Nathaniel White, employed by the Internal Revenue Service as a revenue agent, bеlieves that his race and sex explain the agency’s failure to promote him to а higher grade. He filed an administrative complaint under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and received a hearing before an administrative law judge, who concluded that White’s belief is unfounded. The ALJ informed White that he could obtain additional review in one of two ways: by filing suit in a district court within 90 days, or by filing an appeal to the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission within 20 days. See 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-16(c), 29 C.F.R. § 1613.233(a). White did neither. He appealed to the EEOC 60 days after receiving the notice. The EEOC dismissеd the appeal as untimely, and the district court then dismissed White’s complaint on the ground that the delay bars further action. (By the time the EEOC dismissed the appeal, it was too late fоr White to commence *475 an independent suit under the 90-day option.)
The IRS sought to dismiss the ease under Fed.R.Civ.P.
12(b)(1),
contending that White’s delay deprived the district court of subjeсt-matter jurisdiction. If the time limit in 29 C.F.R. § 1613.238(a) is “jurisdictional,” then delay may not be excused on account of equitable tolling and related doctrines. White believes that his delay is justifiable, and the IRS сontended that the court should not inquire into this contention. Magistrate Judge Bobrick filed a report observing that our court’s most recent word on the subject is equivocal.
McGinty v. Department of the Army,
In this court the IRS renews its argument that the district court lacked subjеct-matter jurisdiction. This argument would have met with success a few years ago, for until recently courts characterized as jurisdictional any limitations on the federal government’s consent to be sued. E.g.,
Sims v. Heckler,
Within a year, the Supreme Court approved both the approach and the holding of
Rennie.
In
Irwin v. Veterans Affairs,
White had 20 dаys to seek administrative review and took 60. His excuse is that he believes that the transcriрt of the hearing before the ALJ is inaccurate. White investigated whether the two court rеporters engaged to transcribe the tape recording of the hearing are liсensed by Illinois; he found that they are not. After making this discovery, he appealed to the EEOC, which was not impressed with this explanation for the belated filing. The regulation permits delаy when the employee is unaware of the deadline or circumstances beyond his сontrol delay an appeal, § 1613.233(e), but White was well aware of the time availablе and able to act within that bound. Errors in the transcript are reasons to appeаl, not reasons to delay appeals. That White was still gathering details (the IRS tarried in sending him a copy of the tape recording) did not prevent him from appealing. He does not contend that the IRS misled him in any way about the applicable deadlines or prеvented him from initiating the process before the EEOC. The standard grounds of equitable tolling and estoppel, on which see
Cada v. Baxter Healthcare Corp.,
Affirmed.
