McArthur Ester claims that his former employer, the Department of Veterans Affairs (“the VA”), denied him a promotion in violation of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. The district court granted the VA summary judgment on the ground that Ester had failed to exhaust his administrative remedies in a timely fashion, rejecting Ester’s claim that the VA had waived any such requirement by not asserting it in administrative proceedings. We believe a finding of waiver is appropriate, however. Therefore, we reverse and remand.
I
In 1993, VA officials at Hines VA Benefits Division Center posted an announcement inviting applications for a vacant Supervisory Computer Operator, GS-12 position. Ester, who at the time worked as a Supervisory Computer Operator, GS-11, submitted an application. On January 21, 1994, Ester was notified that a female applicant had been selected to fill the GS-12 position.
Ester filed a timely informal complaint with an EEO counselor at the VA, alleging that sex discrimination and retaliation for prior complaints of discrimination were the reasons he did not receive the promotion. Counseling failed to resolve Ester’s complaint to his satisfaction, and on March 17, 1994, Ester received a “Notice of Final Interview with EEO Counselor.” Among other things, the Notice informed Ester that he had 15 days to file a formal complaint of discrimination. Ester did not file a formal complaint until April 19, 1994 — 33 days after he received the final interview Notice. Nevertheless, the VA accepted his complaint and initiated an investigation.
The EEO investigator assigned to look into Ester’s complaint initially concluded that Ester had been discriminated against and recommended sustaining Ester’s complaint. But after the VA requested a supplemental investigation, the investigator reversed himself and recommended rejecting Ester’s, complaint. In both investigative reports, the investigator specifically concluded that Ester had met all procedural requirements for filing a formal complaint. Moreover, the VA never asserted the untimeliness of Ester’s for mal complaint as a reason for rejecting his complaint, not even in its request for a supple *1071 mental investigation, which took issue with several aspects of the investigator’s first report.
On January 29, 1999, approximately 3 years after the EEO investigator submitted his supplemental report, the VA finally ruled on Ester’s formal complaint. The agency rejected his claims and issued Ester a right-to-sue letter. The VA grounded its ruling entirely on the merits of Ester’s claim; it made no mention of the untimeliness of Ester’s formal complaint.
On April 23, 1999, Ester timely filed suit in federal district court, alleging that the VA had, in violation of Title VII, refused to promote him because of his sex and in retaliation for filing complaints of discrimination regarding previous employment actions. In its answer to Ester’s complaint, the VA asserted for the first time that, in administrative proceedings, Ester had not filed his formal complaint of discrimination in a timely manner. The VA then moved for summary judgment, arguing that because he had not timely filed his formal complaint, Ester had not properly exhausted his administrative remedies. In response, Ester argued, among other things, that the VA had waived the requirement that he timely file a formal complaint by not asserting that requirement as a defense in administrative proceedings. Unpersuaded by Ester’s waiver argument, or any of his other arguments, the district court granted the VA’s motion for summary judgment. Ester now appeals and argues that the district court erred in rejecting his waiver argument.
II
Federal employees who seek to assert Title VII claims must exhaust the administrative remedies available to them in a timely fashion before they may assert their claims in a lawsuit. 42 U.S.C. § 2000e — 16(c);
Brown v. Gen. Servs. Admin.,
This court has not yet addressed when an agency’s failure to assert an available exhaustion defense in administrative proceedings should constitute waiver of such a defense in a subsequent lawsuit. And, the courts of appeals that have considered the issue have not produced uniform results. One circuit has adopted a rule that requires an agency to make an explicit finding of timeliness, before accepting that the agency has waived a timeliness defense. See
Rowe v. Sullivan,
We believe this position is more consistent with the Supreme Court’s holding in
United States v. L.A. Tucker Truck Lines, Inc.,
To the contrary, strong policy considerations compel us toward the equal-application conclusion we reach today. First, the values of judicial economy, agency autonomy, accuracy and the need for a well-developed record for review, are all served by requiring objections — even those objections possessed by the agency itself — to be raised in the agency proceeding. See
McKart v. United States,
Second, longstanding Supreme Court precedent demands that administrative agencies fully state the reasons for their action. See
SEC v. Chenery Corp.,
Third, in deciding the question of waiver along federal/agency lines we believe instructive the decisions on waiver
*1073
along federal/state lines. And, on federal habeas corpus review, the Supreme Court has required the last state court rendering a judgment to make a “plain statement” of any adequate and independent state ground
{e.g.,
procedural default), before federal courts will be precluded from addressing the federal questions presented.
Harris v. Reed,
In this case, the VA ruled on the merits of Ester’s claims without addressing Ester’s failure to timely file his formal complaint. We therefore conclude that the VA waived its right to argue that Ester failed to timely exhaust the administrative remedies available to him.
Ill
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the district court is ReveRSed and the case is Remanded for further proceedings.
Notes
. We do not, however, reject the well-setLled rule that agencies do not waive a timeliness defense merely by accepting and investigating a discrimination complaint. See
Bowden,
