This appeal concerns application of the doctrine of equitable tolling of a statute of limitations in the context of a claim asserted under the Age Discrimination in Employment Act (“ADEA”), 29 U.S.C. §§ 621-634 (1982). Plaintiff-appellant Richard Cerbone commenced this action in the District Court for the Southern District of New York (Richard Owen, Judge) alleging that his employers, defendants-appellees International Ladies’ Garment Workers’ Union (“ILGWU”) and New York Coat, Suit, Dress, Rainwear and Allied Workers’ Union (the “Joint Board”) (collectively the “Union”), violated the ADEA by forcing him to retire solely on the basis of his age.
Cerbone’s age discrimination claim is based on the following circumstances. The Joint Board is a labor organization composed of a number of ILGWU locals. For many years Cerbone was employed as manager-secretary of one such local. In the summer of 1981 the Union decidеd to dissolve three locals, including the local managed by Cerbone, by merging them into four other locals. Cerbone alleges that the Union dissolved the three locals in order to force their managers, all of whom were over sixty years old, to retire.
Ruling on the defendants’ motion for summary judgment, the District Court determined that the 180-day limitations period began to run in the summer of 1981 when Cerbone first believed that the defendants were discriminating against him. Finding that Cerbone had not alleged facts entitling him to invoke the equitable tolling doctrine, the District Court held that Cerbоne’s EEOC charge was not timely and, therefore, granted the defendants’ motion for summary judgment.
Cerbone contends that the case presents circumstances from which a jury could find that the limitations period was tolled. He relies on representations made to him by defendant-appellee Sol Chaikin, presidеnt of ILGWU. During the summer of 1981, after Cerbone learned that the Union wanted him to retire, he met with Chaikin on two occasions. At the first meeting, Cerbone informed Chaikin that he was healthy, that he did not want to retire, and that he did not know what he would do with himself if he did retire. Chaikin responded by saying that he would “make it good” to Cerbone and by offеring Cerbone a position as director of retiree activities, a somewhat casual, part-time task, in which he would organize meetings and establish clubs of retired members of ILGWU. Chaikin promised Cerbone that he would be paid $75 for every meeting he organized, up to a maximum total of $5,000 during the first
It is undisputed that, following Cerbone’s retirement, he was given the promised position and reimbursed for certain expenses he incurred in carrying out his new duties. However, he was not paid any money based on the number of meetings he organized. When he did not receive the promised pay, Cerbonе attempted to contact Chaikin, who failed to return his calls. Ultimately, Cerbone realized that Chaikin did not intend to honor his promise, and he decided to file a charge of age discrimination with the EEOC after the limitations period had expired. Cerbone contends that a jury could find that the limitations period set forth in the DEA was tolled by reason of Chaikin’s misrepresentation that he would be compensated if he accepted the new position.
The federal doctrine of equitable tolling of a statute of limitations was developed in the context of actions based on fraud. See Bailey v. Glover,
In recent years the doctrine has been invoked by age discrimination plaintiffs seeking to avoid the bar of the ADEA provisions governing the filing of EEOC charges. See, e.g., O’Malley v. GTE Service Corp.,
This case presents no such extrаordinary circumstance. According to his deposition testimony, Cerbone was fully aware that he had a potential age discrimination claim against his employers as early as the summer of 1981. He stated that he began to suspect that he was being discriminated against when he learned of the proposed merger of the locals and was asked by Joint Board officials if he planned to retire after his local was dissolved. Moreover, the statements that Cerbone attributes to Chaikin concerning the Union’s desire that the older managers retire to make way for the promotion of young officials indisputably put Cеrbone on notice that he had a basis for an age discrimination claim.
Nevertheless, Cerbone insists that summary judgment was improper, relying on a line of cases in which the employee alleged that he had delayed filing a discrimination charge because, subsequent to his discharge, demotion, or forced rеtirement, his employer had promised to reinstate him in his former position or in a comparable alternative position. Under these circumstances, courts have held that it was improper to grant summary judgment to the employer on the ground that the action was timebarred. See Coke v. General Adjustment Bureau, Inc., supra,
The holdings in the “reinstatement” cases cited by Cеrbone may be explained on either of two alternative theories, neither of which aids Cerbone. First, the cases can be viewed as applications of the doctrine that a limitations period is tolled because the employer concealed from the employee the existenсe of the cause of action. Though the employer had made an employment decision adverse to the employee, the employer thereafter promised to reinstate the employee. Until breached, that promise could be found to have justified the employee’s belief thаt the original adverse decision was not motivated by a discriminatory purpose. Accordingly, equitable considerations suggest that the employee should not be penalized if he delays in filing his EEOC charge for a reasonable period while he waits to learn if his employer intends to honor the promise of reinstatement. But, as we noted above, this case presents no facts on which a reasonable jury could find that the Union misled Cerbone with respect to the existence of his ADEA claim. During the very meetings in which Chaikin made the promises that form the basis of Cerbone’s reliance on the tolling doctrine, he made othеr statements that plainly revealed the Union’s discriminatory reasons for forcing Cerbone to retire.
Second, the “reinstatement” cases can be viewed as fashioning a doctrine that the employer is estopped from asserting the limitations bar because he represented, in effect, that he wоuld settle the ADEA claim, and the employee delayed in filing his EEOC charge in reliance on that promise. Unlike equitable tolling, which is invoked in cases where the plaintiff is ignorant of his cause of action because of the
The ADEA cases on which Cerbone relies may be explained as invoking equitable estoppel premised on the existence of settlement negotiations. The ADEA authorizes courts to award, among other remedies, reinstatement to an employee who establishes, for example, that his employer fired him because of his age. See 29 U.S.C. § 626(b). An employer who, prior to suit, promises reinstatement may be viewed as representing that he is willing to settle the employee’s ADEA claim by the offer of a job assignment and benefits substantially equivalent to the employee’s former position. Where the employee reasonably relies on such representation and delays in filing his EEOC charge until after the limitations period has expired, the employer may be estopped to assert the limitations bar in a subsequent ADEA action.
The undisputed facts of this ease, however, would not permit a jury to conclude that the Union’s representations constituted an offer of settlement of an ADEA claim. Cerbone’s deposition testimony makes clear that the Union refused to offer him an alternative, full-time position. Rather, having informed Cerbone that he was bеing retired because of his age, the Union simply chose to extend him some minor benefits in order to ease his transition from full-time employment to retirement.
The judgment of the District Court is affirmed.
Notes
. Because New York is a "State which has a law prohibiting discrimination in employment because of age and establishing ... a State authority to grant ... relief from such discriminatory practice,” 29 U.S.C. § 633(b), the ADEA ordinarily provides a victim of age discrimination in New York 300 days in which to file his charge with the EEOC, id. § 626(d)(2). However, the parties agree that the 180-day period provided in section 626(d)(1) applies in this case because the State law provisions in effect at the time of this suit do not cover Cerbone. N.Y.Exec.Law § 296(3-a)(a) (McKinney 1982) (prohibiting employers from discriminating against persons between eighteen and sixty-five); see id. (McKinney Supp. 1984-1985) (amended version effective January 1, 1986, covering persons eighteen and older).
. The Union alleges that pressing financial problems forced it to dissolve the locals. To support this assertion, it points out that, by the summer of 1981, the Joint Board’s deficit exceeded $1 million.
. Cerbone concedes that he was represented by his son, an experienced labor lawyer, with whom he consulted after he learned that the Union sought to force his retirement.
. The Fourth Circuit has held that an employer's “attempt to mitigate the harshness of a decision terminating' an employee, without more, cannot give rise to an equitable estoppel." Price v. Litton Business Systems, Inc.,
. In affirming dismissal of the ADEA claim as time-barred, we also affirm the District Court’s decision not to exercise pendent jurisdiction over Cerbone’s state law claims.
