The Oyez Project Virtual Tour of the Supreme Court Building

Abstract

Oral Argument: Monday, December 14, 1970
Decision: Monday, March 8, 1971
Issues: Civil Rights, Employment Discrimination
Categories: discrimination, employment, race discrimination

Advocates

Not available

Facts of the Case

Willie Griggs filed a class action, on behalf of several fellow African- American employees, against his employer Duke Power Company . Griggs challenged Duke's "inside" transfer policy, requiring employees who want to work in all but the company's lowest paying Labor Department to register a minimum score on two separate aptitude tests in addition to having a high school education. Griggs claimed that Duke's policy discriminated against African-American employees in violation of Title VII of the 1964 Civil Rights Act. On appeal from a district court's dismissal of the claim, the Court of Appeals found no discriminatory practices. The Supreme Court granted certiorari.

Question

Did Duke Power Company's intradepartmental transfer policy, requiring a high school education and the achievement of minimum scores on two separate aptitude tests, violate Title VII of the 1964 Civil Rights Act?

Conclusion

Yes. After noting that Title VII of the Act intended to achieve equality of employment opportunities, the Court held that Duke's standardized testing requirement prevented a disproportionate number of African-American employees from being hired by, and advancing to higher-paying departments within, the company. Neither the high school graduation requirement nor the two aptitude tests was directed or intended to measure an employee's ability to learn or perform a particular job or category of jobs within the company. The Court concluded that the subtle, illegal, purpose of these requirements was to safeguard Duke's long-standing policy of giving job preferences to its white employees.

Supreme Court Justice Opinions and Votes (by Ideology)

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Full Opinion: Civil Rights, Employment Discrimination: 8 - 0
Voted with the majority, joined Burger's opinion
Douglas
Did not participate
Brennan
Voted with the majority, joined Burger's opinion
Marshall
Voted with the majority, joined Burger's opinion
Black
Voted with the majority, joined Burger's opinion
Harlan
Voted with the majority, joined Burger's opinion
Stewart
Voted with the majority, joined Burger's opinion
White
Voted with the majority, joined Burger's opinion
Blackmun
Voted with the majority, authored an opinion
Burger

Cite this page

The Oyez Project, Griggs v. Duke Power Company, 401 U.S. 424 (1971),
available at: <http://www.oyez.org/cases/1970-1979/1970/1970_124/>
(last visited ).