MAJORITY OPINION 1
A former employee of a state agency filed suit against the agency asserting vari
1. Factual and Procedural Background
Appellee/plaintiff Mathew Esters was a longtime employee of appellant/defendant Texas Department of Transportation (hereinafter, the “Department”). On March 3, 2006, Esters filed a charge of discrimination with the Texas Workforce Commission Civil Rights Division (hereinafter, the “Commission”) and with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (hereinafter, the “EEOC”). In this charge, Esters, an African American, alleged racial discrimination and asserted the following:
• From the time Esters’s supervisor, Stanley Yin, began his employment with the Department on or about 1993, Esters has been denied promotions given to less-qualified employees who were not African American.
• Since approximately 1993, Esters has been subject to racial harassment from Yin in the form of inappropriate comments.
• When Esters was denied promotions, Yin would tell him that he was not promoted because he “didn’t measure up.” Yin also told Esters that he would not be promoted as long as Esters was working at the Department.
• Esters believes he was discriminated against because of his race in violation of Title VII.
Four weeks after filing this charge, Esters left the Department’s employment by taking early retirement. The EEOC processed Esters’s charge of discrimination for itself as to the Title VII claims and for the Commission as to any claims under Chapter 21 of the Texas Labor Code. The EEOC conducted an investigation. On April 28, 2006, the EEOC closed its file on this charge because, based on its investigation, it was unable to conclude that the information obtained established violations of the statutes. The EEOC gave Esters a notice of his right to sue the Department within ninety days of Esters’s receipt of the notice. On May 12, 2006, the Commission gave Esters notice of his right to sue the Department in state court within sixty days of his receipt of the notice.
The following month, on June 6, 2006, Esters filed a charge of discrimination with the EEOC (the “Second Filing”). Esters did not characterize the Second Fling as a new charge of discrimination;
• From 1998 until Esters’s constructive discharge in 2006, Esters was denied promotions, paid less, and subjected to racial innuendos by his superior.
• Esters was subjected to a racially hostile work environment. Yin, his supervisor wanted him to celebrate Confederate Heroes Day instead of the Martin Luther King holiday.
• Yin told him he was not promoted because he “didn’t measure up” and “was a Black token.” Yin also told him that as long as Yin worked at the Department Esters would never be promoted. Esters was threatened with termination if he did not attend a certain class.
• After Esters complained about the discrimination to management from 1993 through 2006, Yin retaliated against him by (1) requiring him to work on hazardous materials without proper training, (2) assigning him to low-level jobs, (3) denying him pay raises commensurate with a twenty-six-year employee, (4) circumventing orders given by the Director of Engineers, and (5) threatening to terminate Esters if he did not attend a “hot mix class.”
The record does not reflect that the EEOC or the Commission ever took any action on the Second Filing. Esters filed suit against the Department on July 11, 2006. In his second amended petition, Esters asserted claims under the following statutes based on alleged racial discrimination, constructive discharge, and retaliation: Title VII (42 U.S.C. § 2000e et seq.); Chapter 21 of the Texas Labor Code; Title 42, section 1981 of the United States Code; and Title 42, section 1983 of the United States Code.
In an initial plea to the jurisdiction, the Department asserted that the trial court lacked jurisdiction over Esters’s claims under sections 1981 and 1983 of Title 42 of the United States Code (hereinafter collectively “1981 and 1983 Claims”) based on the Department’s immunity under the Eleventh Amendment to the United States Constitution. At a pretrial conference on October 16, 2009, the trial court granted Esters leave to file a third amended petition adding Yin as a defendant in his official capacity. After hearing argument, the trial court then sustained in part the Department’s first plea to the jurisdiction, dismissing Esters’s 1981 and 1983 Claims against the Department except to the extent that Esters seeks prospective, equitable relief under these claims.
The Department then asserted a plea to the jurisdiction, arguing that there is no statutory waiver of governmental immunity as to Esters’s retaliation claims because Esters failed to exhaust administrative remedies regarding these claims. The trial court denied this second plea to the jurisdiction, and the Department has appealed under section 51.014(a)(8) of the Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code. See Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem.Code Ann. § 51.014(a) (West 2008).
II. Analysis
A. What was the effect of the Second Filing?
The substance of the Second Filing was not a second charge of discrimination but an attempt to amend the March 3, 2006 charge (hereinafter, “Original Charge”). This attempt to amend the
B. Did Esters exhaust remedies as to his retaliation claims under section 21.055 and Title VII?
Having concluded that the Original Charge is the only valid administrative filing by which Esters could have exhausted administrative remedies, we now must decide whether the Original Charge was sufficient to exhaust remedies as to Esters’s retaliation claims under section 21.055 of the Texas Labor Code (hereinafter, “State Retaliation Claims”) and under Title VII (hereinafter, “Title VII Retaliation Claims”). In his live petition, Esters asserts State Retaliation Claims and Title VII Retaliation Claims based on the Department’s alleged retaliation against Esters, in various ways, for opposing racial discrimination through Esters’s alleged complaints to management and internal complaints (hereinafter collectively, “Complaint Retaliation Claims”). Esters also asserts State Retaliation Claims and Title VII Retaliation Claims based on the Department’s alleged retaliation against Esters, in various ways, for filing the Original Charge (hereinafter collectively, “Charge Retaliation Claims”).
Texas law applies to the State Retaliation Claims and federal law applies to the Title VII Retaliation Claims.
See Torres v. Johnson,
But, under both state and federal law, courts have held that a claim of retaliation for filing a charge of discrimination is sufficiently related to the charge of dis
C. Does failure to exhaust remedies deprive the trial court of jurisdiction over claims under the Texas Labor Code and under Title VII?
Even after
Dubai Petrol. Co. v. Kazi,
Research reveals no precedent binding on this court as to whether a failure to exhaust administrative remedies under Title VII deprives a court of subject-matter jurisdiction, and there is significant conflict among federal courts as to the proper resolution of this issue.
See Pacheco v. Mineta,
D. Did the trial court err by not dismissing all 1981 and 1983 Claims against the Department for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction?
After the trial court’s ruling on the Department’s first plea to the jurisdiction, Esters still had pending 1981 and 1983 Claims in which he alleged retaliation and sought prospective, equitable relief against the Department. The Department based its second plea on Esters’s alleged failure to exhaust administrative remedies. As to Esters’s remaining 1981 and 1983 Claims against the Department, the trial court did not err in denying the Department’s second plea to the jurisdiction because administrative remedies need not be exhausted for these claims.
See CBOCS v. Humphries,
But, under the Eleventh Amendment to the United States Constitution, the trial court lacks jurisdiction over all 1981 and 1983 Claims that Esters alleged or could allege against the Department, including claims under these statutes for prospective, equitable relief directly against the Department.
See
U.S. Const, amend. XI;
Virginia Office for Protection and Advocacy v. Stewart,
— U.S. -,
Under
Ex parte Young
and its progeny, despite the State’s Eleventh Amendment immunity, Esters can seek prospective, equitable relief under federal law against employees of a state agency in their official capacity; but this rule does not affect the immunity of the state agency from such suits, even though these suits, for all practical purposes, are against the state agency.
See Virginia Office for Protection and Advocacy,
— U.S.-,
III. Conclusion
Esters exhausted his administrative remedies as to his Charge Retaliation Claims but not as to his Complaint Retaliation Claims. Therefore, the trial court did not err to the extent it denied the Department’s plea to the jurisdiction as to the former claims but did err in not dismissing the latter claims. The trial court lacks subject-matter jurisdiction over Esters’s remaining 1981 and 1983 Claims directly against the Department. Accordingly, we affirm the trial court’s denial of the Department’s plea as to Esters’s Charge Retaliation Claims, reverse the remainder of the trial court’s order, and remand with instructions for the trial court to dismiss the Complaint Retaliation Claims and all remaining 1981 and 1983 Claims directly against the Department for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction. 6 We remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
ANDERSON, J., concurring without opinion.
Notes
. We issue this opinion to correct an error in the heading of the Majority Opinion filed April 28, 2011.
. 42 U.S.C. § 2000eetseg.
. See Tex. Lab.Code Ann. § 21.055 (West 2006).
. 42 U.S.C. §§ 1981, 1983.
. Esters argues that all of his retaliation claims are sufficiently related to the discrimination alleged in the Original Charge based on the decision in
CBOCS v. Humphries,
. We do not address Esters s claims against Yin, all of which are still pending in the trial court.
