The outcome in Zarda is significant because, unlike many state laws that explicitly prohibit sexual orientation discrimination, Title VII has long been interpreted by federal courts as not reaching such discrimination. The Second Circuit’s decision therefore signals a seismic shift in this long-standing consensus and will likely cause other circuits to reexamine their precedent in light of Title VII’s “evolving” legal framework. Although the Eleventh Circuit hewed close to its precedent in a decision issued shortly before Hively and declined to extend the reach of Title VII to sexual orientation discrimination, the Second Circuit’s decision suggests that the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission’s (EEOC) position on sexual orientation discrimination, which the agency has advanced for several years now, may be gathering steam. For example, in a recent decision from the First Circuit, Franchina v. City of Providence, the court noted that the continuing validity of its “nearly twenty-year-old” precedent on Title VII and sexual orientation discrimination was not at issue in the case, but it also observed (citing Hively) that “the tide may be turning when it comes to Title VII’s protections.” How high the tide goes, and whether it will reach the doors of the Supreme Court, remains to be seen.
Another Federal Appeals Court Finds Title VII Prohibits Sexual Orientation Discrimination
Thursday, March 1, 2018
Following the Seventh Circuit’s landmark decision last April in Hively v. Ivy Tech Community College, the Second Circuit Court of Appeals has joined in finding that Title VII prohibits discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation. In Zarda v. Altitude Express, decided on February 26, 2018, the Second Circuit concluded that Title VII’s ban on sex discrimination “applies to any practice in which sex is a motivating factor.” Because sex is necessarily a factor in sexual orientation, discrimination based on sexual orientation amounts to banned sex discrimination, reasoned the Second Circuit.