Williams v. Brennan

Court: District Court, District of Columbia
Date filed: 2018-08-15
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Combined Opinion
                             UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
                             FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA


 PAULETTE A. WILLIAMS,

                Plaintiff,

        v.
                                                          Civil Action No. 17-1285 (RDM)
 MEGAN J. BRENNAN, Postmaster General,
 et al.,

                Defendants.



                                 MEMORANDUM OPINION

       Plaintiff Paulette Williams, proceeding pro se, brought this action against sixteen

defendants alleging a host of claims relating to her tenure as an employee of the United States

Postal Service. In a previous memorandum opinion and order, the Court dismissed almost all of

Williams’s claims but left intact her Rehabilitation Act claims against Meghan Brennan, in her

official capacity as Postmaster General of the United States. See Williams v. Brennan, 285 F.

Supp. 3d 1, 6 (D.D.C. 2017) (“Williams I”). The Postal Service has now moved to dismiss or, in

the alternative, for summary judgment. Dkt. 41. Because Williams has failed to exhaust her

administrative remedies, the Court will GRANT the Postal Service’s motion to dismiss.

                                      I. BACKGROUND

A.     Williams’s Remaining Claims

       Paulette Williams, an employee of the Postal Service, filed this action in June 2017. Dkt.

1. The Court dismissed her initial complaint for failure to comply with the pleading

requirements of Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 8(a). Dkt. 4. Williams then moved for

reconsideration and to reopen the case, and, at the same time, she filed an amended complaint.


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Dkt. 6; Dkt. 7. After the Court granted her motion and reopened the case, Dkt. 9, fifteen of the

defendants moved to dismiss on various grounds, Dkt. 21; Dkt. 29. There is no evidence that the

remaining defendant was ever served. Williams I, 285 F. Supp. 3d at 4 n.3. The Court granted

one of those motions and sua sponte dismissed the remaining claims, with the exception of

Williams’s Rehabilitation Act claims against the Postal Service. Id. at 1–9. Although not a

picture of clarity, those claims appear to have four components:

       First, Williams alleges that Tony Johnson, the Postmaster for Fort Belvoir, Virginia,

denied her November 2015 request that the Post Office accommodate her physical disability.

Dkt. 7 at 2 (Am. Compl. ¶ 1). Then, when Williams was ready to return to work, Johnson denied

her request to do so, even though her doctor had “lift[ed] all restrictions” on her ability to work.

Id. (Am. Compl. ¶ 2). And, when Williams had returned to work about two months later,

Johnson “creat[ed] a hostile work environment” by making “crude remarks . . . pertaining to

[her] disability” and her “homelessness.” Id. (Am. Compl. ¶ 3).

       Second, Williams avers that Preston Phillips, the manager of the Diamond Farms Post

Office in Gaithersburg, Maryland, retaliated against her in February 2016 due to her “pending

grievance” pertaining to the events occurring at the Fort Belvoir Post Office. Id. at 3 (Am.

Compl. ¶ 4). Over a year later, according to Williams, Phillips denied her April 2017 request

that the Post Office accommodate her “mental health issues.” Id. (Am. Compl. ¶ 5).

       Third, Williams alleges that in June 2017, Patrice Shaw, the Officer in Charge of the

Gaithersburg, Maryland Post Office, threatened to “expos[e] her . . . personal business”—which

the Court understands to refer to her disabilities—unless she met with Shaw “without a steward

present.” Id. (Am. Compl. ¶ 6). According to the amended complaint, Shaw again “victimized”

and “harass[ed]” Williams in July 2017, “when [Shaw] had the floor supervisor . . . serve



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[Williams] with a memo[] stating that [Williams’s] job would be . . . abolished.” Id. (Am.

Compl. ¶ 8).

       Fourth, Williams avers that from February 2017 to the present, the Postal Service has

denied her requests to transfer to other positions and her requests for promotion in retaliation for

her “intent to bring civil litigation” against the Postal Service, id. (Am. Compl. ¶ 7), and, finally,

laid her off on July 3, 2017, “due to [her] disability,” id. (Am. Compl. ¶ 9). Although Williams

was told that this layoff was “expected to last” only two weeks, by the time she filed her

amended complaint almost a month later, she had not yet been reinstated. Id. (Am. Compl. ¶ 9).

B.     Administrative Proceedings

       On December 3, 2015, Williams filed an administrative Equal Employment Opportunity

(“EEO”) complaint with the Postal Service. See Dkt. 1-4 at 4. Although the parties have not

provided the Court with a copy of that administrative complaint, the Court assumes for present

purposes that it challenged the Postal Service’s November 30, 2015 decision declining to

accommodate Williams’s physical disability. Indeed, that is the only conduct that Williams now

challenges that preceded the December 3, 2015 administrative complaint, Dkt. 7 at 2, and a later

administrative notice confirms that Williams, in fact, filed an administrative complaint

challenging the November 30, 2015 decision, Dkt. 41-7 at 4.

       A week after filing that administrative complaint, Williams’s union, the American Postal

Workers’ Union (“APWU”), filed a grievance on her behalf that raised the same substantive

complaint, although in the context of a labor-management dispute. Dkt. 41-3. That grievance,

filed on December 10, 2015, alleged that Williams “was denied” the opportunity to work “after

requesting reasonable accommodations due to her work limitations and permanent medical




                                                  3
condition,” and, in particular, that Johnson informed her that “she would no longer be scheduled

to work due to her work restrictions.” Id. at 1.

       On February 4, 2016, Williams withdrew her EEO complaint, prior to issuance of a

decision by the EEO Office and prior to expiration of the 180-day period of time for the EEO

Office to act on the complaint. In a letter to the Postmaster General attached to Williams’s initial

complaint in this matter, she explains that she withdrew her EEO complaint “because Dana

Claybrooks,” the Postal Service’s EEO counselor, “convinced” her that her union grievance

process “would help [her] the same way, if not better, than what [Claybrooks] could, considering

[Williams’s union grievance] was already up for arbitration.”1 Dkt. 1-2 at 4.

       Over ten months later, on April 20, 2017, the union and the Postal Service reached a

settlement of Williams’s grievance. Dkt. 41-4 at 2. Williams was awarded a cash payment to

cover her lost wages for her “denial of light duty [work] from December 15, 2015 until she

returned to work on February 1, 2016.” Id. Although this award covers a period of time after

she filed her administrative complaint (on December 3, 2015) and after the union initiated the

grievance process (on December 10, 2015), it appears that the Postal Service’s decision to

restrict her ability to work during that period of time was directly related to Williams’s earlier

request for an accommodation.

       Unhappy with the resolution of her union grievance, Williams took a step toward re-

initiating the EEO process on May 15, 2017, by submitting Postal Service Form 2564-A. Dkt.


1
   Because Williams is proceeding pro se, the Court has reviewed her various submissions,
including attachments, for evidence or information that might support her claim. See Crawford
v. Duke, 867 F.3d 103, 108 (D.C. Cir. 2017) (“We generally ‘permit[ ] courts to consider
supplemental material filed by a pro se litigant in order to clarify the precise claims being urged’
in her complaint.”) (quoting Greenhill v. Spellings, 482 F.3d 569, 572 (D.C. Cir. 2007)
(collecting cases)).


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41-5. That form, captioned “Information for Pre-Complaint Counseling,” is not an EEO

complaint but, instead, merely initiates the counseling process. Id. at 1. The issues that

Williams raised, moreover, are only indirectly related to the claims she asserts in this case.

Rather than challenge the Postal Service’s failure to accommodate her disabilities, she

challenged the union grievance process, asserting that “[t]he union rep did not at all attempt to

represent [her] correctly.” Id. Consistent with that claim, she named the APWU Vice President

for Labor Relations as the “official[] who took the action which prompted” Williams “to seek

counseling,” and she listed the date the grievance was settled as the date “the incident or action

that prompted” her need for counseling took place. Id. at 1–2. There is no evidence that, prior to

filing this lawsuit, Williams ever filed an administrative complaint relating to the allegations

raised in her request for counseling.

       Ultimately, with the exception of the complaint that she filed and withdrew, Williams did

not file an administrative EEO complaint until August 9, 2017—several weeks after she filed this

lawsuit. See Dkt. 41-7. As reasonably construed by the Postal Service’s EEO Office, that

administrative complaint raised ten issues, including the November 30, 2015 decision not to

accommodate Williams’s disability; alleged “harassment regarding” her “shoes, pants, and

mobile devices;” and a variety of events occurring in 2017. Id. at 1–2. In September 2017, the

EEO Office accepted some of those claims for investigation but declined to accept three of

Williams’s claims. Id. at 3. Most significantly for present purposes, it declined to accept her

claim regarding the November 30, 2015 failure to accommodate on the ground that Williams had

raised that claim in a prior complaint and had voluntarily withdrawn that complaint. Id. at 4.




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                                           II. ANALYSIS

        The Postal Service moves to dismiss or, in the alternative, for summary judgment on

three grounds: (1) Williams has failed to exhaust her administrative remedies in a timely manner;

(2) her 2015 failure-to-accommodate claims are barred by the settlement of her grievance; and

(3) several of her other claims fail as a matter of law. Dkt. 41-1. In addition to these defenses,

the Court must, on its own, consider whether it has subject-matter jurisdiction. See Gonzalez v.

Thaler, 565 U.S. 134, 141 (2012). Because that inquiry must come first, see Steel Co. v. Citizens

for a Better Env’t, 523 U.S. 83, 94–95 (1998), and, in the present context, overlaps with the

Postal Service’s exhaustion defense, the Court begins—and ends—with exhaustion.

        Like many other discrimination statutes, “[t]he Rehabilitation Act requires individuals to

exhaust administrative remedies before they can file suit to enforce the Act’s protections.” Doak

v. Johnson, 798 F.3d 1096, 1099 (D.C. Cir. 2015). In some circumstances, the requirement is

jurisdictional and thus may not be excused based on futility or equitable considerations. See

Spinelli v. Goss, 446 F.3d 159, 162 (D.C. Cir. 2006). But, in other circumstances, it is non-

jurisdictional, Doak, 798 F.3d at 1103–05, and thus “subject to waiver, estoppel, and equitable

tolling,” Saltz v. Lehman, 672 F.2d 207, 208 (D.C. Cir. 1982). To the extent the requirement is

jurisdictional, the plaintiff bears the burden of alleging facts sufficient to establish that he or she

exhausted administrative remedies and bears the ultimate burden of proof. See DaimlerChrysler

Corp. v. Cuno, 547 U.S. 332, 342 n.3 (2006); Georgiades v. Martin-Trigona, 729 F.2d 831, 833

n.4 (D.C. Cir. 1984). In contrast, to the extent it is non-jurisdictional, the failure to exhaust

constitutes an affirmative defense, and thus the defendant must raise the defense and bears the

burden of proof. See Bowden v. United States, 106 F.3d 433, 437 (D.C. Cir. 1997).




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       Two D.C. Circuit precedents mark the bounds of jurisdictional and non-jurisdictional

exhaustion under the Rehabilitation Act. In the first, Spinelli v. Goss, the D.C. Circuit held on

interlocutory appeal that the district court should have dismissed the plaintiff’s “Rehabilitation

Act claim for lack of jurisdiction on the ground that he failed to exhaust his administrative

remedies.” 446 F.3d at 162. Applying Spinelli, a number of district court decisions held, in

categorical terms, that administrative exhaustion under the Rehabilitation Act is a jurisdictional

requirement. See, e.g., Dick v. Holder, 80 F. Supp. 3d 103, 110 & n.8 (D.D.C. 2015); Mahoney

v. Donovan, 824 F. Supp. 2d 49, 58 (D.D.C. 2011). In Doak v. Johnson, however, the D.C.

Circuit held that “Spinelli does not reach that far.” 798 F.3d at 1103. In Doak, unlike in Spinelli,

the plaintiff had filed an administrative claim; her misstep was that she had failed to initiate the

EEO counseling process within 45 days, as required by the Equal Employment Opportunity

Commission regulations. Id. at 1103 (plaintiff waited 78 days to contact EEO counselor).

Although the district court concluded that her misstep deprived the court of jurisdiction, the

Court of Appeals disagreed. Id. at 1103. As it explained: “In Spinelli, [the] court addressed the

jurisdictional consequence of a plaintiff’s wholesale failure to file an administrative decision at

all.” Id. Because the Rehabilitation Act provides a remedy only to employees who are

“aggrieved by the final disposition of [an administrative] complaint,” 29 U.S.C. § 794a(a)(1),

and because the plaintiff in Spinelli “never filed an administrative complaint,” the Spinelli court

held that there was “never any reviewable final administrative action” and thus the district court

was without jurisdiction. Id. at 1103–04. But, as the court emphasized in Doak, “[t]hat is all

Spinelli held.” Id. at 1104.

       In drawing this line, the Doak decision distinguished between statutory and

administrative exhaustion requirements. The statutory requirement under the Rehabilitation Act



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appears in a single clause: the remedies available to federal government employees under Title

VII, 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-16, are available under the Rehabilitation Act “to any employee . . .

aggrieved by the final disposition of [an administrative EEO] complaint or by the failure [of the

agency] to take final action on such complaint.” 29 U.S.C. § 794a(a)(1). Doak made clear that

Spinelli does not extend to “non-statutory step[s] preceding the formal agency exhaustion

required by statute” that were “created by EEOC regulation.” 798 F.3d at 1104. In particular,

under the regulations—but not under the Act itself—an aggrieved employee must initiate the

EEO counseling process within 45 days of the alleged incident. 29 C.F.R. § 1614.105(a). If the

informal counseling process is unsuccessful, the employee may then file a formal grievance,

which initiates the formal administrative process. 29 C.F.R. § 1614.106. The agency then has

180 days to provide the aggrieved party with a copy of the investigative file and to notify her that

she has a right to request a hearing or a final agency decision. 29 C.F.R. § 1614.108(f). After

180 days have passed, regardless of whether the agency has issued a report or rendered a

decision, the aggrieved party can file suit. 29 C.F.R. §§ 1614.108(g), 1614.407(b).

       Against this backdrop, the Court must determine whether Williams has exhausted her

administrative claims, whether any failure to exhaust is jurisdictional or non-jurisdictional, and

what consequences follow. The Court will first address Williams’s most recent claims and will

then turn to her 2015 claims.

A.     Williams’s 2016 and 2017 Claims

       Williams asserts several claims relating to conduct allegedly occurring in 2016 and 2017.

To start, her complaint alleges that she was harassed by Tony Johnson, the Postmaster for Fort

Belvoir, Virginia from February 2016, and that, beginning that same month, Preston Phillips, the

manager of the Gaithersburg, Maryland Post Office retaliated against her because of her pending



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grievance. Dkt. 7 at 2–3 (Am. Compl. ¶¶ 3–5). There is no evidence that Williams ever raised

either of these allegations in an administrative EEO complaint. She, obviously, could not have

raised either allegation in her 2015 administrative complaint, and her 2017 administrative

complaint does not refer to any events occurring in 2016. Dkt. 41-6; Dkt. 41-7. Because the

filing of an administrative complaint constitutes a jurisdictional prerequisite to suit under

Spinelli, and because Williams has not satisfied her burden of pleading—or showing—that she

filed an administrative complaint raising the 2016 events, the Court concludes that it must

dismiss those claims for lack of jurisdiction.

       In contrast, Williams has filed an administrative complaint regarding at least some of the

events alleged in her complaint occurring in 2017 and continuing “to [the] [p]resent,” Dkt. 7 at 4

(Am. Compl. ¶ 9), including, most notably, her claim that since June 2017 she has been “denied

reasonable accommodation,” Dkt. 41-7 at 2. The problem is that Williams’s administrative EEO

complaint was not filed until August 9, 2017—well after she commenced this action.2 Compare

Dkt. 41-6 at 1, with Dkt. 1 (Compl.). The requirement that an aggrieved party file an



2
  After this Court dismissed Williams’s initial complaint without prejudice on July 17, 2017, see
Dkt. 5, Williams filed an amended complaint and asked the Court to reopen her case, see Dkt. 6–
7. The Court did so on August 18, 2017, see Dkt. 9, which was several days after Williams filed
her official EEO complaint. The timing of her amended complaint does not change the Court’s
analysis, however. First, “the jurisdiction of the Court depends upon the state of things at the
time of the action brought.” Mollan v. Torrance, 22 U.S. 537, 539 (1824). Williams brought
this action on June 29, 2017, see Dkt. 1, and, if a party has “filed before the exhaustion
requirement . . . was satisfied,” then “th[e] jurisdictional defect cannot be cured by the filing of
a[] [later] amended complaint.” Edwards v. District of Columbia, 616 F. Supp. 2d 112, 117
(D.D.C. 2009). Second, even if the Court were to treat the operative date of this action as
August 18, 2017, the date on which Williams filed her amended complaint, Williams still would
not have exhausted her administrative remedies; she did not provide the agency with an
opportunity to investigate or default on her claims, and, therefore, there was no “final
disposition” or “failure to take final action” by the Postal Service prior to the time she filed her
amended complaint. 29 U.S.C. § 794a(a)(1); see also Doak, 798 F.3d at 1103.


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administrative EEO complaint is, as discussed above, jurisdictional, and a plaintiff may not cure

a misstep of this nature by filing an administrative complaint after bringing suit. To the contrary,

“[t]he existence of federal jurisdiction ordinarily depends on the facts as they exist when the

complaint is filed.” Newman-Green, Inc. v. Alfonzo-Larrain, 490 U.S. 826, 830 (1989). “The

fact that remedies are exhausted after the filing of the complaint does not cure the jurisdictional

defect of premature filing.” Adeogba v. Migliaccio, 266 F. Supp. 2d 142, 146 (D.D.C. 2003)

(exhaustion under the FTCA); see also Slate v. District of Columbia, 79 F. Supp. 3d 225, 233

(D.D.C. 2015) (“A plaintiff’s failure to exhaust [under the FTCA] cannot be remedied by

amending a premature complaint at a later date, after the requirements have been satisfied.”)

       That conclusion is supported by both the text and purpose of the Rehabilitation Act. As a

textual matter, the language that the D.C. Circuit relied upon in Spinelli, as further explicated in

Doak, turns on whether the employee has been “aggrieved by the final disposition of [her

administrative EEO] complaint.” 29 U.S.C. § 794a(a)(1). The requirement is, understandably,

framed in the past tense and, under the reasoning of Spinelli and Doak, confers jurisdiction on

the district court only after the plaintiff has been aggrieved by the agency’s disposition of her

complaint. That conclusion is also consistent with the purpose of the exhaustion requirement,

which exists “in order to give federal agencies an opportunity to handle matters internally

whenever possible and to ensure that the federal courts are burdened only when reasonably

necessary.” Brown v. Marsh, 777 F.2d 8, 14 (D.C. Cir. 1985). As the D.C. Circuit has

emphasized, “claims against a federal agency—such as [] Rehabilitation Act claims . . . —must

initially be brought before the employing agency itself.” Barkley v. U.S. Marshals Serv. ex rel.

Hylton, 766 F.3d 25, 34 (D.C. Cir. 2014). This requirement is “part and parcel of the

congressional design to vest in the federal agencies and officials engaged in hiring and



                                                 10
promoting personnel ‘primary responsibility’ for maintaining non-discrimination in

employment.” Kizas v. Webster, 707 F.2d 524, 543–44 (D.C. Cir. 1983).

       The Court, accordingly, concludes that it must also dismiss Williams’s 2017 (and post-

2017 claims) for lack of jurisdiction.

B.     Williams’s 2015 Claims

       This, then, leaves only Williams’s allegations involving conduct occurring in 2015.

Williams asserts that the Postal Service discriminated against her based on her disability twice

during this period: First, on November 30, 2015, the Postal Service allegedly denied her request

for a reasonable accommodation of her “physical disability.” Dkt. 7 at 2 (Am. Compl. ¶ 1).

Second, on December 15, 2015, the Postal Service did not allow her to return to work even after

she had her “physician . . . lift all [work] restrictions” that she had previously “requested during

[an earlier] reasonable accommodation process.” Id. (Am. Compl. ¶ 2). The Court will consider

each of these allegations in turn.

       1.      November 30, 2015 Failure to Accommodate Williams’s Disability

       Williams’s allegations relating to the Postal Service’s alleged failure to accommodate her

physical disability in November 2015 stands in a different posture from her other claims because

she did file an EEO complaint on December 3, 2015, which raised this issue. See Dkt. 1-4 at 4;

see also Dkt. 41-7 at 3–4 (Aug. 2017 EEO Notice of Partial Acceptance/Partial Dismissal,

describing the allegations regarding November 30, 2015 as “identical to the claims raised in [her]

previous EEO Complaint”). The problem is that Williams withdrew that complaint on February

4, 2016, Dkt. 41-7 at 4, less than 180 days after it was filed and before the EEO Office took any

action on it. According to Williams, she did so because Dana Claybrooks, the Postal Service’s

EEO counselor, “convinced [her] that APWU would help [her] the same way, if not better, than



                                                 11
what [Claybrooks] could, considering [Williams] was already up for arbitration.” Dkt. 1-2 at 4.

The question, then, is whether Williams satisfied the jurisdictional exhaustion requirement by

filing an administrative complaint and, if so, whether she can then assert an equitable defense

(her reliance on Claybrooks) to overcome any non-jurisdictional hurdles. Because the Court

concludes that Williams failed to satisfy the jurisdictional exhaustion requirement, it does not

reach the question whether, as a matter of equity, her failure to follow through should be

overlooked.

       The relevant question is, once again, whether this issue is controlled by Spinelli; if it is,

the defect is jurisdictional. The only difference between the facts present here and those in

Spinelli is that the plaintiff in Spinelli “never filed an administrative complaint,” Doak, 798 F.3d

at 1104, while Williams filed, and then withdrew, her complaint. That difference is immaterial.

The relevant question under the Rehabilitation Act is whether the Williams was “aggrieved by

[a] final disposition of” her administrative complaint. 29 U.S.C. § 794a(a)(1). In Spinelli, the

plaintiff was not aggrieved by a final disposition because he “never filed an administrative

complaint.” 446 F.3d at 162. Here, Williams was not aggrieved by a final disposition because

she withdrew her complaint before the Postal Service could act on it. There is no sensible

reading of the statute that would permit the Court to distinguish between these circumstances. In

both Spinelli and this case, the employee did not obtain a final disposition (and the agency did

not simply fail “to take final action on [an administrative EEO] complaint”), and, in both cases,

that omission was a product of the employee’s own failure to pursue administrative relief.




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       Even if this Court were to conclude that Spinelli is at odds with prevailing doctrine for

distinguishing between jurisdictional and non-jurisdictional rules,3 Spinelli still requires this

result. To be sure, one might argue that Spinelli held only that the Rehabilitation Act conditions

jurisdiction on the filing of an administrative complaint. But that is not what Spinelli actually

says. The D.C. Circuit clearly set forth its holding: “jurisdiction depended on the ‘final

disposition of [an administrative] complaint,” and, because Spinelli never filed an administrative

complaint, “there was . . . no final disposition of one.” 446 F.3d at 162. In other words, the

district lacked jurisdiction over Spinelli’s claim because “there was no final disposition” of an

administrative charge. Any question that this was the holding in Spinelli, moreover, was put

firmly to rest in Doak. There, the Court of Appeals wrote that Spinelli “held that federal court

‘jurisdiction depended on the “final disposition of [an administrative] complaint.”’” 798 F.3d at

1103–04 (emphasis added) (quoting Spinelli, 446 F.3d at 162). This Court is bound by that

holding. See Rodriguez de Quijas v. Shearson/Am. Exp., Inc., 490 U.S. 477, 484 (1989).



3
  At least one other decision from this Court has observed that Spinelli stands in some tension
with the Supreme Court’s decision in Arbaugh v. Y & H Corp., 546 U.S. 500 (2006), which was
decided only months before Spinelli. See Dick v. Holder, 80 F. Supp. 3d at 110 n.8. As the Dick
decision explains, id., that tension arises from Arbaugh’s admonition that, unless
Congress “clearly states that a threshold limitation on a statute’s scope shall count as
jurisdictional,” courts should “treat [a] restriction as nonjurisdictional in character.” 546 U.S. at
515–16. And, although “the D.C. Circuit has not squarely addressed the issue of whether
equitable defenses are available” under Title VII “to plaintiffs who bypass the administrative
filing requirement altogether,” Dahlman v. Am. Ass’n of Retired Persons, 791 F. Supp. 68, 75
(D.D.C. 2011), it has, at times, declared without apparent qualification that “Title VII’s
exhaustion requirements are not jurisdictional,” Artis v. Bernanke, 630 F.3d 1031, 1034 n.4
(D.C. Cir. 2011); see also Menominee Indian Tribe of Wis. v. United States, 614 F.3d 519, 527
(D.C. Cir. 2010) (“[N]either Title VII nor the ADEA incorporates a jurisdictional exhaustion
requirement.”). Those cases are relevant here because the statutory exhaustion requirement in
the Rehabilitation Act, 29 U.S.C. § 794a(a)(1) (“employee . . . aggrieved by the final disposition
of such complaint”) is remarkably similar to the statutory exhaustion requirement found in Title
VII, 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-16(c) (“an employee . . . , if aggrieved by the final disposition of his
complaint”).

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Applying that rule here, Williams withdrew her administrative complaint before the Postal

Service had an opportunity to issue a final disposition, and thus this Court lacks jurisdiction to

consider the claim raised in that aborted administrative complaint.

       2.      December 15, 2015 Refusal to Permit Williams to Return to Work

       Williams’s final claim alleges that the Postal Service refused to allow her to return to

work on and after December 15, 2015, even though her doctor had lifted “all restrictions” on her

ability to work. Dkt. 7 at 2 (Am. Compl. ¶ 2). Because this claim did not arise until after

Williams filed her December 3, 2015 EEO complaint, the Court can safely assume that it was not

included in that complaint. Moreover, even if it was added by way of amendment—and there is

no evidence that it was—it would face the same jurisdictional hurdle discussed above. Nor does

the fact that Williams included the claim in her August 9, 2017 EEO complaint provide the Court

with jurisdiction, at least with respect to her pending complaint. As explained above, the Court

must have jurisdiction at the time the plaintiff brings suit, and a subsequently filed administrative

complaint is insufficient to confer jurisdiction over a claim that was absent at the time suit was

brought. In those circumstances, the plaintiff’s remedy, if any, lies in exhausting her

administrative rights and then commencing a new suit. Such a suit may face other exhaustion

hurdles, but (presumably) not jurisdictional ones.

       The Court, accordingly, concludes that Williams failed to satisfy the jurisdictional

exhaustion requirements before bringing suit on her December 15, 2015 claim and that, as a

result, that claim must also be dismissed for lack of jurisdiction.




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                                      CONCLUSION

       For the foregoing reasons, the Court will GRANT Defendant’s motion to dismiss, Dkt.

41, and will DISMISS this action.

       A separate Order will issue.



                                                  /s/ Randolph D. Moss
                                                  RANDOLPH D. MOSS
                                                  United States District Judge

Date: August 15, 2018




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