Two justices on the U.S. Supreme Court want to alter the 52-year-old framework for resolving employment discrimination claims, arguing that the so-called McDonnell Douglas model is unworkable and confusing.
The case is Hittle v. City of Stockton. On March 10, Justices Thomas and Gorsuch issued a decision dissenting from the Court's decision not to hear the case. Having lost their case in the lower courts, Hittle's lawyers filed a petition for Supreme Court review. But even the other conservative justices on the Court evidently do not want to revisit McDonnell Douglas. Still, the dissent provides insight into how two of the Justices approach this issue. When even one Justice wants to revisit or overrule a major precedent, it's important news.
Every employment discrimination lawyer knows about McDonnell Douglas v. Green, 411 U.S. 792 (1973). In cases involving circumstantial evidence, the plaintiff has to make out a minimal prima facie case, usually through proof they were qualified for the position and were terminated or demoted under circumstances creating an inference of discrimination, i.e., a Black employee was replaced by a white employee, or there was something fishy about the adverse action. If the prima facie case is made out, the employer has to articulate a reason for termination or demotion (or other adverse action). Employers almost always satisfy that minimal requirement, as well. The burden then shifts to the plaintiff to prove the real reason was discrimination, usually proven through evidence that the employer's articulated justification was a knowing falsehood. The pretext fight is usually where the action is.
Thomas and Gorsuch write that this framework "has been widely criticized" over the years as confusing and inefficient, having "taken on a life of its own" as it was originally designed for bench trials but now guides summary judgment motions and jury trials. They note that the Supreme Court devised this evidentiary framework "out of whole cloth," though to be fair to the McDonnell Douglas model, most Supreme Court doctrine is devised by the justices to help apply statutory and constitutional principles. Title VII, when enacted in 1964, said nothing about how courts and litigants were supposed to apply it in the real world. Maybe the thinking back then was that discrimination was often so blatant that you did not need a complex evidentiary model to determine if someone was really the victim of discrimination. By 1973, however, employers got wise and knew that direct evidence of discriminatory intent would doom their chances in court, and that more subtle means of discrimination were in order. McDonnell Douglas takes the latter approach into account.
Here are the problems with McDonnell Douglas, as Thomas and Gorsuch see it:
Because the McDonnell Douglas framework was designed for use in a bench trial, the language this Court has used to describe the framework does not neatly track the plaintiff ’s summary-judgment task. or example, the first step requires a plaintiff to “establis[h] a prima facie case.” And, the third step requires the plaintiff to show, “by a preponderance of the evidence,” that the employer’s stated reason “was in fact pretext” for discrimination. But, a plaintiff need not establish or prove any elements—by a preponderance or otherwise—to survive summary judgment. At that stage, he need only offer enough evidence to create a genuine dispute of material fact.
In addition,
Our precedent makes clear that the framework is, at most, a “procedural device, designed only to establish an order of proof and production” when evaluating circumstantial evidence. Put another way, it is “‘merely’” a “‘way to evaluate the evidence’” that bears on the ultimate finding of liability. Yet, some courts treat McDonnell Douglas as a substantive legal standard that a plaintiff must establish to survive summary judgment or to ultimately prove a claim.There is more:
Some courts also fail to appreciate that McDonnell Douglas is necessarily underinclusive. The framework sets forth criteria that, if satisfied, will allow a plaintiff to prove a Title VII violation. But, satisfying McDonnell Douglas is not the only way or even the best way to prove a claim. The McDonnell Douglas Court itself explained that “[t]he facts necessarily will vary in Title VII cases” and the prima facie proof required in one case “is not necessarily applicable in every respect to differing factual situations.” Yet, some courts treat the McDonnell Douglas framework as the exclusive method for evaluating evidence at summary judgment.
Thomas and Gorsuch rely heavily on a Ninth Circuit concurring opinion from December 2023 that questions the McDonnell Douglas framework. Concurrences like this will often find their way into Supreme Court rulings and dissents, and the judges write them as a message to the Supreme Court and other circuit courts to reevaluate some legal principle.
Another issue that Thomas does not reference, which I have observed, is that the prima facie portion of the three-part framework is "not onerous" and "de minimus" under settled case law. But courts do not so instruct the jury, which may rule against the plaintiff for not having a preponderance of the evidence in support of one of the prima facie elements even though the cases hold the plaintiff to a lower standard. Relatedly, the Second Circuit has said that you should not charge the jury with the prima facie elements, but that rule is not settled; some cases say you have to do it. Yet another quandary is this: the circuit courts have not settled upon how to resolve when pretext alone is enough to prove discrimination. Some circuits, including the Second Circuit want more than just pretext; we call that pretext-plus. Other circuits say evidence of pretext alone is enough to support a jury verdict.
In the 1990's, some federal judges began to question to McDonnell Douglas framework, abandoning the prima facie analysis and turning directly to examining the evidence as a whole to see if there is enough evidence to support the plaintiff's case. That is how juries do it; trial judges charge them on pretext, but I wonder if jurors go beyond the step-by-step instructions and just ask themselves if there is enough to prove discrimination. I have not seen trial judges lately abandon the prima facie test.
I don't know what alternatives the Court may adopt in place of McDonnell Douglas. While the ultimate question for the plaintiff is whether the defendant discriminated against her, the jury probably needs some kind of framework to facilitate its deliberations. For one, thing resolving cases involving circumstantial evidence are not easy and forcing the employer to articulate a reason, and allowing the plaintiff an opportunity to prove that articulated reason is a knowing falsehood certainly focuses the jury's attention on the main issues in the case. Juries may rationally find that if the employer's reason for the plaintiff's termination is a knowing falsehood, that deception may very well prove discrimination. Why else would the employer lie in court?
If the Supreme Court abandons the McDonnell Douglas framework, that will be a major event in the lives of employment discrimination attorneys, sort of like when the Court revised the employer liability standards in sexual harassment cases in 1998, when it issued the the Faragher and Ellerth rulings that upended the case law through the circuit courts. That only two Justices want to revisit McDonnell Douglas means the framework is safe for now. Both Thomas and Gorsuch are outside-the-box thinkers. But Supreme Court case law has been changing very quickly over the last 10 years. Litigants will continue to ask the Court to review this issue, I am sure.