After the plaintiff in this Title VII case was first fired, then recalled and demoted by his employer, he filed a charge of race discrimination with a state human rights commission that acted in concert with the EEOC under the provisions of a workshar *896 ing agreement between the two agencies. The resulting bureaucratic morass that followed, through no fault of the plaintiff, is what we must now consider. This appeal concerns whether a plaintiffs filing of a Title VII charge with a state agency, whose subsequent actions cause that charge not to meet statutory time requirements, should be considered to have been filed with the EEOC in a timely manner. We apply the doctrine of equitable tolling and hold that the statutory period of Title VII is tolled where, through no fault of the plaintiff, the procedural errors of a state administrative agency would otherwise defeat the plaintiff’s right to litigate his case. We therefore reverse the judgment of the District Court and remand the case for further proceedings.
I.
Under Title VII’s § 706(e), the general rule is that charges are to be filed with the EEOC within 180 days of the alleged discriminatory act, with one exception: where proceedings have been filed with a state or local agency first, “such charge shall be filed ... within three hundred days” of discrimination or within thirty days of the termination of state or local proceedings, “whichever is earlier.” 42 U.S.C.A. § 2000 e-5(e) (West 1981). Under § 706(c), when a discrimination charge arises in a state which has a state or local law prohibiting the discriminatory act alleged or where a state or local authority is empowered to grant or seek relief from such an act, “no charge may be filed under subsection (b) [which provides for filing of charges with the EEOC] by the person aggrieved before the expiration of sixty days after proceedings have been commenced under the State or local law, unless such proceedings have been earlier terminated....” 42 U.S.C.A § 2000e-5(c) (West 1981). Read together, if a plaintiff does not file a charge under the general 180-day rule, the 60-day deferral period of § 706(c) gives a state agency “an opportunity to combat discrimination free from federal intervention.”
EEOC v. Commercial Office Products Co.,
Plaintiff Brown, an African-American male, was employed by the defendant Martin Marietta Energy Systems for fourteen years, rising from a job as a janitor to become a program finance officer and administrator. On January 14, 1988, the plaintiff was terminated from his position as a finance officer. He was recalled the next day and was told that his termination would be “converted” to a transfer and a demotion to his original job as a janitor.
179 days after his initial termination Brown contacted the EEOC’s Nashville office by mail. Some two months later, the plaintiff submitted a charge of discrimination, which was received by the Tennessee Human Rights Commission (“THRC”) on September 30, 1988. Under the terms of a worksharing agreement between the EEOC and the THRC, a THRC clerk assigned charge numbers for both agencies’ files at that time. The THRC forwarded it to the EEOC, which received it on October 7, 1988. When the THRC forwarded the charge, it used a standardized form 1 that contained three blocks for noting which agency planned to process initially the charge. The THRC marked one block, reading that “[p]ursuant to the work-sharing agreement, this charge is to be initially processed by the 706 Agency.”
*897 The plaintiff’s charge had originated in Monroe County, a county for which the THRC bore initial processing responsibility under the worksharing agreement. But, the plaintiff also alleged ongoing discrimination and retaliation under Title VII, and under the worksharing agreement, such charges were part of a category of claims that the EEOC would initially process and that the THRC would waive its rights to handle. Moreover, 255 days had elapsed between the day he was terminated and the date the charge was filed. To be timely under Tennessee law, charges must be brought within 180 days of the alleged discrimination. Under the worksharing agreement, the THRC had agreed to “defer immediately to EEOC all charges received and determined as untimely under Tennessee law” for a failure to meet the state’s 180-day filing deadline.
After conducting an initial investigation, the EEOC notified the THRC on October 17, 1988 that it would not pursue further processing of plaintiff’s charge. THRC now began an investigation, issuing a notice of administrative closure on April 3, 1990. A right-to-sue notice was issued to Brown on the same day. Well over 300 days had elapsed between the termination and the state agency’s closure of its proceedings.
The District Court granted the defendant’s motion for summary judgment on two grounds: first, that the plaintiff had not filed a charge with the EEOC within 240 days, and second, that the THRC had not terminated its inquiries within the 300-day period required by Title VII’s § 706(e). The District Court did not address the effect of the worksharing agreement’s waiver provisions, nor was it asked to consider whether equitable principles should operate to toll the filing requirements for the plaintiff.
II.
Plaintiff and amicus curiae EEOC urge us to resolve whether the worksharing provision’s waiver sections are self-executing so that, regardless of the THRC’s annotation on the transmittal form, an “automatic waiver” of its processing rights had occurred. 2 We need not resolve this complex issue, however, because we believe that the doctrine of equitable tolling provides appropriate relief, although some brief analysis of Title VII’s timeliness provisions is necessary to resolve the threshold issue we face. As a threshold matter, we address this court’s power sua sponte to consider the equitable tolling issue, which is obviously latent in the case.
As a general rule, this court will usually decline to entertain arguments not presented in the first instance to the trial court.
See, e.g., Taft Broadcasting Co. v. United States,
Both bases for our limited exception to the general rule are present. The bureaucratic confusion and error, and the resulting administrative tardiness in fulfilling the statutory 300-day filing requirement, were in no way attributable to any conduct on the part of the plaintiff. Section 706(e) provides for a federal filing more than 180 days after the date of discrimination, if the charge is filed with the state agency “within three hundred days after the alleged unlawful employment practice occurred....” 42 U.S.C.A. § 2000e-5(e) (West 1981).
The defendant contends that under the rule of
Mohasco Corp. v. Silver,
While reaffirming
Mohasco
as a general rule, the Supreme Court has more recently examined the timeliness of charge filings under worksharing agreements in
EEOC v. Commercial Office Products Co.,
We agree with the District Court that the logic of
Commercial Products,
not
Mohasco,
controls this case. By filing his charge with the THRC — which, under the worksharing agreement, acted as agent for the EEOC, and
vice versa
— Brown simultaneously filed his charge with the EEOC. To reason that Brown had not met the sixty-day period of § 706(c) would be
*899
irreconcilable with Title VIPs purposes because such a result “would result in extraordinary inefficiency without furthering any other goal of the Act.”
Commercial Office Products,
III.
The Supreme Court squarely held in
Zipes v. Trans World Airlines, Inc.,
The Supreme Court’s holding in
Zipes
was fully in accord with this Court’s own jurisprudence. As we noted in 1981: “The informal and flexible nature of [the EEOC’s] administrative process suggests that we should not apply the time requirements inflexibly and mechanically....”
Morgan v. Washington Manufacturing Co.,
We held in
Morgan v. Washington Manufacturing Co.
that in the absence of prejudice to a defendant, or a showing of bad faith or lack of diligence by a claimant, considerations of equity favored tolling Title VII’s filing periods when the claimant makes a timely filing with the EEOC or a federal agency with jurisdiction in “some fields of employment discrimination.”
Morgan,
The plaintiff, while outside the general 180-day rule of § 706(e), still complied with the alternative 300-day period. But for the THRC’s erroneous annotation, timely initial
*900
processing would have taken place under the terms of the worksharing agreement by the EEOC, and not by the THRC. Counsel for the amicus EEOC conceded as much during oral arguments. The state agency would therefore have terminated its proceedings within 300 days, and the charge would have been timely. There is also no evidence, nor was it argued by the defendant, that defendant failed to receive adequate notice under these circumstances to the detriment of its rights. Thus, under these facts we are presented with a situation ripe for equitable tolling under the teachings of
Zipes
and this court’s decisions in
Morgan
and
Leake. Cf. Brown v. Mead Corp.,
The Supreme Court’s refusal to apply equitable tolling to another Title VII claimant in
Baldwin County Welcome Center v. Brown,
The apparent “legal mistake” here was manifestly not of the plaintiff’s doing, nor was it within his knowledge or within his control to rectify. To deny relief to the plaintiff under the peculiar facts of this case “would be to exalt form over substance and preclude relief to a potentially meritorious claim simply because it was the victim of a bureaucratic mix-up,” as well as to defeat two of the goals sought by the THRC and the EEOC: the minimization of red tape and the efficient processing of discrimination charges.
See, e.g., EEOC v. Techalloy Maryland,
IV.
Accordingly, the judgment of the District Court is REVERSED and the case REMANDED for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. For an example of a similar transmittal form between a state agency and the EEOC, see
Trevino-Barton v. Pittsburgh Nat'l Bank,
. For cases construing the effect of worksharing agreements on Title VII’s filing periods, see
Worthington v. Union Pacific R.R.,
