This case presents a single issue: whether the United States Postal Service (“Postal Service”) is liable for interest on backpay disbursed pursuant to a claim under Section 717 of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 42 U.S.C. Section 2000e-16. For the reasons outlined below, we hold that the Postal Service is liable for interest under those circumstances.
I
The relevant facts can be stated very briefly. Joan Carol Nagy, a white female, was terminated by the Postal Service in late March of 1974. Nagy utilized administrative channels in an attempt to prove that her termination resulted from discrimination against her on the basis of her sex. In May of 1979, a factfinding hearing was held before an Equal Employment Opportunity Commission examiner. The examiner found Nagy’s case meritorious and recommended that she be reinstated. It also recommended that she receive backpay from the date of her termination through September 21, 1977, the date on which she had earlier been offered reinstatement.
In late 1979, pursuant to the examiner’s recommendation, Nagy was indeed reinstated. Nonetheless, she filed suit in early 1980 in the United States District Court for the Southern District of Florida, maintaining that she was entitled to backpay up to the actual date of her reinstatement in 1979. This argument was premised on the fact that the 1977 offer of reinstatement had been conditional and therefore did not serve to limit the Postal Service’s liability for backpay. Prior to trial, the Postal Service agreed with Nagy on this point, and a settlement was reached in August of 1981. The settlement agreement expressly reserved for submission to the district court the issue of interest on the backpay due Nagy. The district court found the interest recoverable on these facts. This appeal followed.
II
There is no question that an interest award would be proper under Title VII on these facts if the defendant involved were a purely private party.
Pettway v. Ameri
*1192
can Cast Iron Pipe Co.,
In this scheme, the Postal Service defies facile categorization. It is somewhat in the nature of a federal defendant in that it is specifically referred to in the 1972 amendments to Title VII, now embodied in Section 717, 42 U.S.C. Section 2000e-16, that deal with federal employers. It is also somewhat similar to a private defendant in that, since the Postal Reorganization Act of 1970, 39 U.S.C. Sections 101 et seq., the Postal Service operates, in many respects, very much like a private business. In tune with that modus operandi, the Act grants the Postal Service the power to “sue and be sued.” 39 U.S.C. Section 401(1).
Our ability to decide this case, however, does not depend on our ability to label the Postal Service as either federal for all purposes or private for all purposes. Section 717 clearly contemplates that the Postal Service will be treated as a federal employer in the areas specifically covered in that provision, which explicitly includes the Postal Service within its scope. It is also clear that Section 717 is the exclusive remedy for a Postal Service employee alleging illegal discrimination.
Brown v. G.S.A.,
Whatever the proper effect of the language “any other equitable relief” in the case of a federal defendant that enjoys broad sovereign immunity, we hold that the
*1193
language does authorize the collection of interest on a Title VII backpay award from an entity, such as the Postal Service, that has generally waived its sovereign immunity. Under the
Federal Housing Administration v. Burr, supra,
a “sue and be sued” clause creates a presumption of waiver of sovereign immunity that can be rebutted in a particular case only on a showing that a finding of waiver would either (1) be inconsistent with the statutory scheme; or (2) gravely interfere with a governmental function; or (3) be inconsistent with the plain purpose of Congress to use “sue and be sued” in a narrow sense.
The third exception presents a slightly closer question. The Postal Service argues that in including it in the 1972 amendments to Title VII, Congress demonstrated an intent to construe the “sue and be sued” clause narrowly, in effect, to repeal partially the general waiver created by Section 401(1). The difficulty with this argument is that the Postal Service has not shown this to be the
plain
purpose of Congress. The unequivocal teaching of
Burr
is that a limitation on a general waiver of sovereign immunity will not be readily inferred. We find no plain purpose in the 1972 amendments to Title VII to limit the general waiver of sovereign immunity in Section 401(1). The Postal Service argument that Congress’ inclusion of Postal employees in the federal sector of Title VII indicated a congressional intent that Postal employees get the same remedies as federal employees is rejected. Title VII contains no language limiting the relief available to federal employees. The limits on prejudgment interest have been imposed solely because of the barrier of sovereign immunity — a barrier deliberately lifted by Congress when it created the Postal Service. (See dissent of Judge Arnold in
Cross v. United States Postal Service,
III
In conclusion, as the Postal Service has generally waived its sovereign immunity, it is liable for interest on backpay to the same extent as a purely private litigant. The judgment of the district court must therefore be AFFIRMED.
IV
The appellee has filed a motion for attorneys fees and costs. This is a matter that can best be handled by the district court below. Upon remand, the district court shall first decide whether the appellee is entitled to attorneys fees and if so, the reasonable amount thereof. The costs of this appeal are to be taxed against appellants.
AFFIRMED and REMANDED on the issue of attorneys fees and the amount thereof if granted.
Notes
. In view of our manner of disposing of this case, it is unnecessary for us to reach this question. We therefore express no opinion as to the correctness of these cases.
. In
Cross v. United States Postal Service,
