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Court rules that Civil Rights Law protects gay workers
Two different branches of the federal government argued against each other
Court: Civil Rights Law protects claims of employment discrimination based on sexual orientation
(CNN)A
federal appeals court in New York ruled on Monday that Title VII of the
Civil Rights Act of 1964, a federal law that bans employment
discrimination because of sex, also protects claims of discrimination
based on sexual orientation.
"Sexual
orientation discrimination is a subset of sex discrimination because
sexual orientation is defined by one's sex in relation to the sex of
those to whom one is attracted," a 10-3 opinion issued by the 2nd US
Circuit Court of Appeals stated.
The
ruling is a loss for the Trump administration, which had argued that
Congress did not mean Title VII to extend to claims of sexual
orientation.
The court, based in
New York, becomes the second appeals court to rule that the civil rights
law covers discrimination based on sexual orientation. Last year, the
7th Circuit Court of Appeals issued a similar ruling.
The
ruling means that employees in those two circuits can use existing
civil rights law to sue for discrimination based on sexual orientation.
It
is a victory for the estate of Donald Zarda, a skydiving instructor who
died before trial but his estate had continued his suit.
"Now
two courts have ruled emphatically that we are right," said Gregory
Nevins of Lambda Legal, who filed briefs in support of Zarda. "This is a
big win, and we hope for a national ruling in the future."
The
case stems from 2010, when Zarda was an Altitude Express instructor for
Rosanna Orellana. Zarda's role was to be tied to the back of Orellana,
deploy the parachute and supervise the jump. According to court papers,
at some point Zarda informed Orellana that he was gay. After the jump,
Orellana's boyfriend learned that Zarda had disclosed his sexual
orientation and called Altitude Express with various complaints about
Zarda's behavior. Zarda was fired.
The
company contended that Zarda was fired for failing to provide an
enjoyable experience to customers. Zarda asserted that his actions were
appropriate and he was fired because of his sexuality. He filed a
complaint with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission alleging sex
discrimination in violation of Title VII.
The case was unusual, since the EEOC supported Zarda, while the Justice Department was on the other side.
"The EEOC is not speaking for the United States," Justice Department lawyers said in their brief.
After
the ruling, Justice spokesman Devin O'Malley issued a statement saying
the department is "committed to protecting the civil and constitutional
rights of all individuals" but that it is dedicated "to the fundamental
principle that the courts cannot expand the law beyond what Congress has
provided."
Saul D. Zabell, an attorney for Altitude Express, said he has not decided whether to appeal the case to the Supreme Court.
He
said that while his clients recognize that sexual orientation needs to
be protected under the law, a jury in the case found that Zarda had not
been terminated because of his sexual orientation but instead it was
based on his inappropriate behavior.
Coming
more than two years after the Supreme Court cleared the way for
same-sex marriage, government lawyers wrote in briefs that "to be sure,"
there have been "notable changes in societal and cultural attitudes
about such discrimination," but they insisted that Congress has
"consistently" declined to amend Title VII in light of those changes.
They
said that even changes in societal attitudes "do not present courts
with a license to rewrite a constitutionally valid statutory text under
the banner of speculation about what Congress might have done to
implement a clear statute's policy objectives."
Lawyer Gregory Antollino and the LGBT rights group Lambda Legal argued in support of Zarda's estate.
"If
you discriminate on the basis of sexual orientation, you necessarily
take into account the sex of the employee," said Antollino. "You can't
take the 'sex' out of 'sexual orientation.' "
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