Plaintiff-appellant Thomas Schroeder appeals the district court’s entry of summary judgment which held that Schroeder had failed to file a timely charge of age discrimination, and that no grounds existed to equitably toll the charge-filing period. The district court also dismissed Schroeder’s pendent state law claim for lack of subject matter jurisdiction. We affirm.
I.
Because Schroeder appeals from a grant of summary judgment, we view the record
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and all inferences drawn from it in the light most favorable to Schroeder, the non-movant.
Beard v. Whitley County REMC,
At the EEOC, Gloria Mayfield interviewed Schroeder. (The district court described Mayfield as an “intake person”; but nothing in Schroeder’s affidavit or the rest of the record identifies Mayfield.) After Schroeder provided Mayfield with all of the information she requested (the record does not reveal what this was) and following an interview, Mayfield informed Schroeder that “there wasn’t much [that] she could do for [him].” (Schroeder affidavit, 115) Schroeder left the EEOC, and has not succeeded in creating an issue of fact as to whether he filed a charge or completed an intake questionnaire.
Following Schroeder’s visit to the EEOC, “a number of older employees were fired or forced to retire by [Copley].” (Schroeder affidavit, If 6) Schroeder learned that “[s]ome of those employees received settlements,” and “realized that maybe the EEOC was wrong and [that he] did have a cause of action.” (Id.) He then contacted an attorney and on November 19, 1987, filed a charge with the EEOC alleging that Copley had unlawfully discriminated against him on the basis of age.
Schroeder filed a two-count complaint on January 27, 1987. Count one alleged his discharge violated the Age Discrimination in Employment Act (“ADEA”), 29 U.S.C. §§ 621-634. Count two was a state law claim brought under the court’s pendent jurisdiction for intentional infliction of emotional distress. Copley moved for summary judgment on Count one, arguing that Schroeder’s charge was untimely, and moved to dismiss Count two for lack of subject matter jurisdiction in the event the district court granted summary judgment on the ADEA claim. Schroeder opposed the summary judgment motion, claiming first that he had filed a timely charge, and second, that even if he had not, the charge-filing period should have been tolled on account of the EEOC’s refusal to accept his charge, and Copley’s failure to post notices informing its employees of their rights under the ADEA.
The district court held that Schroeder had not filed a timely charge with the EEOC, and that, in any event, he had never (within the 300-day limitations period) manifested an intent to activate the ADEA’s machinery. The court also found there was no basis to equitably toll the charge-filing period. Mayfield’s comment that she didn’t think there was much the EEOC could do for Schroeder, the court reasoned, did not amount to an “affirmative inducement” to forego filing a charge. Further, the court held, even if Copley’s failure to post a notice informing its employees of their rights under the ADEA tolled the charge-filing period, it only tolled the period until May or June 1986, when Schroeder learned of his rights through Wallace. And because Schroeder did not file his charge until November 19,1987, it still was untimely. The court also dismissed Schroeder’s pendent claim for lack of subject matter jurisdiction. Schroeder appeals the district court’s determinations that his charge was untimely and that no grounds existed to equitably toll the filing period.
II.
We review the district court’s entry of summary judgment
de novo. Central States, Southeast and Southwest Areas Pension Fund v. Jordan,
Under the ADEA “[n]o civil action may be commenced ... until 60 days after a charge alleging unlawful discrimination has been filed with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission.” 29 U.S.C. § 626(d). In a deferral state like Illinois,
Smith v. General Scanning, Inc.,
In Steffen, we held that a completed intake questionnaire satisfied the charge-filing requirement. It was in writing, named the respondent, and adequately alleged the discriminatory act (demotion). Id. at 542, 544. Further, Steffen had made known his intent to activate the ADEA’s machinery by informing the EEOC of his intent to comply with the charge-filing requirement, and by following the EEOC’s instructions on how to satisfy the requirement. Id. at 544. In Bihler, though, the Third Circuit held that an employee’s letter to his former employer — with copies to the EEOC and the relevant state agencies— which alleged that the writer’s termination “constituted age discrimination” and threatened litigation did not constitute a “charge” because it failed to notify the EEOC that the employee intended to activate the ADEA’s machinery. Id. at 99-100. The aggrieved employee’s letter “did not sufficiently inform the EEOC whether it was ‘to investigate immediately or to await further communication from the plaintiff before investigation.’ ” Id. at 100 (citation omitted).
In this case, there was no timely written charge, and Schroeder has not produced a completed intake questionnaire.
Compare Steffen.
1
There was not even an
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informal letter alleging discrimination and threatening litigation as in
Bihler.
Schroeder produced no facts indicating that he filed any written statement or that the information he provided Mayfield was ever reduced to writing (see
infra
note 2). Rather, from the record, all we know is that Schroeder set out for the EEOC's Chicago office intending to file a charge (though he never told the EEOC that that was his intent); he met with Mayfield (the “intake person”); he was told that there “wasn’t much” the EEOC “could do for [him]”; and he left without any further activity. We do not know what information Schroeder gave to Mayfield (or, for that matter, who Mayfield was, or what position she held), or what Mayfield was referring to when she commented that there “wasn’t much” that could be done. This, coupled with the absence of any timely written charge or intake questionnaire, compels the conclusion that not only was no charge timely filed, but also that no reasonable person would have been convinced that Schroeder intended to “activate the [ADEA’s] machinery.”
Steffen,
Retreating somewhat, Schroeder next argues that the EEOC prevented him from filing a charge, and that, as a result, the charge-filing period ought to be tolled to avoid punishing him for the EEOC’s failure to fulfill its duty. We cannot agree that Schroeder was in any way prevented from filing a charge. This case is unlike
McKee v. McDonnell Douglas Technical Services Co., Inc.,
In contrast, the court in
Woodard v. Western Union Telegraph Co.,
Likewise here, Schroeder has failed to produce any evidence or facts sufficient to create a genuine issue of material fact to the effect that the EEOC “affirmatively induced” or “lulled” him into inaction. (The EEOC certainly did not refuse to accept a charge. Compare McKee; Jennings.) True, Mayfield told Schroeder that there “wasn’t much” that the EEOC “could do for him”; but that does not constitute lulling or an affirmative inducement to forego filing a charge. And Schroeder’s affidavit did not even inform us as to whether he filled out or even attempted to fill out an intake questionnaire. Mayfield’s lukewarm reception does not justify equitably tolling the charge-filing period. Finally, while Schroeder may not have been “familiar” with the ADEA when he accompanied Wallace to the EEOC, he nevertheless understood he had rights under the ADEA (see infra)) and that is enough.
Lastly, Schroeder contends that the filing period should have been equitably tolled until he retained an attorney because Copley failed to post notices informing its employees of their rights under the ADEA. Employers are required to post such informational notices under 29 U.S.C. § 627.
See also
29 C.F.R. § 1627.10;
Kephart v. Institute of Gas Technology,
It is undisputed that Copley failed to properly post such notices. Schroeder thus argues that the filing period should not have started to run until November 1987 — when he claims he retained an attorney. The record, however, does not tell us
when
Schroeder hired his attorney; rather, it tells us only that he hired one. The November 1987 date appears only in Schroeder’s brief, but facts stated in a brief are insufficient to create a genuine issue of material fact.
See Helmich v. Kennedy,
The information Schroeder needed to know before filing a charge was straightforward: that it was unlawful to discriminate on the basis of age, and that he was required to file a charge with the EEOC to pursue a discrimination claim. A posted notice would have told him no more. 8 Fair Empl.Prac.Manual at 441:153. An employer’s failure to post notices tolls the charge-filing period “only until the employee acquires
general
knowledge of his right not be discriminated against on account of age,” not until the employee acquires knowledge of his “specific rights under the ADEA” or the existence of the specific
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charge-filing period.
McClinton v. Alabama By-Products Corp.,
Because the district court properly entered summary judgment on Schroeder’s federal claim (ADEA), it was also proper to dismiss Schroeder’s pendent state law claim for lack of subject matter jurisdiction.
See Maguire v. Marquette University,
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the district court is
Affirmed.
Notes
. In an effort to fall under
Steffen,
Schroeder asserts in his appellate briefs that, since the filing of an intake questionnaire is routinely requested of all complainants, "it can be assumed that [Schroeder] did in fact fill out an intake questionnaire.” Schroeder makes this request despite the fact that the record contains no such questionnaire and that Schroeder’s own affidavit makes no reference to having ever filled one out. Assumptions or conclusory claims cannot take the place of specific facts so as to create a genuine issue for trial.
See Posey v. Skyline Corp.,
.Because we decide that no charge of any kind was timely filed, we do not need to reach the issue of whether a charge must be filed in writing or whether it may be filed orally. We note, though, that the charge in its final form must be in writing. 29 C.F.R. § 1626.6. However, the regulations indicate that charges may be received orally (e.g., by telephone), so long as they ultimately are "reduced to writing.” Id.
We also do not address Schroeder’s argument that, even if his charge was untimely, the charge-filing requirement was nevertheless satisfied because others did file timely charges, thus placing Copley on notice under the reasoning of
Anderson
v.
Montgomery Ward & Co., Inc.,
. Section 626(d) formerly required individuals to give “notice of an intent to file [suit],” but was amended in 1978 to substitute the word "charge” for the notice of intent to file suit requirement.
Woodard,
. The Secretary of Labor’s duties and responsibilities under the ADEA were shifted to the EEOC effective January 1, 1979.
Anderson,
