Anna Agolli v. Office Depot, Inc.

548 F. App'x 871
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedDecember 18, 2013
Docket12-2458
StatusUnpublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 548 F. App'x 871 (Anna Agolli v. Office Depot, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Anna Agolli v. Office Depot, Inc., 548 F. App'x 871 (4th Cir. 2013).

Opinion

Affirmed by unpublished PER CURIAM opinion.

Unpublished opinions are not binding precedent in this circuit.

PER CURIAM:

The plaintiff in these proceedings, Anna Maria Agolli, appeals from the district court’s dismissal of her complaint, in which she alleged claims against her former employer, defendant Office Depot, Inc., pursuant to Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. As explained below, we affirm.

I.

On September 29, 2011, proceeding pro se, Agolli filed a thirty-one-page complaint in the District of Maryland, along with a right-to-sue letter that had been issued on June 30, 2011, by the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (the “EEOC”). 1 On October 3, 2011, Agolli submitted a forty-eight-page amended complaint. Office Depot countered with a motion for a more definite statement under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(e), asserting that the amended complaint was so disorganized and incoherent that Office Depot could not reasonably prepare a response. The district court granted Office Depot’s motion and afforded Agolli fourteen days to file a more definite statement. Agolli attempted to comply, but the court deemed her statement to be no less “prolix and confusing” than the defective complaint, and thus dismissed the entire action. See Agolli v. Office Depot, Inc., No. 8:11-cv-02806, slip op. at 1 (D.Md. Apr. 27, 2012), ECF No. 35 (Memorandum explaining that “[a]lthough the pleadings of a pro se litigant should be liberally construed, neither an opposing party nor the court can be required to glean through an unintelligible complaint to ascertain the claim or claims that a plaintiff may be asserting”).

Agolli moved to reconsider the dismissal and reopen her case, acknowledging deficiencies in her prior pleadings and advising that she was preparing a second amended complaint with the assistance of counsel. On June 19, 2012, following the district court’s grant of Agolli’s motion, her newly obtained lawyer filed the more coherent fifteen-page second amended complaint — the “Complaint” at issue in this appeal. The Complaint alleged claims under Title VII for disparate treatment based on race, retaliation, and hostile work environment. Significantly, the Complaint specified that Agolli was discharged by Office Depot on October 31, 2008, because of her race (Caucasian) and in retaliation for her prior complaints about harassment and discrimination. Relevant to the hostile work environment claim, the Complaint detailed multiple acts of harassment, *873 each occurring more than 300 days before Agolli filed her EEOC charge of August 25, 2009. The Complaint did not allege that Agolli’s termination — which happened within 300 days of her administrative charge — was part and parcel of the hostile work environment. 2

In response, Office Depot made a Rule 12(b)(6) motion to dismiss the Complaint for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted. Specifically, Office Depot contended that Agolli’s hostile work environment claim was time-barred, because each act of harassment alleged in the Complaint occurred more than 300 days before Agolli filed her EEOC charge. Office Depot further maintained that Agol-li failed to exhaust Title VII administrative remedies -with respect to her race discrimination and retaliation claims.

Office Depot attached to its dismissal motion a copy of Agolli’s EEOC charge, as the charge had been provided to Office Depot by the EEOC. That version of Agol-li’s charge consisted of a self-prepared one-page form, on which Agolli checked the boxes for race discrimination, sex discrimination, and retaliation, but, when asked to provide “particulars,” described only a sexually hostile work environment. See J.A. 22. The form instructed that, “if additional space is needed, attach! ] extra sheet(s).” Id. Consistent with that instruction, Agolli’s description of her “particulars” included the statement, “SEE ATTACHED FOR GENERAL EXPLANATION, AND ONGOING INFO ALSO.” Id. Nevertheless, having received solely the one-page form from the EEOC, Office Depot was led to believe that Agolli had not actually attached extra sheets. Accordingly, Office Depot argued that it was entitled to dismissal because Agolli had endeavored to exhaust only her (otherwise time-barred) hostile work environment claim.

With her opposition to Office Depot’s motion to dismiss, Agolli produced twenty-three pages of “continuation sheets” that she had submitted to the EEOC on August 26, 2009 — one day after she had filed the one-page form. At the top of each page of the continuation sheets was the heading “ANNA MARIA AGOLLI COMPLAINANT CONTINUATION SHEETS EEOC COMPLAINT August 25, 2009.” See J.A. 23-45. Unlike the Complaint, the continuation sheets alleged that Agolli’s discharge was part and parcel of the hostile work environment. See id. at 25. The continuation sheets also included sections entitled “Reverse discrimination” and “retaliation.” Id. at 41, 43. Seeking to avert dismissal of the Complaint, Agolli urged the district court to count her termination as the ultimate act of harassment underlying her (thus timely) hostile work environment claim, and to view the continuation sheets as adequate to exhaust her race discrimination and retaliation claims.

In reply, Office Depot maintained that the timeliness of Agolli’s hostile work environment claim had to be measured by the allegations of the Complaint, which identified only pre-discharge acts of harassment occurring more than 300 days before Agol-li filed her EEOC charge. Office Depot further asserted that the continuation sheets fell short of exhausting Agolli’s race discrimination and retaliation claims, both because the EEOC had not provided the continuation sheets to Office Depot (a fact sworn to by Office Depot’s in-house counsel in an attached declaration), and because the continuation sheets, much like *874 Agolli’s early pro se complaints, were indecipherable.

By its Order of August 22, 2012, the district court granted Office Depot’s motion to dismiss the Complaint pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6). The accompanying Memorandum reflects that the court agreed with Office Depot that Agolli’s hostile work environment claim was time-barred on the face of the Complaint, and that Agolli failed to exhaust administrative remedies with respect to her race discrimination and retaliation claims. In making the latter ruling, the court deemed the continuation sheets to be an inadequate mode of exhaustion, explaining that the continuation sheets were not provided by the EEOC to Office Depot, and that they were “disjointed and rambling and ... not sufficiently focused to alert either the EEOC or Office Depot to [Agolli’s claims].” See Agolli v. Office Depot, Inc., No. 8:11-cv-02806, slip op. at 2 n. 1, 2012 WL 3656503 (D.Md. Aug. 22, 2012), ECF No. 52.

Subsequently moving under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 59(e) to alter or amend the judgment, Agolli recapped various arguments against dismissal of the Complaint.

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Bluebook (online)
548 F. App'x 871, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/anna-agolli-v-office-depot-inc-ca4-2013.