[DO NOT PUBLISH]
IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT FILED
________________________ U.S. COURT OF APPEALS
ELEVENTH CIRCUIT
No. 10-11657 OCT 22, 2010
Non-Argument Calendar JOHN LEY
CLERK
________________________
D.C. Docket No. 9:09-cv-80572-KAM
JOHANE TILLERY,
Plaintiff-Appellant,
versus
UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT
OF HOMELAND SECURITY,
Janet Napolitano, Secretary,
Defendant-Appellee.
________________________
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Southern District of Florida
________________________
(October 22, 2010)
Before CARNES, HULL and FAY, Circuit Judges.
PER CURIAM:
Johane Tillery appeals the district court’s order dismissing her complaint
raising retaliation claims under Title VII for failure to exhaust administrative
remedies.1 After review, we affirm.
I. BACKGROUND
A. Title VII Complaint
Plaintiff Johane Tillery (“Tillery”) worked as a transportation security
officer for the Transportation Security Administration (“TSA”), an agency within
the Department of Homeland Security (“DHS”), at the Palm Beach International
Airport (“PBIA”). In February 2006, Tillery complained that her manager, Larry
Davis, had sexually harassed her. As a result Davis was transferred from PBIA.
In March 2006, Tillery requested a transfer to an airport in Tucson, Arizona.
On April 13, 2006, her request was approved. However, on May 5, 2006, after the
Arizona facility spoke to Tillery’s PBIA supervisors, Tillery was told that she
could not transfer to the Arizona facility. On June 7, 2006, Tillery was terminated.
Tillery’s complaint alleged that her PBIA supervisors gave false information to the
Arizona facility in retaliation for her sexual harassment complaint against Davis
and later terminated her in retaliation, too.
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Civil Rights Act of 1964, § 701 et seq., as amended by Civil Rights Act of 1991, § 104 et
seq., 42 U.S.C. § 2000e et seq. (“Title VII”).
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B. Motion to Dismiss
DHS filed a pre-answer motion to dismiss pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil
Procedure 12(b). DHS’s motion argued that Tillery failed to exhaust her
administrative remedies because she did not contact TSA’s Equal Employment
Office (“EEO”) within 45 days of the allegedly discriminatory action, as required
by agency regulations. See 29 C.F.R. § 1614.105(a)(1) (requiring a federal
employee who believes she has been discriminated against to “initiate contact with
a Counselor within 45 days of the date of the matter alleged to be discriminatory
or, in the case of personnel action, within 45 days of the effective date of the
action”).2 DHS contended, inter alia, that (1) the first alleged retaliatory act
occurred on May 5, 2006; (2) the 45-day notification period expired on June 19,
2006; and (3) Tillery did not contact an EEO counselor until July 12, 2006, 23
days after the 45-day period expired. DHS further contended Tillery never
contacted an EEO Counselor about the allegedly retaliatory termination. DHS
submitted exhibits, including: (1) an EEO Counselor’s Report; (2) declarations of
2
Under Part 1614, an employee of a federal agency must first consult an EEO Counselor
in an effort to “informally resolve the matter.” 29 C.F.R. § 1614.105(a). At the end of this
informal consultation, the employee may file a formal complaint with the agency within fifteen
days, triggering the agency’s obligation to conduct an investigation. 29 C.F.R. § 1614.106(a)-(b),
(e)(2). The agency is required to dismiss a formal complaint if the employee failed to comply
with the time limits for informally consulting with the EEO Counselor or for filing the formal
complaint. 29 C.F.R. § 1614.107(a)(2). The employee then has the right to appeal the agency’s
dismissal of the formal complaint. See 29 C.F.R. § 1614.106(e)(1).
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EEO officials; (3) Tillery’s formal EEO complaint; and (4) the DHS’s final agency
decision dismissing her formal EEO complaint as untimely under the regulations.
Tillery responded, attaching her affidavit and documents. Tillery contended
that the 45-day notification period was equitably tolled because, after she was
placed on leave on May 8, 2006, she could contact an EEO Counselor only by
phone and her repeated calls over a three- or four-week period were not returned.
See 29 C.F.R. § 1614.105(a)(2) (requiring agency to extend the 45-day period
where “despite due diligence” claimant “was prevented by circumstances beyond
his or her control from contacting the counselor within the time limits”). Tillery’s
affidavit stated that, while on leave, she made calls three or four times per week
over a 25- to 30-day period until July 11, 2006, when she finally received a return
call. Tillery argued that (1) evidence of her efforts to contact the EEO Counselor
created a genuine issue of material fact that only a jury should decide, and (2) her
letter, dated May 30, 2006, to Pete Garcia, the Federal Security Director, within
the 45-day period satisfied the EEO Counselor contact requirement.
In reply, DHS filed additional documents, including the declaration of Janet
White, an EEO manager, describing the EEO’s process for handling telephone
calls. White averred that the EEO maintained a 24-hour hotline that employees
could call to leave messages regarding EEO concerns. The EEO’s protocol was to
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return messages within 24 hours. Each day, an assigned EEO counselor would
check the hotline voicemail, record the information on an “incoming-case
spreadsheet,” return the call and then supplement the entry on the spreadsheet with
information obtained during the telephone conversation. It was contrary to the
EEO’s mission and business practice to delete messages without responding to
them, fail to return calls or inaccurately record dates of contact with the
complainants. The EEO’s incoming-case spreadsheet indicated that Tillery’s only
call to TSA’s EEO was on July 11, 2006, which was returned on July 12, 2006.
C. District Court’s Notice
On February 9, 2010, the district court notified the parties that it was
considering DHS’s motion to dismiss. The district court advised that it was
guided by Bryant v. Rich, 530 F.3d 1368 (11th Cir. 2008), which directs the
district court to resolve factual disputes as to exhaustion of administrative
remedies on a motion to dismiss if (1) the factual disputes do not decide the merits
of the claims and (2) the parties have had sufficient opportunity to develop the
record. Id. at 1376. The district court noted that the parties had filed exhibits,
including affidavits. The district court gave Tillery ten days to submit any
additional evidence in opposition to DHS’s motion to dismiss.
D. Tillery’s Supplemental Brief
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Tillery then submitted a supplemental brief and more evidence, including:
(1) Tillery’s affidavit; (2) copies of emails; and (3) deposition transcripts of TSA
supervisors at the Tucson airport who handled Tillery’s transfer request. Tillery’s
brief argued that DHS reconsidered her transfer request and ultimately denied it on
May 29, 2006, making her July 11, 2006 telephone contact with the EEO office
timely.
E. District Court’s Dismissal Order
On March 10, 2010, the district court granted DHS’s motion to dismiss.
Again citing Bryant v. Rich, the district court reiterated that it could consider the
parties’ evidence as to exhaustion of administrative remedies on a motion to
dismiss and was not required to convert the motion to a summary judgment
motion. The district court concluded that “whether Tillery timely initiated an
administrative review of her claim, or if not, whether the time should be tolled, do
not go to the merits. Therefore the Court will resolve these questions at this
stage.”
After reviewing the evidence, the district court found that: (1) Tillery first
contacted the EEO counselor on July 11, 2006 and complained that the April 24,
2006 transfer denial was retaliatory; (2) it was “highly unlikely that Tillery made
any initial contact with TSA’s [EEO office] other than the contact recorded on the
incoming-case spreadsheet” on July 11, 2006; (3) there was “no credible
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evidence” supporting Tillery’s claim in her “self-serving affidavit” that she had
attempted to call the EEO office three to four times a week over a 25 or 30 day
period or that her only way to contact the EEO office was by telephone.
Accordingly, the district court concluded that there was no basis to equitably toll
the 45-day limitation period.
The district court also concluded that Tillery’s May 30, 2006 letter to Pete
Garcia, sent within the 45-day period, did not satisfy the notification requirement
because Garcia was not connected to the EEO process and Tillery’s letter did not
express an intent to begin the EEO process. The district court further found that
Tillery never filed a formal complaint charging retaliatory termination. Thus, the
district court concluded that Tillery failed to exhaust administrative remedies as to
both her claim for retaliatory denial of her transfer request and her claim for
retaliatory termination. Tillery appealed.
II. DISCUSSION
On appeal, Tillery does not challenge the merits of the district court’s ruling
that she failed to exhaust administrative remedies. Rather, Tillery argues only
that, in ruling on DHS’s motion to dismiss, the district court erred in resolving
factual disputes.
We start with our precedent in Bryant v. Rich, 530 F.3d 1368 (11th Cir.
2008), relied on by the district court. In Bryant, this Court concluded that the
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district court properly resolved factual disputes in granting a motion to dismiss
based on failure to exhaust administrative remedies. 530 F.3d at 1377.
Specifically, the Bryant Court explained that “[b]ecause exhaustion of
administrative remedies is a matter in abatement and not generally an adjudication
on the merits, an exhaustion defense . . . is not ordinarily the proper subject for a
summary judgment; instead, it should be raised in a motion to dismiss, or treated
as such if raised in a motion for summary judgment.” Id. at 1375-76 (quotation
marks omitted). The Bryant Court treated Rule 12(b) motions regarding
exhaustion of nonjudicial remedies as similar to motions regarding jurisdiction
and venue in that “[e]xhaustion of administrative remedies is a matter in
abatement, and ordinarily does not deal with the merits.” Id. at 1374 (quotation
marks and brackets omitted). In those types of Rule 12(b) motions,“it is proper for
a judge to consider facts outside of the pleadings and to resolve factual disputes so
long as the factual disputes do not decide the merits and the parties have sufficient
opportunity to develop a record.” Id. at 1376 (footnotes omitted).
Here, both prongs of Bryant are satisfied. First, the facts relating to whether
Tillery exhausted administrative remedies do not bear on the merits of her
retaliation claims. Second, Tillery clearly had sufficient opportunity to develop,
and did develop, a record. Accordingly, under Bryant, the district court did not err
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by acting as the factfinder as to when Tillery first contacted the EEO counselor
and whether she had made earlier unsuccessful attempts to do so.
We reject Tillery’s argument that Bryant is applicable only to motions to
dismiss under the Prison Litigation Reform Act’s (“PLRA”) exhaustion
requirement, 42 U.S.C. § 1997e(a). Although the source of the exhaustion
requirement in Bryant was the PLRA, Bryant relied upon general principles that:
(1) a matter in abatement, even if non-jurisdictional, such as exhaustion of
administrative remedies is appropriately raised in a Rule 12(b) motion to dismiss,
and (2) a district court can resolve a factual dispute in ruling on that Rule 12(b)
motion to dismiss so long as it does not adjudicate the merits of the claim and the
plaintiff has had an opportunity to develop the record. See id. at 1374-76.
Like the PLRA’s exhaustion requirement, exhausting administrative
remedies under Part 1614 of the Code of Federal Regulation is a prerequisite to a
federal employee’s filing an employment discrimination action under Title VII.
See Crawford v. Babbitt, 186 F.3d 1322, 1326 (11th Cir. 1999) (concluding that
exhausting administrative remedies is a jurisdictional prerequisite to filing Title
VII action). Thus, the general principles relied upon in Bryant apply equally to
DHS’s motion to dismiss Tillery’s Title VII retaliation claims on exhaustion
grounds.
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Tillery relies upon Stewart v. Booker T. Washington Insurance, in which
this Court reversed a district court’s decision that the plaintiff failed to file her
statutory charge of discrimination with the EEOC within 180 days of her
termination, as required by 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-5(e)(1). 232 F.3d 844, 846 (11th
Cir. 2000). The Stewart Court stressed that Title VII’s statutory filing period does
not begin to run until the employee receives “unequivocal notice of the adverse
employment decision.” Id. at 849 (quotation marks omitted). The Stewart Court
first concluded that the May 1997 statements of the defendant employer’s
president, Kirkwood Balton, to all employees that the company’s primary assets
were being sold and that the company would “try to hire them, or . . . pay them
four months’ severance pay” were not sufficient to start the time clock running on
the 180-day statutory period. Id. (omission in original). We pointed out that
although Balton’s statements gave the plaintiff employee reason “to suspect that
she might be terminated,” this was not a statement that plaintiff was “actually
being terminated.” Id. We also pointed out that plaintiff had filed an
uncontradicted affidavit stating that she was never told she was terminated until
November 1997. Id.
The Stewart Court concluded that the district court erred in holding Balton’s
statements were sufficient to start the 180-day period and in disregarding the
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plaintiff’s affidavit testimony that she was never told she was terminated until
November 1997. Id. at 849-50. The district court in Stewart had converted a
motion to dismiss into a motion for summary judgment and had applied the Rule
56 summary judgment standard. Id. at 848. This Court reviewed the district
court’s decision under only the Rule 56 standard. Id. The Stewart Court stated
that it must accept the plaintiff’s affidavit as true in the Rule 56(c) summary
judgment context and that her affidavit created a factual issue of when she was
notified of her termination. Id. at 850. The Stewart Court did not mention
“exhaustion of administrative remedies” at all or whether exhaustion is properly
raised and resolved under Rule 12(b). For this reason, Stewart did not address the
Rule 12(b)-exhaustion issue presented in Bryant and in this case too. Stewart does
not require us to reverse the district court here.
In sum, in ruling on DHS’s Rule 12(b) motion to dismiss based solely on
exhaustion of administrative remedies and not on the merits of Tillery’s claims,
the district court did not err in considering evidence outside the pleadings or in
making fact findings as to exhaustion. Accordingly, we affirm the district court’s
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order dismissing Tillery’s complaint for failure to exhaust administrative remedies
with her EEO counselor before filing suit.3
AFFIRMED.
3
Because Tillery did not appeal the merits of the district court’s ruling that she failed to
exhaust administrative remedies, she has abandoned this issue. See Marek v. Singletary, 62 F.3d
1295, 1298 n.2 (11th Cir. 1995).
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