Larry Haynes v. District of Columbia Water
Opinion
Larry Haynes had worked at the D.C. Water and Sewer Authority ("D.C. Water") for nearly thirty years when his position was eliminated as part of a reorganization. D.C. Water offered Haynes a new position, but he was unable to obtain the license that position required and lost his job. Haynes alleges that he was treated differently than other employees affected by the reorganization due to his race, age, and learning disability, and that D.C. Water refused to accommodate his disability when it set deadlines for him to obtain the new license. He brings claims under various federal and D.C. civil rights statutes. The district court granted D.C. Water summary judgment, Haynes appealed, and we affirm.
I
D.C. Water is an independent agency of the D.C. government that provides water and sewage service to the District of Columbia.
Haynes v. DC Water is Life
,
In 2014, D.C. Water consolidated several departments. Many positions were to remain the same after the reorganization, but some, including Haynes's, were to be eliminated or replaced. D.C. Water also discovered during this reorganization that D.C. law requires individuals holding apprentice electrician licenses-such as Haynes-to be directly supervised by master electricians. Problematically, D.C. Water did not employ enough master electricians to supervise all the Electrical Equipment Repairers holding apprentice electrician licenses, and, by mid-2014, determined that it would not be feasible to hire enough master electricians to do so. D.C. Water thus concluded that the Electrical Equipment Repairer position would be replaced by an "Industrial Journeyman Electrician" position, and that individuals employed in the new position would be required to hold a more advanced journeyman electrician license that permitted additional unsupervised work.
After negotiations with the union representing affected employees, D.C. Water set a March 31, 2015 deadline for current Repairers to obtain their new licenses. Repairers who obtained the proper licenses on or before that date were to be retained as Industrial Journeyman Electricians, and those that did not would be fired. Beginning on September 2, 2014, Haynes and other Repairers attended training sessions offered by D.C. Water. Haynes alleges that around this time he told D.C. Water's Human Resources Department that he was dyslexic and needed more time to prepare for the exam, particularly because the training was a "refresher" course "not meant for first-time test takers."
Haynes
,
As of March 31, 2015, Haynes had failed to take the journeyman electrician exam and been unable to get medical documentation of his dyslexia. The next day, D.C. Water sent him a letter explaining that his failure to comply with the licensing deadline meant that he could no longer perform any electrical work. D.C. Water did, however, give him sixty more days (until May 31, 2015) to pass the examination. Haynes was able to meet with a clinical psychologist on May 13, who diagnosed Haynes with a "[r]eading [d]isorder with impairment in word reading and reading comprehension," and a "[w]riting [d]isorder with impairment in written expression and spelling." Joint Appendix ("J.A.") 157. The psychologist concluded that it would be "reasonable" for Haynes's "current job ... to accommodate for [these] reading and writing disabilities."
What is clear is that on May 26, 2015, Haynes went to the Washington Field Office of the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC). There he submitted an intake questionnaire describing what had happened at work and requesting additional counseling about whether to file a charge of discrimination. Later that day, he filed such a charge. On May 27, Haynes received a Notice of Right to Sue from the EEOC, which stated that "[b]ased upon its investigation," the agency was "unable to conclude that the information obtained establishe[d] violations of the" Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990,
Haynes failed to complete the journeyman electrician license exam by the extended deadline of May 31, 2015 and was fired. At that time, there were six other Electrical Equipment Repairers in the same grade ("11/CDL") as Haynes. Five were black and one was white. Two of the black employees already had the necessary license for the new position before the reorganization. Prior to March 31, 2015, one black Repairer and the white Repairer completed the exam. Along with Haynes, the remaining two black employees did not complete the licensing exam by March 31, 2015 and were given the additional sixty-day extension. They also appear to have been laid off.
On September 29, 2016, Haynes filed a pro se complaint in the district court, alleging that D.C. Water failed to accommodate his learning disability when it set the deadlines for him to acquire a new license. Haynes eventually retained counsel and filed an amended complaint that includes claims for breach of contract, disability discrimination in violation of the ADA, race discrimination under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 42 U.S.C. § 2000e
et seq.
("Title VII") and the Civil Rights Act of 1866,
Haynes appealed the district court's decision except as to the breach of contract claim. The district court had federal question jurisdiction over Haynes's Section 1981, ADA, Title VII, and ADEA claims under
II
We affirm the district court because (1) Haynes's ADA and DCHRA claims were untimely; (2) he failed to exhaust his administrative remedies prior to bringing his Title VII and ADEA claims; (3) it was within the district court's discretion to conclude that further discovery on Haynes's only potentially viable claim-the one brought under Section 1981-was unwarranted, given the lack of detail in Haynes's Rule 56(d) declaration; and (4) summary judgment on Haynes's Section 1981 claim was appropriate given the record before the district court.
A
We review the district court's grant of summary judgment de novo.
Epsilon Elecs., Inc. v. U.S. Dep't of Treasury, Office of Foreign Assets Control
,
Under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 56(d), when a party moves for summary judgment and the "nonmovant shows by affidavit or declaration that, for specified reasons, it cannot present facts essential to justify its opposition, the court may: (1) defer considering the motion or deny it; (2) allow time to obtain affidavits or declarations or to take discovery; or (3) issue any other appropriate order." FED. R. CIV. P. 56(d). We review the district court's denial of a request for discovery for abuse of discretion.
Novecon Ltd. v. Bulgarian-Am. Enter. Fund
,
B
We first affirm the district court's conclusion that Haynes's ADA and DCHRA claims were untimely. Haynes received a Notice of Right to Sue from the EEOC on May 27, 2015. Under the ADA, he had ninety days from that date to file a complaint in court, meaning that the last day for Haynes to file an ADA claim was August 25, 2015.
See
Haynes filed his first complaint on September 29, 2016, and he acknowledges that this date fell beyond each statute's deadline. He asserts, however, that his problems with reading and comprehension so affected his understanding of his legal rights that he was unable to handle his affairs, rendering him "non compos mentis" at the time his right to file suit accrued and equitably tolling the filing deadline. Haynes Br. 19;
see also
Non Compos Mentis, BLACK'S LAW DICTIONARY (10th ed. 2014) (defining the Latin phrase as "not master of one's mind"). The burden of proving that the statutes of limitations should have been equitably tolled rests with Haynes.
See
Smith-Haynie
,
We begin by clarifying the law that governs whether Haynes was non compos mentis at the time his right to file suit accrued. The parties suggested that D.C. law regarding this species of equitable tolling applies to both Haynes's ADA and DCHRA claims. The district court followed their lead and applied D.C. law in declining to toll the statutes of limitations.
See
Haynes
,
Indeed, as a practical matter, the distinction between federal and state law makes no difference in this case: The relevant D.C. law relied on by the parties and the district court merely restates a "universally applied standard" that is also employed by the federal courts "for determining when a person is mentally unsound for purposes of tolling [a] civil statute of limitations."
Speiser v. U.S. Dep't of Health & Human Servs.
,
Haynes argues that his "functional[ ] illitera[cy]" rendered him non compos mentis, Reply Br. 18-20, because his "learning disability and dyslexia impeded his ability to understand his legal obligations and exercise his legal rights," Haynes Br. 19. As evidence, he points to (1) language in his original, pro se complaint that suggests that he misunderstood the Notice of Right to Sue as setting a future hearing date rather than informing him of his right to file a lawsuit within 90 days; (2) several errors in his initial EEOC questionnaire, including his inconsistent indication of whether he had a disability and a statement that he had been discriminated against on the basis of genetic information; and (3) reports issued by the psychologist he saw in May 2015. Haynes Br. 19-21. This evidence is insufficient to create a dispute of material fact as to whether Haynes was non compos mentis at any time, much less for the length of time necessary to bring his claims within the relevant statutes of limitations.
Our decision in
Smith-Haynie v. District of Columbia
is particularly instructive. In that case, the plaintiff filed suit under Title VII ninety-two days after she received her Notice of Right to Sue but claimed that the statute of limitations should have been tolled because she had been unable "to grasp the meaning of the 90-day limitations period" due to emotional trauma.
Smith-Haynie
,
We went on to suggest that to successfully invoke this doctrine, a plaintiff must proffer evidence that she was "[un]able to engage in rational thought and deliberate decision making sufficient to pursue [her] claim alone or through counsel,"
Haynes's learning disability resembles the plaintiff's condition in
Smith-Haynie
in that it may have interfered with his ability to understand the statute of limitations and exercise his legal rights. Critically, however, Haynes's medical records demonstrate that he retained the ability to "handl[e] h[is] own affairs and function[ ] in society."
See
Nor has Haynes explained why he was able to ascertain and exercise his legal rights by bringing suit in federal court when he eventually did, but was unable to do so during the ninety-day period following receipt of the Notice of Right to Sue or the year following his termination. Instead, the evidence shows that Haynes was able to contact the EEOC, receive counseling about his legal rights, file a charge of discrimination, file a federal lawsuit, and eventually retain counsel. This series of actions-absent further explanation-weighs against his having been non compos mentis.
We do not mean to diminish the severity of Haynes's learning disability or the effect that it may have had on his ability to understand the written information given to him by the EEOC. But our precedent makes clear that lack of understanding is not enough-a plaintiff claiming he was non compos mentis must demonstrate an inability to handle his everyday affairs or function in society. Haynes has offered no evidence that his capacities were so limited and presented medical reports to the contrary. We must, accordingly, conclude that he has failed to meet the demanding standard our case law sets for equitable tolling and that his ADA and DCHRA claims are untimely.
C
Haynes also brings claims under the ADEA and Title VII, arguing that D.C. Water discriminated against him due to his age and race. Because Haynes did not allege race or age discrimination when he filed a charge of discrimination with the EEOC, he failed to exhaust his administrative remedies as to these claims. We will therefore affirm the district court's grant of summary judgment to D.C. Water.
Prior to filing a suit alleging violations of the ADEA and Title VII, a plaintiff must exhaust her administrative remedies.
Park v. Howard Univ.
,
The charge of discrimination form Haynes filed with the EEOC asks complainants to check a box underneath the heading "Discrimination Based on" to indicate the basis of their charge. Haynes checked "disability," leaving the boxes for "race," "color," and "age" blank. J.A. 143. His narrative describing the alleged discrimination also lacked any mention of age or race. Instead, he wrote that "I have a disability and require reasonable accommodations," that "My Employer has not provided me with reasonable accommodations," and that
I believe that my layoff (and possible subsequent termination as a result of being unable to obtain these licenses) was discriminatory in violation of the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990, as amended, ("ADA") and that my Employer has failed to provide[ ] me with a reasonable accommodation in violation of the ADA.
Haynes argues on appeal that his "emphasis" in the administrative proceeding "on his disability claim should not preclude other discrimination claims that would arise from the investigation," given that all his claims arise from the same series of events. Haynes Br. 23. Haynes has not, however, explained why information regarding race or age discrimination would arise from an investigation into the accommodation of his disability. Indeed, he does not address race discrimination at all, forfeiting the argument.
See
Haynes Br. 21-23;
see also
Al-Tamimi v. Adelson
,
With respect to age discrimination, Haynes argues only that the fact that he twice wrote the word "Age" in his EEOC questionnaire after the names of the other two Repairers who did not timely complete their exams means that the EEOC would have examined his allegations of age discrimination when conducting its investigation. Haynes Br. 23; J.A. 166.
We reject this argument for two reasons. First, these references to age are in the questionnaire Haynes submitted to the EEOC, rather than his actual charge of discrimination.
Compare
J.A. 166,
with
J.A. 143. Such a questionnaire can be treated as part of the "charge," exhausting the claims described in it.
See
Fed. Express Corp. v. Holowecki
,
But even if we were to assume that the intake questionnaire formed part of the charge, we would reject Haynes's argument that he exhausted his age discrimination claim for a second reason. The section of the questionnaire where he twice wrote "Age" directs the filer to list the "race, sex, age, national origin, religion, or disability of" similarly situated employees who were "treated better than you," "if known, and if it relates to your claim of discrimination." J.A. 166. Following the names of the two Repairers who were also laid off, Haynes wrote the word "Age" twice. According to him, "[t]he only reason ... [he] would list the age of 'similarly-situated' employees is to allege age discrimination." Haynes Br. 23. Haynes, however, did not actually list the ages of the other employees. He wrote the
word
age. Moreover, he then crossed out that entire section of his questionnaire, wrote "Nobody," and rewrote the names of the two employees in the section of the questionnaire asking for similarly situated employees who were "treated the
same
as you"-which, of course, is the proper place to describe the employees who Haynes alleges were also laid off for failing to timely complete the test. J.A. 167. When he did so, he did not again write "Age" in the column for information relevant to his claim of discrimination.
Because Haynes's EEOC charge "contained no claims or factual allegations that could reasonably be expected upon investigation to lead to" evidence supporting claims of race or age discrimination, he failed to exhaust his ADEA and Title VII claims.
Park
,
D
Finally, Haynes argues that the district court erred when it denied his Rule 56(d) request for discovery and granted D.C. Water summary judgment on his Section 1981 claim. Because the declaration Haynes filed failed to meet the standards set by
Convertino v. U.S. Department of Justice
,
" Section 1981 protects the right 'to make and enforce contracts' free from racial discrimination."
Nanko Shipping, USA v. Alcoa, Inc.
,
Haynes alleges that D.C. Water violated Section 1981 when it "changed his official position to require an unnecessary license, gave him six months to obtain the Journeyman Electrician License while giving Caucasian electricians eighteen months to two years to obtain" the same licenses, "denied Mr. Haynes the chance to go back to school while offering Caucasian employees the opportunity to take classes and obtain the education necessary to earn their Journeyman Electrician Licenses, removed him from his position, and terminated him from his employment." J.A. 11-12.
D.C. Water moved for summary judgment less than a month after Haynes filed the amended complaint in which he first made a Section 1981 claim, stating that it had discharged Haynes only because he failed to obtain the license needed to do his job. In response to Haynes's allegations that he had been treated differently, D.C. Water presented evidence that all employees required to obtain journeyman electrician licenses had been subject to the same requirements and deadlines. In addition to opposing the motion on the merits, Haynes filed a declaration from his lawyer pursuant to Rule 56(d) requesting that summary judgment be delayed pending discovery. The rule provides that "[i]f a nonmovant shows by affidavit or declaration that, for specified reasons, it cannot present facts essential to justify its opposition, the court may: (1) defer considering the motion or deny it; (2) allow time to obtain affidavits or declarations or to take discovery; or (3) issue any other appropriate order." FED. R. CIV. P. 56(d). Haynes argues that the district court abused its discretion when it denied him a chance to take discovery regarding, in relevant part:
1. All electronic messages from Defendant's managers relating to the reorganization and impact on employees based on race, age, and education and competence to pass examination for a license.
2. All documents and electronic messages regarding the elimination of the Electrician Repair 9 and 11 position.
3. All documents regarding the treatment of Plaintiff's similarly-situated colleagues (electricians).
4. All documents relating to the time other Defendant employees received to obtain a Journeyman Electrician License and any back to school offers to other employees.
5. All documents related to the race, age and disability of Defendant employees who were offered additional time to obtain a Journeyman's license or an opportunity to go back to school.
6. All documents and electronic communications reflecting contacts with Occupational and Professional Licensing Division regarding electrician's duties.
J.A. 140-41.
At first blush, Haynes has a point. Summary judgment usually "is premature unless all parties have 'had a full opportunity to conduct discovery,' "
Convertino
,
This case turns on the first of the
Convertino
factors.
3
The district court held
that Haynes's two-page declaration failed to adequately explain why the facts outlined above were necessary to the litigation. We agree. Although the declaration listed categories of "information and documentation" that Haynes "needed to respond to the issues raised in [D.C. Water's] Motion for Summary Judgment," J.A. 140-41, it said nothing about "
why
those facts [were] necessary" to respond to the motion or to support the allegations in the complaint,
Convertino
,
D.C. Water's proffered justification for Haynes's discharge was compliance with a D.C. law requiring that electricians possess journeyman licenses prior to working with the level of supervision Haynes had. Haynes contends that reason was pretext because other employees subjected to new licensure requirements during the reorganization were given further accommodations. As relevant here, in Haynes's complaint he describes those other employees as electricians who received additional flexibility in obtaining their journeyman electrician licenses. D.C. Water then presented evidence that the only electricians subject to new licensure requirements during the reorganization were Electrical Equipment Repairers like Haynes, and that all the Repairers were treated the same (or worse) than Haynes. J.A. 21-22, 46, 62-63.
After D.C. Water produced this evidence about the other electricians affected by the reorganization, Haynes broadened the group of employees he alleged were subjected to relaxed licensing requirements. He argued that discovery regarding non-electricians was necessary to determine whether similarly situated employees existed who were given additional time to obtain non-electrical licenses. He also suggested that discovery about the reorganization more generally was necessary to determine whether it disproportionately impacted African-American employees who had long worked in limited-skill positions at D.C. Water.
Discovery along these lines might have supported Haynes's claim of discrimination and a request for such discovery could have rendered summary judgment premature. Almost all the information Haynes identified in his request for discovery, however, is expressly restricted to information about
electricians
affected by the reorganization. And Haynes failed to explain adequately why the more general category of information he identified in his declaration was necessary to create a triable issue of fact. As the district court concluded, his explanations fall short of the level of particularity we have previously concluded is necessary to meet the first
Convertino
factor.
See
Kohn Aff.,
Convertino v. U.S. Dep't of Justice
, No. 1:04-cv-00236 (D.D.C. Oct. 18, 2010), Dkt. No. 187-1 (describing the particular aspects of the motion that discovery was necessary to rebut, the specific discovery that would be sought, and how that information would
create a genuine dispute of material fact with respect to six facts underlying the movant's arguments);
see also
Smith
,
Haynes's response is twofold. First, he argues that we have, in the past, held that it was an abuse of discretion to deny discovery following the production of similarly vague declarations or affidavits. Haynes Br. 16-18. But the cases he relies on for this proposition were decided before Convertino established the applicable standard. The declarations at issue in those cases, moreover, still described with greater specificity how the requested information might create a dispute of material fact. Kohn Aff., Ikossi v. Dep't of Navy , No. 1:04-cv-01392 (D.D.C. Feb. 4, 2005), Dkt. No. 10-2; Shapiro Aff., Chappell-Johnson v. Powell , No. 1:03-cv-01557 (D.D.C. Dec. 1, 2003), Dkt No. 14-2.
Second, Haynes says that the district court necessarily abused its discretion by requiring him to produce evidence that D.C. Water's explanation for his discharge was mere pretext. Haynes Br. 14-15. He argues that the relevant inquiry prior to discovery is whether he stated a claim, not whether he created a dispute of material fact regarding pretext. This claim of legal error conflates two separate conclusions of the district court. First, the district court concluded that Haynes's Rule 56(d) request was deficient and denied discovery. Then it concluded that on the present record Haynes had failed to create a dispute of material fact as to whether D.C. Water's proffered reason for discharging him was pretext. Having decided that Haynes was not entitled to discovery, faulting him for failing to create a dispute of material fact was entirely proper-and indeed required to grant summary judgment. That Haynes's complaint may have survived a motion to dismiss because he stated a claim is, given the motion for summary judgment and proffer of a legitimate, nondiscriminatory reason, irrelevant.
* * *
Our decision in Convertino provides a roadmap for securing discovery. When it comes to the first factor, that guide directs nonmovants to file an affidavit or declaration explaining, with sufficient particularity, what specific facts are required to oppose the motion and why those facts are necessary to the litigation. What counts as "sufficient particularity" will necessarily be a case-specific inquiry, dependent on the nature of the claims and the existing record. But the affidavits we have approved of in prior cases have two things in common. First, they discuss the specific facts that must be discovered to support a plaintiff's legal theory, rather than recite broad categories of information-even if broad categories of information will ultimately be requested to uncover those specific facts. Second, they explain why the required information could create a dispute of material fact, even when its ultimate import is unclear, and connect the information sought to the theory of relief advanced. Haynes's declaration was deficient on both counts.
Though in some cases the relevance and necessity of the requested discovery are so obvious given the claims that little more than identification of the information is required to head off a pre-discovery motion
for summary judgment,
see
Ikossi
,
III
Haynes's ADA and DCHRA claims are untimely, his ADEA and Title VII claims were not properly exhausted before the EEOC, the district court did not abuse its discretion in denying Haynes's request for discovery, and summary judgment on his Section 1981 claim was appropriate. We therefore affirm the district court.
So ordered.
In
National Railroad Passenger Corp. v. Morgan
, the Supreme Court rejected the "continuing violation" doctrine, which had allowed Title VII plaintiffs to bring otherwise untimely claims on the theory that more recent discrimination or retaliation was part of the same unlawful employment practice.
The parties dispute whether Haynes properly raised an objection to the district court's grant of summary judgment other than that discovery should have been permitted. Haynes claims in his opening brief that the district court improperly disregarded his evidence that D.C. Water's proffered reason for discharging him was pretextual. Haynes Br. 10-11. We read that statement to challenge the appropriateness of summary judgment, albeit on the narrow ground that the district court wrongly failed to credit Haynes's assertion that "Utility Workers, consisting of primarily Caucasian employees, received additional time and training to obtain their Journeyman's license."
The district court also concluded that Haynes had failed to explain why he could not produce some of the materials requested, thus failing to meet the second Convertino factor. And on appeal, D.C. Water argues that the declaration was deficient with respect to all three factors. Because each factor must be fulfilled for a nonmovant to secure discovery, our conclusion that the declaration failed to explain adequately why the facts sought were necessary to the litigation resolves the case without the need to reach the other factors.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Larry HAYNES, Appellant v. DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA WATER AND SEWER AUTHORITY, Appellee
- Cited By
- 55 cases
- Status
- Published