Opinion
Plаintiff/appellant Roger Baker appeals from summary judgment for defendants/respondents Children’s Hospital Medical Center, Joyce Hane and Jerry Howe in appellant’s action for employment discrimination. Appellant contends the trial court erroneously concluded that he fаiled to exhaust his administrative remedies, in that his complaint before the Department of Fair Employment and Housing (DFEH) was insufficiently comprehensive to permit the instant action.
*1060
Given the record before us, we emphasize at the outset some fundamental rules of appellate review: (1) the appellant has the burden of affirmatively demonstrating error by providing the reviewing court with an adequate record (Cal. Rules of Court, rule 5(a);
Scala
v.
Jerry Witt & Sons
(1970)
Facts
Appellant, who is Black, was hirеd in July 1982 as a casual, on-call file clerk in respondent hospital’s medical records department. On-call employees have no guaranty of minimum hours or set work schedules, and their work schedules depend upon the department’s staffing needs. On-call employees have the responsibility оf telephoning their supervisors to see if they are needed for work. While so employed, appellant was also a university student. During the school year he worked a weekend shift only, but during the summers of 1982 and 1983 he worked additional hours.
In the summer of 1984 appellant’s immediate supervisor was James Haywoоd, respondent Hane was the director of medical records, and respondent Howe the vice-president of medical services. During the 1984 summer appellant asked Haywood for additional available hours, but was not assigned any. During this period he worked only the 7 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. weekend shift. In August 1984 apрellant and other file clerks presented an internal grievance against Hane and the hospital, alleging racial discrimination. There was a hearing on their grievance in September, but the hospital closed the matter in November due to the grievants’ failure to document their charges.
In May 1985 appellant filed a charge of discrimination with the DFEH, charging that during the summer of 1984 he was the victim of racial discrimination, in that he was denied the opportunity to work on-call hours in favor of a Caucasian employee with less seniority. The DFEH subsequently issued appellant a “right to sue” notice. Appellant, together with five other medical records department employees, then filed the instant action under Government Code sections 12920, 12921, and 12940, 1 which prohibit employment discrimination based on race, or in retaliation for the employee’s *1061 opposition to an unlawful employment practice. They alleged generally that respondents harassed them, subjected them to differential treatment and biased evaluations, engaged in racial epithets, and denied them equal opportunities for promotions and pay raises based on race. They further alleged that rеspondents threatened to discipline them if they filed an internal grievance based on civil rights violations, and that after they filed their internal grievance, respondent Hane retaliated against them by increasing their work load and falsely reprimanding them. Appellant specifically alleged thаt respondent Hane, despite knowing that appellant was at all times available to work, stopped calling him for his on-call file clerk position and called instead Caucasian clerks with less seniority.
Respondents moved for summary judgment against appellant on the ground he was barred from asserting claims other than those specifically raised in his DFEH complaint (summer 1984). As to that claim, respondents argued he did not meet his burden of proving disparate treatment based on race, and that they demonstrated legitimate nondiscriminatory reasons for their actions.
Appellant does not contest the judgment as to his allegation of discrimination regarding his 1984 summer hours. However, he contends he may raise allegations of discrimination related to those in his DFEH complaint: harassment, biased evaluations, and denial of pay raises and promotions due to his race and in retaliation fоr pursuing an internal grievance.
Discussion
The California Fair Employment and Housing Act (FEHA; § 12900 et seq.) guarantees employees freedom from job discrimination on the basis of race. (§ 12921.) Such discrimination is against public policy, and discrimination based on race or in retaliation for opposition to the employer’s practice of racial discrimination is an unlawful employment practice. (§§ 12920, 12940, subds. (a) and (f).)
A person “claiming to be aggrieved by an alleged unlawful practice” may file a verified written complaint with the DFEH. The complaint must set forth, inter alia, the particulars of the unlawful practice. (§ 12960.) After an aggrieved employee files a complaint “alleging facts sufficient to constitute a violation of any of the provisions of [the FEHA], the department shall make prompt investigation in connection therewith.” (§ 12963.) Following its investigation, the DFEH may follow various alternatives to resolve the сomplaint, including seeking conciliation, or filing an accusation against the employer with the Fair Employment and Housing Commission. (§§ 12963.7, 12965, subd. (a).) If no accusation is issued within 150 days after
*1062
the complaint is filed and the matter is not otherwise resolved, DFEH is obligated to inform the complainant in writing (commonly referred to as a “right to sue” letter) that he may bring a civil action under the FEHA. (§ 12965, subd. (b).) “Only then may [the complainant] sue in the superior court ‘under [the FEHA].’ . . . [T]here is no right to sue . . . unless the Department fails to file an accusation before the Commission.”
(Commodore Home Systems, Inc.
v.
Superior Court
(1982)
Exhaustion of an administrative remedy is generally a jurisdictional prerequisite to an action in court.
(Abelleira
v.
District Court of Appeal
(1941)
This question was addressed briefly in
Jones
v.
Los Angeles Community College Dist.
(1988)
Federal law takes a similar approach. Because the antidiscriminatory оbjectives and the overriding public policy purposes of the FEHA and title VII of the Federal Civil Rights Act of 1964 (42 U.S.C. § 2000e et seq.) are identical, we may refer to federal cases where appropriate, even though the two acts differ in some particulars. (See
County of Alameda
v.
Fair Employment & Housing Com.
(1984)
As in California, a person alleging а violation of federal employment rights must first file a charge with the federal equivalent of DFEH, the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC). Should EEOC choose not to pursue the charge, it issues the complainant a right to sue letter (42 U.S.C. § 2000e-5(f)(l)), which is a jurisdictional prerequisite to an action in the federal district cоurt.
{Patterson
v.
General Motors Corp.
(7th Cir. 1980)
In Sanchez the employee filed an EEOC claim stating that her employer harassed and abused her, refused to pay her for absences due to a work-related injury, and discharged her due to her sex and national origin. EEOC concluded that reasonable cause existed to believe the employer guilty of discrimination based on national origin but not sex, and issued a right to sue letter. (EEOC only investigates and seeks voluntary compliance; it doеs not have adjudicatory powers comparable to the California Fair Employment and Housing Commission.) Her action did not include some of the allegations in her EEOC claim (specifically, refusal to pay her salary during an *1064 absence due to a work-related injury and discharge), but did include allegations not contained in the EEOC claim (i.e., limitation of employment and promotion opportunity, and threats to Black and Mexican-American employees; specifically, she alleged the employer had a system whereby minority group employees did all the cleanup duty, which duty was not рrorated and was always done by minorities.).
The employer argued that the employee could not pursue her action because her allegations of discrimination were not sufficiently harmonized with the allegations in her EEOC charge, and that it contained allegations “new and distinct” from the allegations before the EEOC. The court disagreed, holding that “the specific words of the charge of discrimination need not presage with literary exactitude the judicial pleadings which may follow. [jj] [T]he allegations in a judicial complaint filed pursuant to Title VII ‘may encompass any kind of discrimination like or related to allegations contained in the charge and growing out of such allegation during the pendency of the case before the [EEOC]’ [Citation.] In other words, the ‘scope’ of the judicial complaint is limited to the ‘scope’ of the EEOC investigation which can reasonably be expected to grow out of the charge of discrimination, [fl] The logic of this rule is inherent in the statutory scheme of Title VII. A charge of discrimination is not filed as a preliminary to a lawsuit. On the contrary, the purpose of a charge of discrimination is to trigger the investigatory and conciliatory procedures of the EEOC. Once a charge has been filed, [EEOC] carries out its investigatory function and attempts to obtain voluntary compliance with the law. Only if the EEOC fails to achieve voluntary compliance will the matter ever become the subject of court action. Thus it is obvious that the civil action is much more intimately related to the EEOC investigation than to the words of the charge which originally triggered the investigation.” {Sanchez v. Standard Brands, Inc., supra, 431 F.2d at pp. 465-466.) Because the employee’s action alleging discrimination in promotion contained nothing beyond the scope of her charge before the EEOC (harassment and discharge), she was entitled to maintain her action.
In
Oubichon
v.
North American Rockwell Corporation
(9th Cir. 1973)
The record before us does not reveal the extent of the DFEH’s investigation of appellant’s complaint, or the reason it issued the right to sue letter. However, the allegations of harassment and differential treatment encompass the allegations of discrimination in his DFEH complaint. Moreover, it is reasonable that an investigation of the allegations in the original DFEH complaint would lead to the investigation of subsequent discriminatory acts undertaken by respondents in retaliation for appellant’s filing an internal grievance. Consequently, we conclude the instant action is not barred by the exhaustion doctrine.
The judgment on appellant’s first cause of action is reversed. In all other respects it is affirmed.
King, J., and Poché, J., * concurred.
