Bostock v. Clayton Cnty. Bd. of Comm'rs
Opinion
A member of this Court in active service having requested a poll on whether this case should be reheard by the Court sitting en banc, and a majority of the judges in active service on this Court having voted against granting a rehearing en banc, it is ORDERED that this case will not be reheard en banc.
ROSENBAUM, Circuit Judge, joined by JILL PRYOR, Circuit Judge, dissenting from the denial of rehearing en banc:
The issue this case raises-whether Title VII protects gay and lesbian individuals from discrimination because their sexual preferences do not conform to their employers' views of whom individuals of their respective genders should love-is indisputably en-banc-worthy. Indeed, within the last fifteen months, two of our sister Circuits have found the issue of such extraordinary importance that they have each addressed it en banc.
See
Zarda v. Altitude Express, Inc.
,
No wonder. In 2011, about 8 million Americans identified as lesbian, gay, or bisexual. 2 See Gary J. Gates, How Many People are Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender? , The Williams Inst., 1, 3, 6 (Apr. 2011), https://williamsinstitute.law.ucla.edu/wp-content/uploads/Gates-How-ManyPeople-LGBT-Apr-2011.pdf (last visited July 10, 2018). Of those who so identify, roughly 25% report experiencing workplace discrimination because their sexual preferences do not match their employers' expectations. 3 That's a whole lot of people potentially affected by this issue. 4
Yet rather than address this objectively en-banc-worthy issue, we instead cling to a 39-year-old precedent,
Blum v. Gulf Oil Corp
.,
I have previously explained why
Price Waterhouse
abrogates
Blum
and requires the conclusion that Title VII prohibits discrimination against gay and lesbian individuals because their sexual preferences
do not conform to their employers' views of whom individuals of their respective genders should love.
See
Evans v. Ga. Reg'l Hosp.
,
But I dissent today for an even more basic reason: regardless of whatever a majority of this Court's views may turn out to be on the substantive issue that Bostock raises, we have an obligation to, as a Court , at least subject the issue to the "crucial" "crucible of adversarial testing," 8 and after that trial "yield[s] insights or reveal[s] pitfalls we cannot muster guided only by our own lights," 9 to give a reasoned and principled explanation for our position on this issue-something we have never done. 10
Particularly considering the amount of the public affected by this issue, the legitimacy of the law demands we explain ourselves.
See
Harvie Wilkinson III,
The Role of Reason in the Rule of Law
,
Despite never offering a reasoned explanation tested by the adversarial process, a majority of this Court apparently believes that
Blum
somehow prophesized the correct post-
Price Waterhouse
legal conclusion in its one-sentence "analysis" that relies solely on authority itself abrogated by
Price Waterhouse
. If the majority truly believes that, it should grant en banc rehearing and perform the "considerable calisthenics" to explain why gender nonconformity claims are cognizable except for when a person fails to conform to the "ultimate" gender stereotype by being attracted to the "wrong" gender.
Hively
,
And that's really saying something: in the past five years, the Second Circuit appears to have decided only two cases en banc-including
Zarda
-of the more than 24,000 appeals it terminated during that same period.
See
Westlaw search in CTA2 database: "adv:DA(aft 2008) & PR,PA,JU(en/2 banc)" (last visited July 10, 2018); Administrative Office of the United States Courts, Federal Court Management Statistics of the Courts of Appeals, http://www.uscourts.gov/sites/default/files/fcms_na_appprofile1231.2017.pdf;http://www.uscourts.gov/sites/default/files/data_tables/fcms_na_appsumary1231.2016.pdf; http://www.uscourts.gov/sites/default/files/data_tables/fcms_appeals_summary_pages_december_2015.pdf;http://www.uscourts.gov/sites/default/files/statistics_import_dir/appeals-fcms-summary-pages-december-2014.pdf; http://www.uscourts.gov/sites/default/files/statistics_import_dir/appeals-fcms-summary-pages-december-2013.pdf. In fact, Chief Judge Katzmann has characterized the Second Circuit as having a "longstanding tradition of general deference to panel adjudication."
Ricci v. DeStefano
,
Most statistics since that time include the number of individuals who identify as transgender. We have already held that
Price Waterhouse v. Hopkins
,
See , e.g. , 2017 Workplace Equality Fact Sheet , Out & Equal Workplace Advocates, http://outandequal.org/2017-workplace-equality-fact-sheet/ (last visited July 10, 2018) ("One in four LGBT employees report experiencing employment discrimination in the last five years."); LGBT People in Georgia, The Williams Inst., https://williamsinstitute.law.ucla.edu/wpcontent/uploads/Georgia-fact-sheet.pdf (last visited July 10, 2018) (finding 25% of LGBT Georgians reported workplace discrimination). I have been unable to find current statistics providing the percentage of only lesbian, gay, and bisexual individuals (without the inclusion of transgender individuals) who report discrimination in the workplace. Nevertheless, according to Professor Gary Gates's report for the Williams Institute, see supra at 1, "[a]n estimated 3.5% of adults in the United States identify as lesbian, gay, or bisexual and an estimated 0.3% of adults are transgender."
Studies show that this discrimination takes a myriad of forms: LGBT individuals are not interviewed and hired at the same rate as their heterosexual peers, and they face pay and promotional disparities. See Brad Spears, Christy Mallory, Documented Evidence of Employment Discrimination & Its Effects on LGBT People , The Williams Inst., 14 (July 2011), https://williamsinstitute.law.ucla.edu/wp-content/uploads/Sears-Mallory-Discrimination-July-20111.pdf (last visited July 10, 2018). Studies also show that employment discrimination against LGBT individuals correlates with effects beyond the employment sphere. For example, LGBT employees who experienced employment discrimination reported higher levels of psychological distress and health-related problems. See Craig R. Waldo, Working in a Majority Context: A Structural Model of Heterosexism as Minority Stress in the Workplace , 46 J. of Counseling Psych. 218, 224-28 (1999).
For comparison's sake, this issue spawned 163 pages of analysis from the Second Circuit in Zarda and 69 pages of analysis from the Seventh Circuit in Hively .
Smith
concluded that Title VII does not prohibit discrimination against male employees who present as "effeminate."
Smith v. Liberty Mut. Ins.
,
The pernicious effects of this discrimination are not just limited to those on people, they also drag down the economy by, among other things, reducing worker productivity and increasing turnover. See M.V. Lee Badgett, The Economic Case for Supporting LGBT Rights , The Atlantic, Nov. 29, 2014, https://www.theatlantic.com/business/archive/2014/11/theeconomic-case-for-supporting-lgbt-rights/383131/ (last visited July 10, 2018) (comparing the impact of employment discrimination against LGBT individuals on countries' gross domestic products); M.V. Lee Badgett et al., The Business Impact of LGBT-Supportive Workplace Policies , The Williams Inst. (May 2013), http://williamsinstitute.law.ucla.edu/wpcontent/uploads/Business-Impact-LGBT-Policies-Full-Report-May-2013.pdf (last visited July 10, 2018).
I am, of course, aware that petitions for certiorari in
Bostock
and
Zarda
are currently pending before the Supreme Court. But as of the date we as a Circuit voted against granting en banc rehearing in this case and I distributed this dissent to my colleagues-July 10, 2018-nearly three months remain before the Supreme Court is even again in session. And who knows whether the Court will grant either petition?
See
Supreme Court, The Justice's Caseload, https://www.supremecourt.gov/about/justicecaseload.aspx (last visited July 10, 2018) (stating that the Supreme Court usually grants review in only 80 cases of the 8,000 certiorari petitions filed each year). We have been unhindered by similar impediments in the past.
See
,
e.g.
,
In re Anthony Johnson
,
Sessions v. Dimaya
, --- U.S. ----,
In
Evans
,
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Gerald Lynn BOSTOCK, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. CLAYTON COUNTY BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS, Defendant, Clayton County, Defendant-Appellee.
- Cited By
- 3 cases
- Status
- Published