Defendants-appellants Radames Cardoza-Rodriguez et al., (“employees”) appeal from the district court’s issuance of a declaratory judgment in favor of plaintiff-appellee American Airlines (“American”) enforcing releases of age discrimination forms executed by appellants and dismissing their counterclaims under the Age Discrimination in Employment Act of 1967 (“ADEA”), 29 U.S.C. §§ 621 et seq. and Puerto Rico Law 100. We *114 reverse in part and vacate and remand in part the district court’s declaration that the releases at issue are enforceable. Nonetheless, we affirm the district court’s grant of summary judgment on the employees’ counterclaim, finding the employees’ ADEA claims time-barred.
I.
Background
Because the district court issued the declaratory judgment on plaintiffs motion for summary judgment, we recite the facts in a light most favorable to the non moving party, the employees.
DeNovellis v. Shalala,
On September 21, 1994, as part of a workforce reduction program, American offered certain rеservation, ticket, and cargo agents in the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, the opportunity to participate in a Voluntary Early Retirement Program (‘VERP”). The VERP provided for the addition of five years to each employee’s actual age for purposes of calculating retirements benefits, five years additional credited service, cash bridge payments of $400 per month until the employee became eligible to recéive benefits, immediate retirement medical benefits and travel benefits. To be eligible to participate in the VERP an employee had to be at the maximum pay scale in their job classification and at least forty-five years of age.
American informed the employees of the program’s details by providing various VERP-related documents. The introduction to the “Terms and Conditions” booklet describing the program warned the employees to read the materials carefully, and provided a participation deadline of November 11, 1994, with a seven day rescission period after an election to participate. In order to participate, an employee was required to sign a ‘Voluntary Early Retirement Election Form” attesting that the decision was “completely voluntary, final and irrevocable,” that he or she had been given forty-five days to make the election, and that all rights to reemployment with American were being relinquished. The election form also stated that, on an employee’s last day of work, he or she would be required to sign a “Complete Release of All Claims,” absolving American of all employment-related liability including, specifically, “age discrimination claims.”
The VERP election form required each employee to attest to having read the entire relеase form prior to electing to retire early. By the terms of the release, the employee agreed not to bring any legal proceeding against American in any court, administrative agency, or tribunal, that the employee would forfeit the extra retirement benefits if the employee breached a material release term, and also provided the party successfully enforcing the release costs and attorney’s fees. The release contained a provision stating: “I have had reasonable and sufficient time and opportunity to consult with an independent legal representative of my own choosing before signing this Complete Release of All Claims.” Although the VERP documentation advised the employee to discuss the program with their families and to “consult a financial advisor,” neither the release nor any of the VERP documentation explicitly advised the employees to consult an attorney prior to executing the release or electing to retire. The only mention of independent legal advice was contained in the release, which was not to be signed until the employee’s last day of work. .Each employee signed the release on his or her last day of work.
The appellants elected to participate in the early retirement program on various dates throughout the election period. The earliest election occurred on October 11, 1994, the latest on December 13, 1994. The VERP also provided that the employees’ termination dates would depend on the restructuring process; therefore, after their election, the employees continued to work. Over the next ten months, American began to terminate them individually. The earliest termination occurred on December 30, 1994, while the latest did not occur until September 29, 1995. After each termination, American paid the VERP’s enhanced retirement benefits. For several months (the precise period is unclear from the record), each of the appellants accepted and retained these benefits.
*115 On October 27,1995, over a year after the appellants elected to participate in the VERP, they began to file administrative age discrimination claims with both the Puerto Rico Anti-Discrimination Unit (“ADU”) and the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (“EEOC”) variously claiming that their election to participate in the VERP was involuntary and that American had discriminated against them on the basis of age. In general, the complaints alleged that certain management employees had led older employees to believe that American planned to move the operations in the reservation and cargo departments to another location or subcontract to an outside company, placing their jobs in jeopardy. However, once the employees elected to retire, American asked them to train new, younger replacements to fill their jobs. The claimed threatened job losses never materialized.
II.
Prior Proceedings
On April 18, 1996, American Airlines responded to the appellants’ ADU filings by initiating the instant declaratory judgment action. See 28 U.S.C. § 2201. In its pleadings, American asked the district court to issue an order declaring the rights and obligations of the parties in connection with the VERP under the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974, 29 U.S.C. § 1132(a)(3). 1 Subsequently, American moved under Fed.R.Civ.P. 67 to have the court approve the deposit of future payments of the employees’ retirement benefits into a court-designated bank account (the “court registry”). The cоurt granted that motion, and, since May 1996, American has paid the monthly payments due under the VERP into an interest-bearing account.
The employees counterclaimed against American for age discrimination under the ADEA, the Older Workers Benefits Protection Act (“OWBPA”), 29 U.S.C. § 626(f), and 29 L.P.R.A. §§ 146 et seq., known colloquially as Puerto Rico “Law 100.” Evidently, once the district court allowed American to deposit the employees’ retirement benefits into the court registry, a number of the original employee eounterelaimants abandoned their claims. Of the twenty-one employees who brought the original counterclaim, only eleven remain in the case on appeal.
On July 22, 1996, American moved for summary judgment requesting a declaration that: (1) the employees had ratified the release agreement under both federal and local law; and (2) the defendants could not maintain any claims relating to their early rеtirement. American also moved for summary *116 judgment on the employees’ counterclaim arguing, inter alia, that the employees’ administrative filings had been untimely. The court granted American’s motion, and on January 27, 1997, issued a declaratory judgment that:
(1) Defendants have ratified the release agreements entered into by them in connection with their acceptance of early retirement benefits from American;
(2) the release agreements preclude defendants from raising any claims against American relating to their employment or retirement, including the claims for age discrimination under the [ADEA, OWBPA, and Puerto Rico Law],
(3) Defendants failed to file their claims of age discrimination with the EEOC and Puerto Rico’s Anti-Discrimination Unit within the applicable limitations period.
In light of this declaration, the district court granted American’s motion for summary judgment on the employees’ ADEA and Law 100 counterclaims. This appeal followed.
III.
Standard of Review
We “review a district court’s grant of summary judgment
de novo.” Marrero-Garcia v. Irizarry,
IV.
Discussion
Here, we are faced with two distinct questions. First, was the district court’s declaration that the employees’ release operated as a bar to their ADEA and Law 100 claims correct? Second, if the release does not bar their claims, are the employees’ claims nonetheless barred as a matter of law? We answer the first question in the negative, disagreeing with the district court’s determination that the employees’ release bars their ADEA counterclaims. We agree, however, that the statute of limitations bars the employees’ counterclaim.
1. Is the Release Enforceable?
American presents two alternative arguments that the release the employees signed is enforceable: (1) the release complied with the OWBPA, 29 U.S.C. § 626(f) or, (2) if the release is invalid under the OWBPA, by refusing to return the enhanced retirement benefits they received under the VERP, the employees ratified the release. We disagree. We find that the employees’ rеlease of their ADEA claims did not comply with the OWB-PA and that the ratification doctrine does not apply to invalid ADEA waivers. 2 We consider their arguments in turn.
a. Compliance with the OWBPA
Athough the district court did not reach this issue, American contends that we *117 can affirm the court’s declaration because the releases the employees signed are valid under the OWBPA. We disagree.
For an employee’s waiver of ADEA rights to be enforceable, it must be “knowing and voluntary.”
See, e.g., Long v. Sears Roebuck & Company,
(1) The release must be written in a manner calculated to be understood by the employee signing the release, or the average individual eligible to participate;
(2) the release must specifically refer to claims arising under the ADEA;
(3) the release must not purport to encompass claims that may arise after the date of signing;
(4) the employer must provide consideration for the ADEA claim above and beyond that to which the employee would otherwise already be entitled;
(5) the employee must be advised in writing to consult with an attorney prior to executing the agreement;
(6) the employee must be given at least 45 days to consider signing if the incentive is offered to a group;
(7) the release must allow the employee to rescind the agreement up to 7 days after signing; and
(8) if the release is offered in connection with an exit incentive or group termination program, the employer must provide information relating to thе job titles and ages of those eligible for the program, and the corresponding information relating to employees in the same job titles who were not eligible for the program.
See 29 U.S.C. § 626(f)(1)(A)-(H) (emphasis added).
The OWBPA also explicitly places the burden on the party asserting the validity of a waiver to demonstrate that the waiver was “knowing and voluntary.”
See Id.
§ 626(f)(3);
Raczak v. Ameritech Corp.,
Surprisingly, the VERP documents comprising the agreement did not specifically advise the employees to consult with an attorney prior to executing the release. See 29 U.S.C. § 626(f)(1)(E). 3 Although each employee acknowledged on the VERP election form having read the release before making his or her election, the only reference to consulting legal counsel appears in the release itself, which was not to be executed until the employee actually left work a number of months later. When the employees elected to retire, however, they promised to *118 sign the release on their termination date as a condition of receiving benefits. The release states only: “I have had reasonable and sufficient time and opportunity to consult with an independent legal representative of ■my own choosing before signing this Complete Release of All Claims.” The VERP Agreement itself, although it advised employees to consult financial and tax advisors, to seek advice from local personnel representatives, and to attend retirement seminars, 4 said nothing about seeking independent legal advice prior to making the election to retire and agreeing to execute the rеlease as the statute dictates.
Given the burden OWBPA places on employers to demonstrate their agreements contain the required information, the reference contained in the release is insufficient to satisfy § 626(f)(1)(E). “Congress’s intent in enacting § 626 was to compel employers to provide data so that an employee considering waiving ADEA rights could assess,
with the assistance of counsel,
the viability of an ADEA claim.”
Raczak,
American argues that the waiver form complied with the OWBPA because there is no dispute that the employees were fully aware that only persons in their classifications who were over the age of 45 and at the highest pay rates were eligible, that they were releasing age claims in exchange for enhanced benefits, and that they were provided with all the advice the statute required. We disagree. The fact that the employees may have known they were waiving rights in exchange for enhanced retirement benefits does not satisfy § 626(f)(1)(E). We read § 626(f)(1)(E) to mean what it says: employers must advise employees in writing to consult an attorney prior to executing a release of ADEA claims. The failure to advise the employees to consult with counsel goes to the heart of the statute’s purpose. 6 Because American failed to directly advise their employees to consult a lawyer before making the election, we rule, as а matter of law, that American failed to meet its burden under the OWBPA. 7 See 29 U.S.C. § 626(f)(1).
*119 b. Ratification of the Employees’ ADEA Waiver
As we have said, the district court did not decide whether the release complied with OWBPA. Rather, it held that the employees’ acceptance of enhanced retirement benefits, as well as their opposition to the court’s order to deposit the disputed retirement funds into the court’s registry pending the outcome of this litigation, constituted a ratification of the original release agreement. We disagree.
In the past, we have applied the ratification doctrine to enforce an otherwise invalid release on the ground that “ ‘[a] contract or release, the execution of which is induced by duress, is voidable, not void, and the person claiming duress must act promptly to repudiate the contract or release or he will be deemed to have waived his right to do so.’ ”
In re Boston Shipyard Corp.,
The circuits are split on whether the acceptance of benefits ratifies an otherwise invalid waiver of AFEA claims.
8
A majority, both before and after OWBPA’s enactment, have held that neither ratification nor tender-back is appropriate when employees have signed an invalid AFEA waiver.
See How-lett v. Holiday Inns, Inc.,
The arguments for and against incorporating the ratification and tender-back doctrines into the AFEA have been thoroughly reviewed in these eases, and we will not repeat their analysis fully.
The decisions in favor of ratification primarily argue that, because Congress used “the terms ‘knowing1 and ‘voluntary,’ which parallel the common-law concepts of fraud, duress, and mistake, it is apparent that Congress was defining only those circumstances
*120
in which a contract would be voidable, not when it would bé' void.”
Blistein,
The majority view rests on two primary arguments: (1) the plain language of OWB-PA and its legislative history indicate that Congress did not intend ratification to apply to releases that are invalid under OWBPA,
see Long,
We reject the view adopted by the Fourth and Fifth Circuits and adopt the majority position. At common law, a waiver of rights was simply a contract, subject to defenses like duress or mistake. When Congress enacted the OWBPA, however, it specifically rejected using ordinary contract principles to govern the validity of ADEA waivers.
Long,
Incorporating the ratification doctrine into this statutory scheme would emasculate the Act. “Through the OWBPA Congress sought to insure that employees faced with deciding whether to sign an ADEA waiver and forego an ADEA claim be provided with sufficient information to allow them to evaluate the merits of that claim.”
Long,
When, as here, an employer fails in the simple task of advising its employees to consult an attorney prior to electing to retire, the employee is more likely to face a critical decision without the knowledgeable guidance necessary to assess whether he or she is possibly a victim of age discrimination. If the ratification doctrine is incorporated into this scheme, an employer could obtain waivers without advising the employee to consult an attorney and then put the employee to the difficult choice of giving up essential benefits in order to protect his or her rights. The very problem that Congress enacted the OWBPA to remedy could thus resurface, albeit through the back door. Therefore, incorporating the ratification doctrine into the OWBPA could act to undermine the incentives for employers to follow OWBPA’s procedures and deter the prosecution of meritorious claims.
Cf. Hogue v. Southern Ry. Co.,
*121
The conflict between common-law ratification and the statutory scheme at issue here is particularly stark when an employer seeks to induce an employee to accept early retirement. Here, the employees voluntarily agreed to retire in exchange for enhanced benefits without which, American assures us, they would have remained on the job at American’s highest pay scale. Courts applying the ratification doctrine to ADEA claims have stated that thе employees must be required to restore the status quo by tendering-back the benefits they received for waiving their claims.
See Blakeney,
For instance, American does not contend that the employees should, as a precondition to suing, refuse their retirement benefits and seek reinstatement. American does not, in other words, contemplate the restoration of the status quo. Rather, American wants to use the ratification doctrine to retain the economic benefit of the employees’ decisions to retire early — a decision оbtained by American in violation of the OWBPA. As the
Forbus
court noted, this result could “encourage egregious behavior on the part of employers in forcing certain employees into early retirement for the economic benefit of the company.”
We therefore join the majority of courts which have considered the issue and conclude that an employee’s retention of benefits does not act to ratify a waiver of ADEA claims that fails to comply with the OWBPA. 10 Thus, we reverse the district court’s declaration that the release precludes defendants from raising age discrimination claims under the ADEA.
2. Ratification of the Employees’ Law 100 Waivers
Our rejection of the ratification doctrine in the ADEA context has implications for whether, as the district court’s judgment declares, the release bars non-ADEA claims. Though cursory mention of state law was made in the summary judgment motions, both parties centered their arguments on thе question of whether the release, as a whole, was subject to the ratification doctrine under federal and Puerto Rico law. The district court opinion is unclear as to whether the release, despite the employees’ invalid waiver of ADEA claims, nonetheless would bar their Puerto Rico Law 100 claims, as well as any other claims relating to their employment. In reaching a conclusion that it does, the court merely stated: “The result is the same under Puerto Rico law.”
In Long, the Third Circuit, facing the same problem, explained:
[T]he district court rested its grant of summary judgment as to all claims on its finding that the release as a whole was voidable and had been ratified. ... Our holding, confined as it is to ADEA releases invalid under OWBPA, does not automatically dispose of the remainder of [the employee’s] claims as might be the ease if we had rested our decision on the void/voidable distinction.
V.
Monetary Benefits Deposited in the Court Registry
In May 1996, the district court ordered the deposit of the employees’ retirement benefits into an interest-bearing account pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 67. During the pendency of this action, these funds have been accumulating. The question remains as to their proper disposition. The record reflects that American choose not to address this issue on summary judgment and neither party raises it on appeal. Therefore, we do not reach this issue. We note, however, that these funds are due to the employees unless there exists a basis for their retention. We leave this for the district court to determine on remand in a manner consistent with this opinion.
VI.
Statutes of Limitations
The district court granted American summary judgment on the ground that the applicable limitations periods barred all of the employees’ counterclaims. We affirm as to the federal claims, although we clarify that four of the employees’ Law 100 claims were not barred by the statute of limitations.
I. The ADEA Claims
In “deferral states” (states which have enacted employment discrimination laws) such as Puerto Rico, employees must file charges of unlawful age discrimination in employment with the EEOC within 300 days “after the alleged unlawful practice occurred.” 29 U.S.C. § 626(d). American contends that the employees filed their claims with the ADU and the EEOC outside the 300-day time limit imposed by the ADEA. We agree.
To determine the timeliness of the employee’s complaint, we must specifically identify when the unlawful practice that the employees claim violated the ADEA occurred.
See Lorance v. AT. & T. Techs.,
To transform an offer of early retirement into a constructive discharge, a plaintiff must show that the offer was nothing more than a charade, that is, a subterfuge disguising the employer’s desire to purge the plaintiff from the ranks because of his age____ [A] plaintiff who has accepted an employer’s offer to retire can be said to have been constructively discharged when the offer presented was, at rock bottom, a choice between early retirement with benefits or discharge without benefits....
Id.
at 480 (citations and internal quotations omitted). If the VERP was a charade, then American discriminated against the employees by providing them no choice but to participate in an early retirement pro
*123
gram offered only to older employees. As the alleged discriminatory act, this constructive discharge triggered the limitations period.
See Young v. Nat’l Ctr. for Health Servs. Research,
The employees’ arguments to the contrary are flawеd. The employees first argue that the statute did not start to run until they actually left American’s employ after electing to retire early. This argument is meritless. In
Delaware State College v. Ricks,
The employees contend that their discrimination claims did not accrue until younger workers actually replaced them. This argument fails because a prima facie age discrimination claim does not necessarily require replacement by a younger worker.
See Sanchez v. Puerto Rico Oil Co.,
“[W]hen an employee knows that he has been hurt and also knows that his employer has inflicted the injury, it is fair to begin the countdown toward repose. And the plaintiff need not know all the facts that support his claim in order for countdown to commence.”
Morris,
In this ease, the limitations period commenced when the employees elected to participate in the VERP. Thus, unless there exists a basis for equitable modification of *124 the limitations period, all the employees’ ADEA claims are barred as a matter of law.
2. Equitable Estoppel and Tolling
The employees contend that the doctrines of equitable estoppel and equitable tolling should save their claims. 13 We reject the application of these doctrines here.
Equitable estoppel is invoked when an employee is aware of his ADEA rights, but does not make a timely filing due to his reasonable reliance on his employer’s deceptive conduct.
Kale v. Combined Ins. Co. of America,
Equitable tolling is appropriate when the plaintiff demonstrates “excusable ignorance” of his statutory rights.
Kale,
In this case, each employee signed the VERP election form, which contained a paragraph attesting that he or she had read the release. The release stated that the employees were releasing American from any age discrimination claims he or she may have had. Therefore, the employees had actual knowledge of their ADEA rights. In addition, the employees have alleged here that, shortly after inducing them to sign the VERP, American went on a “recruitment frenzy of new reservation agents” and announced that the cargo department would remain in Puerto Rico despite American’s earlier claims. In light of these facts, the employees’ claim that their “excusable” ignorance caused them to wait far longer than 300 days to pursue their claims is untenable.
14
See Cada v. Baxter Healthcare Corp.,
S. The Puerto Rico Law 100 Claims
The employees contend that their Law 100 claims are not barred by the statute of limitations. In pertinent part, Law 100 forbids adverse employment actions based on any one of several protected characteristics, including age.
See
P.R. Laws Ann. tit. 29, § 146 (1985);
Sanchez,
In
Olmo v. Young & Rubicam of P.R., Inc.,
The remaining four employees’ Law 100 claims are not time-barred; they fail on the merits as a matter of law. To survive summary judgment, an employee must submit at least some evidence upon which a jury could properly proceed to find an employer guilty of age discrimination.
See De Arteaga v. Pall Ultrafine Filtration Corp.,
VII.
In conclusion, we hold that the release violated the OWBPA and that the employees’ retention of benefits does not act to ratify a waiver that failed to comply with the OWB-PA. We therefore reverse that portion of the district court’s judgment declaring that the employees’ retention of benefits ratified the release of their ADEA claims. We vacate and remand to the district court to further consider the issue of whether the release bars non-ADEA claims. We affirm the district court’s entry of summary judgment on the employees’ counterclaims.
Affirmed in part; reversed in part; vacated and remanded in part. No costs.
Notes
. Although neither party has addressed the issue, it is our duty to inquire sua sponte into our subject matter jurisdiсtion.
In re Recticel Foam Corp.,
by a ... fiduciary (A) to enjoin any act or practice which violates the terms of the plan, or (B) to obtain other appropriate equitable relief (i) to redress such violations or (ii) to enforce any provisions ... of the terms of the plan.
29 U.S.C. § 1132(a)(3). American seeks a declaration of the parties’ obligations under the plan in light of the release. We need not confront the question of whether § 1132(a)(3) directly authorizes a declaratory judgment in this context.
Compare Winstead v. J.C. Penney Co., Inc.,
Federal courts have regularly taken original jurisdiction over declaratory judgment suits in which, if the declaratory judgment dеfendant brought a coercive action to enforce its rights, that suit would necessarily present a federal question.
Id.
at 19,
. We emphasize that our holding is limited to releases of ADEA claims that are invalid under the OWBPA. We do not decide or express any opinion on whether the employees validly released their non-ADEA claims. See infra part IV.2.
. On appeal, American argues that the VERP informed the employees that:
[E]ach employee shоuld obtain whatever advice he or she required including consultation with personal attorneys or advisors and should make an informed and voluntary choice whether to participate in the plan.
Although American cites to documentation to support this contention, nowhere except in the release does the cited material mention private legal counsel.
. It also advised divorced employees to consult an attorney regarding the effects of certain payment options.
. The legislative history of the OWBPA states:
In the context of ADEA waivers, the Committee recognizes a fundamental distinction between individually tailored separation agreements and employer programs targeted at groups of employees.
During the past decade, in particular, employers faced with the need to reduce workforce size have resorted to standardized programs designed to effectuatе quick and wholesale reductions. The trademark of involuntary termination programs is a standardized formula or package of employee benefits that is available to more than one employee. The trademark of voluntary reduction programs is a standardized formula or package of benefits designed to induce employees voluntarily to sever their employment. In both cases, the terms of the programs generally are not subject to negotiation between the parties. In addition, employees affected by those programs have little or no basis to suspect that action is being taken based on their individual characteristics. Indeed, the employer generally advises them that the termination is not a function of their individual status. Under these circumstances, the need for adequate information and access to advice before waivers are signed is especially acute.
S. Rep. No. 101-263, at 32 (1990), reprinted in 1990 U.S.C.C.A.N. 1509, 1537-38 (emphasis added).
. In light of the OWBPA’s imprecise terms, some violations may be so technical as to be de minim-is, and thus may not invalidate an otherwise valid release of ADEA claims.
See Raczak,
. As the employees point out, the waiver is also deficient in another manner. The waiver broadly prohibits employees from maintaining “any legal proceedings of any nature whatsoever against American
et al.
before any court or ad
*119
ministrative agency” and requires them to "direct that agency or court to withdraw from or dismiss the matter with prejudice” if the agency assumes jurisdiction on their behalf. Section 626(f)(4), however, states: "No waiver may be used to justify interfering with the protected right of an employee to file a charge or participate in an investigation or proceeding conducted by the Cоmmission."
Cf. E.E.O.C. v. Astra U.S.A., Inc.,
. This issue has been argued before the Supreme Court and a decision is currently pending.
See Oubre v. Entergy Operations, Inc.,
. American relies on
Deren v. Digital Equip. Corp.,
. Our holding is limited only to waivers that violate OWBPA’s requirements. Whether the ratification and tender-back doctrines apply to a waiver that complies with the OWBPA but is not “knowing and voluntary” for a different reason,
see Reid v. IBM Corp.,
. As already noted, we affirm the court’s dismissal of ADEA and Law 100 claims because they are barred by the statute of limitations. See infra. The statute of limitations does not, however, provide an independent basis for affirming the district court’s declaratory judgment. The district court's declaratory judgment had three parts: (1) that the release was ratified, (2) that the release precludes all employment related claims (including ADEA claims), and (3) that the employees' age discrimination claims are time-barred. On appeal, we must determine if the trial court’s declaratory judgment, a final ruling that is res judicata in any future litigation concerning this release, is correct in all respects. See 10A Charles Alan Wright, Arthur R. Miller, Federal Practice and Procedure, § 2771 (1983)("A declaratory judgment is binding on the parties before the court and is res judicata in subsequent proceedings as to the matters declared....”). The statute of limitations is relevant only to the third part of the district court’s declaratory judgment. Therefore, we must reach the ratification issue despite the fact that the employees’ counterclaim is barred by the limitations period.
. The defendants/employees have provided a table titled "Summary of Relevant Dates” that set forth the applicable election and filing dates for calculating the limitations periods. American has not disputed the accuracy of these dates.
Employee VERP Accepted ADU Filing Days Post VERP
Cardoza-Rodriguez 10/18/94 10/29/95 376
Coll-Figueroa 10/28/94 10/27/95 364
De La Paz 10/11/94 10/27/95 381
Garcia-Caceres 10/12/94 11/15/95 399
De Rivero 10/14/94 10/27/95 378
Martinez-Rivera 12/12/94 10/27/95 318
Mattos 11/3/94 10/27/95 356
Ortiz-Rosa 10/18/94 11/15/95 393
Santiago-Negron 10/21/94 10/30/95 374
Zequiera-Julia 12/13/94 10/27/95 317
Lopez-Garcia 11/10/94 11/15/95 370
. The ADEA filing period is akin to a statute of limitations and thus, subject to equitable modification.
See Mercado-Garda v. Ponce Federal Bank,
. The employees allude to the theory of continuing violations, which applies when a plaintiff alleges repetitive instances of discrimination perpetuated over time.
See Havens Realty Corp. v. Coleman,
. The employees cite Sanchez v. A.E.E., 97 J.T.S. 45 (1997) for the proposition that the statute of limitations under Law 100 begins to run from the last day that an employee was employed. American contests this reading, asserting that the case dealt with a hostile and persistent sexual harassment work atmosphere, was issued without a formal opinion, and thus, has no precedential value. We direct the employees' attention to U.S.Ct. of App. 1st Cir. Rule 30.7, 28 U.S.C.A. (West 1997):
Whenever an opinion of the Supreme Court of Puerto Rico is cited in a brief and oral argument which does not appear in the bound volumes in English, an official, certified or stipulated translation thereof with three conformed copies shall be filed.
The employees have not complied with this rule. Thus, we decline their invitation to find that the Supreme Court of Puerto Rico has overruled Rodriguez.
