The' district judge held that this suit brought under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 42 U.S.C. §§ 2000e
et seq.,
was barred by res judicata. The defendant had discharged the plaintiff on February 28, 1990. On August 14 she filed a charge of discrimination with the EEOC and its Illinois counterpart, claiming that she had been discharged because she was white and pregnant. In November she sued the defendant under the continuation of benefits provision (COBRA) of ERISA, 29 U.S.C. §§ 1161-68, which entitles an ex-employee to obtain continued medical coverage-at favorable rates for up to a year after losing his or (in this case) her job. The district judge granted summary judgment for the defendant on the ground that the plaintiff had failed to tender her premium for the COBRA coverage within the statutory deadline, and we affirmed.
The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission has filed a brief as amicus curiae in support of the'plaintiff in which it argues for a narrow construal of res judicata in Title VII eases on the ground that application of the doctrine disrupts the administrative procedures established by the statute. It does so, the Commission reasons, by impelling victims of discrimination to pretermit the administrative process' (as the statute permits after 180 days, 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-5(f)(1)) by obtaining a right to sue letter in order to be able to join, in one suit, a Title VII claim with a claim under a different statute. If, as the district judge believed, every claim that can be said to arise out of the same employment action (such as a discharge) is part of the same transaction or occurrence, all such claims must be brought in the same suit, since, if they are not, a final judgment on the merits in one will bar all the others by operation of res judicata.
The Supreme Court rejected a parallel argument — -that the statute of limitations applicable to employment discrimination suits brought under 42 U.S.C. § 1981 should be stayed pending exhaustion of Title VII administrative remedies — in
Johnson v. Railway Express Agency, Inc.,
Although we do not think that the fact that this is a Title VII suit is important to the question whether the suit is barred by res judicata, we think the district judge went astray in concluding that it is barred. It is true that if the plaintiff had not been fired she would have neither a claim for COBRA *226 benefits nor a claim that she had been fired as an act of racial and gender discrimination. Both the COBRA claim, the subject of the previous suit, and the Title VII claim, the subject of the present suit, thus arose out of her discharge in the sense that, but for the discharge, she would have had no complaint under either statute. A but-for test, however, is obviously no good (as has long been understood in tort, antitrust, and other cases). Restatement, supra, § 24, illustration 7, at p. 202. For suppose the plaintiff on her way out of her office after being fired had slipped on a banana peel carelessly dropped by another employee and it was clear that had she not been fired she would not have slipped because the banana peel would have been- picked up by the time she left at the end of a normal work day. No one would argue in such a case that her claim for negligence was part of the same transaction as her claim for discrimination merely because both were causally connected in the loose and misleading but-for sense to the termination. As the two claims would have no material facts in common there would be no reason to force them to be brought in the same suit. There is no more reason here. The COBRA suit concerns facts that arose after the plaintiff was fired and that therefore have no connection to the facts concerning racial and gender discrimination on which her Title VII claim is based, all of which occurred before (though some perhaps just before) she was fired.
The standard for when two claims are so closely related that they constitute the same transaction for purposes of res judicata is not as clear as it might be. It is not much use being told, as by the restaters, that the question what claims constitute a single transaction is to be decided “pragmatically,” with due regard for whether they form “a convenient trial unit,” whether the evidence concerning them is similar, and whether .“their treatment as a unit conformed to the parties’ expectations.”
Aunyx Corp. v. Canon U.S.A., Inc., supra,
Building oh earlier statements by this and other courts, which helpfully if a little vaguely define “transaction” in terms of “core of operative facts,” “same operative facts,” or “same nucleus of operative facts,”
Prochotsky v. Baker & McKenzie, supra,
In the present case, in contrast, only one fact on which the two claims are based is the same — that the plaintiff was terminated. The other facts on which the Title VII claim is based concern the conduct of the defendant leading up to the plaintiffs discharge, while the other facts on which the COBRA claim is based concern the processing of her request for continued benefits after she was discharged. No one suggests that these different-seeming factual packets are at root the same because, for example, they grew out of some malevolent scheme by the defendant to do in the plaintiff at every turn. It is like the typical retaliation case, in which an employee files a claim based on some set of facts and then the employer fires him for filing the claim, precipitating a second claim. They are two claims, not one, for purposes of res judicata.
Abels v. Renfro Corp.,
The difficult intermediate cases — where there is substantial factual overlap between the two claims, but not, as here or.in the retaliation cases, a complete or nearly complete lack of overlap — can be left for the future. Our formulation is helpful only in the identification and disposition of cases lying at the extremes — but this is such a case. The judgment dismissing the plaintiffs Title VII suit is reversed and the case remanded for further proceedings consistent -with this opinion.
Reversed and Remanded.
