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No. 9951076
United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
Purushothaman Rajaram v. Meta Platforms, Inc.
No. 9951076 · Decided June 27, 2024
No. 9951076·Ninth Circuit · 2024·
FlawFinder last updated this page Apr. 2, 2026
Case Details
Court
United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
Decided
June 27, 2024
Citation
No. 9951076
Disposition
See opinion text.
Full Opinion
FOR PUBLICATION
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT
PURUSHOTHAMAN RAJARAM, No. 22-16870
Plaintiff-Appellant, D.C. No.
3:22-cv-02920-LB
v.
META PLATFORMS, INC., FKA OPINION
Facebook, Inc.,
Defendant-Appellee.
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Northern District of California
Laurel D. Beeler, Magistrate Judge, Presiding
Argued and Submitted October 4, 2023
University of Hawaii at Manoa
Filed June 27, 2024
Before: Marsha S. Berzon, Eric D. Miller, and Lawrence
VanDyke, Circuit Judges.
Opinion by Judge Miller;
Dissent by Judge VanDyke
2 RAJARAM V. META PLATFORMS, INC.
SUMMARY *
Employment Discrimination
Reversing the district court’s dismissal of an
employment discrimination action, and remanding, the panel
held that 42 U.S.C. § 1981 prohibits discrimination in hiring
against United States citizens on the basis of their
citizenship.
Purushothaman Rajaram, a naturalized United States
citizen, alleged that Meta Platforms, Inc., refused to hire him
because it prefers to hire noncitizens holding H1B visas to
whom it can pay lower wages.
Section 1981(a) provides:
All persons within the jurisdiction of the
United States shall have the same right in
every State and Territory to make and enforce
contracts, to sue, be parties, give evidence,
and to the full and equal benefit of all laws
and proceedings for the security of persons
and property as is enjoyed by white citizens,
and shall be subject to like punishment, pains,
penalties, taxes, licenses, and exactions of
every kind, and to no other.
Disagreeing with the Fifth Circuit, the panel held that,
according to the statutory text, section 1981 prohibits
employers from discriminating against United States
*
This summary constitutes no part of the opinion of the court. It has
been prepared by court staff for the convenience of the reader.
RAJARAM V. META PLATFORMS, INC. 3
citizens because an employer that does so gives one class of
people—noncitizens, or perhaps some subset of
noncitizens—a greater right to make contracts than “white
citizens.” If some noncitizens have a greater right to make
contracts than “white citizens,” then it is not true that “[a]ll
persons” have the “same right” to make contracts as “white
citizens.”
Dissenting, Judge VanDyke, applying what he thought
was the better reading of an admittedly ambiguous text, and
informed by the statutory development of section 1981,
concluded that the statute does not protect citizens from
discrimination on the basis of citizenship.
COUNSEL
Daniel L. Low (argued) and Daniel Kotchen, Kotchen &
Low LLP, Washington, D.C., for Plaintiff- Appellant.
Lauren R. Goldman (argued), Gabrielle Levin, and Emily
Black, Gibson Dunn & Crutcher LLP, New York, New
York; Kelley Pettus, Gibson Dunn & Crutcher LLP, Denver,
Colorado; Michele L. Maryott and Daniel R. Adler, Gibson
Dunn & Crutcher, Irvine, California; for Defendant-
Appellee.
4 RAJARAM V. META PLATFORMS, INC.
OPINION
MILLER, Circuit Judge:
This case presents the question whether 42 U.S.C.
§ 1981 prohibits discrimination in hiring against United
States citizens on the basis of their citizenship. We conclude
that it does.
Purushothaman Rajaram is a naturalized United States
citizen and an information technology professional with
experience managing software development projects. On
several occasions between 2020 and 2022, he unsuccessfully
applied to work at Meta Platforms, Inc., which operates
Facebook, Instagram, and WhatsApp, among other online
services. He alleges that Meta refused to hire him because it
prefers to hire noncitizens holding H-1B visas to whom it
can pay lower wages. The H-1B program allows employers
to hire qualified foreign workers for specialty occupations
when there is a shortage of skilled workers authorized to
work in the United States. See 8 C.F.R. § 214.2(h)(1)(ii)(B).
Rajaram brought this putative class action asserting a
single claim: that Meta violated section 1981 by
discriminating against United States citizens in hiring. The
district court dismissed the complaint, holding that section
1981 “does not bar discrimination based on U.S.
citizenship.”
We review the district court’s interpretation of the statute
de novo. United States v. Salazar, 61 F.4th 723, 726 (9th Cir.
2023). We begin with the statutory text. Hall v. United States
RAJARAM V. META PLATFORMS, INC. 5
Dep’t of Agric., 984 F.3d 825, 837 (9th Cir. 2020). Entitled
“Statement of equal rights,” section 1981(a) provides:
All persons within the jurisdiction of the
United States shall have the same right in
every State and Territory to make and enforce
contracts, to sue, be parties, give evidence,
and to the full and equal benefit of all laws
and proceedings for the security of persons
and property as is enjoyed by white citizens,
and shall be subject to like punishment, pains,
penalties, taxes, licenses, and exactions of
every kind, and to no other.
Two aspects of section 1981 are not in dispute. First,
although the statute does not expressly provide a cause of
action for those injured by violations of the
nondiscrimination principle it sets out, it impliedly “affords
a federal remedy against discrimination in private
employment.” Johnson v. Railway Express Agency, Inc., 421
U.S. 454, 460 (1975). The parties agree that “[a]n individual
who establishes a cause of action under § 1981 is entitled to
both equitable and legal relief, including compensatory and,
under certain circumstances, punitive damages.” Id.
Second, while a plaintiff bringing a claim under section
1981 “must initially identify an impaired ‘contractual
relationship’ . . . under which the plaintiff has rights,”
section 1981 “protects the would-be contractor along with
those who already have made contracts.” Domino’s Pizza,
Inc. v. McDonald, 546 U.S. 470, 476 (2006). In other words,
section 1981 imposes liability when defendants have
discriminated in a way that “prevented individuals who
‘sought to enter into contractual relationships’ from doing
6 RAJARAM V. META PLATFORMS, INC.
so.” Id. (quoting Runyon v. McCrary, 427 U.S. 160, 172
(1976)) (emphasis omitted).
The disputed question is whether section 1981 prohibits
employers from discriminating against United States
citizens. The statutory text answers that question in the
affirmative. An employer that discriminates against United
States citizens gives one class of people—noncitizens, or
perhaps some subset of noncitizens—a greater right to make
contracts than “white citizens.” If some noncitizens have a
greater right to make contracts than “white citizens,” then it
is not true that “[a]ll persons” have the “same right” to make
contracts as “white citizens.” That is precisely what the
literal text of the statute prohibits.
Meta insists that the observation “that the statute protects
‘all persons’ . . . ducks the question presented by this
appeal,” which is “not who can sue under Section 1981, but
what plaintiffs can sue about.” In Meta’s view, the statute’s
“protections are limited to discrimination based on race or
alien status, not discrimination based on U.S. citizenship.”
Meta’s reading appears to rest on the idea that “the same”
should not be read literally. Rather, it argues, the statute does
not prohibit employers from affording noncitizens greater
rights than “white citizens” because the rights of “white
citizens” are merely the floor to which the rights of “[a]ll
persons” are raised. Thus, accepting Meta’s position would
require us to accept that when Congress wrote “the same”
rights, it really meant rights “at least as great as” those of
white citizens.
The problem with Meta’s position is that “the same”
means “the same.” It does not mean “at least as great as.”
Meta does not suggest that “the same” meant something
different when the statute was enacted, nor does it provide
RAJARAM V. META PLATFORMS, INC. 7
“contextual evidence that Congress intended to depart from
the ordinary meaning” of that phrase. Trim v. Reward Zone
USA LLC, 76 F.4th 1157, 1161 (9th Cir. 2023). Because the
words of section 1981 are unambiguous, “our ‘sole function’
is to enforce the statute according to its clear terms.” Id. at
1163 (quoting Lamie v. United States Tr., 540 U.S. 526, 534
(2004)); see Connecticut Nat’l Bank v. Germain, 503 U.S.
249, 253–54 (1992) (“We have stated time and again that
courts must presume that a legislature says in a statute what
it means and means in a statute what it says there.”).
Meta suggests that “all persons” in section 1981 refers to
the persons permitted to sue to obtain the same rights as
white citizens. Under that reading, citizens are not protected
because they necessarily—indeed, tautologically—have the
same rights as citizens. But the statute states a principle of
parity between “all persons” and “citizens,” violated if some
persons have either greater or lesser rights than citizens. If
noncitizens have greater rights than citizens, then the
statute’s guarantee is violated, and an aggrieved party—
here, an injured citizen—may invoke the cause of action
recognized in Johnson to equalize the rights that “all
persons” are afforded. 421 U.S. at 460.
Our reading of the statutory text is reinforced by the
Supreme Court’s decision in McDonald v. Santa Fe Trail
Transportation Co., 427 U.S. 273 (1976). In that case, white
employees of a company were fired for theft, but a black
employee charged with the same offense was not. Id. at 276.
The fired employees sued under section 1981, alleging that
they had been discriminated against on the basis of their
race. Id. The Court held that they had stated a claim under
section 1981 because an “examination of the language and
history of § 1981 convinces us that § 1981 is applicable to
racial discrimination in private employment against white
8 RAJARAM V. META PLATFORMS, INC.
persons.” Id. at 286–87. In so holding, it rejected an
argument similar to Meta’s, explaining that “we cannot
accept the view that the terms of § 1981 exclude its
application to racial discrimination against white persons.”
Id. at 287. The Court noted that “the statute explicitly applies
to ‘all persons,’ . . . including white persons.” Id. It
explained that “[w]hile a mechanical reading of the phrase
‘as is enjoyed by white citizens’ would seem to lend support
to” the employer’s position, the Court had “previously
described this phrase simply as emphasizing ‘the racial
character of the rights being protected.’” Id. (quoting
Georgia v. Rachel, 384 U.S. 780, 791 (1966)). It then added
that, “[i]n any event, whatever ambiguity there may be in the
language of § 1981 . . . is clarified by an examination of the
legislative history,” which suggests that the statute
“appl[ies] to ‘every race and color.’” Id. (quoting Cong.
Globe, 39th Cong., 1st Sess. 211 (1866) (statement of Sen.
Trumbull)).
This case, to be sure, concerns citizenship
discrimination, not racial discrimination. The history of the
relationship between the racial and citizenship aspects of
section 1981 is therefore helpful in understanding why
McDonald governs here.
Section 1981 combines a portion of section 1 of the Civil
Rights Act of 1866 (1866 Act), ch. 31, § 1, 14 Stat. 27, with
section 16 of the Enforcement Act of 1870 (1870 Act), ch.
114, § 16, 16 Stat. 140, 144. General Bldg. Contractors
Ass’n v. Pennsylvania, 458 U.S. 375, 385 (1982). The 1866
Act declared that “citizens, of every race and color, without
regard to any previous condition of slavery or involuntary
servitude . . . shall have the same right . . . to make and
enforce contracts . . . as is enjoyed by white citizens.” 1866
Act, § 1, 14 Stat. 27. “The principal object of the [1866]
RAJARAM V. META PLATFORMS, INC. 9
legislation was to eradicate the Black Codes, laws enacted
by Southern legislatures imposing a range of civil disabilities
on [freed slaves].” General Bldg. Contractors Ass’n, 458
U.S. at 386.
Section 16 of the 1870 Act was an exercise of Congress’s
power under the recently ratified Fourteenth Amendment in
response to California legislation restricting the rights of
Chinese immigrants. Saint Francis Coll. v. Al-Khazraji, 481
U.S. 604, 613 (1987); Anderson v. Conboy, 156 F.3d 167,
173 (2d Cir. 1998) (explaining that section 16 addressed “the
plight of Chinese immigrants in California, who were
burdened by state laws restricting their ability to work [and]
removing their right to give testimony at trial”). To that end,
the 1870 Act extended the protections of the 1866 Act to “all
persons” rather than “citizens” alone. 1870 Act, § 16, 16
Stat. 144.
Although the type of discrimination alleged here is more
closely related to the 1870 change from “all citizens” to “all
persons” than to the racial language in the 1866 Act
discussed in McDonald, see 427 U.S. at 289, the McDonald
Court’s reading of section 1981 governs this case. The
statute guarantees “[a]ll persons . . . the same right . . . as is
enjoyed by white citizens.” 42 U.S.C. § 1981(a). If white
persons as well as nonwhite persons can sue to enforce that
guarantee—a principle the McDonald Court considered
“explicitly” set out in the text—then so too can citizens as
well as noncitizens. 427 U.S. at 287.
Of course, there is at least one non-textual reason to treat
racial discrimination differently from citizenship
discrimination: If the McDonald Court had read section 1981
to prohibit discrimination against persons of some races but
not others, it would have raised serious constitutional
10 RAJARAM V. META PLATFORMS, INC.
questions. See Adarand Constructors, Inc. v. Peña, 515 U.S.
200, 227 (1995) (“[A]ll racial classifications, imposed by
whatever federal, state, or local governmental actor, must be
analyzed by a reviewing court under strict scrutiny.”);
Students for Fair Admissions, Inc. v. President & Fellows of
Harvard Coll., 600 U.S. 181, 206 (2023). No such questions
would arise from reading the statute to protect aliens but not
citizens. See Korab v. Fink, 797 F.3d 572, 578 (9th Cir.
2014) (“Congress may enact laws distinguishing between
citizens and aliens so long as those laws are rationally related
to a legitimate government interest.”).
But the McDonald Court nowhere discussed—or even
hinted at—the principle of constitutional avoidance. More
importantly, even if the Court was motivated by
“constitutional concerns” posed “by one of the statute’s
applications,” that “cannot justify giving the same . . .
provision a different meaning” here simply because the
current application does not raise the same constitutional
concern. Clark v. Martinez, 543 U.S. 371, 380 (2005). A
statute is not “a chameleon, its meaning subject to change
depending on the presence or absence of constitutional
concerns in each individual case.” Id. at 382. If one statutory
construction “would raise . . . constitutional problems,” the
other construction should prevail across all applications
“whether or not those constitutional problems pertain to the
particular litigant before the Court.” Id. at 380–81.
Looking beyond section 1981 itself, Meta argues that a
neighboring provision shows that the statute does not
prohibit discrimination against citizens. As noted above,
although section 1981 has its ultimate origins in the 1866
Act, the present text derives from the 1870 Act. See Runyon,
427 U.S. at 168 n.8; General Bldg. Contractors Ass’n, 458
U.S. at 385. Specifically, section 16 of the 1870 Act
RAJARAM V. META PLATFORMS, INC. 11
provided that “all persons . . . shall have the same right . . .
to make and enforce contracts . . . as is enjoyed by white
citizens, and shall be subject to like punishments, pains,
penalties, taxes, licenses, and exactions of every kind, and
none other.” 1870 Act § 16, 16 Stat. 144. That provision was
followed by a criminal prohibition “designed to enforce
section 16’s grant of substantive rights.” United States v.
Otherson, 637 F.2d 1276, 1282 (9th Cir. 1980). Section 17
of the 1870 Act, codified as amended at 18 U.S.C. § 242,
made it an offense to subject “any inhabitant of any State or
Territory to the deprivation of any right secured or protected
by the last preceding section of this act, or to different
punishment, pains, or penalties on account of such person
being an alien, or by reason of his color or race, than is
prescribed for the punishment of citizens.” 1870 Act § 17,
16 Stat. 144. Pointing out that section 17 expressly bars
discrimination based on alienage, Meta contends that section
16—and by extension, section 1981—should similarly be
read to bar discrimination based on alienage but not
discrimination based on United States citizenship. See
Otherson, 637 F.2d at 1282 (noting that reading section 17
as “coextensive with the grant of substantive rights [in
section 16] best promotes the statutory purpose of protecting
those rights”).
The problem with that argument is that section 16, like
section 1981 today, sets out two different guarantees of equal
treatment: a guarantee of an equal right to make and enforce
contracts, and a separate guarantee of being “subject to like
punishment, pains, [and] penalties.” Although section 17
mentions alienage, it does so only in connection with the
second guarantee, barring the infliction of “different
punishment, pains, or penalties on account of such person
being an alien, or by reason of his color or race.” That
12 RAJARAM V. META PLATFORMS, INC.
reading is confirmed by United States v. Classic, in which
the Supreme Court held that “[t]he qualification as to
alienage, color and race, is a parenthetical phrase in the
clause penalizing different punishments ‘than are prescribed
for citizens,’ and in the common use of language could refer
only to the subject matter of the clause and not to that of the
earlier one relating to the deprivation of rights to which it
makes no reference in terms.” 313 U.S. 299, 326 (1941).
Thus, even though the enforcement section should be read as
coextensive with the grant of substantive rights, the alienage
limitation informs our reading of only the second clause of
section 1981(a), which refers to differences in punishment
and is not at issue here.
Meta also advances a series of non-textual arguments,
but we find none persuasive. First, it invokes legislative
history. But the statutory text is clear, and “[l]egislative
history, for those who take it into account, is meant to clear
up ambiguity, not create it.” Milner v. Department of Navy,
562 U.S. 562, 574 (2011). In any event, nothing in the
legislative history is inconsistent with reading the statute to
reach claims brought by citizens. At most, as with claims of
race discrimination by white persons, the legislative history
suggests that Congress was not focused on such claims. Cf.
McDonald, 427 U.S. at 289 (observing that “the immediate
impetus for the [1866] bill was the necessity for further relief
of the constitutionally emancipated former . . . slaves”).
Even though claims by citizens were “not the principal evil
Congress was concerned with” in enacting section 1981, “it
is ultimately the provisions of our laws rather than the
principal concerns of our legislators by which we are
governed.” Oncale v. Sundowner Offshore Servs., Inc., 523
U.S. 75, 79 (1998). “‘[I]n the context of an unambiguous
statutory text,’ whether a specific application was
RAJARAM V. META PLATFORMS, INC. 13
anticipated by Congress ‘is irrelevant.’” Bostock v. Clayton
Cnty., 590 U.S. 644, 677 (2020) (quoting Pennsylvania
Dep’t of Corr. v. Yeskey, 524 U.S. 206, 212 (1998)).
Second, Meta points to a subsequent enactment, the
Immigration Reform and Control Act of 1986, which
prohibits “discriminat[ing] against any individual . . .
because of such individual’s citizenship status.” Pub. L. No.
99-603, § 102, 100 Stat. 3374 (codified at 8 U.S.C.
§ 1324b(a)(1)(B)). Meta says that in enacting that statute,
“Congress recognized that ‘[n]o Federal law now prohibits
discrimination on the basis of citizenship status.’”
The quoted language is from a statement of minority
views accompanying a report of the House Judiciary
Committee. H.R. Rep. No. 682, 99th Cong., 2d Sess., pt. 2,
at 46 (1986). We agree with the District of Columbia Circuit
that “[p]ost-enactment legislative history—perhaps better
referred to as ‘legislative future’—becomes of absolutely no
significance when the subsequent Congress (or more
precisely, a committee of one House),” and here, only a
minority of the committee, “takes on the role of a court and
in its reports asserts the meaning of a prior statute.” United
States ex rel. Long v. SCS Bus. & Tech. Inst., Inc., 173 F.3d
870, 878–79 (D.C. Cir. 1999).
Moreover, even on Meta’s interpretation of
section 1981, the minority statement accompanying the
committee report did not accurately describe the law in 1986.
The quoted sentence also notes that “under EEOC guidelines
citizenship requirements are already deemed violative of
Title VII when they have the purpose or effect of
discriminating against an individual on the basis of national
origin.” H.R. Rep. No. 682, pt. 2, at 46. That language
suggests that the committee minority used the phrase
14 RAJARAM V. META PLATFORMS, INC.
“discrimination on the basis of citizenship status” to refer
both to discrimination based on the status of being a citizen
and also to discrimination based on the status of being a
noncitizen. Meta does not dispute that section 1981 prohibits
discrimination against noncitizens. See Takahashi v. Fish &
Game Comm’n, 334 U.S. 410, 419–20 (1948); Sagana v.
Tenorio, 384 F.3d 731, 739 (9th Cir. 2004). Thus, contrary
to the statement in the report, there has long been a
prohibition in section 1981 against at least some forms of
discrimination based on citizenship status.
Ultimately, what Congress may have believed about the
state of the law in 1986 is irrelevant to the question before
us. “[L]ater enacted laws . . . do not declare the meaning of
earlier law.” Almendarez-Torres v. United States, 523 U.S.
224, 237 (1998); see also Wright v. West, 505 U.S. 277, 295
n.9 (1992).
Third, Meta argues that our interpretation would lead to
nonsensical results if extended to other antidiscrimination
statutes. Meta observes that “[i]f Congress or a state
legislature wants to protect only the elderly, we don’t assume
it also meant to protect young people.” It is of course true
that the Age Discrimination in Employment Act of 1967,
Pub. L. No. 90-202, 81 Stat. 602, which prohibits
“discriminat[ion] . . . because of [an] individual’s age,” does
not prohibit discrimination against the young. 29 U.S.C.
§ 623(a)(1). But the Supreme Court’s decision establishing
that proposition illustrates the flaw in Meta’s argument. In
General Dynamics Land Systems, Inc. v. Cline, employees
between the ages of 40 and 50, who were covered under the
statute, see 29 U.S.C. § 631(a), alleged that their employer
engaged in age discrimination when it eliminated a
retirement benefits program for workers under 50 while
retaining the program for older workers. 540 U.S. 581, 584–
RAJARAM V. META PLATFORMS, INC. 15
85 (2004). The Court noted that the word “age” can carry
two different meanings—as, for example, in statements such
as “Age can be shown by a driver’s license,” and “Age has
left him a shut-in”—and it held that the “context shows that
‘age’ means ‘old age’ when teamed with ‘discrimination.’”
Id. at 596. Cline therefore does not establish a general
principle that antidiscrimination statutes should be read to
apply asymmetrically, any more than our decision today
rests on what Meta calls a general “principle of ‘reverse
discrimination.’” Rather, as in Cline, we interpret the statute
before us according to the most natural meaning of its text.
Finally, we acknowledge that our conclusion differs
from that of the only other court of appeals to consider this
issue. In Chaiffetz v. Robertson Research Holding, Ltd., the
Fifth Circuit rejected a section 1981 claim asserted by an
American employee of a British company who alleged that
his employer failed to promote him because of his
citizenship. 798 F.2d 731, 732 (5th Cir. 1986). The court
rejected the plaintiff’s reliance on McDonald, reasoning that
it “does not follow” that because section 1981 protects white
persons from racial discrimination, it also protects citizens
from citizenship discrimination. Id. at 735. “Discrimination
against whites is racial discrimination,” the court stated, “but
(in America) discrimination against Americans can never be
discrimination based on alienage.” Id. (emphasis omitted).
Given everything we have said so far, the problem with
that reasoning should be apparent. Discrimination based on
alienage is indeed different from racial discrimination, but it
is not different in any way that is relevant to the text of
section 1981. Nowhere does the statute “use the term ‘alien’
to describe those to whom it extends protection.” Jimenez v.
Servicios Agricolas Mex, Inc., 742 F. Supp. 2d 1078, 1085
(D. Ariz. 2010). Instead, it guarantees that “[a]ll persons . . .
16 RAJARAM V. META PLATFORMS, INC.
shall have the same right . . . to make and enforce contracts
. . . as is enjoyed by white citizens.” Rajaram alleges that
Meta has violated that guarantee by giving noncitizens a
greater right than citizens to contract for employment. He
has therefore stated a claim under section 1981.
REVERSED and REMANDED.
VANDYKE, Circuit Judge, dissenting:
This is a hard case. The majority seems to think
otherwise because it claims the text of Section 1981
“clear[ly]” protects citizens from discrimination on the basis
of citizenship. That conclusion is appealing, but not because
of textual clarity. It’s appealing because it’s natural to think
that if Congress protected noncitizens then surely it must
have protected citizens too.
But the text just says that Section 1981 protects “[a]ll
persons’” enjoyment of the “same right[s]” as “white
citizens.” This could be read as a “leveling-up”
requirement—everyone gets the same rights established by
some benchmark (here, “white citizens”). Under that
reading, since citizens definitionally always have the same
rights as citizens, they are not protected by the statute. On
the other hand, I suppose the statute could be read, as the
majority reads it, as a strict equalizing statute—everyone
gets the same rights, period. If someone has more rights than
citizens, then citizens can sue to get equalized. Of course, if
that is what Congress meant, then one wonders why the text
includes “as is enjoyed by white citizens” at all, since it
seems entirely unnecessary. Just say everybody gets the
same rights.
RAJARAM V. META PLATFORMS, INC. 17
In justifying its supposedly clear reading of the text, the
majority relies on McDonald v. Santa Fe Trail
Transportation Co., in which the Supreme Court concluded
that defining the rights as those “enjoyed by white citizens”
did not preclude whites from protection against racial
discrimination. 427 U.S. 273, 286–87 (1976). But the
Supreme Court’s reasoning in McDonald is nothing like the
majority’s “textual” rationale here. That’s because, as my
colleague Judge Berzon candidly acknowledged during oral
argument, McDonald was written “when the notion that one
has to stick to the language and nothing else was not
prevalent.” Far from supporting the majority’s conclusion
today that the text is clear, the Supreme Court in McDonald
barely addressed Section 1981’s text, acknowledged that a
“mechanical reading” of it cut the other way, and then
decided the case based on an extensive review of legislative
history about race—legislative history that has nothing to do
with the citizenship question before us. So it is more than a
bit strange to rely on McDonald as somehow bolstering the
majority’s terse yet confident textual analysis.
In reality, Section 1981’s text is not as clear as the
majority makes it out to be, and McDonald does nothing to
resolve its ambiguity. Applying what I think is the better
reading of an admittedly ambiguous text, and informed by
the statutory development of Section 1981, I conclude that
the statute does not protect citizens from discrimination on
the basis of citizenship. In concluding otherwise, the
majority unnecessarily creates a circuit split with the Fifth
Circuit. I respectfully dissent.
18 RAJARAM V. META PLATFORMS, INC.
I. This is a harder case than the majority makes it
out to be.
The majority’s plain text reasoning is tempting. The text
of the statute reads that “[a]ll persons … shall have the same
right[s] … as [are] enjoyed by white citizens.” 42 U.S.C.
§ 1981(a). The statute’s text sets a standard that “[a]ll
persons’” rights are pegged to. So maybe everyone can have
the “same right[s]”—no less, but no more either—as those
enjoyed by “white citizens.”
Our first clue that this interpretation may not be the only,
or even the best, reading of Section 1981 comes from the
Supreme Court’s decision in McDonald. In McDonald, the
Court determined that Section 1981 protects not only
nonwhites’ ability to enjoy the same rights as white citizens
as the text plainly requires, but it also protects white persons
from racial discrimination. 427 U.S. at 286–87. In reaching
that conclusion, the Court observed, like the majority does
here, that the “statute explicitly applies to ‘all persons,’
including white persons.” Id. at 287 (cleaned up).
The scope of the people protected, therefore, was not
limited to nonwhites. But the scope of the class protected
does not control what rights of that class are protected. “All
persons” might fall within the scope of Section 1981, but that
doesn’t tell us what rights the statute guarantees for all those
people. Nor does the phrase “same right[s].” Indeed, if
“[a]ll persons” and “same right” were the determinative
phrases as to the scope of the rights protected, then Section
1981 could be read to prohibit discrimination based on any
characteristic—gender, religion, disability, age, political
affiliation, etcetera. Nobody thinks that, including this court.
See Sagana v. Tenorio, 384 F.3d 731, 738 (9th Cir. 2004).
RAJARAM V. META PLATFORMS, INC. 19
What seems to do the work of defining the rights
protected by Section 1981 is the phrase “as is enjoyed by
white citizens.” The Court in McDonald agreed, focusing
the weight of its analysis on the import of this phrase. And
this phrase is much more ambiguous than the majority here
would like to admit. Contrary to the majority, one possible
reading of the phrase “as is enjoyed by white citizens” is that
it textually defines the rights guaranteed to “[a]ll persons” to
be those enjoyed by white citizens. If this is correct, then
“white citizens” are not protected because they, by
definition, always enjoy the same rights as white citizens.
So even though they might generally fall within the scope of
the class protected by the statute—all people—they could
never be disadvantaged because their rights would never not
be the same rights as enjoyed by … themselves. But don’t
just take my word for it. The Court in McDonald
acknowledged that “a mechanical reading of the phrase ‘as
is enjoyed by white citizens’ would seem to lend support” to
the interpretation that the statute “unambiguously limits
itself to the protection of nonwhite persons against racial
discrimination.” 427 U.S. at 286–87.
But while the Court acknowledged that the text of
Section 1981 weighed against protecting whites, it
ultimately concluded that whites are protected by Section
1981. It did so by privileging legislative history over what
it brusquely conceded was the contrary reading of the text.
The Court’s reasoning in McDonald was almost entirely
governed by legislative history—the Court’s textual analysis
spanned three sentences, followed by nearly ten pages on
legislative history. Id. at 287–296. The Court extensively
examined the legislative floor debates on the bill and the
amendments it underwent while passing between the
chambers. Id. For example, Senator Trumbull, who
20 RAJARAM V. META PLATFORMS, INC.
introduced the bill, stated during debate that “[t]his bill
applies to white men as well as black men.” Id. at 290. And
speaking directly to Representative Wilson’s addition of the
phrase “as is enjoyed by white citizens” as the bill passed
through the House, the Court concluded that the structure of
the bill as it then stood and Wilson’s own statements made
clear that this was merely a clarifying amendment to
“emphasize the racial character of the rights being
protected.” Id. at 293 (citation omitted). Relying on the
“cumulative evidence of congressional intent,” the Court
concluded that “the Act was meant, by its broad terms, to
proscribe discrimination in the making or enforcement of
contracts against, or in favor of, any race.” Id. at 295.
McDonald, therefore, is not a helpful case for the
majority. First, it makes clear that, contrary to the majority’s
short textual analysis, nothing in the text of Section 1981
“clearly” supports the majority’s interpretation—indeed, a
“mechanical reading” of the text “would seem to lend
support to [the] reading of the statute” that “white citizens”
are not protected. Id. at 287. And second, McDonald’s
eschewing of textual analysis for a long march through
legislative history makes it a most unlikely candidate to
support the majority’s purportedly “clear” textual
conclusion.
Undeterred, the majority takes McDonald’s conclusion
that “white persons as well as nonwhite persons can sue to
enforce [the statute’s] guarantee” and extrapolates that “so
too can citizens as well as noncitizens.” The majority wants
to rely on McDonald’s conclusion while ignoring
McDonald’s use of legislative history. But McDonald’s
holding cannot be divorced from its reasoning. The majority
can’t have it both ways: it can’t pretend it’s just following
the “clear” text of Section 1981 while spending more time
RAJARAM V. META PLATFORMS, INC. 21
wrapping itself in McDonald’s atextual result than fairly
analyzing the statute’s textual ambiguity.
Even the legislative history that drove the decision in
McDonald is not helpful in this case. If such an analysis
were appropriate, the same legislative history that supported
reading the statute as prohibiting discrimination against
whites does not support reading it to forbid discrimination
against citizens. As the Court explained in McDonald, the
legislative history of the statute was focused on its racial
aspect. Senator Trumbull, in advocating for the passage of
the bill in the Senate, argued that it would “guaranty to every
person of every color the same civil rights.” Cong. Globe,
39th Cong. 1st Sess. 599–600 (1866). Representative
Wilson, after adding the phrase “as is enjoyed by white
citizens” in an amendment, id. at 1115, similarly argued on
the congressional floor that the purpose of the bill was to
ensure that “[o]ne race shall not be more favored [with
respect to the specified rights] than another,” id. at 1117.
The Congressional Globe is replete with such references to
protections based on race, yet there is seemingly nothing in
the legislative history to indicate that all people were
intended to be protected from discrimination on citizenship
grounds. Nor does the majority identify any evidence that
the purpose of the bill was to defend against discrimination
on the basis of citizenship.
And as the majority acknowledges, there is another
reason “to treat racial discrimination differently from
citizenship discrimination” in this context. Reading Section
1981 to prohibit discrimination against persons of some
races, but not others, would implicate serious constitutional
concerns. See Adarand Constructors, Inc. v. Peña, 515 U.S.
200, 227 (1995) (holding that “all racial classifications,
imposed by whatever federal, state, or local governmental
22 RAJARAM V. META PLATFORMS, INC.
actor, must be analyzed by a reviewing court under strict
scrutiny”). But providing protection for aliens, but not
citizens, would not. See Korab v. Fink, 797 F.3d 572, 578
(9th Cir. 2014) (“Congress may enact laws distinguishing
between citizens and aliens so long as those laws are
rationally related to a legitimate government interest.”).
The majority minimizes this difference by arguing that
even if the constitutional concerns that may have driven the
interpretation of the statute in McDonald are not present
here, we need to interpret the same statutory provision
consistently. But this case is interpreting a different term
than McDonald. McDonald construed the term “white,” and
no one is suggesting we reject that construction. This case
asks us how we should read the neighboring word “citizen.”
At the end of the day, the text is just not unambiguous.
If anything, there is better textual support for the reading the
majority rejects: that discrimination because of citizenship is
not covered by Section 1981 because citizens inherently
possess the rights enjoyed by citizens, even when
noncitizens are preferenced over them. Treating the term
“citizen” like McDonald treated the word “white” suggests
that this might not be the case. But McDonald applied a
nontextual analysis, and its extended analysis of Section
1981’s legislative history cannot be lifted uncritically from
the racial context and simply transplanted to the citizenship
one. Because McDonald’s anachronistic analysis is not,
even on its own terms, helpful to the interpretive question
presented in this case, we must unfortunately address that
question from scratch, which I turn to now.
II. Section 1981 does not protect against citizenship
discrimination.
Starting with the text, Section 1981(a) provides, in full:
RAJARAM V. META PLATFORMS, INC. 23
All persons within the jurisdiction of the
United States shall have the same right in
every State and Territory to make and enforce
contracts, to sue, be parties, give evidence,
and to the full and equal benefit of all laws
and proceedings for the security of persons
and property as is enjoyed by white citizens,
and shall be subject to like punishment, pains,
penalties, taxes, licenses, and exactions of
every kind, and to no other.
42 U.S.C. § 1981(a). According to the text, “[a]ll persons”
are ensured the “same right[s] … as [are] enjoyed by white
citizens.” Id. As described above, one obvious reading is
that the statute affords all persons, regardless of race or
alienage, at least the same rights as enjoyed by white
citizens, and if another group is treated below that standard,
the statute makes up the difference. But the text of the statute
does not explicitly say that all persons can be afforded no
more than those rights “enjoyed by white citizens.” Id.
Without any textual basis for leveling noncitizens down, the
claims brought by Rajaram—an American citizen—fall
outside of the statutory text.
Rajaram contends that Meta is violating Section 1981
because its hiring practices favor noncitizens over citizens.
He does not argue that he has been denied the rights enjoyed
by white citizens. Instead, he relies on McDonald’s
conclusion that “white citizens” includes nonwhites to argue
that “citizens” means “people of any citizenship status”—
whether American or otherwise. Thus, he asserts that under
Section 1981 noncitizens cannot be afforded more rights
than those afforded to American citizens. But the text of
Section 1981 does not guarantee citizens the same rights as
24 RAJARAM V. META PLATFORMS, INC.
enjoyed by noncitizens. It guarantees both citizens and
noncitizens the same rights as those “enjoyed by white
citizens.” Id. (emphasis added).
It is true that the class of people protected by Section
1981 is broad, extending to “[a]ll persons within the
jurisdiction of the United States.” Id. But while the class is
broad, we have previously held that the protection provided
to that class is limited. It does not reach “discrimination on
the basis of gender or religion, disability, age, or political
affiliation.” Sagana, 384 F.3d at 738 (internal citations
omitted). And neither does it protect against discrimination
on the basis of citizenship. Instead, it guarantees “[a]ll
persons” only the rights “enjoyed by white citizens.”
Rajaram does not allege that he has not been treated as well
as a citizen, but only that he has not been treated as well as a
noncitizen. On this reading of the text, therefore, the
disadvantage that he alleges is not one that the statute
addresses.
The statutory evolution of Section 1981 confirms this
interpretation of the text. Originating in Section 1 of the
Civil Rights Act of 1866, see Civil Rights Act of 1866, ch.
31, Sec. 1, 14 Stat. 27, 27 (codified as amended at 42 U.S.C.
§ 1981(a)), the language from which Section 1981 comes did
not originally protect aliens at all, and prohibited only racial
discrimination. Section 1 provided that “all … citizens”
shall have the same rights that “white citizens” enjoy. Sec.
1, 14 Stat. at 27; see also Gen. Bldg. Contractors Ass’n v.
Pennsylvania, 458 U.S. 375, 384 (1982). In Section 16 of
the Enforcement Act of 1870, Congress extended Section 1’s
prohibition by replacing “all … citizens” with “all persons.”
Enforcement Act of 1870, ch. 114, Sec. 16, 16 Stat. 140, 144
(codified as amended at Sec. 1981(a)). That amendment
granted noncitizens the same statutory rights as citizens,
RAJARAM V. META PLATFORMS, INC. 25
thereby adding a ban on alienage discrimination. See
Sagana, 384 F.3d at 738 (“The significance we attach to the
drafters’ changing ‘all citizens’ to ‘all persons’ to hold that
aliens fall under the statute’s protections, also compels the
conclusion that [Section] 1981 protects against
discrimination on the basis of alienage.”). As that revision
demonstrates, Congress was attentive to the distinction
between “citizens” and noncitizen “persons.” Congress
made clear that the protections of the statute were not limited
to “citizens”—but it said nothing about whether the law
applied to discrimination purely on the basis of citizenship.
Section 16 “contain[ed] essentially the language that
now appears in [Section] 1981.” Gen. Bldg. Contractors,
458 U.S. at 385. Like Section 1981, Section 16 provided
that “all persons … shall have the same right … to make and
enforce contracts … as is enjoyed by white citizens, and
shall be subject to like punishments, pains, penalties, taxes,
licenses, and exactions of every kind.” Sec. 16, 16 Stat. at
144. In the adjacent Section 17, Congress imposed criminal
sanctions that illustrate the scope of Section 16. Section 17
penalized any person who, under color of law, subjected
“any inhabitant of any State or Territory to the deprivation
of any right secured or protected by the last preceding
section of this act, or to different punishment, pains, or
penalties on account of such person being an alien, or by
reason of his color or race, than is prescribed for the
punishment of citizens.” Sec. 17, 16 Stat. at 144. The
sanction for the deprivation of any right in “the last
preceding section” refers expressly to those rights in Section
16, and the sanction for “different punishment, pains, or
penalties” corresponds to the “like punishments, pains,
penalties, taxes, licenses, and exactions” that Section 16
requires. Secs. 16–17, 16 Stat. at 144. Thus, “Section 17 by
26 RAJARAM V. META PLATFORMS, INC.
its plain language enforced the specific rights enumerated in
Section 16.” Anderson v. Conboy, 156 F.3d 167, 175 (2d
Cir. 1998); see also United States v. Otherson, 637 F.2d
1276, 1282 (9th Cir. 1980) (“Section 16 grants these rights,
and section 17 enforces that grant by criminalizing their
deprivation.”).
Section 16 granted the same right “as is enjoyed by white
citizens,” and Section 17 penalized discrimination that
resulted from not being “white citizens.” That meant
discrimination against aliens: “different punishment, pains,
or penalties on account of such person being an alien,” as
compared to the punishment “prescribed for … citizens.”
Sec. 17, 16 Stat. at 144. Like Section 16 and Section 1981,
Section 17 identified “citizens” as the group against which
to measure the treatment of those it protects.
The majority concludes that Section 17’s reference to
alienage in the second part of Section 17, barring the
infliction of different punishment, does not apply to its first
guarantee of the rights in Section 16. But it is not just the
explicit reference to “alien[s]” in Section 17 that informs the
scope of the right protected in Section 16. Instead, it is the
consistent characterization of the protected rights as those of
“citizens.” Section 16 states that all people are entitled to
the same rights as white citizens—this means that even
noncitizens must enjoy the rights of citizens. Section 17
similarly protects aliens from receiving different
punishments than citizens on account of their status as aliens.
Together, Sections 16 and 17 consistently ensure that
noncitizens will not be discriminated against in favor of
citizens. In both cases, it is only noncitizens who can be
harmed, because citizens definitionally enjoy the rights of
citizenship. So while the legislative history relied on by the
Court in McDonald suggests that the statute’s protection is
RAJARAM V. META PLATFORMS, INC. 27
not limited to “nonwhites,” 427 U.S. at 295, the historical
development of Section 1981 corroborates the better textual
reading that alienage, not citizenship, is protected.
III. The majority’s opinion creates an unnecessary
circuit split.
Finally, as the majority acknowledges, its conclusion is
at odds with the Fifth Circuit’s decision in Chaiffetz v.
Robertson Research Holding, Ltd., 798 F.2d 731 (5th Cir.
1986)—a case addressing the exact same issue—and thus
creates a circuit split. In Chaiffetz, the Fifth Circuit held that
the district court had “correctly concluded that [Section
1981] is inapplicable” because it “does not encompass
discrimination based solely on national origin.” Id. at 735
(quoting Bullard v. Omi Georgia, Inc., 640 F.2d 632, 634
(5th Cir. 1981)). In doing so, the Fifth Circuit explicitly
rejected the argument raised by Rajaram that Section 1981
protects against “reverse discrimination on the basis of
alienage.” Id. (internal quotation marks omitted).
As the majority does in this case, the plaintiff in Chaiffetz
attempted to rely on McDonald to argue that “given the
Supreme Court’s interpretation of the applicability of
[Section] 1981 to reverse discrimination on the basis of race,
it is axiomatic that similar reverse discrimination against
American citizens in favor of non-citizens is also
proscribed.” Id. (internal quotation marks omitted). This,
according to the Fifth Circuit, “does not follow.” Id. Rather,
“[d]iscrimination against whites is racial discrimination, but
(in America) discrimination against Americans can never be
discrimination based on alienage. It can only be
discrimination based on national origin,” and such
discrimination is not prohibited “under [Section] 1981.” Id.
28 RAJARAM V. META PLATFORMS, INC.
(emphasis in original). The majority unnecessarily creates a
circuit split where one should not exist.
***
This is not an easy interpretive case, and I personally like
the majority’s conclusion better than mine. It’s only natural
to think that this sort of discrimination protection should be
reciprocal—if noncitizens can’t be discriminated against in
favor of citizens, then surely citizens shouldn’t be
disadvantaged in favor of noncitizens. This reading is
particularly appealing today, when conditions create more
incentives to discriminate against citizens. Illegal border
crossings have increased year over year since 2021, with
almost two million encounters reported during the first half
of this fiscal year alone. See Nationwide Encounters, U.S.
Customs and Border Protection, https://www.cbp.gov/
newsroom/stats/nationwide-encounters. Given that it is
easier to pay such noncitizens lower wages, it’s easy enough
to see how this creates growing economic pressure to favor
noncitizens over citizens. A statute that protects against this
sort of discrimination may be what this country needs, but it
isn’t what Congress gave us in Section 1981. And it’s not
my role to transform this statute into what I wish it was. I
therefore reluctantly dissent.
Plain English Summary
FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT PURUSHOTHAMAN RAJARAM, No.
Key Points
01FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT PURUSHOTHAMAN RAJARAM, No.