Appellant Earl Johnson brought suit against his employer, General Electric Company, for discriminating against him on the basis of race. Johnson’s complaint alleged three separate violations of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 42 U.S.C. §§ 2000e — 2000e-17. The district court granted defendant’s motion to dismiss all three counts as being untimely. We affirm, though on different grounds with regard to Count II.
In June 1980, appellant filed a union grievance alleging that General Electric twice had denied him promotions to senior design positions because he was black. According to appellant’s very sketchy complaint, after January 1981 he “continued to be passed over for promotion to the ‘Senior Design’ position by white males with less seniority and qualifications that were no greater than his.” In July 1981, defendant placed the plaintiff on what plaintiff describes as a “three month trial review ... to determine if he was qualified for the Senior Design position.” The facts at this point become very confusing. It is not clear what the result of this trial review process was. Plaintiff does not allege that anything happened at the end of the “three months.” Instead, plaintiff alleges that in February of the following year, he “was informed that he had failed to pass a second trial review, disqualifying him for a promotion.” In April 1982, he filed a complaint before the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC). He alleges that since the filing of that complaint, his work assignments have been fewer and more simplistic, thus further preventing him from demonstrating skills sufficient for Senior Design work.
Title VII requires that an aggrieved individual file a charge with the EEOC “within one hundred and eighty days after the alleged employment practice occurred.” 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-5(e). That period is extended to 300 days in “deferral states,” such as Massachusetts, if the “person aggrieved has initially instituted proceedings with a State or local agency with authority to grant or seek relief from such practice ” In such a deferral state, however, the complainant must file his charges with the EEOC within 240 days of the alleged violation, in order to allow 60 days for deferral to the state agency.
See Mohasco Corp. v. Silver,
Count I of appellant’s complaint sets forth allegations of discrimination in
*134
1980 when two white males were promoted to Senior Design positions ahead of him. Appellant’s EEOC complaint admittedly was not filed until at least 22 months after he was passed over for these positions. Therefore this claim is barred as untimely. Johnson’s union grievance procedure does not toll the statute of limitations.
See Delaware State College v. Ricks,
The district court also dismissed Count II as untimely. That count reads as follows:
21. On or about June 3, 1980, the Plaintiff filed a grievance for failure to promote him. Thereafter and continuing to the present the Defendant has refused to promote the Plaintiff.
22. In July, 1981, the Defendant in response to Plaintiff’s grievance established a review process that was designed to prevent the Plaintiff from qualifying as a “Senior Designer”.
23. Despite the fact that the Plaintiff had already exhibited sufficient skills, and in fact performed work normally assigned to “Senior Designers” in the past, he was assigned to perform in an area that he was not familiar with. It was designed to cause his failure.
24. On or about February 24, 1982, Plaintiff was informed that he had failed the second trial review and would not be promoted.
25. This trial review process was unfair as applied to the Plaintiff as he had already adequately demonstrated the necessary skills for promotion to “Senior Designer”. This artificial process was racially motivated and biased against the Plaintiff.
The appellee contends that this claim accrued in July 1981, when the trial review process was established. Appellant, on the other hand, insists that the clock did not start running on this claim until February 1982, when the appellant was informed that he would not be promoted.
The district court correctly dismissed Count II, but we disagree with its reasoning for that dismissal. We think the issue important enough to address the grounds relied upon by the district court. We then set forth our separate reasoning for affirming dismissal.
See Knight v. Mills,
The district court, relying on
Delaware State College v. Ricks,
We believe that this reliance on Ricks was in error. The district court’s decision both reads the complaint too narrowly, and establishes a date of accrual at which it would have been unfair, if not impossible, for plaintiff to have instituted a Title VII action.
In
Ricks,
the Supreme Court held that the proper focus in Title VII cases for statute of limitations purposes is “ ‘upon the time of the
discriminatory acts,
not upon the time at which the
consequences
of the acts became most painful.’ ”
Subsequent appellate cases have struggled to apply Ricks in various circumstances. The predominant question has concerned whether a claim accrues when an employee is made subject to an employment plan or evaluation (e.g., seniority status or a mandatory retirement age or a subjective evaluation), or when that plan or evaluation is applied to deny the plaintiff particular benefits or positions (e.g., a promotion or the award of a retirement pension). The issue can alternatively be framed as whether the applications of a discriminatory employment plan or evaluation constitute separate, cognizable discrim *135 inatory acts under Ricks, or whether they are merely consequences of earlier discriminatory acts. In other words, can the statute of limitations start running before there is certainty that any adverse employment decision disadvantaging the plaintiff will result from the discrimination?
In the recent case of
Lorance v. AT & T Technologies, Inc.,
Most circuit courts have, however, rejected this analysis. They have reasoned, instead, that the application of a discriminatory system to a particular substantive decision (e.g., to promote, demote, fire, or award benefits) constitutes an independent discriminatory act which can trigger the commencement of the statute of limitations. For instance, in
EEOC v. Westinghouse Elec. Corp.,
In an analogous Title VII case, the District of Columbia Circuit reasoned that although the preparation of an evaluation might have been a discriminatory act, a later screening panel’s use of that discriminatory evaluation for purposes of a promotion decision is an alleged “unlawful discriminatory act in its own right.”
Stoller v. Marsh,
We are persuaded by this line of cases. If the “notice” standard articulated in
Ricks
and in
Chardon v. Fernandez,
In addition, it is far from clear whether claims under Title VII and analogous statutes would be ripe for adjudication until discriminatory systems were actually
applied
to plaintiffs in particular employment decisions. In
Ricks,
the professor’s claim undoubtedly was ripe as soon as he was notified of his imminent dismissal. But it is questionable whether an action by an employee who has not yet suffered any injury as a result of a discriminatory system is sufficiently ripe.
See Westinghouse,
This court has addressed the
Ricks
issue only in the context of attempting to discern the definition of a “continuing violation.”
See, e.g., Cajigas v. Banco de Ponce,
In the case before us now, we are not presented with a “continuing” discriminatory “policy,” as that concept is used in the cases cited above and in footnote 5. The issue before us is whether a “discriminatory act” occurred within the time mandated by the statute of limitations. The district court interpreted Count II of appellant’s complaint to complain solely about the review process used to test the appellant. Much of the language of that count would seem to support this reading. Plaintiff complains in paragraph 22 that the process was “designed” to prevent him from qualifying for Senior Designer status. Paragraph 23 claims that the tests plaintiff was required to perform were unfair, and “designed to cause his failure.”
But in paragraph 24, the plaintiff explicitly ties the unfair review process to notification of his failure and denial of promotion on February 24, 1982. (Earlier in his complaint, appellant also focused on the promotion denial in February in addition to the unfairness of the review process. Para. 11.) Thus, in the final paragraph of the count, plaintiff concludes that the process was unfair “as applied to the Plaintiff.”
Reading the complaint, as we must, as a whole and in the light most favorable to the plaintiff, we cannot say that he is not complaining about the promotion denial in February in addition to the unfair review process the preceding summer. Even if the event in February is in some sense a “consequence” of the earlier discrimination, it is also alleged to be an independent discriminatory act in and of itself. The testers’ alleged discriminatory animus becomes “background” material “which might make the [subsequent] decision [not to promote] discriminatory.”
Stoller v. Marsh,
But even assuming that the review process itself constitutes the core of the alleged discrimination, it is not clear that that claim would have accrued until some tangible effects of the discrimination were apparent to the plaintiff. Until February, plaintiff did not know that the alleged unfair process would have any adverse effects whatsoever. Notice of any injury resulting from the adverse employment practice therefore did not occur until then. Neither Ricks nor any other Supreme Court case has held that the statute of limitations may start running before the plaintiff is aware that he will in fact be injured by the challenged practice. In this case, not only was there no adverse promotion decision on the basis of the test until after February 1982, plaintiff was not even unfairly classified until he was told that he had failed the test. He was merely allowed to be reviewed according to what he alleges to have been an unfair procedure. 6 If plaintiff had instituted his dis *138 crimination claim in 1981, before the results of the test had been determined, it is likely that it would have been dismissed as unripe, since at that point it was undetermined whether the review process would in fact cause plaintiff any injury, or indeed, whether he would fail the review at all. February of 1982, then, seems to have been the earliest time at which appellant properly could have filed the action on Count II. That count therefore was not time-barred.
Nevertheless, appellant’s complaint in Count II must be dismissed for failure to plead a Title VII violation with sufficient particularity. “Complaints based on civil rights statutes must do more than state simple conclusions; they must at least outline the facts constituting the alleged violation.”
Fisher v. Flynn,
In order adequately to allege a pri-ma facie Title VII claim of the sort complained of by appellant, a plaintiff need only assert that non-minority employees similarly situated or qualified were granted favorable treatment or benefits.
See McDonnell Douglas Corp. v. Green,
By contrast, the complaint alleges no specific facts that could lead a reasonable jury to infer that the review process, or the decision in February 1982 not to promote Johnson, was racially motivated. Plaintiff does not allege that the review process was waived for white employees who had similar qualifications. Plaintiff’s complaint in Count II concerns the nature of the test, not its establishment. In fact, it seems as if the review process was established for the benefit of the plaintiff, so that he could prove his qualifications for the Senior Designer position after the defendant had previously determined that he was not so qualified. As to the discriminatory nature of the review process itself, plaintiff provides merely the conclusory allegation in paragraph 25 that the “artificial process was racially motivated and biased against the Plaintiff.” Appellant has alleged facts which, if proven, might sustain a claim of an
unfair
review process. But that alone does not establish a Title VII violation. The element of racial discrimination must also be alleged with sufficient particularity. Plaintiff does not contend that any white employees were promoted without the qualifications for which the review process tested. Nor does he allege any other evidence of racial bias in the nature of the review. Appellant has not asserted facts sufficient to create inferences that would support a finding that he would have been treated differently had he not been black.
See Velazquez v. Chardon,
*139 Appellant alleges in Count III that the defendant retaliated against him for filing his complaint with the EEOC in April 1982. The district court properly dismissed this count on the ground that the plaintiff had not adequately exhausted required EEOC procedures.
No claim may be brought in federal court unless the prerequisite of administrative investigation has first been met. A complaint related to that brought before the EEOC, but which was not itself made the subject of a separate EEOC complaint, must reasonably be expected to be have been within the scope of the EEOC’s investigation in order to meet the jurisdictional prerequisite.
See, e.g., Miller v. International Tel. & Tel. Corp.,
The decision of the district court dismissing appellant’s complaint is affirmed.
Notes
. It should be noted that the Supreme Court in
Ricks
explicitly left undecided whether Ricks’ cause of action would accrue when the tenure decision itself was made known to him. Instead, the statute started running when he was informed that the denial of tenure would mean the loss of his job.
.
In a case decided before
Ricks,
the Sixth Circuit similarly held that the adoption of a discriminatory seniority system constitutes a "continuing violation” of the ADEA as long as that system is maintained by the employer. Thus, an employee’s cause of action would not accrue "until his employment opportunities are adversely affected by the application to him of the provisions of that seniority system.”
Morelock v. NCR Corp.,
. Although the Seventh Circuit itself concluded that "no court has pressed the logic of the notice approach so relentlessly, or is likely to do so,” id., that very court later did, in Lorance, in fact adopt this "paradoxical” approach. The Lorance court did not cite its earlier analysis in Heiar.
.
United Air Lines, Inc. v. Evans,
.
See also Cook
v.
Pan American World Airways, Inc.,
. Indeed, the injury here is far more speculative than that which might be expected to arise from the sort of discriminatory seniority system discussed in Lorance.
. This is hardly the only defect in appellant’s complaint. It is impossible to discern with any degree of clarity what transpired to give appellant cause to complain. Appellant fails to allege why, if he was already qualified for the Senior Designer position, defendant insisted it was necessary for him to undergo further testing. There is no indication whether his "failure" meant that he was not qualified for any Senior Designer position, or whether it caused him to be passed over for a particular promotion opportunity. Most peculiarly, the review process established in July 1981 was supposed to last three months. We are told nothing about the results of that review. Instead, the complaint indicates that plaintiff failed a second review process *139 some seven months later. Even under the liberal rules of notice pleading, appellant’s complaint falls well short of the degree of specificity necessary to provide the defendant and the court proper notice of the wrongs alleged.
. We need not decide whether we would have "ancillary" jurisdiction over the retaliation claim even in the absence of an EEOC complaint,
see Gottlieb v. Tulane Univ. of Louisiana,
