This appeal presents the question of whether a plaintiff in a Title VII action, who received two successive, facially valid right-to-sue notices from the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC), but who did not commence a suit in a district court within ninety days of receipt of the first notice, is precluded from proceeding under the second notice.
The essential facts involve the issuance to appellant of two separate right-to-sue notices by the EEOC. In 1970 appellant filed an EEOC complaint alleging she was discriminated against when her employer terminated her. In December of 1974, appellant was issued a “right to sue” notice that included an EEOC determination that there was no reasonable cause to believe that she was discharged or refused a promotion based on her sex. She took no court action. In January of 1978, appellant received another notice from the EEOC. This notice stated that the Commission found reasonable cause to believe her charge of discrimination is true and, again, notified her of her right to commence suit in United States District Court. Accompanying the second notice was a letter advising appellant that the determination and notice of right to sue issued in December of 1974 “was the product of administrative error and should be disregarded as having been outside the authority of this office to issue.” Pursuant to the second notice of right to sue, appellant commenced this action.
The district court dismissed the action, ruling that the second notice of right to sue was invalid since the first notice created jurisdiction and subjected appellant to running of the ninety-day statutory period for filing. 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-5(f)(1). Appellant contests this ruling on the theory that the first notice was a nullity, void ab initio, because the EEOC District Director of the issuing office did not have authority to is *1165 sue the determination and right-to-sue letter. 1
Title VII filing requirements are jurisdictional,
Mohasco Corp. v. Silver,
We must decide, then, whether the first right-to-sue notification, even if issued without proper administrative authority, commenced, for once and for all, the appellant’s statutory period for bringing a court action and, if so, whether there exist grounds in the instant case for application of the doctrine of equitable tolling. We conclude that the appellant’s case was properly dismissed because the first notification of right to sue was sufficient to support an action and because the appellant cannot successfully invoke an equitable tolling defense to the jurisdictional challenge raised by appellee.
The keystone of appellant’s argument is her claim that the first notice of right to sue was a nullity. Stressing this point, she attempts to distinguish precedents in which there were two notices, but the first was valid. In
Cleveland v. Douglas Aircraft Co.,
Were we to accept appellant’s proposition, it would become necessary in every case involving a potential administrative inconsistency for the trial court to investigate the EEOC action underlying the notice of right to sue. Thus, even if the notice were facially valid, as was the first notice issued to appellant Brown, a defendant could compel inquiry into the action of the agency. Furthermore, if suit were not brought under the first notice, a plaintiff could theoretically wait an indefinite time before obtaining a valid notice of right to sue and then could commence an action against the surprised employer. 3 These problems illustrate the importance of the rigid statutory framework within which discrimination claims proceed to the courts and demonstrate the wisdom of the Ninth Circuit’s reluctance to make subjective inquiry into EEOC administrative practices.
The facts of the instant case distinguish it from situations where the EEOC has issued a right-to-sue notice and then, within the statutory period for commencing suit, has notified the prospective plaintiff of the EEOC’s decision to reconsider its earlier determination. In this situation a plaintiff who did not commence a district court action until receiving a second notice following the EEOC’s further consideration has been permitted to maintain the action based on the second notice.
Gonzalez v. Firestone Tire and Rubber Co.,
Similarly, the decision in
Hiduchenko v. Minneapolis Medical and Diagnostic Center, Ltd.,
*1167 In contrast, the first notice issued to the appellant in the instant case was sent more than four years after she filed her initial charge with the EEOC.- It was not possible for appellant, appellee, or a court to tell without investigating the underlying EEOC action leading to issuance of the notice of right to sue that there was any error. In this circumstance appellant simply cannot be heard to contend that Hiduchenko compels disregarding the first notice. In Hiduchenko the first notice was directly violative of the express statutory provisions for deferral to the administrative agencies. No inquiry into intra-agency procedure and motivation was required. Thus, while it is true that the court in Hiduchenko called the first notice a nullity and the EEOC has similarly described the first notice issued to appellant, the distinctions are crucial. Our concern with formulating a rule that would call for subjective inquiries into agency procedures to ascertain the validity of notices of right to sue on a case-by-case basis requires that on the present facts we reject application of the principles enunciated in Hiduchenko. 6
Appellant contends that requiring her to file on the basis of the first notice leaves her in an untenable position, because the employer could challenge her suit by highlighting the invalidity of that notice.
Cf. Holly v. Alliance Rubber Co.,
Turning to an evaluation of the equities and of whether there is a basis for equitable tolling, little more need be said. Appellant mentions the doctrine but has not explained how she can be brought within its ambit, and we find no reason to apply the doctrine in these circumstances. Appellant did not act on the first notice, and she makes no allegation that any action by appellee in any way deterred her from acting.
See Leake v. University of Cincinnati,
We conclude, therefore, that the notice of right to sue issued in December of 1974 commenced the statutory period for appellant to bring suit in the district court. She *1168 failed to act, leaving the employer with reason to conclude that the matter was resolved. The EEOC’s attempt, several years later, to repudiate the first notice and to issue a second valid notice of right to sue contravenes the statutory concern for finality and requires factual inquiry into the operations of the administrative realm, an inquiry that must be reserved for very limited circumstances not including those presented on these facts.
Accordingly, the judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. In support of this claim, appellant points to a detailed affidavit and attachments filed by Eduardo Pena, Jr., Director of Government Employment of the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission. Mr. Pena avers that the first EEOC determination and notice of right to sue was issued in error because the Cincinnati office was not given a complete file when the file of appellant was transferred from the Cleveland office. The paper missing from the file would have informed the Cincinnati office that the case was pending before the Commission in Washington, D. C., and that a “hold” had been placed on the file pending completion of review of the case by the Commission. It is thus established that, under the structure of the EEOC administration, the Cincinnati district director was without authority to issue the 1974 determination of no reasonable cause and notice of right to sue.
.
Fox
is specifically limited to a situation in which the plaintiff filed an action in state court within ninety days of receipt of the right-to-sue notice, the plaintiff reasonably believing the state court possessed subject matter jurisdiction.
Fox v. Eaton Corp.,
. The instant case illustrates this problem to some degree. The employer and employee received a notice of right to sue in December of 1974, but no suit was commenced. Not until August of 1976 did the employer receive an invitation to engage in conciliation, followed by a notice of right to sue in January of 1978. Thus, at least until 1976, the employer was without formal notice of any continuing litigation. Under appellant’s theory there is no reason why that period could not have been four years, or even longer, depending only on the timeliness with which the EEOC detects its administrative error.
. Plainly, the circumstance in which the EEOC “vacates” its notice of right to sue before expiration of the ninety-day filing period is different from that presented by the facts before us. In that situation the employer and employee both are made aware that the EEOC investigation is continuing and the prospect of litigation is not past, thus minimizing the potential for prejudice to the employer.
. The court noted but did not rely on the fact that, in dismissing the first case, the district judge specifically inquired of defense counsel whether the dismissal would prevent the plaintiff from following her case through the administrative channels in accordance with the stat
*1167
ute and then returning to federal court, and was told it would not.
Hiduchenko II,
. We need express no opinion on the correctness of the analysis utilized in Hiduchenko save to say that, for the reasons explained, it is not at odds with the reasoning we advance here.
. Our approach here would not preclude investigation into a claim by an employer that a notice of right to sue did not issue from the EEOC but is a forgery, or similar contentions. Rather, what is rejected is a contention by either party to a Title VII suit that an administrative inconsistency or error can be raised to compel looking behind a notice of right to sue to ascertain if the EEOC was acting in compliance with its regulations and procedures.
. There is no apparent reason why a court could not stay proceedings commenced in reliance on a deficient notice until the plaintiff had a chance to cure the defect.
See Oscar Mayer & Co. v. Evans,
. Appellant herself does not contend she had any suspicion that the first notice was not issued with proper authority until she received the second notice. There is no reason to believe, therefore, that she forewent the opportunity to file a district court action using the 1974 notice for any reason but free exercise of choice.
