(dissenting) :
With due respect for the opinions of my brothers I find myself in disagreement with them in these cases. Accordingly, I record my views in this separate statement.
The statutes here principally involved (Title VII, § 706, 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-5, subsections (a) and (e), are set out in footnotes numbered 4 and 5 of the majority opinion. There is no need to reproduce them here. The majority view is that the “statute, on its face, does not establish an attempt by the Commission to achieve voluntary compliance as a jurisdictional prerequisite” to the bringing of a civil action by a person allegedly aggrieved.
In each of these cases the Commission admittedly made no effort whatsoever to eliminate the alleged unlawful employment practice by the informal methods prescribed by statute. The only reason assigned by the Commission for such failure was its “heavy work load.” By this simple expedient the Commission sought to bypass the clear provisions of the statute, to render them meaningless and thereby open the floodgates to the judiciary when the obvious intent of the lawmakers, as indicated by the language of the statute and the legislative history, was to place the primary burden on the Commission, to protect employers and other persons subject to the provisions *654of the statute from subjection to the burden of frivolous claims and demands, and to protect the courts from the anticipated deluge of civil actions to enforce the newly-created statutory civil rights.
It is elementary that the fundamental purpose of conciliation is to avoid litigation. In these cases appellants (hereafter plaintiffs) would have the court adopt the unnatural view that conciliation may follow litigation at the election of a litigant. Undeniably, if conciliation is to follow litigation then its whole purpose is defeated and the effort of Congress to require it prior to litigation is reduced to an idle gesture. This point is clearly manifested in the wording of the statute and it was recited again and again in the legislative history as will be later noted. Plaintiffs seek to persuade the court to read and construe subsection (e) standing alone and not in conjunction with subsection (a). That argument entirely overlooks subsection (a) as well as other pertinent language in subsection (e). The language of subsection (a) of section 706 is clear that if the Commission finds reasonable cause to believe the charge is true it shall endeavor to eliminate the practice by “informal methods.” The language of subsection (e) of section 706 further establishes, as the court below stated, that after this effort is made by the Commission it then becomes its duty to report its failure to the aggrieved party who may then institute action in court. Subsection (e) gives the Commission power to extend conciliation beyond thirty days if further efforts to secure voluntary compliance are warranted. The words “further efforts” clearly connote that Congress contemplated that initial efforts to conciliate had already gone before. Furthermore, after an action has been commenced in the district court, subsection (e) authorizes the Commission to request the court to stay proceedings pending the termination of the efforts of the Commission “to obtain voluntary compliance.” This language is further proof that conciliation efforts must have begun before suit is filed.
Applying elementary rules of statutory construction, section 706 must be read as a whole in order to ascertain its true meaning. Each part or section should be construed in connection with every other part or section to produce a harmonious whole.19 Reading subsections (a) and (e) together, I reach the conclusion that conciliation efforts must precede suit. This conclusion was reached by Professor Sovern of the Columbia Law School and Legal Consultant to the NAACP Legal Defense and Education Fund. As he stated in a treatise on this subject:
“That the structure of § 706, with its linkage of the individual suit to Commission conciliation, leads naturally to the conclusion that the complainant cannot sue until the Commission takes the steps specified, could not have been lost on Congress * * *."20
In analyzing the language of the statute the court in Dent v. St. Louis-San Francisco Ry. Co., 265 F.Supp. 56, 62 (N.D.Ala.1967), stated:
“ * * * it not oniy speaks of ‘the termination’ of conciliation but was likewise explained in Congress as authorizing a stay pending ‘further efforts at conciliation by the Commission,’ [110 Cong.Rec. 15866 (July 2, 1964)] and it therefore is to authorize a stay for the termination or continuation of conciliation efforts, not for their initiation.”
In referring to subsection (e) and noting that the Commission has up to sixty days to attempt to secure voluntary compliance the following statement appears in the Harvard Law Review:
“Only after this effort has failed may the aggrieved person bring an ac*655tion for relief, and even then the court may, upon request, stay proceedings for up to 60 additional days pending * * * the further efforts of the Commission to obtain compliance.” (Emphasis added.)21
The passage of this civil rights legislation and the statutory provisions pertinent here were accomplished only after much debate, after amendments were proposed and material changes made which differed from the original proposals. “Seldom has similar legislation been debated with greater consciousness of the need for ‘legislative history’ or with greater care in the making thereof, to guide the courts in interpreting and applying the law.”22
In both the House and Senate, it was explained that a civil action could not be brought without efforts to achieve voluntary compliance by conciliation. The House Labor Committee Report explained that “maximum efforts be concentrated on informal and voluntary methods of eliminating unlawful employment practices before commencing formal procedures.” Representative Lindsay, then a member of the House Judiciary Committee, explained that “the procedures are carefully spelled out. * * * Those procedures are designed to give due protection to everyone. They command that there first be voluntary procedures.”23 He added that “unless this voluntary procedure is complied with, nothing further can happen.”24
On at least two occasions Congress thoroughly considered and then rejected proposals that litigants be permitted to proceed with court action before conciliation was attempted. Thus, the original bill expressly provided that a civil action could be brought “in advance” of conciliation efforts “if circumstances warrant,” but these clauses were eliminated “to make certain” that there be resort “to conciliatory efforts” before court action.25
The bill was passed by the House as amended and the amendment, eliminating the “in advance” clause, was explained by Representative O’Hara:
“There were some who believed that perhaps the language, as it stood, would authorize bringing the action in court before any attempt had been made to conciliate. We thought that striking the language would make it clear that an attempt would have to be made to conciliate in accordance with the language * * * before an action could be brought in the district court.”26
Further evidence of intent is found in the fact that in 1965 Congress again was urged to enact a law which would permit litigation “in advance” of conciliation.27 Again Congress rejected this proposal. It seems to me perfectly clear that the plaintiffs are here seeking by court decree to acquire precisely that which legislative proponents sought and failed to get from the Congress.
The plaintiffs concede in their brief that conciliation efforts were a prerequisite to a civil action under the bill as passed by the House. But they argue that the conciliation prerequisite was eliminated by the Dirksen compromise in the Senate. To support this argument they point to the fact that the compromise substituted the “person aggrieved” for the Commission as the party authorized in the original proposal to bring the civil action. This argument is in “patent disregard for the fact that the procedure under the compromise was explained [in the Senate], just as was the House Bill, as authorizing the institution of a civil action only after concilia*656tory efforts by the Commission.28 As to the conciliation step, it was explained in the Senate:
“[W]e have leaned over backwards in seeking to protect the possible defendants by means of all the procedures referred to — those of conciliation, arbitration, and negotiation.”29
“If efforts to secure voluntary compliance fail, the person complaining of discrimination may seek relief in a federal district court.”30
Senator Saltonstall explained his support of the proposed legislation as follows :
“ [A] n aggrieved party may initiate action under the provisions of the bill on a federal level. In such cases, provision is made for Federal conciliation in an effort to secure voluntary compliance with the law prior to court action.
“The point of view of this section is to permit one who believes he has a valid complaint to have it studied by the Commission and settled through conciliation if possible. The Court procedure can follow.
“In Massachusetts, we have had experience with an arrangement of this sort for 17 years and as I recall, approximately 4,700 unfair practice complaints have been brought before our Massachusetts Commission Against Discrimination. Only two of them have been taken to court for adjudication. That procedure is the basis and theory of this part of the bill and that is why I support it.”31 (Emphasis above supplied.)
Senator (now Vice President) Humphrey made the following statements:
“Those of us who have worked upon the substitute package have sought to simplify the administration of the "bill * * * in terms of seeking a solution by mediation of disputes, rather than forcing every case before the Commission or into a court of law.
“We have placed emphasis on voluntary conciliation — not coercion.
“The amendment of our substitute leaves the investigation and conciliation functions of the Commission substantially intact.
“Section 706(e) provides for suit by the person aggrieved after conciliation has failed.” (Emphasis supplied.)32
The plaintiffs ignore the legislative history relating to the compromise between the Senate and the House and the adoption of the legislation in its present form. All of this history was relied upon by Chief Judge Lynne in the Dent case,33 and I cannot overlook the fact that this court heretofore indicated approval of Dent in Mickel v. South Carolina State Employment Service, 377 F.2d 239, 242 (4 Cir. 1967), in which decision two of the judges in the instant cases joined. We there stated:
“The decision in Dent, supra, * * painstakingly discusses the legislative history of this portion of the Civil Rights Act. The opinion presents overwhelming authority culled from Congressional committee reports and the statements of key legislators to support the conclusion that Congress intended that persons claiming discrimination in employment should first exhaust their remedies within the Commission created for that purpose. Furthermore, the original bill contained a clause permitting the bringing of civil actions prior to seeking conciliation but this provision was eliminated by a House amendment in order to insure that conciliatory efforts would be made.”
*657I again express my approval of the decision in Dent and its analysis of the legislative history. That decision was relied upon heavily by the court below. Now, the plaintiffs incorrectly assert that most of the items of legislative history relied upon by the district court and by the court in the Dent case were from the House “at a time when the bill still provided for judicial enforcement only at the suit of the Commission,” a provision in the bill as originally drafted. It would appear that the statements from the Senate as hereinabove set forth demonstrate that the arguments advanced by plaintiffs are without merit. It cannot be doubted that the Dirksen compromise was “a further softening of the enforcement provisions of Title VII,”34 and placed “greater emphasis * * * on arbitration and voluntary compliance than there was in the House bill.”35 Senator Case, a co-manager of the bill in the Senate, stated:
“There could be no claim of harassment in as much as the enforcement procedure has been whittled down to the minimum.”36
Therefore, it would be illogical to construe the compromise as placing less emphasis on voluntary compliance than did the House bill.
The plaintiffs’ argument that the Dirksen compromise in the Senate was intended to permit suit prior to conciliation efforts, thereby reversing the procedure admittedly spelled out in the House bill, is illogical in two more respects. First, the compromise grew out of the need of the supporters of the bill in the Senate to invoke the cloture procedure. In order to obtain the required number of votes the House bill had to be softened. “The necessity for and difficulties in obtaining the two-thirds vote for cloture must be borne in mind in any attempt to understand the amendments to the bill adopted in the Senate and particularly the amendments to Title VII.37 Second, if it had been the intent of the Senate to allow resort to court action prior to conciliation efforts, this could easily have been accomplished by reinserting the “in advance thereof” clause which was deleted in the House. The Senate, however, made no such insertion and, even more to the point, there are no statements from the Senators to indicate that the Senate bill was to be construed as if the “in advance thereof” clause had been inserted. It having been the recognized intent of the House to insure conciliation efforts before resort to court action it would be contrary to logic to imagine that this intended procedure was eliminated in the Senate by inference and without one word of explanation. Thus, when the Senate bill went back to the House for approval, it was explained by members of the House Judiciary Committee that:
“There is greater emphasis in the Senate amendments on arbitration and voluntary compliance than there was. in the House bill.”38
“The bill comes back to the House tempered and softened.”39
Adverting to the Senate proceedings, it was pointed out that the compromise proposal was based upon the accumulated experience of twenty-five states which have fair employment practices laws. Senator Javits assured the Senate that fears about the procedure of the compro*658mise were not warranted because “in the 13 industrial states of the north, since the first law of this kind was passed, there have been 19,439 cases” and “only 18 have actually gone to court.” (110 Cong.Rec. 13089-13090, June 9, 1964). As hereinbefore shown, Senator Saltonstall referred to the experience in Massachusetts as gratifying, indeed. The Senate obviously relied heavily upon such assurances that employers would not be harassed with frivolous litigation and that the federal courts would not be flooded.
The experience of the states, showing that conciliation is a successful means of obtaining voluntary settlement of complaints of discrimination in employment, is not to be lightly regarded. This court has already recognized that conciliation provides a means for the Commission to settle the matter “in an atmosphere of secrecy without resorting to the extreme measure of bringing a civil action in the congested federal courts,” Mickel, supra, 377 F.2d 239, 241. The statute, § 706(a), 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-5(a), directs that nothing said or done and as a part of “such endeavors” may be made public by the Commission without the written consent of the parties or used as evidence in a subsequent proceeding. This section also makes it a misdemeanor for any employee of the Commission to divulge such information. If voluntary compliance with these statutes is the first objective, and I think it is, the prospect of willing cooperation is greatly diminished by a suit instituted prior to conciliation efforts on the part of the Commission. Publicity with respect to complaints of discrimination might involve substantial dangers to industrial peace. The pressures, publicity and adversary attitudes which naturally follow the institution of a law suit can make willing cooperation difficult, if not impossible. Congress intended, in my view, that the Commission should make the effort to eliminate alleged unlawful employment practices by conferences with the employer, by persuasion and by conciliation. Such is the sensible approach before authorizing the aggrieved person to plunge into litigation. I am persuaded that it is this approach which Congress intended and for which it made provision.
It is true that the courts are not in accord in their interpretation of these statutes, as pointed out in the majority opinion. As these disagreements began to appear the Commission may have been impelled to review and reconsider the procedures which it had undertaken to follow. In the instant cases the notification was sent to each plaintiff that he could resort to court action prior to any conciliation effort by the Commission. Up to that time the Commission had issued no formal or official interpretation of the requirements of the statute with regard to whether an effort to conciliate must precede the issuance of such notice. But in November 1966 the Commission, perhaps entertaining some doubt as to the legality of its procedure employed in these and other cases, issued a Regulation stating that it “shall not issue a notice * * * where reasonable cause has been found, prior to efforts at conciliation with respondent,” except that, after sixty days from the filing of the charge, the Commission will issue a notice upon demand of either the charging party or the respondent. (29 C.F.R. § 1601.25a).
If inability to undertake conciliatory procedures be attributable solely to a “heavy case load,” as asserted by the Commission, this would not be the first instance where statutes could not be followed or enforced because of lack of necessary implementation. If sufficient funds were not appropriated to permit the Commission to function as intended this situation can and should be corrected, but this is a problem which cannot be solved by the courts. Claims of resulting unfairness to allegedly aggrieved persons have been made in this and other courts if conciliation effort, though unsuccessful, is held to be a prerequisite to resort to the courts. It is clear that Congress intended to protect aggrieved persons against violations of their civil rights but it is clear also that Congress *659did not lose sight of the unfairness which would result to parties against whom charges are filed if they could be brought into court without the conciliation step.40
. 2 Sutherland, Statutory Construction, § 4703; Mastro Plastics Corp. v. National Labor Relations Board, 350 U.S. 270, 285, 76 S.Ct. 349, 100 L.Ed. 309 (1956); National Labor Relations Board v. Lion Oil Co., 352 U.S. 282, 288, 77 S.Ct. 330, 1 L.Ed.2d 331 (1957).
. Sovern, Legal Restraints on Racial Discrimination in Employment, 82 (1966).
. The Civil Rights Act of 1964, 78 Harv.L.Rev. 684, 693 (1965).
. Vaas, Title VII; Legislative History, 7 Boston College L.Rev. 431, 444 (1966).
. 110 Cong.Rec. 1638, 2565 (Feb. 1, 8, 1964).
. 110 Cong.Rec. 2565 (Feb. 8, 1964).
. 110 Cong.Rec. 2566, 2576 (Feb. 8, 1964) (Rep. Celler, Chairman of the House Judiciary Committee).
. 110 Cong.Rec. 2566 (Feb. 8, 1964).
. House Rep. No. 718 on H.R. 10065, 89th Cong., 1st Sess., 1965.
. Dent v. St. Louis-San Francisco Ry. Co., 265 F.Supp. 56, 59-60 (N.D.Ala.1967).
. 110 Cong.Rec. 14190 (June 17, 1964) (Senator Morse).
. 110 Cong.Rec. 12617 (June 8, 1964) (Senator Muskie).
. 110 Cong.Rec. 12690, 14190 (June 4, 17, 1964).
. 110 Cong.Rec. 13088, 14443, 12722-12723 (June 4, 9, 1964).
. Dent v. St. Louis-San Francisco Ry. Co., 265 F.Supp. 56 (N.D.Ala.1967).
. 110 Cong.Rec. 12595 (June 3, 1965) (Senator Clark).
. 110 Cong.Rec. 15876 (July 2, 1964) (Rep. Lindsay).
. 110 Cong.Rec. 13081 (June 9, 1964); and Senator Humphrey stated that the Senate changes “gave increased emphasis to methods of securing voluntary compliance.” 110 Cong.Rec. 12707 (June 4, 1964); and “We have placed emphasis upon voluntary conciliation — not coercion.” 110 Cong.Rec. 14443 (June 19, 1964).
. Berg, Equal Employment Opportunity Under The Civil Rights Act of 1964, 31 Brooklyn L.Rev. 62, 66 (1964).
. 110 Cong.Rec. 15876 (July 2, 1964) (Rep. Lindsay).
. 110 Cong.Rec. 15893 (July 2, 1964) (Rep. McCulloch).
. See Dent v. St. Louis-San Francisco Ry. Co., 265 F.Supp. 56, 62 (N.D.Ala.1967).