Opinion for the Court filed by Chief Judge EDWARDS.
This ease requires the court to decide what course the District Court should take when a party raises the affirmative defense of statute of limitations for the first time in a dispositive motion, rather than in a responsive pleading as required by Rule 8(c) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. Appellant Geraldine Harris (Geraldine Harris Coombs at the time of the events in question) sued Appellee Department of Veterans Affairs (“Department”) for racial discrimination under Title VII, 42 U.S.C. § 2000e et seq. (1994). She filed her complaint in District Court ninety-one days after the date on the certified mail return receipt attached to the notice of final agency decision against her, one day beyond the statutory limit. See 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-16(c) (1994). The Department did not raise the defense of untimeliness in any of its answers. After discovery, during which the Department made inquiries about the date Harris received notice, the Department filed for summary judgment on untimeliness grounds. Although Harris contended that the date on the mail receipt was in error, the District Court rejected her explanation, granted summary judgment in favor of the Department, and then dismissed Harris’s reprisal claims for want of jurisdiction.
We reverse and remand. Rule 8(c) means what it says: affirmative defenses must be raised in a responsive pleading, not a dispositive motion. This requirement permits the parties to chart the course of litigation in advance of discovery and motions thereon. Because the Department did not raise the defense in a responsive pleading and did not apply to the District Court for leave to amend its answer under Rule 15(a), the Court should not, without more, have considered the defense of untimeliness. However, this procedural error need not necessarily cause loss of the defense. On remand, the government may seek leave to amend its answers. We also reverse and remand the District Court’s dismissal of Appellant’s reprisal claims. Because untimeliness is not a jwrisdictional defense under Title VII, the District Court had discretion under 28 U.S.C. § 1367(c) (1994) to retain jurisdiction over supplemental reprisal claims even if it dismissed the underlying Title VII claim for untimeliness.
I. Background
By a complaint filed on July 31, 1992, Appellant brought suit in District Court charging the Department with discrimination under Title VII. During her deposition on June 23,1993, Harris initially stated that she received a copy of the agency’s final decision on May 2, 1992. Deposition of Geraldine Harris Coombs, Appendix for Appellees (“App. for Appellees”) 13. The Assistant U.S. Attorney (“AUSA”) conducting the deposition showed Harris her signature on a certified mail receipt dated May 1, 1992; Harris then stated that she received the notice on May 1, and that her mistake resulted from her noting “May 2” on the envelope. Id. at 14. Her testimony also suggested that she erred in counting the days by assuming that each month had thirty days. Id. at 17.
Harris twice moved to amend her complaint to include allegations that the Department engaged in reprisal against her by changing her job duties and denying her requests for leave. The District Court granted those motions to amend. The Department did not raise the affirmative defense of untimeliness in any of its answers to the initial complaint or the amendments. It was not until after discovery when the Department moved for dismissal of the case as untimely in a motion for summary judgment. On April 24, 1995, the Magistrate Judge recommended dismissal. Harris excepted to the Magistrate’s recommendation, supporting her exception with a new affidavit, dated May 4, 1995. There, she stated that she had in fact received the notice on Saturday, May 2, 1992, and had so noted on the envelope. She further stated that she was at work on May 1, 1992, from 10:00 a.m. until 5:30 p.m. according to her time sheet, which she submitted. She added that she could not have *342 received the letter on May 1, because according to a postal supervisor with whom she had spoken, mail was not delivered before 10:00 a.m. and after 5:30 p.m. She further asserted that the “May 1” date stamped on both the postal delivery notice and return receipt was in error. Plaintiffs Affidavit in Support of Her Exception to the Magistrate’s Report and Recommendation, Appellant’s App. 47-48. The delivery notice, which Appellant submitted as evidence, was dated April 30, and said “You may pick up your mail after 8:30 a.m. [on] 5/1.” Delivery Notice, reproduced in Appellant’s App. at 50. It was stamped May 1, 1992, and signed “Geraldine H. Coombs.” Id. The return receipt was also stamped May 1,1992 and signed “Geraldine Harris Coombs.” Domestic Return Receipt, reproduced in Appellant’s App. at 51.
The District Court granted the Department’s motion, which it treated as one for summary judgment.
Coombs v. Secretary of the Department of Veterans Affairs,
No. 92-1785,
Finally, the District Court rejected Harris’s contention that the Department had waived the statute of limitations defense by failing to plead it in any of its three answers to Harris’s initial complaint and two subsequent amended complaints. Citing caselaw from other circuits, the District Court held that a party could raise an unpled affirmative defense by motion if the late raising did not prejudice the opposing party by denying it notice. Id. at 10. The District Court noted that Harris did not claim prejudice and found that Harris did not suffer prejudice as a result of the late raising of the issue, because she had two opportunities to respond to the claim: one in her exception to the Magistrate’s report, the other in her opposition to the Department’s motion for summary judgment. Id. at 10-11.
Subsequently, the District Court dismissed Appellant’s reprisal claims. The court explained that it lacked supplemental jurisdiction because the original claim was never properly before the court. Coombs v. Secretary of the Department of Veterans Affairs, No. 92-1785, order at 2 (D.D.C. Feb. 23, 1996), reprinted in Appellant’s App. 58. Appellant appealed the summary judgment and dismissal of the reprisal claims to this court.
II. Analysis
A. Timeliness of Affirmative Defenses
The issue in this case regarding the timeliness of affirmative defenses requires construction of Rule 8(c). Because this is a legal issue, we review the District Court’s interpretation of Rule 8(c)
de novo. Harbeson v. Parke Davis, Inc.,
The Supreme Court has explained that the purpose of the pleading requirement of Rule 8(c) “is to give the opposing party notice of the plea of estoppel and a chance to argue, if he can, why the imposition of an estoppel would be inappropriate.”
Blonder-Tongue Lab. v. University of Illinois Found.,
As its name implies, notice pleading relies on the principle of fair notice “to secure the just, speedy, and inexpensive determination” of actions, Fed.R.Civ.P. Rule 1. Where the old forms of action delimited the kinds of arguments that parties could make according to the forms they chose, notice pleading aims to produce a general chart of possible claims and defenses available to the parties before they embark on the voyage of litigation.
Cf. Conley v. Gibson,
At the same time, the Rules “reject the approach that pleading is a game of skill in which one misstep by counsel may be decisive to the outcome and accept the principle that the purpose of pleading is to facilitate a proper decision on the merits.”
Conley,
•The provision of Rule 15(a) allowing amendment' with leave of court gives the District Court discretion and direction. It instructs the District Court to determine the propriety of amendment on a case by case basis, using a generous standard:
In the absence of any apparent or declared reason — such as undue delay, bad faith or dilatory motive on the part of the movant, repeated failure to cure deficiencies by amendments previously allowed, undue prejudice to the opposing party by virtue of allowance of the amendment, futility of the amendment, etc. — the leave sought should, as the rules require, be “freely given.”
Foman v. Davis,
We recognize that, rather than requiring amendment under Rule 15(a), some circuits permit parties to raise affirmative defenses for the first time in dispositive motions where no prejudice is shown.
See, e.g., Blaney v. United States,
Second, automatically permitting late raising of affirmative defenses where no prejudice has occurred reduces the multifarious reasons for denying leave to amend envisioned by the Court in
Foman
to the single, non-exhaustive factor of prejudice. Improper circumstances such as “undue delay, bad faith or dilatory motive on the part of the movant, [or] repeated failure to cure deficiencies by amendments previously allowed,”
Foman,
When an opposing party does receive notice of a previously unpled defense when a dispositive motion is filed, it lacks the advance notice required by Rule 8(c) that would have enabled it to develop factual and legal defenses fully. Although an opposing party may introduce affidavits in response to a motion for summary judgment, Fed.R.Civ.P. Rule 56(c), as Appellant did in this case, affidavits will not always suffice to provide adequate evidence for the defenses proposed. Frequently, mounting a proper defense will necessitate further discovery, which may not be possible in the time allotted to respond to the motion. Rule 15(a) authorizes the District Court to allow amendment, but this does not mean it would be unduly formalistic for the District Court to deny amendment to a strategic litigant who intentionally neglected to plead a defense. To the contrary, denying leave to amend to such a litigant would serve, not impede, the interests of substantive justice.
In order to preserve the notice purpose of Rule 8(c) and the discretionary structure of Rule 15(a), we hold that Rule 8(c) means what it says: a party must first raise its affirmative defenses in a responsive pleading before it can raise them in a dispositive motion. The Fifth Circuit has interpreted Rule 8(c) similarly.
See Ashe v. Corley,
There is no reason to fear that procedural formalism will displace substantive justice here, because a party may request, and the District Court shall freely give, leave to amend the pleadings under Rule 15(a) when justice requires. The District Court must not simply consider the defense in deciding the summary judgment motion. The procedural requirement that the District Court await a request for leave to amend, and grant or deny leave based on the circumstances of the case, is not empty formalism but the logical consequence of a system of rules that strives to achieve fairness without rigidity. On its face and on its logic, Rule 8(c) requires that a party actually plead its affirmative defenses, not that it plead them only in those cases where failure to plead would result in prejudice to the opposing party.
On remand, if the Department petitions for leave to amend the pleadings, the District Court may consider that request within the framework specified by the Court in Foman in deciding whether to grant leave to amend under Rule 15(a). It may grant or deny leave, and thus permit or exclude the defense of untimeliness. Our holding requires only that the District Court await a request of leave to amend and consider that request in its good discretion.
B. Supplemental Jurisdiction
We review the District Court’s dismissal for want of jurisdiction
de novo,
because the District Court dismissed on the
*346
grounds that it lacked the original jurisdiction necessary for supplemental jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1367(a), and not on the grounds that it was exercising its discretion to dismiss supplemental claims remaining after dismissal of original claims as authorized by 28 U.S.C. § 1367(c)(3). Even if the District Court grants leave to amend the Defendant’s answers to include the untimeliness defense, and accordingly grants summary judgment to the Department on untimeliness grounds, it may still retain supplemental jurisdiction over Appellant’s reprisal claims. Under 28 U.S.C. § 1367(a), the District Court has supplemental jurisdiction over related claims when it has original jurisdiction over the initial claim. Here, the District Court did not have original jurisdiction over Appellant’s reprisal claims, for which administrative remedies had not been exhausted. Instead the District Court had supplemental jurisdiction over the reprisal claims, which arose out of the charge properly before the court.
Nealon v. Stone,
Although it did not invoke 28 U.S.C. § 1367, and cited only an unreported case which predated the statute,
Johnson v. General Elec.,
The District Court erred in this analysis. We have held that the statute of limitations in Title VII cases under 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-16(c) is not jurisdictional.
Mondy v. Secretary of the Army,
When the District Court has dismissed claims properly before it, it retains discretion to decide whether or not to dismiss other claims as to which it may exercise supplemental jurisdiction. 28 U.S.C. § 1367(c)(3). It may decline to exercise supplemental jurisdiction if “the district court has dismissed all claims over which it has original jurisdiction.” Id. The discretionary language of the statute makes it clear that the court may also choose to preserve its supplemental jurisdiction.
In remanding to the District Court, we note that if Appellant’s underlying claim is dismissed for untimeliness, then the underlying claim will remain unlitigated. Under those circumstances, it would be appropriate for the District Court to weigh the fact that administrative remedies have not been exhausted on the reprisal claims in deciding whether to exercise its supplemental jurisdiction over them. Although the District Court has discretion to entertain unexhausted Title VII reprisal claims, and retains that discretion in this case, it will normally hear such claims alongside the underlying discrimination claim. Where the District Court will not hear the underlying discrimination claim, requiring exhaustion of administrative remedies may obviate the need to hear the case at all.
III. Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, the District Court’s grant of summary judgment and dismissal of Appellant’s reprisal claims are reversed and remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
So ordered.
Notes
. Appellee suggests that the standard of review should be abuse of discretion, citing a case in which the Third Circuit held that the trial court did not abuse its discretion by considering an affirmative defense raised for the first time on dispositive motion. Brief for Appellees 7 n.3 (citing
Kleinknecht v. Gettysburg College,
. Although the courts appear uniformly to use the term "waiver” to describe the consequence of failure to plead an affirmative defense, the more precise term "forfeiture” better captures the courts' meaning: "Whereas forfeiture is the failure to make the timely assertion of a right, waiver is the intentional relinquishment or abandonment of a known right.”
U.S.
v.
Olano,
. Rule 15(b) applies ‘‘[w]hen issues not raised by the pleadings are tried by express or implied consent of the parties," and envisages a somewhat different scheme of burdens than Rule 15(a), commensurate with the later stage of the proceedings. Because a case decided on motion for summary judgment does not reach trial, Rule 15(b) does not apply in deciding the question of whether a party has forfeited unpled affirmative defenses when it raises them for the first time in dispositive motion.
See Crawford v. Gould,
