This is an appeal by the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) from an order of the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Michigan which revoked the .EEOC’s status as a permissive intervenor herein and thereby precluded the Commission from further participation in the instant case. However, during the pendency of the present appeal of the revocation order, the undérlying civil action was dismissed with prejudice pursuant to a settlement between plaintiff Donna Horn (Horn) and defendant Eltra Corp. (Eltra). Accordingly, this Court must determine if the settlement of Horn’s basic claim now renders moot the present appeal which seeks the reinstatement of the EEOC as an intervenor in Horn’s lawsuit.
As a general rule, “[a] prerequisite of an intervention (which is an ancillary proceeding in an already instituted suit) is an existing suit within the Court’s jurisdiction.” Non-Commissioned Officers Association of the United States v. Army Times Publishing Co.,
The EEOC neither acknowledges nor attempts to conform to the above authorities; instead, the Commission argues that the weight of recent precedent supports a rule that an intervenor’s claim does not “rise and fall” with the suit of the original party. Principally, the EEOC relies upon Pasedena City Board of Education v. Spangler,
In Spangler, the Court permitted the intervention of the Justice Department to survive the mootness of the original party plaintiff’s claim in a school desegregation matter that had not been certified as a class action. As noted, the Supreme Court’s analysis in Spangler closely adheres to the two recognized bases for allowing intervention to proceed where the basic action has become moot. Initially the Court considered, and rejected, a claim that the parties’ prior treatment of the lawsuit as affecting a “class of unnamed individuals still attending Pasedena public schools” was .equivalent to formal class certification and so could support continuing intervention.
The United States intervened in this case pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 2000h-2. That section provides that “the United States shall be entitled to the same relief as if it had instituted the action.” The meaning of this provision is somewhat ambiguous, and there is little legislative history to shed any light upon the intention of Congress. But we think the statute is properly read to authorize the United States to continue as a party plaintiff in this action, despite the disappearance of the original plaintiffs and the absence of any class certification, so long as such participation serves the statutory purpose, and that the presence of the United States as a party ensures that this case is not moot.
Id. at 430-31,
The status of the EEOC in the case at bar is not analogous. The Commission is seeking to proceed as a permissive intervenor pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 24(b) and not as an intervenor of right, in the manner of the Justice Department in Spanger. Compare 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-5(f)(l) and 42 U.S.C. § 2000h-2. Further, notwithstanding the manner by which intervention was initially accomplished, the Justice Department in Spangler was determined to possess, by statute, the status of an original party once it had intervened and so could not be denied its right to proceed upon the dismissal of other original parties. Absent a similar statute, nothing in Spangler can be read as
Wherefore, inasmuch as the class action allegations of Horn’s complaint were expressly denied certification, and the EEOC is without an independent jurisdictional basis upon which to litigate against Eltra herein, this Court concludes that the settlement and dismissal of Horn’s claim renders the Commission’s present appeal moot, and the appeal is hereby ORDERED dismissed.
Notes
. Moreover, General Telephone Co. v. EEOC,
. A second case relied upon by the EEOC to support a general rule allowing intervention into actions where the original party has been dismissed is United States Steel v. Environmental Protection Agency,
