John O'ROURKE, Plaintiff-Appellee,
v.
CONTINENTAL CASUALTY COMPANY, doing business as CNA
Insurance Companies, Defendant-Appellant.
No. 92-2004.
United States Court of Appeals,
Seventh Circuit.
Argued Nov. 12, 1992.
Decided Jan. 8, 1993.
Rehearing and Rehearing En Banc Denied
Feb. 3, 1993.
Claudia Oney (argued), Mark Hansen, Gail Rabinowitz, Chicago, IL, for plaintiff-appellee.
Jeffrey S. Goldman, Allison Blakley (argued), Steven L. Gillman, Fox & Grove, Chicago, IL, for defendant-appellant.
Before FLAUM and EASTERBROOK, Circuit Judges, and WOOD, Jr., Senior Circuit Judge.
EASTERBROOK, Circuit Judge.
CNA Insurance Companies fired John O'Rourke in 1975. After he filed a charge of age discrimination, CNA voluntarily reinstated him. Eleven years later, CNA fired O'Rourke a second time. Once again he accused CNA of age discrimination. This time CNA held its ground, and a jury concluded that CNA had not counted O'Rourke's age against him. Nonetheless O'Rourke prevailed, because the jury also found that the 1986 discharge penalized O'Rourke for the claim of discrimination in 1975. It does not seem likely that Continental would seek to "get" a disgruntled ex-employee by reinstating and employing him for 11 years, only to sack him again even though he was doing good work. Still, unlikely things happen now and then. We need not decide whether the jury's verdict (based on statements a supervisor made four years before the discharge) passes acceptable limits, cf. Samuelson v. Durkee/French Airwick,
A person who seeks relief under the Age Discrimination in Employment Act must meet two deadlines. First, he must file with the EEOC a charge of discrimination "within 180 days after the alleged unlawful practice occurred". 29 U.S.C. § 626(d)(1). The 180 days becomes 300 in "deferral" states, see 29 U.S.C. §§ 626(d)(2), 633. Second, he must commence suit within two years of the unlawful practice. 29 U.S.C. § 626(e)(1), incorporating 29 U.S.C. § 255. Extensions are possible: from two years to three if the violation is wilful, § 255(a), and by a year of tolling during the EEOC's efforts at conciliation, § 626(e)(2). Outer limits under the most favorable circumstances, then, are 300 days to make a charge before the administrative agency and 4 years to file suit, both measured from the act asserted to be unlawful.
CNA fired O'Rourke on February 18, 1986. He made an administrative charge on March 12, 1986, but did not allege retaliation. The factual narration in the charge (drafted by the EEOC and verified by O'Rourke) concerns age discrimination in the discharge; the document includes a check in the "age discrimination" box but not the "retaliation" box. The EEOC sent this charge to CNA. By O'Rourke's own account, the first time he alerted the EEOC to the possibility of retaliation was March 4, 1987, more than a year after the discharge, when he sent the agency a memorandum concerning his discharge and reinstatement in 1975. The memorandum did not hint at retaliation--O'Rourke offered the prior discharge as evidence that CNA generally takes employees' age into account--but we shall assume that an alert staff at the EEOC would have inferred that retaliation was a possibility. We do not know what the EEOC's staff thought of this document (its files were destroyed in routine housekeeping before trial), but we do know that the EEOC's caseworker did not amend the charge or initiate discussions with CNA about retaliation. When the EEOC closed its investigation, it found no support for O'Rourke's claim of age discrimination and did not mention retaliation.
O'Rourke began the litigation on February 1, 1988. Drafted by a lawyer, the complaint accuses CNA of age discrimination. It does not mention the discharge in 1975 or otherwise advert to retaliation. Almost three years later, on December 21, 1990, O'Rourke sought leave to amend the complaint to add a claim of retaliation. A belated amendment was appropriate, O'Rourke insisted, because not until taking the deposition of Dolores Moran in May 1990 did he recognize that his discharge in 1986 might be related to the events of 1975. Moran testified that during 1982 she had a conversation with the supervisor who ultimately fired O'Rourke, during which this supervisor characterized O'Rourke as a troublemaker and appeared itching to find an excuse to get rid of him. On February 15, 1991, the district judge denied the motion for leave to amend, excluding the retaliation theory from the case.
O'Rourke did not take the hint. Instead of filing a fresh charge with the EEOC, claiming equitable tolling as justification for the delay, see Cada v. Baxter Healthcare Corp.,
Let us assume, with the district court, that the memo O'Rourke sent to the EEOC in March 1987, and the papers with which he thereafter peppered the agency, could have alerted mentally nimble investigators to the possibility of retaliation. Three difficulties remain. First, March 1987 is more than a year after the discharge, while § 626(d)(2) grants a maximum of 300 days to make a charge. Second, the charge serves as notice to the employer. Although issues implied by a charge and communicated to the employer in the course of investigation can enlarge the set of claims open to litigation, Jenkins v. Blue Cross Mutual Hospital Insurance, Inc.,
Jenkins, a case under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, articulates principles applicable to all employment discrimination regimens. We concluded that an employee may present claims "like or reasonably related to the allegations of the charge and growing out of such allegations."
Trying to put the best face on things, O'Rourke maintains that the time did not commence until May 1990, when he took Dolores Moran's deposition. Oddly, O'Rourke does not contend that he is entitled to equitable tolling. No matter. Any equitable tolling came to a halt no later than May 1990, after which O'Rourke had to act with dispatch. Yet he did not try to amend the complaint during the next seven months, and he never filed with the EEOC a charge raising this subject. Equitable tolling enlarges the time within which to proceed but does not justify omitting steps such as the administrative charge that Congress has made essential.
Courts often bend over backward to prevent forfeitures by lay persons who, in filing charges, cannot be expected to know the legal buzzwords. By 1988 O'Rourke had a lawyer. That lawyer, like the EEOC and O'Rourke himself, disdained to allege retaliatory discharge. Generosity toward people who may have been victims of discrimination does not imply disregard of statutory deadlines. Employees are not the only ones with rights under the law. See Lever v. Northwestern University,
REVERSED.
HARLINGTON WOOD, Jr., Senior Circuit Judge, concurring.
The majority opinion lays out the law concisely, and I have no quarrel with the results reached on the facts in this particular case. My only limited concern is that this case not be too strictly applied by some so as to unjustifiably limit the reasonable flexibility we have allowed in the past. It is not disputed that an employee may present claims "like or reasonably related to the allegations of the charge and growing out of such allegations." It is advisable to remember that this standard, as described by Judge Cummings in Babrocky v. Jewel Food Co.,
