Ott v. Md. Dep't of Pub. Safety & Corr. Servs.
Opinion
Rennae Elizabeth Ott asks us to determine the statute of limitations for claims she brought against Maryland's Department of Public Safety and Correctional Services ("DPSCS" or "Department") pursuant to the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 ("Rehabilitation Act"). Because the Rehabilitation Act does not contain a limitations period, we borrow the time limit from the most analogous state law claim. In the past, courts have applied Maryland's three-year general limitation for civil cases to claims under the Rehabilitation Act. We, however, have not addressed this question since Maryland amended its Fair Employment Practices Act ("MFEPA") to align more closely with the Rehabilitation Act. We now find that the amended MFEPA qualifies as the most analogous Maryland law to the Rehabilitation Act. The MFEPA's two-year statute of limitations applies and bars Ott's claims.
To avoid this result, Ott invokes the doctrine of equitable tolling. Unfortunately, she does not meet the doctrine's exacting standard, and cannot avoid the bar.
For these reasons, we affirm the district court's dismissal of Ott's Rehabilitation Act claims.
I.
Ott worked for DPSCS as a parole officer. In 2010, she learned that a pediatrician had molested her daughter, causing Ott to develop post-traumatic stress disorder ("PTSD") and severe anxiety. Her difficulties forced her to take medical leave and to transfer to a different location.
Ott says that one of her co-workers learned of the molestation and began to harass Ott about her daughter and Ott's mental health. The harassment continued for a year and took various forms, all ignored by the Department. Ott's PTSD and anxiety worsened, her performance deteriorated, and DPSCS forced her to resign on March 6, 2014.
While still employed, Ott filed a discrimination charge with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission ("EEOC"). Ott's charge proceeded slowly through the EEOC, but eventually the agency found reasonable cause for Ott's claims and referred them to the Department of Justice ("DOJ"). On July 26, 2016, the DOJ issued Ott a right to sue notice.
Ott filed her complaint in this case on October 10, 2016, asserting claims arising under the Americans with Disabilities Act ("ADA") and Rehabilitation Act. 1 The district court applied the MFEPA's two-year statute of limitations to Ott's Rehabilitation Act claims and refused to toll her time to sue. 2 The court dismissed her complaint, and this appeal followed.
II.
We review de novo dismissals pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6).
Walters v. McMahen
,
While we typically review a district court's equitable tolling decision for abuse of discretion, we review de novo when the court denied equitable tolling as a matter of law.
Cruz v. Maypa
,
A.
Ott argues that Maryland's general three-year statute of limitations governing civil actions applies to her Rehabilitation Act claims. When a federal statute, like the Rehabilitation Act, does not set forth a statute of limitations, federal courts "borrow the state statute of limitations that applies to the most analogous state-law claim."
Semenova v. Md. Transit Admin.
,
Here, we must determine which Maryland statute is most analogous to Ott's Rehabilitation Act claims. The state statute "need not be identical" to the Rehabilitation Act, but it must provide essentially "the same rights and remedies."
Semenova
,
The Rehabilitation Act protects against and provides redress for employment discrimination based on disability.
McCullough
,
Similarly, we deemed the North Carolina Persons With Disabilities Protection Act
3
("North Carolina Act") analogous to the Rehabilitation Act.
McCullough
,
Finding the state laws analogous to the Rehabilitation Act, we elected to apply their limitations periods instead of the states' general personal injury time limits.
McCullough
,
In contrast, in the past, Maryland had no analogue to the Rehabilitation Act, so we applied Maryland's general civil three-year statute of limitations to Rehabilitation Act claims.
Jeandron v. Bd. of Regents
,
We start with an enactment in 2007. At that time, the Maryland legislature added to the MFEPA a private right of action for employment discrimination based on disability. H.B. 1034, 2006 Leg., 421st Sess. (Md. 2006) (codified as amended at
Recently, we examined the MFEPA amendments in an ADA case involving a commuter bus.
6
Semenova
,
Unlike the plaintiff in
Semenova
, Ott alleges employment disability discrimination under the Rehabilitation Act. The MFEPA, as amended in 2007 and 2009, provides a right of action for the employment practices Ott cites in her complaint, including retaliation and failure to accommodate.
See
State Gov't § 20-1013. Like the North Carolina and Virginia Acts, the revised MFEPA and the Rehabilitation Act "redress discrimination against the same very specific group of persons,"
McCullough
,
The MFEPA, therefore, is the most analogous Maryland cause of action to Ott's Rehabilitation Act claims, and its two-year statute of limitations governs her case. Ott's allegations of wrongful conduct end with her resignation on March 6, 2014. She filed her complaint on October 10, 2016, outside the two-year period. Accordingly, the district court properly dismissed Ott's Rehabilitation Act claims as time-barred.
B.
Ott further argues that if a two-year statute of limitations governs her claims, we should apply equitable tolling to save them from dismissal. The discretionary equitable tolling doctrine applies when (1) a defendant wrongfully prevents a plaintiff from asserting her claims, or (2)
extraordinary circumstances beyond the plaintiff's control prevent her from filing on time.
Harris v. Hutchinson
,
This is not one of those cases. Ott claims that she did not, and could not, know that the MFEPA would supply the statute of limitations for her claims. As we have explained, the 2007 and 2009 amendments brought the MFEPA squarely within the realm of
Wolsky
and
McCullough
. In any event, a party's "misconception about the operation of the statute of limitations is neither extraordinary nor a circumstance external to [her] control."
United States v. Sosa
,
Ott further argues that DPSCS caused the delay by withholding its sovereign immunity defense to her ADA claims during the administrative process. Believing DPSCS would consent to suit, Ott waited for a right to sue letter. Under these circumstances, we do not find it "unconscionable to enforce the limitation period."
Harris
,
In sum, Ott fails to meet the high bar for equitable tolling. The district court did not err by declining to apply equitable tolling to her case.
III.
Although we find the facts in this case disturbing and sympathize with Ott's circumstances, the district court correctly dismissed her Rehabilitation Act claims. We affirm the district court's application of the MFEPA's two-year statute of limitations and its denial of equitable tolling.
AFFIRMED
Ott's ADA claims required administrative exhaustion,
After Ott conceded that sovereign immunity barred her ADA claims, the district court dismissed them. This appeal does not concern the ADA claims.
After we issued McCullough , the legislature changed the law's name from the "North Carolina Handicapped Persons Act."
Although our unpublished decision in Jeandron came after the amendments to the MFEPA, that case concerned events that occurred before Maryland expanded the MFEPA. Id . at 224-25.
Maryland courts characterize the two-year requirement as a statute of limitations, not a condition precedent, as Ott argues.
E.g.
,
Wonasue v. Univ. of Md. Alumni Ass'n
,
Because the Rehabilitation Act and the ADA lack statutes of limitations and have "substantially similar language," we apply the same borrowing analysis to both.
Semenova
,
Ott also alleges that her PTSD and anxiety prevented her from timely filing. To invoke tolling on these grounds, she must show that she suffered from a "profound mental incapacity."
Sosa
,
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Rennae Elizabeth OTT, Plaintiff - Appellant, v. MARYLAND DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC SAFETY AND CORRECTIONAL SERVICES, Defendant - Appellee.
- Cited By
- 64 cases
- Status
- Published