U.S. Supreme Court
United Automobile Workers v. Johnson Controls, 499
U.S. 187 (1991)
International Union, United Automobile, Aerospace
&
Agricultural Implement Workers of America, UAW
No. 89-1215
Argued Oct. 10, 1990
Decided March 20, 1991
499
U.S. 187
CERTIORARI TO THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE SEVENTH CIRCUIT
Syllabus
A primary ingredient in respondent's battery manufacturing
process is lead, occupational exposure to which entails health
risks, including the risk of harm to any fetus carried by a female
employee. After eight of its employees became pregnant while
maintaining blood lead levels exceeding that noted by the
Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) as critical
for a worker planning to have a family, respondent announced a
policy barring all women, except those whose infertility was
medically documented, from jobs involving actual or potential lead
exposure exceeding the OSHA standard. Petitioners, a group
including employees affected by respondent's fetal-protection
policy, filed a class action in the District Court, claiming that
the policy constituted sex discrimination violative of Title VII of
the Civil Rights Act of 1964, as amended. The court granted summary
judgment for respondent, and the Court of Appeals affirmed. The
latter court held that the proper standard for evaluating the
policy was the business necessity inquiry applied by other
Circuits; that respondent was entitled to summary judgment because
petitioners had failed to satisfy their burden of persuasion as to
each of the elements of the business necessity defense under
Wards Cove Packing Co. v. Atonio, 490 U.
S. 642; and that, even if the proper evaluative standard
was bona fide occupational qualification (BFOQ) analysis,
respondent still was entitled to summary judgment because its
fetal-protection policy is reasonably necessary to further the
industrial safety concern that is part of the essence of
respondent's business.
Held: Title VII, as amended by the Pregnancy
Discrimination Act (PDA), forbids sex-specific fetal-protection
policies. Pp.
499 U. S.
197-211.
(a) By excluding women with childbearing capacity from
lead-exposed jobs, respondent's policy creates a facial
classification based on gender and explicitly discriminates against
women on the basis of their sex under § 703(a) of Title
VII. Moreover, in using the words "capable of bearing children" as
the criterion for exclusion, the policy explicitly classifies on
the basis of potential for pregnancy, which classification must
be
Page 499 U. S. 188
regarded, under the PDA, in the same light as explicit sex
discrimination. The Court of Appeals erred in assuming that the
policy was facially neutral because it had only a discriminatory
effect on women's employment opportunities, and because its
asserted purpose, protecting women's unconceived offspring, was
ostensibly benign. The policy is not neutral, because it does not
apply to male employees in the same way as it applies to females,
despite evidence about the debilitating effect of lead exposure on
the male reproductive system. Also, the absence of a malevolent
motive does not convert a facially discriminatory policy into a
neutral policy with a discriminatory effect.
Cf. Phillips v.
Martin Marietta Corp., 400 U. S. 542.
Because respondent's policy involves disparate treatment through
explicit facial discrimination, the business necessity defense and
its burden-shifting under
Wards Cove are inapplicable
here. Rather, as indicated by the Equal Employment Opportunity
Commission's enforcement policy, respondent's policy may be
defended only as a BFOQ, a more stringent standard than business
necessity. Pp.
499 U. S.
197-200.
(b) The language of both the BFOQ provision set forth in
§ 703(e)(1) of Title VII -- which allows an employer to
discriminate on the basis of sex "in those certain instances where
. . . sex . . . is a [BFOQ] reasonably necessary to the normal
operation of [the] particular business" -- and the PDA provision
that amended Title VII-which specifies that, unless pregnant
employees differ from others "in their ability or inability to
work," they must be "treated the same" as other employees "for all
employment-related purposes" -- as well as these provisions'
legislative history and the case law, prohibit an employer from
discriminating against a woman because of her capacity to become
pregnant unless her reproductive potential prevents her from
performing the duties of her job. The so-called safety exception to
the BFOQ is limited to instances in which sex or pregnancy actually
interferes with the employee's ability to perform, and the employer
must direct its concerns in this regard to those aspects of the
woman's job-related activities that fall within the "essence" of
the particular business.
Dothard v. Rawlinson,
433 U. S. 321,
433 U. S. 333,
433 U. S. 335;
Western Air Lines, Inc. v. Criswell, 472 U.
S. 400,
472 U. S. 413.
The unconceived fetuses of respondent's female employees are
neither customers nor third parties whose safety is essential to
the business of battery manufacturing. Pp.
499 U. S.
200-206.
(c) Respondent cannot establish a BFOQ. Fertile women, as far as
appears in the record, participate in the manufacture of batteries
as efficiently as anyone else. Moreover, respondent's professed
concerns about the welfare of the next generation do not suffice to
establish a BFOQ of female sterility. Title VII, as amended by the
PDA, mandates that decisions about the welfare of future children
be left to the parents
Page 499 U. S. 189
who conceive, bear, support, and raise them, rather than to the
employers who hire those parents or the courts. Pp.
499 U. S.
206-207.
(d) An employer's tort liability for potential fetal injuries
and its increased costs due to fertile women in the workplace do
not require a different result. If, under general tort principles,
Title VII bans sex-specific fetal-protection policies, the employer
fully informs the woman of the risk, and the employer has not acted
negligently, the basis for holding an employer liable seems remote,
at best. Moreover, the incremental cost of employing members of one
sex cannot justify a discriminatory refusal to hire members of that
gender.
See, e.g., Los Angeles Dept. of Water & Power v.
Manhart, 435 U. S. 702,
435 U. S.
716-718, and n. 32. Pp.
499 U. S.
208-211.
886 F.2d 871 (CA7 1989), reversed and remanded.
BLACKMUN, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which
MARSHALL, STEVENS, O'CONNOR, and SOUTER, JJ., joined. WHITE, J.,
filed an opinion concurring in part and concurring in the judgment,
in which REHNQUIST, C.J., and KENNEDY, J., joined,
post,
p.
499 U. S. 211.
SCALIA, J., filed an opinion concurring in the judgment,
post, p.
499 U. S.
223.
Page 499 U. S. 190
JUSTICE BLACKMUN delivered the opinion of the Court.
In this case, we are concerned with an employer's gender-based
fetal-protection policy. May an employer exclude a fertile female
employee from certain jobs because of its concern for the health of
the fetus the woman might conceive?
I
Respondent Johnson Controls, Inc., manufactures batteries. In
the manufacturing process, the element lead is a primary
ingredient. Occupational exposure to lead entails health risks,
including the risk of harm to any fetus carried by a female
employee.
Page 499 U. S. 191
Before the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 78 Stat. 241, became law,
Johnson Controls did not employ any woman in a
battery-manufacturing job. In June, 1977, however, it announced its
first official policy concerning its employment of women in
lead-exposure work:
"[P]rotection of the health of the unborn child is the immediate
and direct responsibility of the prospective parents. While the
medical profession and the company can support them in the exercise
of this responsibility, it cannot assume it for them without
simultaneously infringing their rights as persons."
"
* * * *"
". . . . Since not all women who can become mothers, wish to
become mothers, (or will become mothers), it would appear to be
illegal discrimination to treat all who are capable of pregnancy as
though they will become pregnant."
App. 140.
Consistent with that view, Johnson Controls "stopped short of
excluding women capable of bearing children from lead exposure,"
id. at 138, but emphasized that a woman who expected to
have a child should not choose a job in which she would have such
exposure. The company also required a woman who wished to be
considered for employment to sign a statement that she had been
advised of the risk of having a child while she was exposed to
lead. The statement informed the woman that, although there was
evidence "that women exposed to lead have a higher rate of
abortion," this evidence was "not as clear . . . as the
relationship between cigarette smoking and cancer," but that it
was, "medically speaking, just good sense not to run that risk if
you want children and do not want to expose the unborn child to
risk, however small. . . ."
Id. at 142-143.
Five years later, in 1982, Johnson Controls shifted from a
policy of warning to a policy of exclusion. Between 1979 and 1983,
eight employees became pregnant while maintaining blood lead levels
in excess of 30 micrograms per deciliter. Tr. of Oral Arg. 25, 34.
This appeared to be the critical level
Page 499 U. S. 192
noted by the Occupational Health and Safety Administration
(OSHA) for a worker who was planning to have a family.
See
29 CFR § 1910.1025 (1989). The company responded by
announcing a broad exclusion of women from jobs that exposed them
to lead:
". . . [I]t is [Johnson Controls'] policy that women who are
pregnant or who are capable of bearing children will not be placed
into jobs involving lead exposure or which could expose them to
lead through the exercise of job bidding, bumping, transfer or
promotion rights."
App. 85-86. The policy defined "women . . . capable of bearing
children" as "[a]ll women except those whose inability to bear
children is medically documented."
Id. at 81. It further
stated that an unacceptable work station was one where, "over the
past year," an employee had recorded a blood lead level of more
than 30 micrograms per deciliter or the work site had yielded an
air sample containing a lead level in excess of 30 micrograms per
cubic meter.
Ibid.
II
In April, 1984, petitioners filed in the United States District
Court for the Eastern District of Wisconsin a class action
challenging Johnson Controls' fetal-protection policy as sex
discrimination that violated Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of
1964, as amended, 42 U.S.C. § 2000e
et seq.
Among the individual plaintiffs were petitioners Mary Craig, who
had chosen to be sterilized in order to avoid losing her job, Elsie
Nason, a 50-year-old divorcee, who had suffered a loss in
compensation when she was transferred out of a job where she was
exposed to lead, and Donald Penney, who had been denied a request
for a leave of absence for the purpose of lowering his lead level
because he intended to become a father. Upon stipulation of the
parties, the District Court certified a class consisting of "all
past, present and future production and maintenance employees" in
United Auto Workers bargaining
Page 499 U. S. 193
units at nine of Johnson Controls' plants "who have been and
continue to be affected by [the employer's] Fetal Protection Policy
implemented in 1982." Order of Feb. 25, 1985.
The District Court granted summary judgment for
defendant-respondent Johnson Controls.
680 F.
Supp. 309 (1988). Applying a three-part business necessity
defense derived from fetal-protection cases in the Courts of
Appeals for the Fourth and Eleventh Circuits, the District Court
concluded that, while "there is a disagreement among the experts
regarding the effect of lead on the fetus," the hazard to the fetus
through exposure to lead was established by "a considerable body of
opinion"; that, although
"[e]xpert opinion has been provided which holds that lead also
affects the reproductive abilities of men and women . . . [and]
that these effects are as great as the effects of exposure of the
fetus . . . a great body of experts are of the opinion that the
fetus is more vulnerable to levels of lead that would not affect
adults;"
and that petitioners had "failed to establish that there is an
acceptable alternative policy which would protect the fetus."
Id. at 315-316. The court stated that, in view of this
disposition of the business necessity defense, it did not "have to
undertake a bona fide occupational qualification's (BFOQ)
analysis."
Id. at 316, n. 5.
The Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit, sitting en banc,
affirmed the summary judgment by a 7-to-4 vote. 886 F.2d 871
(1989). The majority held that the proper standard for evaluating
the fetal-protection policy was the defense of business necessity;
that Johnson Controls was entitled to summary judgment under that
defense; and that, even if the proper standard was a BFOQ, Johnson
Controls still was entitled to summary judgment.
The Court of Appeals,
see id. at 883-885, first
reviewed fetal-protection opinions from the Eleventh and Fourth
Circuits.
See Hayes v. Shelby Memorial Hospital, 726 F.2d
1543 (CA11 1984), and
Wright v. Olin Corp., 697 F.2d
1172
Page 499 U. S. 194
(CA4 1982). Those opinions established the three-step business
necessity inquiry: whether there is a substantial health risk to
the fetus; whether transmission of the hazard to the fetus occurs
only through women; and whether there is a less discriminatory
alternative equally capable of preventing the health hazard to the
fetus. 886 F.2d at 885. The Court of Appeals agreed with the
Eleventh and Fourth Circuits that
"the components of the business necessity defense the courts of
appeals and the EEOC have utilized in fetal protection cases
balance the interests of the employer, the employee and the unborn
child in a manner consistent with Title VII."
Id. at 886. The court further noted that, under
Wards Cove Packing Co. v. Atonio, 490 U.
S. 642 (1989), the burden of persuasion remained on the
plaintiff in challenging a business necessity defense, and --
unlike the Fourth and Eleventh Circuits -- it thus imposed the
burden on the plaintiffs for all three steps. 886 F.2d at 887-893.
Cf. Hayes, 726 F.2d at 1549, and
Wright, 697 F.2d
at 1187.
Applying this business necessity defense, the Court of Appeals
ruled that Johnson Controls should prevail. Specifically, the court
concluded that there was no genuine issue of material fact about
the substantial health-risk factor, because the parties agreed that
there was a substantial risk to a fetus from lead exposure. 886
F.2d at 888-889. The Court of Appeals also concluded that, unlike
the evidence of risk to the fetus from the mother's exposure, the
evidence of risk from the father's exposure, which petitioners
presented, "is, at best, speculative and unconvincing."
Id. at 889. Finally, the court found that petitioners had
waived the issue of less discriminatory alternatives by not
adequately presenting it. It said that, in any event, petitioners
had not produced evidence of less discriminatory alternatives in
the District Court.
Id. at 890-893.
Having concluded that the business necessity defense was the
appropriate framework and that Johnson Controls satisfied
Page 499 U. S. 195
that standard, the court proceeded to discuss the BFOQ defense,
and concluded that Johnson Controls met that test, too.
Id. at 893-894. The en banc majority ruled that industrial
safety is part of the essence of respondent's business, and that
the fetal-protection policy is reasonably necessary to further that
concern. Quoting
Dothard v. Rawlinson, 433 U.
S. 321,
433 U. S. 335
(1977), the majority emphasized that, in view of the goal of
protecting the unborn, "more is at stake" than simply an individual
woman's decision to weigh and accept the risks of employment. 886
F.2d at 898.
Judges Cudahy and Posner dissented, and would have reversed the
judgment and remanded the case for trial. Judge Cudahy explained:
"It may (and should) be difficult to establish a BFOQ here, but I
would afford the defendant an opportunity to try."
Id. at
901. "[T]he BFOQ defense need not be narrowly limited to matters of
worker productivity, product quality and occupational safety."
Id. at 901, n. 1. He concluded that this case's "painful
complexities are manifestly unsuited for summary judgment."
Id. at 902.
Judge Posner stated: "I think it is a mistake to suppose that we
can decide this case once and for all on so meager a record."
Ibid. He, too, emphasized that, under Title VII, a
fetal-protection policy which explicitly applied just to women
could be defended only as a BFOQ. He observed that Title VII
defines a BFOQ defense as a "bona fide occupational qualification
reasonably necessary to the normal operation" of a business, and
that
"the 'normal operation' of a business encompasses ethical,
legal, and business concerns about the effects of an employer's
activities on third parties."
Id. at 902 and 904. He emphasized, however, that
whether a particular policy is lawful is a question of fact that
should ordinarily be resolved at trial.
Id. at 906. Like
Judge Cudahy, he stressed that "it will be the rare case where the
lawfulness of such a policy can be decided on the defendant's
motion for summary judgment."
Ibid.
Page 499 U. S. 196
Judge Easterbrook, also in dissent and joined by Judge Flaum,
agreed with Judges Cudahy and Posner that the only defense
available to Johnson Controls was the BFOQ. He concluded, however,
that the BFOQ defense would not prevail, because respondent's
stated concern for the health of the unborn was irrelevant to the
operation of its business under the BFOQ. He also viewed the
employer's concern as irrelevant to a woman's ability or inability
to work under the Pregnancy Discrimination Act's amendment to Title
VII, 92 Stat. 2076, 42 U.S.C. § 2000e(k). Judge
Easterbrook also stressed what he considered the excessive breadth
of Johnson Controls' policy. It applied to all women (except those
with medical proof of incapacity to bear children), although most
women in an industrial labor force do not become pregnant, most of
those who do become pregnant will have blood lead levels under 30
micrograms per deciliter, and most of those who become pregnant
with levels exceeding that figure will bear normal children anyway.
886 F.2d at 912-913. "Concerns about a tiny minority of women
cannot set the standard by which all are judged."
Id. at
913.
With its ruling, the Seventh Circuit became the first Court of
Appeals to hold that a fetal-protection policy directed exclusively
at women could qualify as a BFOQ. We granted certiorari, 494 U.S.
1055 (1990), to resolve the obvious conflict between the Fourth,
Seventh, and Eleventh Circuits on this issue, and to address the
important and difficult question whether an employer, seeking to
protect potential fetuses, may discriminate against women just
because of their ability to become pregnant. [
Footnote 1]
Page 499 U. S. 197
III
The bias in Johnson Controls' policy is obvious. Fertile men,
but not fertile women, are given a choice as to whether they wish
to risk their reproductive health for a particular job. Section
703(a) of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 78 Stat. 255, as amended,
42 U.S.C. § 2000e-2(a), prohibits sex-based
classifications in terms and conditions of employment, in hiring
and discharging decisions, and in other employment decisions that
adversely affect an employee's status. [
Footnote
2] Respondent's fetal-protection policy explicitly
discriminates against women on the basis of their sex. The policy
excludes women with childbearing capacity from lead-exposed jobs,
and so creates a facial classification based on gender. Respondent
assumes as much in its brief before this Court. Brief for
Respondent 17, n. 24.
Nevertheless, the Court of Appeals assumed, as did the two
appellate courts who already had confronted the issue, that
sex-specific fetal-protection policies do not involve facial
discrimination. 886 F.2d at 886-887;
Hayes, 726 F.2d at
1547;
Wright, 697 F.2d at 1190. These courts analyzed the
policies as though they were facially neutral, and had only a
Page 499 U. S. 198
discriminatory effect upon the employment opportunities of
women. Consequently, the courts looked to see if each employer in
question had established that its policy was justified as a
business necessity. The business necessity standard is more lenient
for the employer than the statutory BFOQ defense. The Court of
Appeals here went one step further and invoked the burden-shifting
framework set forth in
Wards Cove Packing Co. v. Atonio,
490 U. S. 642
(1989), thus requiring petitioners to bear the burden of persuasion
on all questions. 886 F.2d at 887-888. The court assumed that,
because the asserted reason for the sex-based exclusion (protecting
women's unconceived offspring) was ostensibly benign, the policy
was not sex-based discrimination. That assumption, however, was
incorrect.
First, Johnson Controls' policy classifies on the basis of
gender and childbearing capacity, rather than fertility alone.
Respondent does not seek to protect the unconceived children of all
its employees. Despite evidence in the record about the
debilitating effect of lead exposure on the male reproductive
system, Johnson Controls is concerned only with the harms that may
befall the unborn offspring of its female employees. Accordingly,
it appears that Johnson Controls would have lost in the Eleventh
Circuit under
Hayes because its policy does not
"effectively and equally protec[t] the offspring of all employees."
726 F.2d at 1548. This Court faced a conceptually similar situation
in
Phillips v. Martin Marietta Corp., 400 U.
S. 542 (1971), and found sex discrimination because the
policy established "one hiring policy for women and another for men
-- each having pre-school-age children."
Id. at
400 U. S. 544.
Johnson Controls' policy is facially discriminatory, because it
requires only a female employee to produce proof that she is not
capable of reproducing.
Our conclusion is bolstered by the Pregnancy Discrimination Act
of 1978 (PDA), 92 Stat. 2076, 42 U.S.C. § 2000e(k), in
which Congress explicitly provided that, for purposes of Title VII,
discrimination "on the basis of sex" includes discrimination
"because
Page 499 U. S. 199
of or on the basis of pregnancy, childbirth, or related medical
conditions." [
Footnote 3]
"The Pregnancy Discrimination Act has now made clear that, for
all Title VII purposes, discrimination based on a woman's pregnancy
is, on its face, discrimination because of her sex."
Newport News Shipbuilding & Dry Dock Co. v. EEOC,
462 U. S. 669,
462 U. S. 684
(1983). In its use of the words "capable of bearing children" in
the 1982 policy statement as the criterion for exclusion, Johnson
Controls explicitly classifies on the basis of potential for
pregnancy. Under the PDA, such a classification must be regarded,
for Title VII purposes, in the same light as explicit sex
discrimination. Respondent has chosen to treat all its female
employees as potentially pregnant; that choice evinces
discrimination on the basis of sex.
We concluded above that Johnson Controls' policy is not neutral,
because it does not apply to the reproductive capacity of the
company's male employees in the same way as it applies to that of
the females. Moreover, the absence of a malevolent motive does not
convert a facially discriminatory policy into a neutral policy with
a discriminatory effect. Whether an employment practice involves
disparate treatment through explicit facial discrimination does not
depend on why the employer discriminates, but rather on the
explicit terms of the discrimination. In
Martin Marietta,
supra, the motives underlying the employers' express exclusion
of women did not alter the intentionally discriminatory character
of the policy. Nor did the arguably benign motives lead to
consideration of a business necessity defense. The question
Page 499 U. S. 200
in that case was whether the discrimination in question could be
justified under § 703(e) as a BFOQ. The beneficence of
an employer's purpose does not undermine the conclusion that an
explicit gender-based policy is sex discrimination under
§ 703(a). and thus may be defended only as a BFOQ.
The enforcement policy of the Equal Employment Opportunity
Commission accords with this conclusion. On January 24, 1990, the
EEOC issued a Policy Guidance in the light of the Seventh Circuit's
decision in the present case. App. to Pet. for Cert. 127a. The
document noted:
"For the plaintiff to bear the burden of proof in a case in
which there is direct evidence of a facially discriminatory policy
is wholly inconsistent with settled Title VII law."
Id. at 133a. The Commission concluded: "[W]e now think
BFOQ is the better approach."
Id. at 134a.
In sum, Johnson Controls' policy
"does not pass the simple test of whether the evidence shows
'treatment of a person in a manner which, but for that person's
sex, would be different.'"
Los Angeles Dept. of Water & Power v. Manhart,
435 U. S. 702,
435 U. S. 711
(1978), quoting Developments in the Law, Employment Discrimination
and Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 84 Harv.L.Rev. 1109,
1170 (1971). We hold that Johnson Controls' fetal-protection policy
is sex discrimination forbidden under Title VII unless respondent
can establish that sex is a "bona fide occupational
qualification."
IV
Under § 703(e)(1) of Title VII, an employer may
discriminate on the basis of
"religion, sex, or national origin in those certain instances
where religion, sex, or national origin is a bona fide occupational
qualification reasonably necessary to the normal operation of that
particular business or enterprise."
42 U.S.C. § 2000e-2(e)(1). We therefore turn to the
question whether Johnson Controls' fetal-protection policy
Page 499 U. S. 201
is one of those "certain instances" that come within the BFOQ
exception.
The BFOQ defense is written narrowly, and this Court has read it
narrowly.
See, e.g., Dothard v. Rawlinson, 433 U.
S. 321,
433 U. S.
332-337 (1977);
Trans World Airlines, Inc. v.
Thurston, 469 U. S. 111,
469 U. S.
122-125 (1985). We have read the BFOQ language of
§ 4(f) of the Age Discrimination in Employment Act of
1967 (ADEA), 81 Stat. 603, as amended, 29 U.S.C. §
623(f)(1), which tracks the BFOQ provision in Title VII, just as
narrowly.
See Western Air Lines, Inc. v. Criswell,
472 U. S. 400
(1985). Our emphasis on the restrictive scope of the BFOQ defense
is grounded on both the language and the legislative history of
§ 703.
The wording of the BFOQ defense contains several terms of
restriction that indicate that the exception reaches only special
situations. The statute thus limits the situations in which
discrimination is permissible to "certain instances" where sex
discrimination is "reasonably necessary" to the "normal operation"
of the "particular" business. Each one of these terms -- certain,
normal, particular -- prevents the use of general subjective
standards and favors an objective, verifiable requirement. But the
most telling term is "occupational"; this indicates that these
objective, verifiable requirements must concern job-related skills
and aptitudes.
JUSTICE WHITE defines "occupational" as meaning related to a
job.
Post at
499 U. S. 212,
n. 1. According to the him, any discriminatory requirement imposed
by an employer is "job-related" simply because the employer has
chosen to make the requirement a condition of employment. In
effect, he argues that sterility may be an occupational
qualification for women because Johnson Controls has chosen to
require it. This reading of "occupational" renders the word mere
surplusage. "Qualification" by itself would encompass an employer's
idiosyncratic requirements. By modifying "qualification" with
"occupational," Congress narrowed the term to qualifications that
affect an employee's ability to do the job.
Page 499 U. S. 202
Johnson Controls argues that its fetal-protection policy falls
within the so-called safety exception to the BFOQ. Our cases have
stressed that discrimination on the basis of sex because of safety
concerns is allowed only in narrow circumstances. In
Dothard v.
Rawlinson, this Court indicated that danger to a woman herself
does not justify discrimination. 433 U.S. at
433 U. S. 336.
We there allowed the employer to hire only male guards in contact
areas of maximum-security male penitentiaries only because more was
at stake than the "individual woman's decision to weigh and accept
the risks of employment."
Ibid. We found sex to be a BFOQ
inasmuch as the employment of a female guard would create real
risks of safety to others if violence broke out because the guard
was a woman. Sex discrimination was tolerated because sex was
related to the guard's ability to do the job -- maintaining prison
security. We also required in
Dothard a high correlation
between sex and ability to perform job functions, and refused to
allow employers to use sex as a proxy for strength although it
might be a fairly accurate one.
Similarly, some courts have approved airlines' layoffs of
pregnant flight attendants at different points during the first
five months of pregnancy on the ground that the employer's policy
was necessary to ensure the safety of passengers.
See Harriss
v. Pan American World Airways, Inc., 649 F.2d 670 (CA9 1980);
Burwell v. Eastern Air Lines, Inc., 633 F.2d 361 (CA4
1980),
cert. denied, 450 U.S. 965 (1981);
Condit v.
United Air Lines, Inc., 558 F.2d 1176 (CA4 1977),
cert.
denied, 435 U. S. 934
(1978);
In re National Airlines, Inc., 434 F.
Supp. 249 (S.D.Fla.1977). In two of these cases, the courts
pointedly indicated that fetal, as opposed to passenger, safety was
best left to the mother.
Burwell, 633 F.2d at 371;
National Airlines, 434 F. Supp. at 259.
We considered safety to third parties in
Western Airlines,
Inc. v. Criswell, supra, in the context of the ADEA. We
focused upon "the nature of the flight engineer's tasks," and the
"actual capabilities of persons over age 60" in relation to
Page 499 U. S. 203
those tasks. 472 U.S. at
472 U. S. 406.
Our safety concerns were not independent of the individual's
ability to perform the assigned tasks, but rather involved the
possibility that, because of age-connected debility, a flight
engineer might not properly assist the pilot, and might thereby
cause a safety emergency. Furthermore, although we considered the
safety of third parties in
Dothard and
Criswell,
those third parties were indispensable to the particular business
at issue. In
Dothard, the third parties were the inmates;
in
Criswell, the third parties were the passengers on the
plane. We stressed that, in order to qualify as a BFOQ, a job
qualification must relate to the "essence,"
Dothard, 433
U.S. at
433 U. S. 333,
or to the "central mission of the employer's business,"
Criswell, 472 U.S. at
472 U. S.
413.
JUSTICE WHITE ignores the "essence of the business" test, and so
concludes that
"the safety to fetuses in carrying out the duties of battery
manufacturing is as much a legitimate concern as is safety to third
parties in guarding prisons (
Dothard) or flying airplanes
(
Criswell)."
Post at
499 U. S. 217.
By limiting its discussion to cost and safety concerns and
rejecting the "essence of the business" test that our case law has
established, the he seeks to expand what is now the narrow BFOQ
defense. Third-party safety considerations properly entered into
the BFOQ analysis in
Dothard and
Criswell because
they went to the core of the employee's job performance. Moreover,
that performance involved the central purpose of the enterprise.
Dothard, 433 U.S. at
433 U. S. 335
("The essence of a correctional counselor's job is to maintain
prison security");
Criswell, 472 U.S. at
472 U. S. 413
(the central mission of the airline's business was the safe
transportation of its passengers). JUSTICE WHITE attempts to
transform this case into one of customer safety. The unconceived
fetuses of Johnson Controls' female employees, however, are neither
customers nor third parties whose safety is essential to the
business of battery manufacturing. No one can disregard the
possibility of injury to future children; the BFOQ, however,
Page 499 U. S. 204
is not so broad that it transforms this deep social concern into
an essential aspect of battery-making.
Our case law, therefore, makes clear that the safety exception
is limited to instances in which sex or pregnancy actually
interferes with the employee's ability to perform the job. This
approach is consistent with the language of the BFOQ provision
itself, for it suggests that permissible distinctions based on sex
must relate to ability to perform the duties of the job. Johnson
Controls suggests, however, that we expand the exception to allow
fetal-protection policies that mandate particular standards for
pregnant or fertile women. We decline to do so. Such an expansion
contradicts not only the language of the BFOQ and the narrowness of
its exception, but the plain language and history of the Pregnancy
Discrimination Act.
The PDA's amendment to Title VII contains a BFOQ standard of its
own: unless pregnant employees differ from others "in their ability
or inability to work," they must be "treated the same" as other
employees "for all employment-related purposes." 42 U.S.C.
§ 2000e(k). This language clearly sets forth Congress'
remedy for discrimination on the basis of pregnancy and potential
pregnancy. Women who are either pregnant or potentially pregnant
must be treated like others "similar in their ability . . . to
work."
Ibid. In other words, women as capable of doing
their jobs as their male counterparts may not be forced to choose
between having a child and having a job.
JUSTICE WHITE asserts that the PDA did not alter the BFOQ
defense.
Post at
499 U. S. 218.
The he arrives at this conclusion by ignoring the second clause of
the Act, which states that
"women affected by pregnancy, childbirth, or related medical
conditions shall be treated the same for all employment-related
purposes . . . as other persons not so affected but similar in
their ability or inability to work."
42 U.S.C. § 2000e(k). Until this day, every Member
of this Court had acknowledged that
"[t]he second clause [of the PDA] could not be clearer: it
mandates that pregnant employees 'shall be
Page 499 U. S. 205
treated the same for all employment-related purposes' as
nonpregnant employees similarly situated with respect to their
ability or inability to work."
California Federal S. & L. Assn. v. Guerra,
479 U. S. 272,
479 U. S. 297
(1987) (WHITE, J., dissenting). JUSTICE WHITE now seeks to read the
second clause out of the Act.
The legislative history confirms what the language of the
Pregnancy Discrimination Act compels. Both the House and Senate
Reports accompanying the legislation indicate that this statutory
standard was chosen to protect female workers from being treated
differently from other employees simply because of their capacity
to bear children.
See Amending Title VII, Civil Rights Act
of 1964, S.Rep. No. 95-331, pp. 4-6 (1977):
"Under this bill, the treatment of pregnant women in covered
employment must focus not on their condition alone, but on the
actual effects of that condition on their ability to work. Pregnant
women who are able to work must be permitted to work on the same
conditions as other employees. . . . "
". . . [U]nder this bill, employers will no longer be permitted
to force women who become pregnant to stop working regardless of
their ability to continue."
See also Prohibition of Sex Discrimination Based on
Pregnancy, H.R.Rep. No. 9948, pp. 3-6 (1978), U.S.Code Cong. &
Admin. News 1978, p. 4749.
This history counsels against expanding the BFOQ to allow
fetal-protection policies. The Senate Report quoted above states
that employers may not require a pregnant woman to stop working at
any time during her pregnancy unless she is unable to do her work.
Employment late in pregnancy often imposes risks on the unborn
child,
see Chavkin, Walking a Tightrope: Pregnancy,
Parenting, and Work, in Double Exposure 196, 196-202 (W. Chavkin
ed.1984), but Congress indicated that the employer may take into
account only the woman's ability to get her job done.
See
Becker, From
Muller v. Oregon to Fetal Vulnerability
Policies, 53 U.Chi.L.Rev.
Page 499 U. S. 206
1219, 1255-1256 (1986). With the PDA, Congress made clear that
the decision to become pregnant or to work while being either
pregnant or capable of becoming pregnant was reserved for each
individual woman to make for herself.
We conclude that the language of both the BFOQ provision and the
PDA which amended it, as well as the legislative history and the
case law, prohibit an employer from discriminating against a woman
because of her capacity to become pregnant unless her reproductive
potential prevents her from performing the duties of her job. We
reiterate our holdings in
Criswell and
Dothard
that an employer must direct its concerns about a woman's ability
to perform her job safely and efficiently to those aspects of the
woman's job-related activities that fall within the "essence" of
the particular business. [
Footnote 4]
V
We have no difficulty concluding that Johnson Controls cannot
establish a BFOQ. Fertile women, as far as appears in the record,
participate in the manufacture of batteries as efficiently as
anyone else. Johnson Controls' professed moral and ethical concerns
about the welfare of the next generation do not suffice to
establish a BFOQ of female sterility. Decisions about the welfare
of future children must be left to the parents who conceive, bear,
support, and raise them, rather than to the employers who hire
those parents. Congress has mandated this choice through Title VII,
as amended by the
Page 499 U. S. 207
PDA. Johnson Controls has attempted to exclude women because of
their reproductive capacity. Title VII and the PDA simply do not
allow a woman's dismissal because of her failure to submit to
sterilization.
Nor can concerns about the welfare of the next generation be
considered a part of the "essence" of Johnson Controls' business.
Judge Easterbrook in this case pertinently observed:
"It is word play to say that 'the job' at Johnson [Controls] is
to make batteries without risk to fetuses in the same way 'the job'
at Western Air Lines is to fly planes without crashing."
886 F.2d at 913.
Johnson Controls argues that it must exclude all fertile women
because it is impossible to tell which women will become pregnant
while working with lead. This argument is somewhat academic in
light of our conclusion that the company may not exclude fertile
women at all; it perhaps is worth noting, however, that Johnson
Controls has shown no
"factual basis for believing that all or substantially all women
would be unable to perform safely and efficiently the duties of the
job involved."
Weeks v. Southern Bell Tel. & Tel. Co., 408 F.2d
228, 235 (CA5 1969), quoted with approval in
Dothard, 433
U.S. at
433 U. S. 333.
Even on this sparse record, it is apparent that Johnson Controls is
concerned about only a small minority of women. Of the eight
pregnancies reported among the female employees, it has not been
shown that any of the babies have birth defects or other
abnormalities. The record does not reveal the birth rate for
Johnson Controls' female workers, but national statistics show that
approximately nine percent of all fertile women become pregnant
each year. The birthrate drops to two percent for blue collar
workers over age 30.
See Becker, 53 U.Chi.L.Rev. at 1233.
Johnson Controls' fear of prenatal injury, no matter how sincere,
does not begin to show that substantially all of its fertile women
employees are incapable of doing their jobs.
Page 499 U. S. 208
VI
A word about tort liability and the increased cost of fertile
women in the workplace is perhaps necessary. One of the dissenting
judges in this case expressed concern about an employer's tort
liability, and concluded that liability for a potential injury to a
fetus is a social cost that Title VII does not require a company to
ignore. 886 F.2d at 904-905. It is correct to say that Title VII
does not prevent the employer from having a conscience. The
statute, however, does prevent sex-specific fetal-protection
policies. These two aspects of Title VII do not conflict.
More than 40 States currently recognize a right to recover for a
prenatal injury based either on negligence or on wrongful death.
See, e.g., Wolfe v. Isbell, 291 Ala. 327, 333-334,
280 So. 2d
758, 763 (1977);
Simon v. Mullin, 34 Conn.Sup. 139,
147, 380 A.2d 1353, 1357 (1977).
See also Note, 22 Suffolk
U.L.Rev. 747, 754-756, and nn. 54, 57, and 58 (1988) (listing
cases). According to Johnson Controls, however, the company
complies with the lead standard developed by OSHA and warns its
female employees about the damaging effects of lead. It is worth
noting that OSHA gave the problem of lead lengthy consideration,
and concluded that
"there is no basis whatsoever for the claim that women of
childbearing age should be excluded from the workplace in order to
protect the fetus or the course of pregnancy."
43 Fed.Reg. 52952, 52966 (1978).
See also id. at 54354,
54398. Instead, OSHA established a series of mandatory protections
which, taken together, "should effectively minimize any risk to the
fetus and newborn child."
Id. at 52966.
See 29
CFR § 1910.125(k)(ii) (1989). Without negligence, it
would be difficult for a court to find liability on the part of the
employer. If, under general tort principles, Title VII bans
sex-specific fetal-protection policies, the employer fully informs
the woman of the risk, and the employer has not acted negligently,
the basis for holding an employer liable seems remote, at best.
Page 499 U. S. 209
Although the issue is not before us, JUSTICE WHITE observes that
"it is far from clear that compliance with Title VII will preempt
state tort liability."
Post at
499 U. S. 213.
The cases relied upon by HIM to support its prediction, however,
are inapposite. For example, in
California Federal S. & L.
Assn. v. Guerra, 479 U. S. 272
(1987), we considered a California statute that expanded upon the
requirements of the PDA, and concluded that the statute was not
preempted by Title VII because it was not inconsistent with the
purposes of the federal statute, and did not require an act that
was unlawful under Title VII.
Id. at
479 U. S.
291-292. Here, in contrast, the tort liability that
JUSTICE WHITE fears will punish employers for complying with Title
VII's clear command. When it is impossible for an employer to
comply with both state and federal requirements, this Court has
ruled that federal law preempts that of the States.
See, e.g.,
Florida Lime & Avocado Growers, Inc. v. Paul, 373 U.
S. 132,
373 U. S.
142-143 (1963).
This Court faced a similar situation in
Farmers Union v.
WDAY, Inc., 360 U. S. 525
(1959). In
WDAY, it held that § 315(a) of the
Federal Communications Act of 1934 barred a broadcasting station
from removing defamatory statements contained in speeches broadcast
by candidates for public office. It then considered a libel action
which arose as a result of a speech made over the radio and
television facilities of WDAY by a candidate for the 1966
senatorial race in North Dakota. It held that the statutory
prohibition of censorship carried with it an immunity from
liability for defamatory statements made by the speaker. To allow
libel actions
"would sanction the unconscionable result of permitting civil
and perhaps criminal liability to be imposed for the very conduct
the statute demands of the licensee."
Id. at
360 U. S. 531.
It concluded:
"We are aware that causes of action for libel are widely
recognized throughout the States. But we have not hesitated to
abrogate state law where satisfied that
Page 499 U. S. 210
its enforcement would stand 'as an obstacle to the
accomplishment and execution of the full purposes and objectives of
Congress.'"
Id. at
360 U. S. 535,
quoting
Bethlehem Steel Co. v. New York Labor Board,
330 U. S. 767,
330 U. S. 773
(1947)
If state tort law furthers discrimination in the workplace and
prevents employers from hiring women who are capable of
manufacturing the product as efficiently as men, then it will
impede the accomplishment of Congress' goals in enacting Title VII.
Because Johnson Controls has not argued that it faces any costs
from tort liability, not to mention crippling ones, the preemption
question is not before us. We therefore say no more than that the
concurrence's speculation appears unfounded, as well as
premature.
The tort liability argument reduces to two equally unpersuasive
propositions. First, Johnson Controls attempts to solve the problem
of reproductive health hazards by resorting to an exclusionary
policy. Title VII plainly forbids illegal sex discrimination as a
method of diverting attention from an employer's obligation to
police the workplace. Second, the spectre of an award of damages
reflects a fear that hiring fertile women will cost more. The extra
cost of employing members of one sex, however, does not provide an
affirmative Title VII defense for a discriminatory refusal to hire
members of that gender.
See Manhart, 435 U.S. at
435 U. S.
716-718, and n. 32, and n. 32. Indeed, in passing the
PDA, Congress considered at length the considerable cost of
providing equal treatment of pregnancy and related conditions, but
made the "decision to forbid special treatment of pregnancy despite
the social costs associated therewith."
Arizona Governing
Committee v. Norris, 463 U. S. 1073,
463 U. S.
1084, n. 14 (1983) (opinion of MARSHALL, J.).
See
Price Waterhouse v. Hopkins, 490 U. S. 228
(1988).
We, of course, are not presented with, nor do we decide, a case
in which costs would be so prohibitive as to threaten the
Page 499 U. S. 211
survival of the employer's business. We merely reiterate our
prior holdings that the incremental cost of hiring women cannot
justify discriminating against them.
VII
Our holding today that Title VII, as so amended, forbids
sex-specific fetal-protection policies is neither remarkable nor
unprecedented. Concern for a woman's existing or potential
offspring historically has been the excuse for denying women equal
employment opportunities.
See, e.g., Muller v. Oregon,
208 U. S. 412
(1908). Congress in the PDA prohibited discrimination on the basis
of a woman's ability to become pregnant. We do no more than hold
that the Pregnancy Discrimination Act means what it says.
It is no more appropriate for the courts than it is for
individual employers to decide whether a woman's reproductive role
is more important to herself and her family than her economic role.
Congress has left this choice to the woman as hers to make.
The judgment of the Court of Appeals is reversed, and the case
is remanded for further proceedings consistent with this
opinion.
It is so ordered.
[
Footnote 1]
Since our grant of certiorari, the Sixth Circuit has reversed a
District Court's summary judgment for an employer that had excluded
fertile female employees from foundry jobs involving exposure to
specified concentrations of airborne lead.
See Grant v. General
Motors Corp., 908 F.2d 1303 (1990). The court said:
"We agree with the view of the dissenters in
Johnson
Controls that fetal protection policies perforce amount to
overt sex discrimination, which cannot logically be recast as
disparate impact and cannot be countenanced without proof that
infertility is a BFOQ. . . . [P]laintiff . . . has alleged a claim
of overt discrimination that her employer may justify only through
the BFOQ defense."
Id. at 1310.
In
Johnson Controls, Inc. v. Fair Employment & Housing
Comm'n, 218 Cal. App.
3d 517,
267 Cal. Rptr.
158 (1990), the court held respondent's fetal-protection policy
invalid under California's fair-employment law.
[
Footnote 2]
The statute reads:
"It shall be an unlawful employment practice for an employer --
"
"(1) to fail or refuse to hire or discharge any individual, or
otherwise to discriminate against any individual with respect to
his compensation, terms, conditions, or privileges of employment,
because of such individual's race, color, religion, sex, or
national origin; or"
"(2) to limit, segregate, or classify his employees or
applicants for employment in any way which would deprive or tend to
deprive any individual of employment opportunities or otherwise
adversely affect his status as an employee, because of such
individual's race, color, religion, sex, or national origin."
[
Footnote 3]
The Act added subsection (k) to § 701 of the Civil
Rights Act of 1964 and reads in pertinent part:
"The terms 'because of sex' or 'on the basis of sex' [in Title
VII] include, but are not limited to, because of or on the basis of
pregnancy, childbirth, or related medical conditions; and women
affected by pregnancy, childbirth, or related medical conditions
shall be treated the same for all employment-related purposes . . .
as other persons not so affected but similar in their ability or
inability to work. . . ."
[
Footnote 4]
JUSTICE WHITE predicts that our reaffirmation of the narrowness
of the BFOQ defense will preclude considerations of privacy as a
basis for sex-based discrimination.
Post at
499 U. S.
219-220, n. 6. We have never addressed privacy-based sex
discrimination, and shall not do so here, because the sex-based
discrimination at issue today does not involve the privacy
interests of Johnson Controls' customers. Nothing in our discussion
of the "essence of the business test," however, suggests that sex
could not constitute a BFOQ when privacy interests are implicated.
See, e.g., Backus v. Baptist Medical
Center, 510 F.
Supp. 1191 (ED Ark.1981),
vacated as moot, 671 F.2d
1100 (CA8 1982) (essence of obstetrics nurse's business is to
provide sensitive care for patient's intimate and private
concerns).
JUSTICE WHITE, with whom THE CHIEF JUSTICE and JUSTICE KENNEDY
join, concurring in part and concurring in the judgment.
The Court properly holds that Johnson Controls' fetal protection
policy overtly discriminates against women, and thus is prohibited
by Title VII unless it falls within the bona fide occupational
qualification (BFOQ) exception, set forth at 42 U.S.C.
§ 2000e-2(e). The Court erroneously holds, however,
that the BFOQ defense is so narrow that it could never justify a
sex-specific fetal protection policy. I nevertheless concur in the
judgment of reversal because, on the record before us, summary
judgment in favor of Johnson Controls was improperly entered
Page 499 U. S. 212
by the District Court and affirmed by the Court of Appeals.
I
In evaluating the scope of the BFOQ defense, the proper starting
point is the language of the statute.
Cf. Demarest v.
Manspeaker, 498 U. S. 177
(1991);
Board of Ed. of Westside Community Schools v.
Mergens, 496 U. S. 226,
496 U. S. 227
(1990). Title VII forbids discrimination on the basis of sex,
except
"in those certain instances where . . . sex . . . is a bona fide
occupational qualification reasonably necessary to the normal
operation of that particular business or enterprise."
42 U.S.C. § 2000e-2(e)(1). For the fetal protection
policy involved in this case to be a BFOQ, therefore, the policy
must be "reasonably necessary" to the "normal operation" of making
batteries, which is Johnson Controls' "particular business."
Although that is a difficult standard to satisfy, nothing in the
statute's language indicates that it could never support a
sex-specific fetal protection policy. [
Footnote
2/1]
On the contrary, a fetal protection policy would be justified
under the terms of the statute if, for example, an employer could
show that exclusion of women from certain jobs was reasonably
necessary to avoid substantial tort liability. Common sense tells
us that it is part of the normal operation of business concerns to
avoid causing injury to third parties, as well as to employees, if
for no other reason than to avoid
Page 499 U. S. 213
tort liability and its substantial costs. This possibility of
tort liability is not hypothetical; every State currently allows
children born alive to recover in tort for prenatal injuries caused
by third parties,
see W. Keeton, D. Dobbs, R. Keeton,
& D. Owen, Prosser and Keeton on Law of Torts § 55
P. 368 (5th ed.1984), and an increasing number of courts have
recognized a right to recover even for prenatal injuries caused by
torts committed prior to conception,
see 3 F. Harper, F.
James, & O. Gray, Law of Torts § 18.3, pp. 677-678,
n. 15 (2d ed.1986).
The Court dismisses the possibility of tort liability by no more
than speculating that, if
"Title VII bans sex-specific fetal-protection policies, the
employer fully informs the woman of the risk, and the employer has
not acted negligently, the basis for holding an employer liable
seems remote, at best."
Ante at
499 U. S. 208.
Such speculation will be small comfort to employers. First, it is
far from clear that compliance with Title VII will preempt state
tort liability, and the Court offers no support for that
proposition. [
Footnote 2/2] Second, although
warnings may preclude claims by injured employees, they will not
preclude claims by injured children, because the general rule is
that parents cannot waive causes of action on behalf of their
children, and the parents' negligence will not be imputed to the
children. [
Footnote 2/3] Finally, although
state tort liability
Page 499 U. S. 214
for prenatal injuries generally requires negligence, it will be
difficult for employers to determine in advance what will
constitute negligence. Compliance with OSHA standards, for example,
has been held not to be a defense to state tort or criminal
liability.
See National Solid Wastes Management Assn. v.
Killian, 918 F.2d 671, 680, n. 9 (CA7 1990) (collecting
cases);
see also 29 U.S.C. § 653(b)(4).
Moreover, it is possible that employers will be held strictly
liable, if, for example, their manufacturing process is considered
"abnormally dangerous."
See Restatement (Second) of Torts
§ 869, comment
b (1979).
Relying on
Los Angeles Dept. of Water and Power v.
Manhart, 435 U. S. 702
(1978), the Court contends that tort liability cannot justify a
fetal protection policy because the extra costs of hiring women is
not a defense under Title VII.
Ante at
499 U. S. 210.
This contention misrepresents our decision in
Manhart.
There, we held that a requirement that female employees contribute
more than male employees to a pension fund, in order to reflect the
greater longevity of women, constituted discrimination against
women under Title VII because it treated them as a class, rather
than as individuals. 435 U.S. at
435 U. S. 708.
We did not in that case address in any detail the nature of the
BFOQ defense, and we certainly did not hold that cost was
irrelevant to the BFOQ analysis. Rather, we merely stated in a
footnote that "there has been no showing that sex distinctions are
reasonably necessary to the normal operation of the Department's
retirement plan."
Id. at
435 U. S. 716,
n. 30. We further noted that, although Title VII does not contain a
"cost justification defense comparable to the affirmative defense
available in a price discrimination
Page 499 U. S. 215
suit," "no defense based on the
total cost of employing
men and women was attempted in this case."
Id. at
435 U. S.
716-717, and n. 32.
Prior decisions construing the BFOQ defense confirm that the
defense is broad enough to include considerations of cost and
safety of the sort that could form the basis for an employer's
adoption of a fetal protection policy. In
Dothard v.
Rawlinson, 433 U. S. 321
(1977), the Court held that being male was a BFOQ for "contact"
guard positions in Alabama's maximum security male penitentiaries.
The Court first took note of the actual conditions of the prison
environment:
"In a prison system where violence is the order of the day,
where inmate access to guards is facilitated by dormitory living
arrangements, where every institution is understaffed, and where a
substantial portion of the inmate population is composed of sex
offenders mixed at random with other prisoners, there are few
visible deterrents to inmate assaults on women custodians."
Id. at
433 U. S.
335-336. The Court also stressed that "[m]ore [was] at
stake" than a risk to individual female employees:
"The likelihood that inmates would assault a woman because she
was a woman would pose a real threat not only to the victim of the
assault but also to the basic control of the penitentiary and
protection of its inmates and the other security personnel."
Ibid. Under those circumstances, the Court observed
that
"it would be an oversimplification to characterize [the
exclusion of women] as an exercise in 'romantic paternalism.'
Cf. Frontiero v. Richardson, 411 U. S.
677,
411 U. S. 684."
Id. 433 U.S. at
433 U. S.
335.
We revisited the BFOQ defense in
Western Air Lines, Inc. v.
Criwell, 472 U. S. 400
(1985), this time in the context of the Age Discrimination in
Employment Act of 1967 (ADEA). There, we endorsed the two-part
inquiry for evaluating a BFOQ defense used by the Fifth Circuit
Court of Appeals in
Usery v. Tamiami Trail Tours, Inc.,
531 F.2d 224 (1976). First, the job qualification must not be "so
peripheral to the central mission of the employer's business" that
no discrimination
Page 499 U. S. 216
could be "
reasonably necessary to the normal operation of
the particular business.'" 472 U.S. at 472 U. S. 413.
Although safety is not such a peripheral concern, id. at
472 U. S. 413,
472 U. S. 419,
[Footnote 2/4] the inquiry "`adjusts to the
safety factor'" --
"'[t]he greater the safety factor, measured by the likelihood of
harm and the probable severity of that harm in case of an accident,
the more stringent may be the job qualifications,'"
id. at
472 U. S. 413
(quoting
Tamiami, supra, at 236). Second, the employer
must show either that all or substantially all persons excluded
"
"would be unable to perform safely and efficiently the duties
of the job involved,"'" or that it is "`"impossible or highly
impractical"'" to deal with them on an individual basis. 472 U.S.
at 472 U. S. 414
(quoting Tamiami, supra, at 235 (quoting Weeks v.
Southern Bell Telephone & Telegraph Co., 408 F.2d 228, 235
(CA5 1969))). We further observed that this inquiry properly takes
into account an employer's interest in safety --
"[w]hen an employer establishes that a job qualification has
been carefully formulated to respond to documented concerns for
public safety, it will not be overly burdensome to persuade a trier
of fact that the qualification is 'reasonably necessary' to safe
operation of the business."
472 U.S. at
472 U. S.
419:
Dothard and
Criswell make clear that avoidance
of substantial safety risks to third parties is
inherently
part of both an employee's ability to perform a job and an
employer's
Page 499 U. S. 217
"normal operation" of its business. Indeed, in both cases, the
Court approved the statement in
Weeks v. Southern Bell
Telephone & Telegraph Co., 408 F.2d 228 (CA5 1969), that
an employer could establish a BFOQ defense by showing that "all or
substantially all women would be unable to perform
safely and
efficiently the duties of the job involved."
Id. at
235 (emphasis added).
See Criswell, 472 U.S. at
472 U. S. 414;
Dothard, supra, 433 U.S. at
433 U. S. 333.
The Court's statement in this case that "the safety exception is
limited to instances in which sex or pregnancy actually interferes
with the employee's ability to perform the job,"
ante at
499 U. S. 204,
therefore adds no support to its conclusion that a fetal protection
policy could never be justified as a BFOQ. On the facts of this
case, for example, protecting fetal safety while carrying out the
duties of battery manufacturing is as much a legitimate concern as
is safety to third parties in guarding prisons (
Dothard)
or flying airplanes (
Criswell). [
Footnote
2/5]
Dothard and
Criswell also confirm that costs
are relevant in determining whether a discriminatory policy is
reasonably necessary for the normal operation of a business. In
Dothard, the safety problem that justified exclusion of
women from the prison guard positions was largely a result of
inadequate staff and facilities.
See 433 U.S. at
433 U. S. 335.
If the cost of employing women could not be considered, the
employer there should have been
Page 499 U. S. 218
required to hire more staff and restructure the prison
environment, rather than exclude women. Similarly, in
Criswell, the airline could have been required to hire
more pilots and install expensive monitoring devices, rather than
discriminate against older employees. The BFOQ statute, however,
reflects "Congress' unwillingness to require employers to change
the very nature of their operations."
Price Waterhouse v.
Hopkins, 490 U. S. 228, 242
(1989) (plurality opinion).
The Pregnancy Discrimination Act (PDA), 42 U.S.C. §
2000e(k), contrary to the Court's assertion,
ante at
499 U. S. 204,
did not restrict the scope of the BFOQ defense. The PDA was only an
amendment to the "Definitions" section of Title VII, 42 U.S.C.
§ 2000e, and did not purport to eliminate or alter the
BFOQ defense. Rather, it merely clarified Title VII to make it
clear that pregnancy and related conditions are included within
Title VII's antidiscrimination provisions. As we have already
recognized, "the purpose of the PDA was simply to make the
treatment of pregnancy consistent with general Title VII
principles."
Arizona Governing Committee for Tax Deferred
Annuity and Deferred Compensation Plans v. Norris,
463 U. S. 1073,
463 U. S.
1085, n. 14 (1983). [
Footnote
2/6]
This interpretation is confirmed by the PDA's legislative
history. As discussed in
Newport News Shipbuilding & Dry
Dock Co. v. EEOC, 462 U. S. 669,
462 U. S.
678-679, and n. 17 (1983), the PDA was designed to
overrule the decision in
General Electric Co. v. Gilbert,
429 U. S. 125
(1976), where the Court
Page 499 U. S. 219
had held that "an exclusion of pregnancy from a disability
benefits plan providing general coverage is not a gender-based
discrimination at all."
Id. at
429 U. S. 136.
The PDA thus "makes clear that it is discriminatory to treat
pregnancy-related conditions less favorably than other medical
conditions."
Newport News, supra, 462 U.S. at
462 U. S. 684.
It does not, however, alter the standards for employer defenses.
The Senate Report, for example, stated that the PDA
"defines sex discrimination, as proscribed in the existing
statute, to include these physiological occurrences [pregnancy,
childbirth, and related medical conditions] peculiar to women;
it doe not change the application of Title VII to sex
discrimination in any other way."
S.Rep. No. 9331, pp. 3 (1977) (emphasis added). Similarly, the
House Report stated that
"[p]regnancy-based distinctions will be subject to the same
scrutiny
on the same terms as other acts of sex
discrimination proscribed in the existing statute."
H.R.Rep. No. 9948, p. 4 (1978), U.S.Code Cong. & Admin.News
1978, p. 4752 (emphasis added). [
Footnote
2/7]
In enacting the BFOQ standard, "Congress did not ignore the
public interest in safety."
Criswell, supra, 472 U.S. at
472 U. S. 419.
The Court's narrow interpretation of the BFOQ defense in this case,
however, means that an employer cannot exclude even pregnant women
from an environment highly toxic to their fetuses. It is foolish to
think that Congress intended such a result, and neither the
language of the BFOQ exception nor our cases require it. [
Footnote 2/8]
Page 499 U. S. 220
II
Despite my disagreement with the Court concerning the scope of
the BFOQ defense, I concur in reversing the Court of Appeals
because that court erred in affirming the District Court's grant of
summary judgment in favor of Johnson Controls. First, the Court of
Appeals erred in failing to consider the level of risk-avoidance
that was part of Johnson Controls' "normal operation." Although the
court did conclude that there was a "substantial risk" to fetuses
from lead exposure in fertile women, 886 F.2d 871, 879-883, 898
(CA7 1989), it merely meant that there was a high risk that some
fetal injury would occur absent a fetal protection policy. That
analysis, of course, fails to address the
extent of fetal
injury that is likely to occur. [
Footnote 2/9]
If the fetal protection policy insists on a risk-avoidance level
substantially higher than other risk levels
Page 499 U. S. 221
tolerated by Johnson Controls, such as risks to employees and
consumers, the policy should not constitute a BFOQ. [
Footnote 2/10]
Second, even without more information about the normal level of
risk at Johnson Controls, the fetal protection policy at issue here
reaches too far. This is evident both in its presumption that,
absent medical documentation to the contrary, all women are fertile
regardless of their age,
see id. at 876, n. 8, and in its
exclusion of presumptively fertile women from positions that might
result in a promotion to a position involving high lead exposure,
id. at 877. There has been no showing that either of those
aspects of the policy is reasonably necessary to ensure safe and
efficient operation of Johnson Controls' battery-manufacturing
business. Of course, these infirmities in the company's policy do
not warrant invalidating the entire fetal protection program.
Third, it should be recalled that, until 1982, Johnson Controls
operated without an exclusionary policy, and it has not identified
any grounds for believing that its current policy is reasonably
necessary to its
normal operations. Although it is now more aware of some of the
dangers of lead exposure,
id. at 899, it has not shown
that the risks of fetal harm or the costs associated with it have
substantially increased.
Cf. Manhart, 435 U.S. at
435 U. S. 716,
n. 30, in which we rejected a BFOQ defense because the employer had
operated prior to the discrimination with no significant adverse
effects.
Finally, the Court of Appeals failed to consider properly
petitioners' evidence of harm to offspring caused by lead exposure
in males. The court considered that evidence only in its discussion
of the business necessity standard, in which it focused on whether
petitioners had met their burden of proof. 886 F.2d at
889-890. The burden of proving that a discriminatory qualification
is a BFOQ, however, rests with
Page 499 U. S. 222
the employer.
See, e.g., Price Waterhouse, 490 U.S. at
490 U. S. 248;
Dothard, 433 U.S. at
433 U. S. 333.
Thus, the court should have analyzed whether the evidence was
sufficient for petitioners to survive summary judgment in light of
respondent's burden of proof to establish a BFOQ.
Moreover, the court should not have discounted the evidence as
"speculative," 886 F.2d at 889, merely because it was based on
animal studies. We have approved the use of animal studies to
assess risks,
see Industrial Union Dept. v. American Petroleum
Institute, 448 U. S. 607,
448 U. S. 657,
n. 64 (1980), and OSHA uses animal studies in establishing its lead
control regulations,
see United Steelworkers of America,
AFL-CIO-CLC v. Marshall, 208 U.S. App.D.C. 60, 128, 647 F.2d
1189, 1257, n. 97 (1980),
cert. denied, 453 U.S. 913
(1981). It seems clear that, if the Court of Appeals had properly
analyzed that evidence, it would have concluded that summary
judgment against petitioners was not appropriate because there was
a dispute over a material issue of fact.
As Judge Posner observed below:
"The issue of the legality of fetal protection is as novel and
difficult as it is contentious, and the most sensible way to
approach it at this early stage is on a case-by-case basis,
involving careful examination of the facts as developed by the full
adversary process of a trial. The record in this case is too
sparse. The district judge jumped the gun. By affirming on this
scanty basis, we may be encouraging incautious employers to adopt
fetal protection policies that could endanger the jobs of millions
of women for minor gains in fetal safety and health."
"But although the defendant did not present enough evidence to
warrant the grant of summary judgment in its favor, there is no
ground for barring it from presenting additional evidence at trial.
Therefore it would be equally precipitate for us to direct the
entry of judgment in the plaintiffs' favor. . . ."
886 F.2d at 908.
Page 499 U. S. 223
[
Footnote 2/1]
The Court's heavy reliance on the word "occupational" in the
BFOQ statute,
ante at
499 U. S. 201,
is unpersuasive. Any requirement for employment can be said to be
an occupational qualification, since "occupational" merely means
related to a job.
See Webster's Third New International
Dictionary 1560 (1976). Thus, Johnson Controls' requirement that
employees engaged in battery manufacturing be either male or
nonfertile clearly is an "occupational qualification." The issue,
of course, is whether that qualification is "reasonably necessary
to the normal operation" of Johnson Controls' business. It is
telling that the Court offers no case support, either from this
Court or the lower Federal Courts, for its interpretation of the
word "occupational."
[
Footnote 2/2]
Cf. English v. General Electric Co., 496 U. S.
72 (1990) (state law action for intentional infliction
of emotional distress not preempted by Energy Reorganization Act of
1974);
California Federal Savings and Loan Assn. v.
Guerra, 479 U. S. 272,
479 U. S.
290-292 (1987) (state statute requiring the provision of
leave and pregnancy to employees disabled by pregnancy not
preempted by the PDA);
Silkwood v. Kerr-McGee Corp.,
464 U. S. 238,
464 U. S. 256
(1984) (state punitive damage claim not preempted by federal laws
regulating nuclear power plants);
Bernstein v. Aetna Life &
Cas., 843 F.2d 359, 364-365 (CA9 1988) ("It is
well-established that Title VII does not preempt state common law
remedies");
see also 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-7.
[
Footnote 2/3]
See, e.g., In re Estate of Infant Fontaine, 128 N.H.
695, 700, 519 A.2d 227, 230 (1986);
Collins v. Eli Lilly
Co., 116 Wis.2d 166, 200, n. 14,
342 N.W.2d
37, 53, n. 14 (1984),
cert. denied, 469 U.S. 826
(1984)
Doyle v. Bowdoin College, 403 A.2d
1206, 1208, n. 3 (Me.1979);
Littleton v. Jordan, 428
S.W.2d 472 (Tex.Civ. App.1968);
Fallaw v. Hobbs, 113 Ga.
App. 181, 182-183,
147 S.E.2d
517, 519 (1966);
see also Restatement (Second) of
Torts § 488(1) (1965).
[
Footnote 2/4]
An example of a "peripheral" job qualification was in
Diaz
v. Pan American World Airways, Inc., 442 F.2d 385 (CA5),
cert. denied, 404 U.S. 950 (1971). There, the Fifth
Circuit held that being female was not a BFOQ for the job of flight
attendant, despite a determination by the trial court that women
were better able than men to perform the "nonmechanical" functions
of the job, such as attending to the passengers' psychological
needs. The court concluded that such non-mechanical functions were
merely "tangential" to the normal operation of the airline's
business, noting that
"[n]o one has suggested that having male stewards will so
seriously affect the operation of an airline as to jeopardize or
even minimize its ability to provide safe transportation from one
place to another."
442 F.2d at 388.
[
Footnote 2/5]
I do not, as the Court asserts,
ante at
499 U. S. 203,
reject the "essence of the business" test. Rather, I merely
reaffirm the obvious -- that safety to third parties is part of the
"essence" of most if not all businesses. Of course, the BFOQ
inquiry "
adjusts to the safety factor.'" Criswell, 472
U.S. at 472 U. S. 413
(quoting Tamiami, 531 F.2d at 236). As a result, more
stringent occupational qualifications may be justified for jobs
involving higher safety risks, such as flying airplanes. But a
recognition that the importance of safety varies among businesses
does not mean that safety is completely irrelevant to the essence
of a job such as battery manufacturing.
[
Footnote 2/6]
Contrary to the Court's assertion,
ante at
499 U. S.
204-205, neither the majority decision nor the dissent
in
California Federal S. & L. Assn. v. Guerra,
479 U. S. 272
(1987), is relevant to the issue whether the PDA altered the BFOQ
standard for pregnancy-related discrimination. In that case, the
Court held that the PDA did not preempt a state law requiring
employers to provide leave and reinstatement to pregnant employees.
The Court reasoned that the PDA was not intended to prohibit all
employment practices that favor pregnant women.
Id. at
479 U. S.
284-290. The dissent disagreed with that conclusion,
arguing that the state statute was preempted because the PDA's
language that pregnant employees "shall be treated the same for all
employment-related purposes" appeared to forbid preferential
treatment of pregnant workers.
Id. at
479 U. S.
297-298. Obviously, the dispute in that case between the
majority and the dissent was purely over what constituted
discrimination under Title VII, as amended by the PDA, not over the
scope of the BFOQ defense.
[
Footnote 2/7]
Even if the PDA did establish a separate BFOQ standard for
pregnancy-related discrimination, if a female employee could only
perform the duties of her job by imposing substantial safety and
liability risks, she would not be "similar in [her] ability or
inability to work" as a male employee, under the terms of the PDA.
See 42 U.S.C. § 2000e(k).
[
Footnote 2/8]
The Court's cramped reading of the BFOQ defense is also belied
by the legislative history of Title VII, in which three examples of
permissible sex discrimination were mentioned -- a female nurse
hired to care for an elderly woman, an all-male professional
baseball team, and a masseur.
See 110 Cong.Rec. 2718
(1964) (Rep. Goodell);
id. at 7212-7213 (interpretive
memorandum introduced by Sens. Clark and Case);
id. at
2720 (Rep. Multer). In none of those situations would gender
"actually interfer[e] with the employee's ability to perform the
job," as required today by the Court,
ante at
499 U. S.
204.
The Court's interpretation of the BFOQ standard also would seem
to preclude considerations of privacy as a basis for sex-based
discrimination, since those considerations do not relate directly
to an employee's physical ability to perform the duties of the job.
The lower federal courts, however, have consistently recognized
that privacy interests may justify sex-based requirements for
certain jobs.
See, e.g., Fesel v. Masonic Home of Delaware,
Inc., 447 F.
Supp. 1346 (Del.1978),
aff'd, 591 F.2d 1334 (CA3 1979)
(nurse's aide in retirement home);
Jones v. Hinds General
Hospital, 666 F.
Supp. 933 (SD Miss.1987) (nursing assistant);
Local 567,
American Federation of State, County, and Municipal Employees,
AFL-CIO v. Michigan Council 25, American Federation of State,
County, and Municipal Employees, AFL-CIO, 635 F.
Supp. 1010 (ED Mich.1986) (mental health workers);
Norwood
v. Dale Maintenance System, Inc., 590
F. Supp. 1410 (ND 111.1984) (washroom attendant);
Backus v.
Baptist Medical Center, 510 F.
Supp. 1191 (ED Ark.1981),
vacated as moot, 671 F.2d
1100 (CA8 1982) (nursing position in obstetrics and gynecology
department of hospital).
[
Footnote 2/9]
Apparently, between 1979 and 1983, only eight employees at
Johnson Controls became pregnant while maintaining high blood lead
levels, and only one of the babies born to this group later
recorded an elevated blood lead level.
See ante at
499 U. S. 191;
886 F.2d at 876-877.
[
Footnote 2/10]
It is possible, for example, that alternatives to exclusion of
women, such as warnings combined with frequent blood testings,
would sufficiently minimize the risk such that it would be
comparable to other risks tolerated by Johnson Controls.
JUSTICE SCALIA, concurring in the judgment.
I generally agree with the Court's analysis, but have some
reservations, several of which bear mention.
First, I think it irrelevant that there was "evidence in the
record about the debilitating effect of lead exposure on the male
reproductive system,"
ante at
499 U. S. 198.
Even without such evidence, treating women differently "on the
basis of pregnancy" constitutes discrimination "on the basis of
sex," because Congress has unequivocally said so. Pregnancy
Discrimination Act of 1978, 92 Stat. 2076, 42 U.S.C. §
2000e(k).
Second, the Court points out that
"Johnson Controls has shown no factual basis for believing that
all or substantially all women would be unable to perform safely .
. . the duties of the job involved,"
ante at
499 U. S. 207
(internal quotations omitted). In my view, this is not only
"somewhat academic in light of our conclusion that the company may
not exclude fertile women at all,"
ibid; it is entirely
irrelevant. By reason of the Pregnancy Discrimination Act, it would
not matter if all pregnant women placed their children at risk in
taking these jobs, just as it does not matter if no men do so. As
Judge Easterbrook put it in his dissent below,
"Title VII gives parents the power to make occupational
decisions affecting their families. A legislative forum is
available to those who believe that such decisions should be made
elsewhere."
International Union, UAW v. Johnson Controls, Inc., 886
F.2d 871, 915 (CA7 1989) (Easterbrook, J., dissenting).
Third, I am willing to assume, as the Court intimates,
ante at
499 U. S.
208-211, that any action required by Title VII cannot
give rise to liability under state tort law. That assumption,
however, does not answer the question whether an action is required
by Title VII (including the BFOQ provision) even if it is subject
to liability under state tort law. It is perfectly reasonable to
believe that Title VII has
accommodated state tort law
through the BFOQ exception. However, all that need be said in the
present case is that Johnson has not demonstrated a substantial
risk of tort liability -- which is
Page 499 U. S. 224
alone enough to defeat a tort-based assertion of the BFOQ
exception.
Last, the Court goes far afield, it seems to me, in suggesting
that increased cost alone -- short of "costs . . . so prohibitive
as to threaten survival of the employer's business,"
ante
at
499 U. S. 210
-- cannot support a BFOQ defense.
See ante at
499 U. S. 206.
I agree with JUSTICE WHITE's concurrence,
ante at
499 U. S. 214,
that nothing in our prior cases suggests this, and, in my view, it
is wrong. I think, for example, that a shipping company may refuse
to hire pregnant women as crew members on long voyages because the
on-board facilities for foreseeable emergencies, though quite
feasible, would be inordinately expensive.
In the present case, however, Johnson has not asserted a
cost-based BFOQ.
I concur in the judgment of the Court.