of my amendment is to provide that, in the
event of conflicts, the provisions of the Equal Pay Act shall not
be nullified."
110 Cong.Rec. 13647 (1964) (emphasis supplied).
It is obvious that the principal way in which the Equal Pay Act
could be "nullified" would be to allow plaintiffs unable to meet
the "equal pay for equal work" standard to proceed under Title VII
asserting some other theory of wage discrimination, such as
"comparable worth." If plaintiffs can proceed under Title VII
without showing that they satisfy the "equal work" criterion of the
Equal Pay Act, one would expect all plaintiffs to file suit under
the "broader" Title VII standard. Such a result would, for all
practical purposes, constitute an implied repeal of the equal work
standard of the Equal Pay Act, and render that Act a nullity. This
was precisely the result Congress sought to avert when it adopted
the Bennett Amendment, and the result the Court today embraces.
Page 452 U. S. 194
Senator Bennett confirmed this interpretation just one year
later. The Senator expressed concern as to the proper
interpretation of his Amendment and offered his written
understanding of the Amendment.
"The Amendment therefore means that it is not an unlawful
employment practice: . . . (b) to have different standards of
compensation for nonexempt employees, where such differentiation is
not prohibited by the equal pay amendment to the Fair Labor
Standards Act."
"Simply stated,
the [Bennett] amendment mean that
discrimination in compensation on account of sex does not violate
title VII unless it also violates the Equal Pay Act."
111 Cong.Rec. 13359 (1965) (emphasis supplied). Senator Dirksen
agreed that this interpretation was "precisely" the one that he,
Senator Humphrey, and their staffs had in mind when the Senate
adopted the Bennett Amendment.
Id. at 13360. He added:
"I trust that that will suffice to clear up in the minds of
anyone, whether in the Department of Justice or elsewhere, what the
Senate intended when that amendment was accepted."
Ibid. [
Footnote
2/6]
Page 452 U. S. 195
We can glean further insight into the proper interpretation of
the Bennett Amendment from the comments of Representative Celler,
the Chairman of the House Judiciary Committee and sponsor of Title
VII. After the Senate added the Bennett Amendment to Title VII and
sent the bill to the House, Representative Celler set out in the
record the understanding of the House that sex-based compensation
claims would not satisfy Title VII unless they met the equal work
standards of the Equal Pay Act. He explained that the Bennett
Amendment "[p]rovides that compliance with the [EPA] satisfies the
requirement of the title barring discrimination because of sex --
[§ 703(h)]." 110 Cong.Rec. 15896 (1964). The majority
discounts this statement because it is somewhat "imprecise."
Ante at
452 U. S. 176.
I find it difficult to believe that a comment to the full House
made by the sponsor of Title VII, who obviously understood its
provisions, including its amendments, is of no aid whatsoever to
the inquiry before us. [
Footnote
2/7]
Finally, the contemporaneous interpretations of the Bennett
Amendment by the EEOC, which are entitled to great
Page 452 U. S. 196
weight, since they were issued while the intent of Congress was
still fresh in the administrator's mind, further buttresses
petitioners' interpretation of the Amendment.
Udall v.
Tallman, 380 U. S. 1,
380 U. S. 16
(1965);
General Electric Co v. Gilbert, 429 U.S. at
429 U. S. 142.
The EEOC interpretations clearly state that the Equal Pay Act's
equal work standard is incorporated into Title VII as the standard
which must be met by plaintiffs alleging sex-based compensation
claims under Title VII. The Commission's 1965 Guidelines on
Discrimination Because of Sex explain:
"Title VII requires that its provisions be harmonized with the
Equal Pay Act (section 6(d) of the Fair Labor Standards Act of
1938, 29 U.S.C. § 206(d)) in order to avoid conflicting
interpretations or requirements with respect to situations to which
both statutes are applicable.
Accordingly, the Commission
interprets section 703(h) to mean that the standards of 'equal pay
for equal work' set forth in the Equal Pay Act for determining what
is unlawful discrimination in compenation are applicable to Title
VII. However, it is the judgment of the Commission that the
employee coverage of the prohibition against discrimination in
compensation because of sex is coextensive with that of the other
prohibitions in section 703, and is not limited by § 703(h) to
those employees covered by the Fair Labor Standards Act."
29 CFR § 1604.7 (1966). (Emphasis supplied.)
Three weeks after the EEOC issued its Guidelines, the General
Counsel explained the Guidelines in an official opinion letter.
[
Footnote 2/8] He explained:
"The Commission, as indicated in § 1604.7 of the
Page 452 U. S. 197
Guidelines issued November 24, 1965, 30 F.R. 14028, has decided
that section 703(h), Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964,
incorporates the definition of discrimination in compensation
found in the Equal Pay Act, including the four enumerated
exceptions. . . ."
General Counsel's opinion of December 29, 1965, App. to Brief
for Petitioners 7a. (Emphasis supplied.)
Thus, EEOC's contemporaneous interpretation of the Bennett
Amendment leaves no room for doubt: the Bennett Amendment
incorporates the equal work standard of discrimination into Title
VII. [
Footnote 2/9]
Page 452 U. S. 198
The Court blithely ignore all of this legislative history and
chooses to interpret the Bennett Amendment as incorporating only
the Equal Pay Act's four affirmative defenses, and not the equal
work requirement. [
Footnote 2/10]
That argument does not survive scrutiny. In the first place, the
language of the Amendment draws no distinction between the Equal
Pay Act's standard for liability -- equal pay for equal work -- and
the Act's defenses. Nor does any Senator or Congressman
Page 452 U. S. 199
even come close to suggesting that the Amendment incorporates
the Equal Pay Act's affirmative defenses into Title VII, but not
the equal work standard itself. Quite the contrary, the concern was
that Title VII would render the Equal Pay Act a nullity. It is only
too obvious that reading just the four affirmative defenses of the
Equal Pay Act into Title VII does not protect the careful
draftsmanship of the Equal Pay Act. We must examine statutory words
in a manner that "
reconstitute[s] the gamut of values current
at the time when the words were uttered.'" National Woodwork
Manufacturers Assn. v. NLRB, 386 U. S. 612,
386 U. S. 620
(1967) (quoting L. Hand, J.). In this case, it stands Congress'
concern on its head to suppose that Congress sought to incorporate
the affirmative defenses, but not the equal work standard. It would
be surprising if Congress in 1964 sought to reverse its decision in
1963 to require a showing of "equal work" as a predicate to an
equal pay claim, and at the same time carefully preserve the four
affirmative defenses.
Moreover, even on its own terms, the Court's argument is
unpersuasive. The Equal Pay Act contains four statutory defenses:
different compensation is permissible if the differential is made
by way of (1) a seniority system, (2) a merit system, (3) a system
which measures earnings by quantity or quality of production, or
(4) is based on any other factor other than sex. 29 U.S.C. §
206(d)(1). The flaw in interpreting the Bennett Amendment as
incorporating only the four defenses of the Equal Pay Act into
Title VII is that Title VII, even without the Bennett Amendment,
contains those very same defenses. [
Footnote 2/11] The opening sentence of
Page 452 U. S. 200
§ 703(h) protects differentials and compensation based on
seniority, merit, or quantity or quality of production. These are
three of the four EPA defenses. The fourth EPA defense, "a factor
other than sex," is already implicit in Title VII, because the
statute's prohibition of sex discrimination applies only if there
is discrimination on the basis of sex. Under the Court's
interpretation, the Bennett Amendment, the second sentence of
§ 703(h), is mere surplusage.
United States v.
Menasche, 348 U. S. 528,
348 U. S.
538-539 (1955) ("It is our duty
to give effect, if
possible, to every clause and word of a statute,' Montclair v.
Ramsdell, 107 U. S. 147,
107 U. S. 152,
rather than emasculate an entire section"). [Footnote 2/12] The Court's answer to this argument is
curious. It suggests that repetition ensures that the provisions
would be consistently interpreted by the courts. Ante at
452 U. S. 170.
But that answer only speaks to the purpose for incorporating the
defenses in each statute, not for stating the defenses twice in the
same statute. Courts are not quite as dense as the majority
assumes.
In sum, Title VII and the Equal Pay Act, read together, provide
a balanced approach to resolving sex-based wage discrimination
claims. Title VII guarantees that qualified female employees will
have access to all jobs, and the Equal Pay Act assures that men and
women performing the same work will be paid equally. Congress
intended to remedy wage discrimination through the Equal Pay Act
standards, whether suit is brought under that statute or under
Title
Page 452 U. S. 201
VII. What emerges is that Title VII would have been construed
in pari materia even without the Bennett Amendment, and
that the Amendment serves simply to insure that the equal work
standard would be the standard by which all wage compensation
claims would be judged.
III
Perhaps recognizing that there is virtually no support for its
position in the legislative history, the Court rests its holding on
its belief that any other holding would be unacceptable public
policy.
Ante at
452 U. S.
178-180. It argues that there must be a remedy for wage
discrimination beyond that provided for in the Equal Pay Act. Quite
apart from the fact that that is an issue properly left to
Congress, and not the Court, the Court is wrong even as a policy
matter. The Court's parade of horribles that would occur absent a
distinct Title VII remedy simply does not support the result it
reaches.
First, the Court contends that a separate Title VII remedy is
necessary to remedy the situation where an employer admits to a
female worker, hired for a unique position, that her compensation
would have been higher had she been male.
Ante at
452 U. S.
178-17. Stated differently, the Court insists that an
employer could isolate a predominantly female job category and
arbitrarily cut its wages because no men currently perform equal or
substantially equal work. But a Title VII remedy is unnecessary in
these cases, because an Equal Pay Act remedy is available. Under
the Equal Pay Act, it is not necessary that every Equal Pay Act
violation be established through proof that members of the opposite
sex are currently performing equal work for greater pay. However
unlikely such an admission might be in the bullpen of litigation,
an employer's statement that "if my female employees performing a
particular job were males, I would pay them more simply because
they are males" would be admissible in a suit under that Act. Overt
discrimination does not go unremedied by the Equal Pay Act.
See
Bourque v. Powell Electrical
Page 452 U. S. 202
Manufacturing Co., 617 F.2d 61 (CA5 1980);
Peltier
v. City of Fargo, 533 F.2d 374 (CA8 1976);
International
Union of Electrical Workers v. Westinghouse Electric Corp.,
631 F.2d 1094, 1108, n. 2 (CA3 1980) (Van Dusen, J., dissenting).
In addition, insofar as hiring or placement discrimination caused
the isolated job category, Title VII already provides numerous
remedies (such as backpay, transfer, and constructive seniority)
without resort to job comparisons. In short, if women are limited
to low paying jobs against their will, they have adequate remedies
under Title VII for denial of job opportunities even under what I
believe is the correct construction of the Bennett Amendment.
The Court next contends that, absent a Title VII remedy, women
who work for employers exempted from coverage of the Equal Pay Act
would be wholly without a remedy for wage discrimination.
Ante at
452 U. S.
179-180. The Court misapprehends petitioners' argument.
As Senator Clark explained in his memorandum,
see supra at
452 U. S.
191-192, Congress sought to incorporate into Title VII
the substantive standard of the Equal Pay Act -- the "equal work"
standard -- not the employee coverage provisions.
See
supra at
452 U. S.
194-195, n. 6. Thus, to say that the "equal pay for
equal work" standard is incorporated into Title VII does not mean
that employees are precluded from bringing compensation
discrimination claims under Title VII. It means only that, if
employees choose to proceed under Title VII, they must show that
they have been deprived of "equal pay for equal work."
There is, of course, a situation in which petitioners' position
would deny women a remedy for claims of sex-based wage
discrimination. A remedy would not be available where a lower
paying job held primarily by women is "comparable," but not
substantially equal to, a higher paying job performed by men. That
is, plaintiffs would be foreclosed from showing that they received
unequal pay for work of "comparable worth" or that dissimilar jobs
are of "equal worth." The short, and best, answer to that
contention is that Congress
Page 452 U. S. 203
in 1963 explicitly chose not to provide a remedy in such cases.
And contrary to the suggestion of the Court, it is by no means
clear that Title VII was enacted to remedy
all forms of
alleged discrimination. We recently emphasized for example,
that
"Title VII could not have been enacted into law without
substantial support from legislators in both Houses who
traditionally resisted federal regulation of private business.
Those legislators demanded as a price for their support that
'management prerogatives, and union freedoms . . . be left
undisturbed to the greatest extent possible.'"
Steelworkers v. Weber, 443 U.
S. 193,
443 U. S. 206
(1979).
See Mohasco Corp. v. Silver, 447 U.
S. 807,
447 U. S. 820
(1980) (a 90-day statute of limitations may have "represented a
necessary sacrifice of the rights of some victims of discrimination
in order that a civil rights bill could be enacted"). Congress
balanced the need for a remedy for wage discrimination against its
desire to avoid the burdens associated with governmental
intervention into wage structures. The Equal Pay Act's "equal pay
for equal work" formula reflects the outcome of this legislative
balancing. In construing Title VII, therefore, the courts cannot be
indifferent to this sort of political compromise.
IV
Even though today's opinion reaches what I believe to be the
wrong result, its narrow holding is perhaps its saving feature. The
opinion does not endorse the so-called "comparable worth" theory:
though the Court does not indicate how a plaintiff might establish
a
prima facie case under Title VII, the Court does suggest
that allegations of unequal pay for unequal, but comparable, work
will not state a claim on which relief may be granted. The Court,
for example, repeatedly emphasizes that this is not a case where
plaintiffs ask the court to compare the value of dissimilar jobs or
to quantify the effect of sex discrimination on wage rates.
Ante at
452 U. S. 166,
452 U. S. 180
452 U. S. 181.
Indeed, the Court relates, without criticism, respondents'
contention that
Lemons v. City and County of
Page 452 U. S. 204
Denver, 620 F.2d 228 (CA10),
cert. denied, 449
U.S. 888 (1980), is distinguishable.
Ante at
452 U. S. 166,
n. 7. There, the court found that Title VII did not provide a
remedy to nurses who sought increased compensation based on a
comparison of their jobs to dissimilar jobs of "comparable" value
in the community.
See also Christensen v. Iowa, 563 F.2d
353 (CA8 1977) (no
prima facie case under Title VII when
plaintiffs, women clerical employees of a university, sought to
compare their wages to the employees in the physical plant).
Given that implied repeals of legislation are disfavored,
TVA v. Hill, 437 U. S. 153,
437 U. S. 189
(1978), we should not be surprised that the Court disassociates
itself from the entire notion of "comparable worth." In enacting
the Equal Pay Act in 1963, Congress specifically prohibited the
courts from comparing the wage rates of dissimilar jobs: there can
only be a comparison of wage rates where jobs are "equal or
substantially equal." Because the legislative history of Title VII
does not reveal an intent to overrule that determination, the
courts should strive to harmonize the intent of Congress in
enacting the Equal Pay Act with its intent in enacting Title VII.
Where, as here, the policy of prior legislation is clearly
expressed, the Court should not "transfuse the successor statute
with a gloss of its own choosing."
De Sylva v. Ballentine,
351 U. S. 570,
351 U. S. 579
(1956).
Because there are no logical underpinnings to the Court's
opinion, all we may conclude is that, even absent a showing of
equal work, there is a cause of action under Title VII where there
is direct evidence that an employer has
intentionally
depressed a woman's salary because she is a woman. The decision
today does not approve a cause of action based on a
comparison of the wage rates of dissimilar jobs.
For the foregoing reasons, however, I believe that even that
narrow holding cannot be supported by the legislative history of
the Equal Pay Act and Title VII. This is simply a case where the
Court has superimposed upon Title VII a "gloss of its own
choosing."
[
Footnote 2/1]
Comparable work was not a new idea. During World War II, the
regulations of the National War Labor Board (NWLB) required equal
pay for "comparable work." Under these regulations, the Board made
job evaluations to determine whether pay inequities existed within
a plant between dissimilar jobs.
See General Electric Co.,
28 War Lab.Rep. 666 (1945). As a result, in every Congress since
1945, bills had been introduced mandating equal pay for "comparable
work." In substituting the term "equal work" for "comparable work,"
Congress clearly rejected the approach taken by the NWLB.
[
Footnote 2/2]
Statements made by the sponsors of legislation "deserv[e] to be
accorded substantial weight in interpreting the statute."
FEA
v. Algonquin SNG, Inc., 426 U. S. 548,
426 U. S. 564
(1976);
Schwegmann Brothers v. Calvert Distillers Corp.,
341 U. S. 384,
341 U. S. 394
(1951).
[
Footnote 2/3]
Representative Goodell rejected any type of wage comparisons
between men and women as the basis for relief. He stated:
"We do not have in mind the Secretary of Labor's going into an
establishment and saying, 'Look you are paying the women here $1.75
and the men $2.10. Come on in here, Mr. Employer, and you prove
that you are not discriminating on the basis of sex.' That would be
just the opposite of what we are doing."
109 Cong.Rec. 9208 (1963). Similarly, Representative Griffin
noted that the "equal work" standard meant that the jobs of
inspector and assembler could not be compared, nor could inspectors
who inspect complicated parts be compared to inspectors making
simple cursory inspections.
Id. at 9197. Representative
Thompson, one of the original sponsors of the equal pay
legislation, agreed with Representative Griffin's examples.
Id. at 9198.
[
Footnote 2/4]
Indeed, Title VII was originally intended to protect the rights
of Negroes. On the final day of consideration by the entire House,
Representative Smith added an amendment to prohibit sex
discrimination. It has been speculated that the amendment was added
as an attempt to thwart passage of Title VII. The amendment was
passed by the House that same day, and the entire bill was approved
two days later and sent to the Senate without any consideration of
the effect of the amendment on the Equal Pay Act. The attenuated
history of the sex amendment to Title VII makes it difficult to
believe that Congress thereby intended to wholly abandon the
carefully crafted equal work standard of the Equal Pay Act.
[
Footnote 2/5]
The Court makes far too much of the fact that Senator Bennett's
Amendment was designated a "technical amendment." It is apparently
the Court's belief that a "technical amendment" is an insignificant
one. The Amendment, however, was so designated simply because (1)
the Amendment confirmed the general intention of the Senate evinced
by Senator Clark's earlier explanation of Title VII, and (2) the
time for debate had been limited by the invocation of cloture,
leaving a "technical amendment" as the most expeditious way of
introducing an amendment. Senator Bennett later explained all of
this. 111 Cong.Rec. 13359 (1965).
[
Footnote 2/6]
There is undoubtedly some danger in relying on subsequent
legislative history. But that does not mean that such subsequent
legislative history is wholly irrelevant, particularly where, as
here, the sponsor of the legislation makes a clarifying statement
which is not inconsistent with the prior ambiguous legislative
history.
See Galvan v. Press, 347 U.
S. 522,
347 U. S.
526-527 (1954) (Court relied on a 1951 memorandum by
Senator McCarran in interpreting the meaning of a 1950 statute he
sponsored).
The Court suggests Senator Bennett's 1965 comments should be
discounted because Senator Clark criticized them.
Ante at
452 U. S. 176,
n. 16. Senator Clark did indeed criticize Senator Bennett, but only
because Senator Clark read Senator Bennett's explanation as
suggesting that Title VII protection would not be available to
those employees not within the Equal Pay Act's coverage. Senator
Clark's view was that employees not covered by the Equal Pay Act
could still bring Title VII claims. He did not dispute, however,
the proposition that the "equal work" standard of the Equal Pay Act
was incorporated into Title VII claims. Quite the contrary, Senator
Clark placed into the record a letter from the Chairman of the
National Committee for Equal Pay which stated:
"Our best understanding of the implications of the [Bennett
Amendment] at the time it was adopted was that its intent and
effect was to make sure that equal pay would be applied and
interpreted under the Civil Rights Act in the same way as under the
earlier statute, the Equal Pay Act.
That is, the Equal Pay Act
standards requiring equal work . . . would also be applied under
the Civil Rights Act."
111 Cong.Rec. 18263 (1965) (emphasis supplied). Senator Clark
then commended to the EEOC the reasoning set forth in the letter.
Ibid.
[
Footnote 2/7]
In light of the foregoing, the Court's statement that no Senator
or Congressman mentioned the "equal work" standard is mystifying.
Ante at
452 U. S. 174,
n. 13. Senator Clark, for example, discussed it twice.
See
supra at
452 U. S.
191-192;
452
U.S. 161fn2/6|>n. 6,
supra. Indeed, it is the
Court's theory -- that only the affirmative defenses are
incorporated into Title VII -- that is not "so much as mentioned"
by any "Senator or Congressman."
See infra at
452 U. S.
198-199.
[
Footnote 2/8]
Other opinion letters issued by the EEOC General Counsel during
the 1960's confirmed that Title VII would not be violated unless
equal work was performed. The General Counsel's opinion of May 4,
1966, explains:
"It follows that an employer covered by Title VII may not pay a
male less than the California minimum wage while paying the
statutory rate to a woman for the same job. . . .
[W]hatever
the general rule may be under Title VII, the Bennett Amendment
compels us to apply the same test for differences in compensation
based on sex. 29 CFR 1604.7."
App. to Brief for Petitioners 11a-13a. The General Counsel's
opinion of February 28, 1966, stresses that,
"where an employer pays a certain wage to employees of one sex
in order to comply with such a law, he must also pay the same rate
to employees of the opposite sex for equal work [under Title
VII]."
Id. at 9a-10a. The Commissioner's opinion of July 23,
1966, states that "[a]ssuming that male and female laborers perform
the same functions . . . , a wage differential would violate [Title
VII]."
Id. at 16a.
And the Acting General Counsel's Memorandum of June 6, 1967,
made clear that the Equal Pay Act's equal work standard,
i.e., equal skill, effort, responsibility, and working
conditions, as well as the Equal Pay Act's affirmative defenses,
i.e., seniority systems, merit systems, etc., were
incorporated by the phrase "authorize" in the Bennett Amendment. As
he interpreted the word "authorize":
"
Differentiations which are authorized under said section
[703(h)] are differentiations on the basis of skill, effort,
responsibility, and working conditions, and differentiations
related to a seniority system, a merit system, a system which
measures earnings by quantity or quality of production or a
differential based on any other factor than sex."
"It is the interpretation of these provisions that requires
harmonization between Title VII and the Equal Pay [Act], because
these are the provisions which, within the meaning of §
70[3](h), 'authorize' differentiations."
Id. at 21a-22a. (Emphasis supplied.)
[
Footnote 2/9]
The EEOC has since changed its mind as to the relationship
between Title VII and the Equal Pay Act. But this Court has
recognized that
"an EEOC guideline is not entitled to great weight where . . .
it varies from prior EEOC policy and no new legislative history has
been introduced in support of the change."
Trans World Airlines, Inc. v. Hardison, 432 U. S.
63,
432 U. S. 76, n.
11 (1977).
See General Electric Co. v. Gilbert,
429 U. S. 125,
429 U. S. 142
(1976) (Court discounted weight to be given to the 1972 Title VII
regulations addressing pregnancy benefits because they were
inconsistent with the 1965 regulations).
[
Footnote 2/10]
In reaching this conclusion, the Court relies far too heavily on
a definition of the word "authorize." Rather than "make a fortress
out of the dictionary,"
Cabell v. Markham, 148 F.2d 737,
739 (CA2),
aff'd, 326
U. S. 326 U.S. 404 (1945), the Court should instead
attempt to implement the legislative intent of Congress. Even if
dictionary definitions were to be our guide, the word "authorized"
has been defined to mean exactly what petitioners contend. Black's
Law Dictionary 169 (4th ed.1968) defines "authorized" to mean "[t]o
permit a thing to be done in the future." Accordingly, the language
of the Bennett Amendment suggests that those differentiations which
are authorized under the Equal Pay Act -- and thus Title VII -- are
those based on "skill, effort, responsibility and working
conditions" and those related to the four affirmative defenses.
See 452
U.S. 161fn2/7|>n. 7,
supra.
Respondents also rely on Senator Dirksen's brief reference to
"exceptions to the basic Act. . . ." That statement is highly
ambiguous, and is too thin a reed to support their conclusion that
Congress intended to incorporate only the Equal Pay Act's
affirmative defenses. First, as even the Court concedes,
ante at
452 U. S. 175,
the reference to the "exceptions" probably refers to the exemptions
from coverage of the Fair Labor Standards Act, not to the Equal Pay
Act's four defenses. Second, it was Senator Dirksen who first
raised the objection, answered by Senator Clark, that Title VII
would reject the equal work requirement. And third, in 1965,
Senator Dirksen explicitly agreed with Senator Bennett's
interpretation of the Amendment.
See supra at
452 U. S. 194.
It thus is highly unlikely that Senator Dirksen would have been
interested in preserving either the exceptions or the affirmative
defenses, but not the "equal work" standard.
[
Footnote 2/11]
Under the Court's analysis, § 703(h) consists of two
redundant sentences:
"[1] Notwithstanding any other provision of this subchapter, it
shall not be an unlawful employment practice for an employer to
apply different standards of compensation . . . pursuant to a bona
fide seniority or merit system, or a system which measures earnings
by quantity or quality of production or to employees who work in
different locations. . . . [2] [The Bennett Amendment] It shall not
be an unlawful employment practice under this subchapter for any
employer to differentiate upon the basis of sex in determining the
amount of the wages or compensation paid . . . [except pursuant to
(i) a seniority system; (ii) a merit system; (iii) a system which
measures earnings by quantity or quality of production; or (iv) a
differential based on any other factor other than sex]."
[
Footnote 2/12]
In 1965, Senator Bennett himself made this point. He stressed
that
"[the language setting out the defenses] is merely clarifying
language similar to that which was already in section 703(h). If
the Bennett amendment was simply intended to incorporate by
reference these exceptions into subsection (h), the amendment would
have no substantive effect."
111 Cong.Rec. 13359 (1965).