Grace Ong appeals the district court’s entry of summary judgment,
Ong filed an administrative charge alleging that she was denied a promotion on the basis of national origin. During the pend-ency of the administrative process, she took a disability retirement due to a nervous condition allegedly provoked by the complained-of employer conduct: Ong retired in April 1978 and the administrative hearing was held in May 1978. The administrative process both established her employer’s discriminatory conduct in promotion and awarded her a retroactive appointment up to the date of her retirement. The district court found as a matter of law that Ong had waived her right to federal court jurisdiction over her Title VII claim for additional damages by failing to exhaust her administrative remedies.
Ong challenges the district court’s entry of summary judgment on the ground that she did, as a matter of law, exhaust her administrative remedies. Cleland contends that the summary judgment can be affirmed on Ong’s failure to exhaust or on the alternative ground that the relief Ong sought — compensatory damages — was unavailable to her as a matter of law under Title VII. We affirm.
I. FACTS
Ong is an American citizen of Chinese national origin. She worked for the Veterans Administration from 1968 to 1978. In May 1977, Ong, who was then a GS-6 education claims clerk, applied for a veterans claims examiner position at GS-5 with noncompetitive promotion potential to GS-9. She was not hired for the position. Ong filed a timely administrative equal opportunity charge concerning the promotion decision on June 22, 1977. Her administrative charge alleged that the agency improperly promoted less qualified applicants to the position because of 1) racial stereotypes and 2) her previous equal opportunity charge, 1 see 29 C.F.R. §§ 1613.261-.262 (1979). She requested a retroactive appointment to the position. In April 1978, Ong took a disability retirement from the VA. At the administrative hearing in May 1978, Ong stated *318 that she “had filed for disability retirement because of the treatment [she] had received [at the VA].” She testified that she “was physically and mentally unable to perform [her] job satisfactorily.” 2 The administrative process resulted in a finding by the Federal Employee Appeals Authority [FEAA], in September 1978, that Ong was denied the promotion on the basis of unlawful racial discrimination; the FEAA also found that Ong’s allegations of reprisal based on her earlier discrimination charge were without merit. In November 1978, the agency concurred in the FEAA finding of discrimination in promotion and awarded Ong a retroactive appointment to the claims examiner position dating back to June 1977. See 29 C.F.R. § 1613.271(b)(1) (1979). The agency’s retroactive appointment extended forward only to April 1978, or for ten months, to the time during the administrative process that Ong took a disability retirement. In a deposition taken in connection with the district court proceedings one year later, Ong testified that she had experienced nervous symptoms such as “cold sweats,” sudden blankness of mind, and nausea after initiating the administrative process. She attributed these symptoms to the forthcoming agency decision.
Ong was not awarded back pay by the agency, since the new position was rated lower than her previous position and she did not hold the new position for the twelvemonth period required for promotion to the next GS level.
II. EXHAUSTION OF ADMINISTRATIVE REMEDIES
This appeal presents the novel question of whether a Title VII plaintiff must amend his or her administrative charges to add additional claims based on a different theory of employer discrimination.
A Title VII plaintiff must exhaust his or her administrative remedies before seeking judicial relief from discriminatory agency action.
E. g., Richerson v. Jones,
When an employee seeks judicial relief for incidents not listed in his original charge to the [administrative agency], the judicial complaint nevertheless may encompass any discrimination like or reasonably related to the allegations of the [agency] charge, including new acts occurring during the pendency of the charge before the [administrative agency].
Oubichon v. North American Rockwell Corp.,
The scope of the exhaustion requirement is best understood in the context of the Title VII policies which it is intended to further. Because laypersons often initiate employment discrimination complaints and because the policies of Title VII are
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promoted by encouraging administrative conciliation of employment discrimination complaints, Title VIPs procedural requirements are “neither interpreted too technically nor applied too mechanically.”
Richerson
v.
Jones,
Ong’s theory in the federal courts, that she was “constructively discharged” by the discriminatory promotional decision of the agency, was not presented administratively.
See generally Young v. Southwestern Savings & Loan Association,
Here, Ong’s theory of recovery was unclear even at the administrative hearing. This ambiguity was not clarified by her counsel’s response to objections at that hearing. Nor did her counsel request, in the hearing brief submitted to the examiner some three months later, relief appropriate to a constructive discharge theory. The ambiguity was consequently n.ot resolved by the hearing examiner’s ultimate findings. To point to one brief exchange of counsel— in an administrative hearing that took two days and that produced 284 pages of transcript and in an administrative investigation that took over 16 months — in an at
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tempt to show administrative consideration of the constructive discharge theory is inadequate. The record shows neither that Ong raised administratively the issue of her retirement as a constructive discharge nor that the issue was administratively investigated.
Cf. President v. Vance,
Although Ong attempts to frame her disability retirement as “like or reasonably related” to the employer’s established discrimination in promotion, her arguments are not persuasive. Ong did not allege administratively that her employer had engaged in a pattern or practice of discrimination against her.
Cf. Ramirez v. National Distillers & Chemical Corp.,
III. CONCLUSION
Ong’s failure to raise administratively the issue of her disability retirement as an incident of her employer’s discrimination in promotion prevented agency consideration of it. Because Title VII is intended to promote informal conciliation of employment discrimination charges and because Ong’s failure to present that issue frustrated Title VII policy, we find that Ong failed to exhaust her administrative remedies. Because we hold as we do on the exhaustion issue, we do not reach Cleland’s argument on an alternative ground for affirmance.
Affirmed.
Notes
. Ong had filed a discrimination charge against the agency in September 1975; that charge resulted in a finding of discrimination in which the agency concurred.
. In elaborating on this statement, Ong testified that for the previous three or four years at the VA, she had worked without promotion. An objection to this testimony was lodged by counsel for the VA, who indicated that he did not believe the reason for her retirement was “material” to her discrimination charge. Ong’s counsel answered the objection by stating that the retirement could be “material to a remedy” —that “[i]f her leaving the Agency was because of pressure brought on by officials who were discriminating against her,” he believed “it would be even more incumbent to give her a full remedy of disability retirement equal to what she would have had.” The hearing examiner ruled on the objection by limiting Ong’s testimony to the discrimination which had provoked her administrative charge on the promotion decision and by excluding her testimony on the subsequent disability retirement.
