Plaintiff-Appellant Ernesto Martinez appeals the district court’s grant of summary judgment to Defendant-Appellee United States Postal Service (“Postal Service”) on his claims of retaliatory treatment in violation of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-16(c). As originally filed in November 2000, Mr. Martinez’s complaint alleged instances of retaliatory treatment occurring in May 1999, as to which he had filed a formal complaint with the Postal Service EEO office in July 1999, and subsequent conduct he claimed as retaliatory. In May 2002, Mr. Martinez sought to litigate subsequent employment actions as contained in his response to the Postal Service’s motion for summary judgment. In particular, Mr. Martinez included allegations that disciplinary actions taken against him, namely a September 2000 reprimand (resulting in a letter of warning and a fourteen day suspension) and his April 2001 termination, constituted retaliatory treatment. Mr. Martinez never filed formal EEO complaints regarding these incidents. Although the letter of warning and fourteen day suspension resulting from the September 2000 reprimand is contained in the complaint, (Aplt.App. at 10, ¶ 24), the April 2001 termination is not. Nor is there an amended complaint.
As to these allegations, the district court held that they could not proceed because they were not like or reasonably related to the allegations in Mr. Martinez’s EEO complaint, and Mr. Martinez had failed to exhaust administrative remedies. In determining that Mr. Martinez was required to exhaust administrative remedies with regard to the September 2000 and April 2001 disciplinary actions the district court relied on our holdings in
Jones v. Denver Post Corp.,
Although we agree with the district court that these claims were not properly before it, the Supreme Court’s recent pronouncement in
National Railroad Passenger Corp. v. Morgan,
Our decisions have unambiguously recognized
Morgan
as rejecting application of the “continuing violation” theory. In
Davidson v. America Online, Inc.,
The September 2000 and April 2001 disciplinary actions are clearly discrete and independent actions, though part of what Mr. Martinez must necessarily claim is a “continuing violation.” Because the rule in Morgan requires a Title VII plaintiff to exhaust administrative remedies for each individual discriminatory or retaliatory act, and precludes rebanee upon a continuing violation theory, we affirm the judgment of the district court.
Consistent with the Court’s opinion in
Morgan,
our holding today does not negate the relevance of allegedly retaliatory incidents as to which administrative remedies have not been exhausted, when these incidents occurred after the filing of the judicial complaint. As the Court in
Morgan
explicitly noted “[n]or does the statute bar an employee from using prior acts as background evidence in support of a timely claim.”
Morgan,
We also think it proper to comment briefly on Mr. Martinez’s attempted revision of his pleadings through a summary judgment response. The summary judgment response attempted to add the April 2001 termination. Although other circuits have rejected the validity of such attempts,
see Shanahan v. City of Chicago,
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Of course, our rule does not preclude the moving party from notice and an opportunity to be heard on whether an amendment should be permitted. After all, a request to amend may be denied where the new theory would prejudice the moving party.
Evans,
AFFIRMED.
