In Re Bemis Company, Inc., Petitioner.
No. 01-8038
United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit
Submitted January 11, 2002—Decided January 11, 2002/1—Opinion January 25, 2002
Before Posner, Easterbrook, and Rovner, Circuit Judges.
Petition to Appeal from the United States District Court for the Southern District of Indiana, Terre Haute Division. No. TH 01-0112-C T/H--John D. Tinder, Judge.
Posner, Circuit Judge.
But we cannot grant the relief sought by Bemis because the EEOC is indeed exempt from
That at any rate was the line taken by the Court in General Telephone and we cannot find anything in the present case that would have led the Court to carve an exception for this case. It is of course possible that this case is less appropriate for class treatment--maybe as Bemis argues there is а huge variance in the nature and extent of the injuries suffered by the
Any doubt about the validity or scope of General Telephone has been laid to rest by the Supreme Court‘s decision, rendered just days after our order denying Bemis‘s petition, in EEOC v. Waffle House, Inc., No. 99-1823, 2002 WL 46763 (U.S. Jan. 15, 2002). In the course of holding, with many approving referencеs to General Telephone, that even after the addition of compensatory and punitive damages to the EEOC‘s arsenal of remedies the EEOC does not sue as the representative of the discriminated-against employees who may benefit from the relief it obtains and hence is not barred from suing by the fact that the employeеs had agreed to submit their claims to binding arbitration, the Court stated that Title VII “makes the EEOC the master of its own cаse and confers on the agency the authority to evaluate the strength of the public interest at stake.” Id. at *7. “The EEOC does not stand in the employee‘s shoes.” Id. at *10.
FOOTNOTE
/1 With the notation that an opinion explaining our reasons would follow.
