Ordille v. United States

216 F. App'x 160
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedJanuary 24, 2007
Docket05-5062
StatusUnpublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 216 F. App'x 160 (Ordille v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ordille v. United States, 216 F. App'x 160 (3d Cir. 2007).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

PADOVA, District Judge.

Mary and Richard Ordille appeal the order of the United States District Court *162 for the District of New Jersey granting summary judgment in favor of the Department of Agriculture. At issue is whether the Ordilles’ claims of discrimination in violation of the Equal Credit Opportunity Act are barred by the Act’s statute of limitations, as that statute was modified by Public Law 105-277, Title VII § 741. We have jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1291. We affirm.

I.

Because we write solely for the parties, we set forth only those facts necessary to our analysis.

Mary and Richard Ordille are married blueberry farmers with a long history of difficulties with the Farm Service Agency (“FSA”), a bureau of the United States Department of Agriculture (the “USDA”), and its predecessor, the Farm Home Administration. They claim that the FSA discriminated against them in connection with applications for and existing extensions of credit, on the basis of their national origin, marital status and gender, in violation of the Equal Credit Opportunity Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1691, et seq. (the “ECOA”).

The Ordilles sent a letter to Dan Glickman, Secretary of the Department of Agriculture, dated January 3, 1997, complaining about their treatment by the FSA and requesting an investigation. The Ordilles enclosed with their letter a lengthy affidavit dated January 6, 1997, recounting their mistreatment by various officials of the FSA between 1982 and October 1996 (the letter and affidavit are referred to collectively as the “January 1997 complaint”). The January 1997 complaint referred to unethical treatment of the Ordilles’ original loan application; the failure of FSA officials to inform the Ordilles about grant and loan opportunities made available to other farmers; the failure of FSA officials to provide assistance when the Ordilles suffered weather related crop failures; the failure of the FSA to refinance the Ordilles’ loan at an agreed upon interest rate; the failure of the FSA to assist the Ordilles in the sale or conveyance of the farm to another farmer; and the refusal of the FSA to accept a conveyance of the farm to the FSA in satisfaction of the Ordilles’ debt. Importantly, the January 1997 complaint does not allege that the mistreatment of the Ordilles was a result of unlawful discrimination.

On February 20, 1997, the USDA responded to the Ordilles’ complaint, rejecting their claims of mistreatment. On October 1997, in response to a request for information about the Ordilles’ complaint made by Mary Ordille, Dr. Jeremy S. Wu, Deputy Director of the USDA’s Office of Civil Rights (the “OCR”), wrote to Mary Ordille stating that the Program Investigations Division, which processes discrimination complaints by participants in the USDA’s financial assistance programs, did not have an active complaint from her and sent her a complaint form. On January 1, 1998, the Ordilles filed another complaint, this one directed to the OCR, complaining of discrimination based on their national origin, sex and marital status and attaching a letter, dated January 1, 1998, setting out their history of problems with the FSA. The letter substantially repeated the history of the Ordilles’ FSA transactions contained in the January 1997 complaint, but added that Mary Ordille had been discriminated against based on her sex and national origin (Italian American) because she had not been allowed to apply for the original FSA loan without her husband. The January 1, 1998 letter also contains the following statement which alleges discrimination based on Mary Ordille’s sex, national origin and marital status: ‘We should not *163 have been discriminated [sic] because my husband had a job, because I was an Italian American female working a farm, married or denied our rights, while other farmers were given equal opportunities and protected.” App. at A61.

On September 17, 1999, Rhonda Davis, Chief of the Statute of Limitation division at the OCR, sent a form letter to the Ordilles which stated that the OCR had recently reviewed their discrimination complaint in accordance with Section 741 of Public Law 105-277 1 and determined that their pre-July 1, 1997 complaint met the requirements for a waiver of the statute of limitations. The letter also explained how the Ordilles could seek administrative review of their ECOA claim, referred to as the Section 741 process. On October 28, 1999, Rosalind Gray, Director, OCR, sent a letter to the Ordilles enclosing a final decision of the USDA determining that there had been no discrimination in their case. On December 6, 1999, the Ordilles received a second form letter from Rhonda Davis, nearly identical to the September 17, 1999 letter and with the same docket number. The December 6, 1999 letter again informed the Ordilles that their pre-July 1, 1997 complaint met the requirements for a Section 741 waiver of the statute of limitations.

Sometime in 2000, the Ordilles received an undated letter from Rhonda Davis informing them that they were not eligible for the Section 741 waiver:

This is to advise you that you are not eligible to participate under the Section 741 process. Your case was determined ineligible for Section 741 processing because your complaint was not filed with USDA prior to July 1, 1997. Our records show that your complaint was filed on January 1, 1998. This eligibility review is a final determination denying your complaint as eligible to be processed under the provisions of Section 741.

App. at A68.

On October 18, 2000, the Ordilles asked that this determination be reviewed by an Administrative Law Judge (“ALJ”) under the Section 741 process. On December 8, 2000, the ALJ issued his Proposed Determination, denying the Ordilles’ complaint as time-barred. The ALJ concluded that the Ordilles’ complaint was untimely, and not eligible for a Section 741 waiver, despite the September 17 and December 6, 1999 letters which stated that the Ordilles’ pre-July 1, 1997 complaint met the requirements for waiver of the statute of limitations. The ALJ stated that those letters’ “erroneous reference to a ‘pre-July 1, 1997, complaint’ cannot transform the ineligible Complaint in this case, filed on January 1, 1998, into an eligible Complaint which must have been filed prior to July 1, 1997.” App. at A3S9. The Ordilles appealed the ALJ’s Proposed Determination, arguing that the ALJ erroneously considered January 1, 1998 the date of their complaint, ignoring their January 1997 complaint, and that their January 1, 1998 complaint related back to the timely filing of the January 1997 complaint.

On February 1, 2001, the USDA adopted the Proposed Determination as its Final Determination. The Final Determination found that the Ordilles’ complaint was time-barred and rejected the Ordilles’ argument regarding relation back of the January 1,1998 complaint on the grounds that the January 1997 complaint did not specifi *164 cally assert discrimination based on sex, marital status or national origin.

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216 F. App'x 160, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ordille-v-united-states-ca3-2007.