Manuel Alvarado v. Mine Service, Limited

626 F. App'x 66
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJuly 30, 2015
Docket14-50668
StatusUnpublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 626 F. App'x 66 (Manuel Alvarado v. Mine Service, Limited) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Manuel Alvarado v. Mine Service, Limited, 626 F. App'x 66 (5th Cir. 2015).

Opinion

GREGG COSTA, Circuit Judge. *

Statutes of limitations often result in the severe but necessary consequence of dismissing a plaintiffs case because of his lawyer’s lack of diligence. But any untimeliness in the filing of this employment lawsuit resulted in large part from the vigilance of the plaintiffs attorney rather than his indolence. We thus determine that the unusual facts of this case present one of the exceptional situations in which equitable tolling is appropriate.

I

Manuel Alvarado, an American citizen of Mexican descent, was employed by Mine Service Ltd. as a heavy equipment operator at its power plant in Franklin, Texas. 1 Upon arriving for the night shift one evening in early 2011, he found a noose on a desk in the office. When he confronted the shift foreman about it, the foreman explained that the concrete supervisor left it “to tell his guys if they didn’t finish the job on time, that he was going to hang them.” ROA.192. Alvarado voiced concern over the noose and the trouble that Mine Service could get in if anyone complained. When Alvarado asked what he should do with the noose, the shift foreman told him to throw it out. Aside from that incident, Alvarado had also received numerous complaints from fellow Hispanic workers that they had been mistreated on the night shift. But when Alvarado helped facilitate a meeting between his coworkers and the supervisor, none of the coworkers voiced any grievances. Later that week, Alvarado’s supervisor contacted him and told him rumors were going around the office about the noose and admonished Alvarez that he should “just stay quiet, don’t say nothing to nobody just — We don’t want no trouble.” ROA.194. A week later, on May 30, 2011, Alvarado was notified by phone that he had been fired. His supervisor explained that Alvarado had been “stirring up racial things, and ... was stirring up too much trouble there at the power piant.” ROA.194.

On June 13, two weeks after he was terminated, Alvarado filed a timely charge of retaliation with the EEOC alleging he was fired shortly after he “complained to management about an offensive noose [that] other employees also were offended by.” ROA.395. On the second anniversary of the administrative filing (June 13, 2013), without the EEOC’s having taken any action, Alvarado’s counsel requested a right *68 to sue letter. Consistent with the requirement that the EEOC issue such a letter in response to a request if more than 180 days have elapsed without completion of the agency investigation, 2 the EEOC issued a letter the next day.

Although the letter dated June 14 correctly listed Alvarado’s name, address, and the EEOC charge number, it contained numerous mistakes and omissions. First, although more than 180 days had elapsed since Alvarado filed his charge with the EEOC, the letter stated that “Mess than 180 days have passed since the filing of this charge, but I have determined that it is unlikely that the EEOC will be able to complete its administrative processing within 180 days from the filing of this charge.” ROA.267. Second, although Alvarado only alleged violations of Title VII, the letter checked a box pertaining to the Age Discrimination in Employment Act stating that the EEOC was closing Alvarado’s case and that his “lawsuit under the ADEA must be filed in federal or state court WITHIN 90 DAYS of your receipt of this Notice. Otherwise your right to sue based on the above-numbered charge will be lost.” ROA.267. Finally, although there are lines for a named official’s signature and the date, both were left blank.

The same day this letter issued, the office administrator employed by Alvarado’s attorney emailed the EEOC to notify it of the mistakes and request a corrected letter. The EEOC investigator then called the office administrator and explained that the June 14 letter “was accidentally sent due to a clerical error by a new EEOC clerk” and that a “correct and executed Notice of Right to Sue would be issued.” ROA.398. The law office again contacted the EEOC by email on June 26 to inquire about the status of the revised letter. On July 8, the EEOC issued a corrected letter that listed only Alvarado’s claim under Title VII, detailed that more than 180 days had passed since the charge had been filed, and stated that the EEOC was terminating its processing of the charge. It was signed by Lillie Wilson for Janet V. Elizondo, the EEOC District Director. An entry in the EEOC case log dated July 8 notes “mailed out correct copy w/ signature” and also indicates Alvarado’s case was “closed” on that date.

On October 2, 2013, Alvarado filed his lawsuit alleging retaliation. Given the 90-day deadline for filing Title VII suits after the right to sue letter issues, 3 the suit was timely if the “correct” July 8 letter started the clock running, but twenty days late if the June 14 letter did. Mine Service moved for summary judgment on limitations grounds, arguing that the earlier letter started the 90-day period. The district court agreed based on its finding that the June 14 letter “include[d] everything that is required [under the regulations].” ROA.412. In doing so, the district court held that the office administrator’s statement about what the EEOC investigator said over the phone was hearsay that could not be used to show that the EEOC issued the first letter in error. The district court then sua sponte considered but rejected the possibility of equitable tolling, concluding that the EEOC did not “mislead[ ] the plaintiff about his rights” because the first right to sue letter was facially valid. ROA. 415. Alvarado timely appealed.

II

Alvarado first argues that the district court improperly concluded that the June letter commenced the limitations period. *69 He relies on the EEOC case log indicating that the later July letter was the “correct” one and cites the numerous errors contained in the June letter, emphasizing the lack of any signature. We are more concerned with the false information in the June letter — that the EEOC checked the box for an ADEA claim that Alvarado did not assert and the incorrect statement that the matter had been pending with the agency for less than 180 days. Mine Service counters that the June 14 letter nonetheless triggered the limitations period because it contains the information that is required by an EEOC regulation: authorization to file suit; advice about how to bring a lawsuit; a copy of the charge; and the agency’s decision. See 29 C.F.R. § 1601.28(e). That regulation does not, however, address how inaccurate information affects the legal status of a right to sue letter. It seems that at some point— consider situations in which the right to sue letter lists the incorrect claimant’s name or fails to check the box for the claim the party brought — defects in a letter might render it ineffective.

But we need not resolve the difficult issue of whether the defects in the June 14 letter rise to that level. Even assuming the district court correctly held that limitations began running upon issuance of the first letter, we conclude that equitable toll-' ing is warranted.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
626 F. App'x 66, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/manuel-alvarado-v-mine-service-limited-ca5-2015.