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Supreme Court Addresses Timeliness of Filing
of Title VII Charges
National Railroad Passenger Corporation
(Amtrak) v. Morgan - No continuing violation for discrete act of
discrimination or retaliation. Expanded
limitation on filing for continuing violations such as hostile environment
where a related act is committed within the filing period.
Edelman v. Lynchberg College - Charge filed within the filing period may
be verified after the filing period.
Allegations added after the filing period may “relate back” if they are related to the earlier allegations.
I. WHEN MUST A CHARGE BE FILED WITH THE EEOC?
The
current version of Title VII of the 1964 Civil Rights Act[1]
requires an aggrieved individual, or someone on the individual’s behalf, to
file an administrative charge with the EEOC within 180 days of an alleged
unlawful employment practice. In a
location where there is a state or local agency that has “...authority to grant
or seek relief from such practice or institute criminal proceedings with
respect thereto such charge shall be filed within three hundred days after the
alleged unfair employment practice occurred...”[2] While these time limits are greater than
they were when Title VII was originally enacted the question of whether a claim
has been timely filed is one that the courts continue to have occasions to
consider.
An early Supreme Court decision on the requirement for
a timely charge be filed is United Airlines, Inc. v. Evans.[3] Due to a rule prohibiting married women from
working as flight attendants the plaintiff was
forced to resign from her flight attendant position when she married in
1968. This rule did not apply to
males. Miss Evans did not file a charge
with the EEOC at that time. She resumed working as a flight attendant in 1972
at which time Ms. Evans was not given credit for her prior service. In her suit, based on a charge filed after
her return to work, Ms. Evans claimed discriminatory denial of seniority. She contended that the airline’s action gave
present effect to a past discriminatory act.
In denying Ms. Evans claim the Court held that:
...United was entitled to treat that past act as
lawful after respondent failed to file a charge of discrimination within the 90
days then allowed by 706(d). A
discriminatory act which is not made the basis for a timely charge is the legal
equivalent of a discriminatory act which occurred before the statute was
passed. It may constitute relevant
background evidence in a proceeding in which the status of a current practice
is at issue, but separately considered, it is merely an unfortunate event in
history which has no present legal consequences.[4]
The Supreme Court has consistently rejected claims
based on the continuing effects of single acts of discrimination which have not
been the subject of a timely filed administrative charge. In Delaware State College v. Ricks[5]
the court declined to consider the claim of a college professor who was denied
tenure. He filed his charge more than
the applicable time limit of 180 days after he was notified of the denial of
tenure. Consistent with college policy
Mr. Ricks was permitted to work for one year after the year in which he
was notified of the tenure
decision. The Court held that the time
for filing the charge began to run when he was informed that tenure was denied,
not when his employment ended. The
Court commented that “..., the only alleged discrimination occurred – and the
filing limitations periods therefore commenced – at the time the tenure
decision was made. That is so even
though one of the effects of the denial of tenure – the eventual loss of a
teaching position – did not occur until later.”[6]
(internal footnote omitted).
The Court reasoned similarly in Lorance v. AT &
T Technologies, Inc.[7]
where a company’s seniority system was changed to provide that an employee
moving to a position as a “tester” lost her plant wide seniority for competitive
purposes until she was on the new job for five years. In the interim the individual’s seniority within the department
was counted from the date of the new assignment. The plaintiffs, long service employees, bid into the more
skilled, higher paying tester position after the change. In a subsequent reduction in force they were
laid off due to their low seniority in the new position. They claimed that the change in the seniority
system was adopted to discriminate against women who moved into the more remunerative
job which was traditionally held by males.
Their administrative charges, which were filed when they were laid
off some three years after the change
in the seniority system, were found to be untimely. The Court held that the charges should have been filed within the
filing period subsequent to the change in the seniority system. Following its reasoning in United Air
Lines v. Evans and Delaware State College v. Ricks, the Court declined to
treat the maintenance of the seniority system as a continuing violation.[8] The Court held that the time limitation for
filing a charge runs from the time an intentionally discriminatory seniority
system is adopted rather from when its effects are felt.[9]
The Supreme Court did, however, find a continuing
violation in Bazemore v. Friday[10]
which involved historic discriminatory discrepancies in the pay of black
and white state Agricultural Extension Service workers. The disparities predated the 1972 amendments
that brought these state workers within the coverage of Title VII. Determining that the plaintiffs were not
time barred from asserting the right to comparable pay the Court stated that “Each
week’s paycheck that delivers less to a black man than to a similarly situated
white is a wrong actionable under Title VII, regardless that this
pattern was begun prior to the effective date of Title VII.”[11]
In Beavers v. American Cast Iron Pipe Co.[12]
the Eleventh Circuit followed Bazemore.
The plaintiffs in Beavers challenged their employer’s health
insurance plan which denied dental and medical coverage to employees’ children
if the children were not living with the parent/employee. They
claimed that the plan disparately impacted male employees in violation of Title
VII as wives are more likely to have custody of children after a divorce. Referring to Delaware State College v.
Ricks and Bazemore v. Friday, the panel observed that “...the
Supreme Court recognizes the distinction this court has drawn between the present
effects of a one time violation – as in Ricks – and the continuation of
the violation into the present – as in Bazemore.”[13]
The Beavers court rejected the employer’s
contention that the action was untimely as no administrative charge had been
filed with the EEOC within 180 days of the institution of the health plan. It found a continuing violation in that
“...each week in which divorced men are denied insurance coverage for their
nonresident children while similarly situated divorced women, who apparently
are far more likely to have custody of their children, receive such coverage
constitutes a wrong arguably actionable under Title VII.”[14] Notably the court ruled that Mr. Beavers’
EEOC charge “... was timely as to any application of [the employer’s] allegedly
discriminatory insurance benefits policy within the preceding 180 days.”[15] The ruling did not revive claims for
anything occurring more than 180 days before the filing of the charge.
II. ENFORCEMENT OF CLAIMS BASED ON CHARGES FILED
BEYOND THE FILING PERIOD
A. Equitable
Estoppel
Various doctrines have been advanced to allow a
judicial action to proceed in the face of a charge that has been filed more
than the applicable number of days after some or all of the allegedly
discriminatory conduct that is the subject of the action. In Zipes v. Transworld Airlines[16]
the Supreme Court allowed a case based on an untimely charge to proceed in a
decision that laid the foundation for equitable considerations to be taken into
account. The Court ruled for the
plaintiff because the employer did not properly raise the defense of
untimeliness. The Court held that the
failure to file a charge was not a jurisdictional defect that barred an action
from proceeding and that could be raised at any time. The Court ruled that ...“ filing a timely charge of
discrimination with the EEOC is not a jurisdictional prerequisite to filing a
suit in federal court, but a requirement that, like a statute of limitations,
is subject to waiver estoppel and equitable tolling.” (footnote in the original
omitted).[17]
Even before Zipes the Fifth Circuit held in Reeb
v. Economic Opportunity Atlanta, Inc.[18] that the time limit for filing an EEOC
charge was analogous to a statute of limitations that is susceptible of being
waived rather than a jurisdictional prerequisite to a suit. In that case the plaintiff was told that her
position was abolished due to a lack of funding. Several months later Ms. Reeb learned that a male had been hired
for the position shortly after her dismissal.
She promptly filed a charge with the EEOC. The court held that “Equitable modifications, such as tolling and
estoppel that are applied to [statutes of limitations] should also be
applied...” to the present case.[19] The court ruled that the filing period does
not begin to run “...until the facts that would support a charge of
discrimination under Title VII [are] apparent or should have been apparent to a
person with reasonably prudent regard for his rights similarly situated to the
plaintiff.”[20]
The Eleventh Circuit found the doctrine of “equitable
tolling” inapplicable to an untimely EEOC charge in Ross v. Buckeye
Cellulose Corporation.[21] The plaintiffs challenged a pay evaluation
system (the “P & P System”) as allegedly having a negative disparate impact
on black employees. The plaintiffs
filed their EEOC charges more than the applicable 180 days after all employees’
wages were frozen and the P & P System was no longer in effect. The court declined to apply equitable
tolling, finding that the plaintiffs failed to meet their burden of proof that
there was an equitable basis to waive the limitation. The court pointed out that “The trial transcript is devoid of
evidence that appellants actually were – or that similarly-situated people with
a reasonably prudent regard for their rights would be – unaware that they were
victims of unlawful discrimination in the period more than 180 days prior to
filing their complaints with the EEOC.”[22] The Eleventh Circuit reasoned similarly in Carter
v. West Publishing Co.[23]
where the plaintiffs challenged the employers practice of favoring male
employees over female employees in allowing the purchase of company stock. The court found that equitable estoppel did
not apply to justify allowing the action to proceed where the charge was filed
long after the program was discontinued.
Although the employer sought to keep its stock purchase plan secret the
plaintiff testified that she and other women knew of the plan.[24]
B. Continuing
Violations
The decision in Ross, supra, also declined to
find the existence of a continuing violation.
The challenged evaluation system had been discontinued more than 180
days before the filing of the EEOC charge.
Therefore there was no discriminatory act within the filing period on
which to base a continuing violation.
The harm to plaintiff was found to be a present consequence of an
earlier allegedly discriminatory act rather than the result of a continuing
violation.[25] Similarly, in Carter, supra, the
complained of sale of the employer’s stock had been discontinued outside the
filing period. The court found that the
continued payment of dividends on that stock into the filing period did not
make the sale a continuing violation.[26] It merely gave present effect to a past
alleged violation.
In Gonzalez v. Firestone Tire & Rubber Co.[27]
the use of an unvalidated test to
determining eligibility for transfer or promotion was challenged as
discriminating against Spanish-surnamed
employees. The Fifth Circuit
held that on remand the district court should find a continuing violation only
if the test was used within 180 days prior to the filing of the plaintiff’s
administrative charge. The court
further ruled that even if a continuing violation was found the plaintiff did
not have standing to contest any failure to promote that took place more
than180 days prior to the filing of his charge.[28]
In the recent decision in National Railroad Passenger Corporation v. Morgan[29]
(the “Amtrak” case) the Supreme Court continued to hold that to be timely a
charge must be filed with the EEOC within 180/300 days of a discrete
retaliatory or discriminatory act.[30] The plaintiff averred that he had been
subject to ongoing racial harassment as well as to discrete discriminatory acts such as disparate discipline during
the entire course of his employment.
The court held that:
...discrete discriminatory acts are not actionable if
time barred, even when they are related to acts alleged in timely filed
charges. Each discrete discriminatory
act starts a new clock for filing charges alleging that act. The charge, therefore, must be filed within
the 180- or 300- day time period after the discrete discriminatory act
occurred. The existence of past acts
and the employee’s prior knowledge of their occurrence, however, does not bar
employees from filing charges about related discrete acts so long as the acts
are independently discriminatory and charges addressing those acts are themselves
timely filed. Nor does the statute bar
an employee from using the prior acts as background evidence in support of a
timely claim.[31]
The Court rejected the Ninth Circuit’s view in the
decision below that “serial violations” constitute a continuing violation.[32] It held that “...discrete acts such as
termination, failure to promote, denial of transfer, or refusal to hire are
easy to identify. Each incident of
discrimination and each retaliatory adverse employment decision constitutes a
separate actionable ‘unlawful employment practice.’”[33] Each triggers the running of the time for
filing a charge. The Court
distinguished hostile environment claims from discrete acts.[34] The Court reasoned that where there is a
hostile environment “The ‘unlawful employment practice’ ...cannot be said to
occur on any particular day. It occurs
over a series of days or perhaps years, and in direct contrast to discrete
acts, a single act of harassment may not be actionable on its own.”[35] The Court stated that:
A
hostile work environment claim is comprised of a series of separate acts that
collectively constitute one ‘unlawful employment practice.’ 42 U.S.C.
2000e-5(e)(1). The timely filing provision requires only that a Title VII
plaintiff file a charge within a certain number of days after the unlawful
practice happened. It does not matter
for the purposes of the statute that some of the component acts of the hostile
work environment fall outside the statutory time period. Provided that an act contributing to the
claim occurs within the filing period, the entire time period of the hostile
environment may be considered by a court for the purpose of determining
liability. (footnote omitted).[36]
In finding that a hostile environment is a
single discriminatory act the Court pointed out that such a claim is based on
the entirety of the surrounding circumstances including the severity and
pervasiveness of the conduct and whether it is humiliating or threatening.[37] The Court hypothesized a situation where
acts contributing to a hostile environment occur during days 1 to 100 and the
employee files a charge on day 401. The
charge is untimely if no act comprising part of the hostile environment takes
place within 300 days of the filing (i.e. on day 100 or thereafter). However if an act that is part of the same
scenario is committed on day 401 the charge is timely as to the earlier acts
even if nothing occurred from day 101 to day 400.[38] The Court concluded that:
A
title VII plaintiff raising claims of discrete discriminatory acts must file
within the appropriate time period -- 180 or 300 days-- set forth in 42 U.S.C.
§ 2000e-5(e)(1). A charge alleging a
hostile work environment claim, however, will not be time barred so long as all
acts which constitute the claim are part of the same unlawful employment
practice and at least one act falls within the [applicable] time period. Neither holding, however, precludes a court
from applying equitable doctrines that may toll or limit the time period.
While the Amtrak decision facially expands
opportunities for plaintiffs to raise long past incidents as part of a hostile
environment claim by invoking the continuing violation doctrine there are still
limits. All acts must be “...part of
the same unlawful employment practice.”
The acts must have sufficient relationship with each other to be part of
the same claim. Presumably among the
ties would be the identities of the actors or the knowledge of management. Additionally equitable considerations such
as laches may be a defense where an inordinate delay unduly prejudices the
defense.
The expanded possibility of having to
defend allegations of long past acts must be added to the reasons for employers
to maintain a firm and well disseminated policy of prohibiting conduct that
would contribute to a hostile work environment. Add to these a prompt and effective response to employees’ complaints.
C.
Relation Back
When the timeliness of an administrative charge is questioned
there may be a dispute as to the date on which the charge has been effectively
filed. The concept of “relation back”
may save a charge or some of its allegations from being found to be untimely. The relation back regulation of the EEOC, 29
CFR § 1601.12(b), allows a charge to “...be amended to cure technical defects
or omissions, including failure to verify the charge, or to clarify or amplify
allegations made therein.” Amendments,
including those with additional allegations of unlawful employment practices
“...related to or growing out of the subject matter of the original charge will
relate back to the date that the charge was first received.”
In Edelman v. Lynchburg College[39]
the Supreme Court recently found this regulation to be “... an unassailable
interpretation of § 706.”[40] Edelman had faxed a letter to the EEOC
within the applicable filing period complaining that he was denied tenure by
the college on the basis of his gender, national origin and religion. The letter was not under oath or affirmation
as required by the statute.[41]
Edelman submitted a verified charge form 313 days after the denial of tenure of
which he complained in the fax. The
Court held that the verified form could relate back to the faxed letter. The letter met the requirements of a charge
and thereby stopped the clock from running.
It found that a charge does not have to be verified when filed. If it is verified after the filing time has
run that verification can “relate back” to the original filing, at least where
the charging party and the EEOC regard the initial contact as a charge.[42]
Relation back was allowed to amplify a charge in Sanchez
v. Standard Brands where the Fifth Circuit held that the scope of a
judicial action under Title VII “...
is limited to the ‘scope’ of the EEOC investigation which can reasonably be
expected to grow out of the charge of discrimination.” [43]
(internal citation omitted) The action
“...may encompass any kind of discrimination like or related to allegations
contained in the charge and growing out of such allegations during the pendency
of the case before the Commission.”[44] The plaintiff had filed a timely charge on
the EEOC form on which she checked off the check block indicating
discrimination on the basis of sex.
After the time for filing she amended the charge to include national
origin discrimination. The court ruled
that the amendment was timely having related back to the original filing.
III. CONCLUSION
Plaintiff’s counsel can be certain that defense
counsel will examine charges and
judicial complaints as soon as they are received to determine if the charges
are timely. Defense counsel must be
aware that not every charge that is facially untimely will bar the charging
party from recovering. Both must be
aware of those situations in which a continuing discriminatory policy will
revive claims for what occurred more than 180/300 days before the charge was
filed. However even where an employer
continues to maintain a discriminatory policy a charge filed after the
applicable limitation period will not allow recovery for discrete acts about
which the claimant knew or should have known.
6/30/2002
[1]. 42
U.S.C. § 2000e et seq.
[2]. 42
U.S.C. § 2000e-5(e)(1)
[3]. 431
U.S. 353 (1977)
[4]. Id.
at 558
[5]. 449
U.S. 250 (1980)
[6]. Id.
at 258 See also International Union
of Electrical Workers v. Robbins & Myers, Inc. 429 U.S. 229 (1976)
where the Court held that the time for filing a charge ran from the discharge
date and not from the date of the conclusion of the grievance proceeding that
the employee invoked. The grievance
proceeding did not toll the time limit.
[8]. Id
U.S. at 906
[9]. Id.
at 911 The Lorance decision was
reversed with the addition to Title VII of 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-5e(2) by the 1991
Civil Rights Act. That section provides
that an unfair employment practice results from a seniority system that is
adopted with the intent to discriminate “...when the seniority system is
adopted, when an individual becomes subject to the seniority system, or when a
person aggrieved is injured by the application of the seniority system or
provision of the system.”
[10]. 478
U.S. 385 (1986)
[11]. Id.
at 395 Recovery of back pay under Title
VII is limited by 42 U.S.C. §5000e-5(g)(1) to no more than two years prior to
the filing of a charge with the EEOC.
[12]. 975
F. 2d 792 (11th Cir. 1992
[13]. Id.
at 797
[14]. Id.
at 798
[15]. Id.
at 800
[16]. 455
U.S. 385 (1982)
[17]. 455
U.S. at 243
[18]. 516
F.2d 924 (5th Cir. 1975)
[19]. Id.
at 928
[20]. Id.
at 931
[21]. 980
F.2d 648 (11th Cir. 1993)
[22]. Id.
at 661-62_
[23]. 225
F.3d 1258 (11th Cir. 2000)
[24]. Id.
at 1266
[25]. 980
F.2d at 660
[26]. 225
F.3d at 1265
[27]. 610
F.2d 241 (5th Cir. 1980)
[29]. No.
00-1614, __ Sup. Ct. __ , 15 Fla. L. Weekly Fed. s347(June 10, 2002)
[30].15 Fla. L. Weekly Fed at s350
[31]. Id.
[32]. Id.
[33]. Id.
[34]. Id.
[35]. Id.
[36]. Id.
at s351
[37]. Id.
[38]. Id.
at s359
[39]. 122
S.Ct. 1145 (2002)
[40]. Id.
at 1152
[41]. 42
U.S.C. § 2000e-5(b)
[42]. 122
S.Ct. 1152 It was argued below that the EEOC did not regard the faxed letter as
a charge since it did not give the respondent notice of the charge within10
days of receiving it as required by 42 U.S.C. §§ 2000e-5(b) and (e)(1).
[43]. 431
F.2d 455, 466 (5th Cir. 1970).
See also Mulhall v. Advance Security, Inc., 19 F.3d 586 (11th
Cir. 1994).
[44]. 431
F.2d at 466 quoting King v. Georgia Power Co., 295 F. Supp. 943, 947 (N.D.
Ga. 1968)
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