Karon Lambert, formerly employed in Caterpillar’s plant in Aurora, Illinois, filed a charge with the EEOC claiming that she’d been fired for spurning her supervi
When a charge of discrimination is filed with the EEOC, the Commission must notify the alleged offender(s), investigate the charge, and if the investigation gives rise to a reasonable belief that the charge is true, may (with irrelevant qualifications) sue any of the alleged offenders. 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-5(f)(l). Caterpillar argues that the agency’s reasonable-cause determination is judicially reviewable, citing such dicta as that the “EEOC may allege in a complaint whatever unlawful conduct it has uncovered during the course of its investigation, provided that there is a reasonable nexus between the initial charge and the subsequent allegations in the complaint,”
EEOC v. Harvey L. Walner & Associates,
All these, however, are cases that either were filed by a private individual rather than by the Commission or that transpose uncritically language from such cases. For example, the statement in
United Parcel
that the claim sued upon must be “reasonably related” to the initial charge is copied from
Cheek v. Western & Southern Life Ins. Co.,
The difference between the two classes of case is that exhaustion of administrative remedies is an issue when the suit
If courts may not limit a suit by the EEOC to claims made in the administrative charge, they likewise have no business limiting the suit to claims that the court finds to be supported by the evidence obtained in the Commission’s investigation. The existence of probable cause to sue is generally and in this instance not judicially reviewable. See
FTC v. Standard Oil Co. of California,
