Stephen A. MAYBANK, Plaintiff, v. Robert M. SPEER, Acting Secretary of the Army, Defendant.
Civil Action No. 16-1681 (RDM)
United States District Court, District of Columbia.
Signed 05/03/2017
1. The current officeholder is automatically substituted as the defendant. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 25(d).
Stephen A. Maybank, Millington, TN, Pro Se.
MEMORANDUM OPINION
RANDOLPH D. MOSS, United States District Judge
Plaintiff Stephen A. Maybank, a logistics management specialist with the United States Army Corps of Engineers, brings this action against the United States Army under
Because the Court concludes that Maybank failed to wait the statutorily mandated 180 days between requesting a hearing before the EEOC and filing suit, the Court will dismiss Maybank‘s amended complaint without prejudice and will deny his motion for “default summary judgment” and sanctions as moot.
I. BACKGROUND
For purposes of the pending motion to dismiss, the Court will assume the truth of
On November 6, 2014, Maybank filed an EEO complaint with the Department of the Army for “race discrimination in regards to the selection process for a GS-14 position.” Dkt. 7 at 6. Maybank and the Army settled Maybank‘s administrative claim the next month, and, as part of the settlement, the Army “agreed to provide [Maybank] with a desk audit3 to assess whether or not his accreted duties qualified him for promotion to the GS-14 grade level.” Id. at 7; see also Dkt. 1-9 at 233-37 (settlement agreement). After conducting the audit in early 2015, the Army concluded that the duties Maybank was performing were “within the parameters of [his GS-13] approved project plan;” Dkt. 1-9 at 7, and, on that basis, it denied him a promotion to the GS-14 level. In response, Maybank filed a second EEO complaint, Dkt. 1-8 at 20-22, this time alleging that the Army “discriminated against [him] based on his prior EEO activity” by failing to “conduct the audit in a fair or unbiased manner,” Dkt. 7 at 6-7. The Army‘s EEO office “accepted [Maybank‘s] complaint” for investigation on September 8, 2015, id. at 4, but it did not provide Maybank with a copy of its investigative file within 180 days as required by the governing EEO regulations, see
On March 22, 2016, Maybank sent a letter to the Army‘s EEO office notifying it that the “180 day deadline to complete the investigation into [his] EEO [c]omplaint [had] expired on or around December 10, 2015;” “request[ing] an EEOC hearing to address his EEO [c]omplaint;” and seeking entry of “a default judgment against [Defendant].” Dkt. 1-4 at 3-4. A month later, the Army “provided a copy of the investigative file” to Maybank and advised him that he had 30 calendar days to
II. ANALYSIS
Under
“Title VII permits an aggrieved federal employee to file a civil action in the district court 180 days after the filing of a charge with the EEOC, when the EEOC has taken no final action.” Murthy v. Vilsack, 609 F.3d 460, 464 (D.C. Cir. 2010). As the D.C. Circuit has explained, the “180-day waiting period in section 2000e-16(c) ... is part of Title VII‘s ‘careful blend of administrative and judicial enforcement powers,‘” id. at 465 (quoting Brown v. Gen. Servs. Admin., 425 U.S. 820, 832 (1976)); it reflects Congress‘s decision to “allow a period for the EEOC to investigate and attempt to resolve charges4 through conciliation,” id. at 465. The waiting period is a “mandatory” requirement, and a Title VII plaintiff cannot “avoid the consequences” of a prematurely filed civil complaint or “cure his failure to exhaust” by simply “filing ... an amended complaint after the 180-day period [has] expired.” Id. Rather, when faced with a prematurely filed complaint, the “district court [must] dismiss the complaint without prejudice,” and the prospective plaintiff may then re-file his complaint once the 180-day period has elapsed. Id. at 464-65 (citing Martini v. Fed. Nat‘l Mortg. Ass‘n, 178 F.3d 1336, 1348 (D.C. Cir. 1999)). As Maybank candidly acknowledged at oral argument, he filed this action before the 180-day waiting period had run, and, accordingly, the Court must dismiss the action for failure to exhaust administrative remedies. Counting from the earlier of his two requests for an EEOC hearing—the letter sent on March 22, 2016—only 148 days passed before he filed suit in this Court on August 17, 2016.
Although conceding that he filed suit before the 180-day waiting period expired, Maybank contends that the Army should be estopped from raising a timeliness defense because it, too, failed to comply with the regulatory deadlines—in the case of the Army, it failed to complete its administrative investigation within 180 days as required by
“Congress has not authorized, either expressly or impliedly, a cause of action against the EEOC for the EEOC‘s alleged negligence or other malfeasance in processing an employment discrimination charge,” Smith v. Casellas, 119 F.3d 33, 34 (D.C. Cir. 1997) (per curiam)), and, similarly, an agency‘s “alleged failure to follow the EEOC regulations regarding the administrative processing of [a] claim is not actionable,” Nichols, 2015 WL 9581799, at *13. The logic of this rule is straightforward: Congress and the EEOC carefully crafted the procedures and remedies applicable under Title VII, and it is not the role of the courts to strike a different balance. See Smith, 119 F.3d at 34 (explaining that the ability to “bring a Title VII action directly against his or her employer ... serve[s] as [a complainant‘s] remedy for any improper handling of a discrimination charge by the EEOC“). The same logic extends to the present circumstances. The EEOC created the controlling remedy for an agency‘s failure to complete its investigation within 180 days: The complainant may either (1) request a hearing on his complaint before the EEOC without waiting any longer for the agency to complete its investigation,
CONCLUSION
For these reasons, the Court will GRANT without prejudice the Army‘s motion to dismiss the pending action for failure to exhaust administrative remedies. Because the Court will dismiss the action, the Court will DENY Maybank‘s motion for “default summary judgment” and sanctions as moot.
A separate order will issue.
RANDOLPH D. MOSS
UNITED STATES DISTRICT JUDGE
Saleem EL-AMIN, Plaintiff, v. Joseph VIRGILIO, Defendant.
Civil Action No. 16-75 (ABJ)
United States District Court, District of Columbia.
Signed 05/05/2017
