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How a Supreme Court Case on Job Transfers Will Impact Schools

By Mark Walsh 鈥 December 06, 2023 8 min read
Photograph of the United States Supreme Court building in Washington DC, USA.
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Is teaching 7th grade harder than teaching 3rd grade? Is a transfer from a high school principal鈥檚 position to the central office a 鈥渕aterially adverse鈥 change? What about a school security guard鈥檚 move from a high school to a middle school?

Those are some of the questions lower courts have faced in the context of employment discrimination claims under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. In each of those cases, the courts ruled that the job transfer did not result in a significant disadvantage, and thus the plaintiff鈥檚 case ended at an early stage, before he or she had a chance to prove the alleged discriminatory conduct.

Now, however, the U.S. Supreme Court has taken up the question of whether a job transfer must result in a significant disadvantage before the complaining employee may move on to proving their employment discrimination allegations. After nearly two hours of arguments on Wednesday, the justices seemed to lean toward a ruling in favor of the employee.

In , the justices are considering the case of a St. Louis police sergeant who alleged sex discrimination in her transfer out of the prestigious intelligence division to a more routine patrol district, even though the change was not considered a demotion and did not result in a drop in pay or other benefits.

Although the school cases did not come up during oral arguments, the court鈥檚 decision in the case will have broad ramifications in public education. Education administrators worry that a ruling that would remove the requirement to show harm would not only hamper their need to sometimes reassign staff to address students鈥 needs, but would also bury them in litigation.

鈥淐ollectively, public school districts are the largest employer in the country,鈥 says by the National School Boards Association, AASA, the School Superintendents鈥 Association, and the National Association of School Business Officials International. 鈥淓ducational administrators, particularly in large urban school districts, regularly must make a wide range of teacher and support staff assignments and other personnel management decisions to meet the needs of constantly changing student populations.鈥

The groups join St. Louis in asking the court to uphold a standard that prevails in a majority of federal appeals circuits that have addressed the issue鈥攖hat a job transfer must result in material harm to the employee to be the basis for a Title VII discrimination claim.

鈥淓liminating the material, objective harm requirement would vastly expand the scope of transfer and other employment decisions that might be subject to litigation, and the number of claims that survive early adjudication,鈥 the school groups鈥 brief says. 鈥淭he result would be to significantly increase litigation burdens on already resource-strapped school districts.鈥

The illegal discrimination itself is the harm, employee鈥檚 lawyer argues

The St. Louis police case involves Jatonya Muldrow, who worked nine years in the intelligence division and had once led the gun crimes unit. In 2017, a new, male supervisor transferred her to a local police district, where she supervised routine patrol and investigative matters and once again had to wear a uniform instead of plainclothes.

The new intelligence division leader allegedly referred to the work Muldrow had been involved in as 鈥渧ery dangerous,鈥 and he replaced her with a male officer and transferred two other women out of the division. The supervisor also referred to her as 鈥淢rs.鈥 rather than 鈥淪ergeant,鈥 as he addressed men of that rank.

Muldrow sued for sex discrimination under Title VII, but lost in both a federal district court and the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 8th Circuit, in St. Louis. The appellate court that Muldrow鈥檚 transfer was not an 鈥渁dverse employment action鈥 under Title VII.

The 8th Circuit court observed that Muldrew鈥檚 transfer 鈥渄id not result in a diminution to her title, salary, or benefits鈥 or 鈥渁 significant change in working conditions or responsibilities.鈥 She simply expressed 鈥渁 mere preference for one position over the other,鈥 the court said.

Brian Wolfman, a Georgetown University Law Center professor representing Muldrow before the high court, said the 8th Circuit was mistaken.

鈥淚f an employer transfers an employee because of a protected characteristic, that鈥檚 discrimination, and it鈥檚 prohibited by Title VII,鈥 he said. 鈥淭he worse treatment here is the discrimination itself.鈥

Muldrow also had the support of President Joe Biden鈥檚 administration.

鈥淏y definition, if you are transferring somebody, if you鈥檙e changing their office location, if you are, you know, altering their shift or anything like that on the basis of a protected characteristic, that is inherently harmful,鈥 said Aimee W. Brown, an assistant to the U.S. solicitor general.

Robert M. Loeb, the lawyer representing the city of St. Louis, said that to be the basis for a Title VII claim, a transfer decision 鈥渘eeds to be something more than mere personal preferences and subjective sensitivities of the particular employee.鈥

He said a categorical standard covering any transfer would mean 鈥渢he federal courts would become the super-personnel department not just for all private employers but for state governments and for local governments.鈥

School groups ask: Would a short-term assignment count as a transfer?

The school groups note in their brief that public education 鈥渉as been the backdrop for a significant volume of the case law applying the material, objective harm standard.鈥

They point to several decisions involving lateral transfers of school personnel where courts have ruled for school districts based on a lack of harm to the transferred educator or staff member.

In , the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 7th Circuit, in Chicago, ruled that a Chicago Public Schools teacher did not suffer harm by being assigned to a 7th grade class instead of her preference to teach 3rd grade. The teacher, who was suing under Title VII for alleged national origin discrimination, claimed she was denied a position for which she was best suited and put in a different and more difficult job.

The 7th Circuit said the Chicago teacher did not present enough evidence to show material harm in her new assignment.

鈥淭hat the 7th-grade class she was assigned to may have been more unruly than 3rd-grade students does not make [the teacher鈥檚] assignment to the 7th grade a materially adverse employment action,鈥 the appeals court said.

The school groups also argue that a rule in which lateral transfers are by definition covered by Title VII would be difficult to apply in education.

鈥淒oes a short-term, temporary assignment to cover a class in another school count as a 鈥榯ransfer鈥?鈥 the school groups鈥 brief says. 鈥淒oes assigning a teacher to a different classroom in the same building, or asking her to teach a class online, qualify as a change in 鈥榣ocation鈥?鈥 鈥 None of these questions have clear answers.鈥

The St. Louis police sergeant鈥檚 lawyers cited several school transfer cases in their briefing, calling some applications of the material harm standard 鈥渆gregious.鈥

They cite, among other cases, by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 3rd Circuit, in Philadelphia, that a Black school security officer transferred from a high school to a middle school did not suffer an adverse job action, despite his claims that the middle school position was less prestigious and did not offer the possibility of overtime pay. The officer鈥檚 underlying claim of race discrimination involved allegations that a New Jersey school district moved white security officers inside during winter while making Black guards work outside.

Some other courts have also ruled that certain job transfers in K-12 education were adverse. A federal appeals court that an art teacher鈥檚 transfer from her longtime position at a junior high school to an elementary school interfered with a condition of employment.

In 2000, that a female high school principal who was transferred to a central office position may have suffered 鈥渁 loss of prestige and responsibility鈥 and allowed her Title VII suit to proceed. (To show how split the federal courts are over these questions, another federal appeals court that a middle school principal鈥檚 transfer to the central office was not a loss of prestige.)

Muldrow鈥檚 lawyers argued that the text of Title VII does not call for federal judges 鈥渢o answer value-laden questions about which jobs are better than others.鈥

Justices debate the impact of discrimination in the workplace

During oral arguments, Justice Samuel A. Alito Jr. appeared most sympathetic to a standard requiring some tangible harm resulting from a transfer in a Title VII case. He worried about hearing from federal district judges who might say they could not dismiss 鈥渢rivial cases鈥 without going through lengthy discovery and other legal proceedings.

Alito wondered whether there should be 鈥渟ome sort of threshold that has to be cleared before the matter gets into court.鈥

But several justices appeared to lean towards Muldrow鈥檚 arguments.

鈥淲e鈥檝e recognized over and over again that discrimination itself can profoundly injure people鈥攋ust the fact itself that you鈥檙e being treated differently from somebody else based on your race, based on your sex, et cetera,鈥 Justice Elena Kagan told Loeb, the city鈥檚 lawyer.

Justice Brett M. Kavanaugh said, 鈥淣ot everything in the workplace will relate to a term, condition, or privilege of employment, but transfers, I think, clearly would.鈥

Justice Neil M. Gorsuch, who wrote the court鈥檚 2020 opinion in , which interpreted Title VII as covering discrimination based on sexual orientation and gender identity, told Loeb that he agreed some of the court鈥檚 precedents hold that 鈥渄iscriminate鈥 means treating one employee worse than another.

鈥淕ot it,鈥 Gorsuch said. 鈥淏ut I think we鈥檝e also kind of indicated in our cases that when you treat someone worse than another person because of race or sex, that鈥檚 kind of the end of it, and there isn鈥檛 a further inquiry into how badly you treated somebody worse. A minor [case of] treating [someone] worse on the basis of sex or race is something Congress in 1964鈥攊n a very short and sweet statute, 28 pages long but profound鈥攕aid that the law will no longer tolerate.鈥

A decision in the case is expected by next June.

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