Jean Montgomery v. Patrick Donahoe , 602 F. App'x 638 ( 2015 )


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  •                          NONPRECEDENTIAL DISPOSITION
    To be cited only in accordance with Fed. R. App. P. 32.1
    United States Court of Appeals
    For the Seventh Circuit
    Chicago, Illinois 60604
    Submitted February 23, 2015*
    Decided February 25, 2015
    Before
    DIANE P. WOOD, Chief Judge
    ILANA DIAMOND ROVNER, Circuit Judge
    DIANE S. SYKES, Circuit Judge
    No. 14-3191
    JEAN A. MONTGOMERY,                               Appeal from the United States District
    Plaintiff-Appellant,                         Court for the Northern District of
    Illinois, Eastern Division.
    v.
    No. 13 C 7137
    PATRICK R. DONAHOE, Postmaster
    General, United States Postal Service,            James B. Zagel,
    Defendant-Appellee.                         Judge.
    ORDER
    Jean Montgomery was fired from her job at the United States Postal Service. She
    unsuccessfully challenged her discharge before the Merit Systems Protection Board and
    the Federal Circuit. She also brought this action in the district court. Her complaint states
    only one claim: that several months before she was fired the Postal Service had engaged
    in age discrimination by issuing her a written warning and then suspending her without
    *After examining the briefs and record, we have concluded that oral argument is
    unnecessary. Thus the appeal is submitted on the briefs and record. See FED. R. APP. P.
    34(a)(2)(C).
    No. 14-3191                                                                             Page 2
    pay. The district court granted the Postal Service's motion to dismiss, principally
    reasoning that Montgomery had not exhausted her administrative remedies and,
    moreover, that she appeared to be litigating substantially the same matter in two forums.
    Montgomery appeals, focusing only on the first of these reasons. We affirm the
    judgment.
    Montgomery was a customer services manager at the Englewood neighborhood
    post office in Chicago, Illinois. In October 2011 she received a written warning citing
    several instances of misconduct, including not reporting an employee’s accident.
    Montgomery could have been suspended for 7 days. The next month she was put on
    unpaid suspension for “disrupting day-to-day postal operations,” disregarding Postal
    Service safety policies and procedures, and “untimely reporting accidents at Englewood
    Station.” This suspension was triggered by an “Emergency Placement in Off-Duty
    Status,” see U.S. POSTAL SERVICE, EMPLOYEE AND LABOR RELATIONS MANUAL § 651.4, and
    later recast as a change in status to leave without pay. The parties refer to the suspension
    as an emergency placement, as do we. In April 2012 the Postal Service sent Montgomery
    a “Notice of Proposed Removal” listing similar misconduct.
    Montgomery, who is now 66 years old, first contacted an Equal Employment
    Opportunity counselor at the Postal Service in May 2012. The counselor documented
    that Montgomery had complained about receiving the written warning, the “Emergency
    Placement in Off-Duty Status,” and the notice of proposed removal.1 Montgomery
    attributed all of these actions to age discrimination and retaliation for prior EEO activity.
    She then submitted a formal EEO complaint that mentions only the notice of proposed
    removal and accuses her supervisor of acting in bad faith during an unsuccessful
    attempt to mediate this threat of discharge. The formal EEO complaint says nothing
    1 The Postal Service asserts in its appellate brief that this initial contact with an
    EEO counselor was untimely as to the written warning and emergency placement in
    off-duty status because these allegedly discriminatory actions occurred more than 45
    days earlier. See 29 C.F.R. § 1614.105(a)(1); see also Nat'l R.R. Passenger Corp. v. Morgan,
    
    536 U.S. 101
    , 113 (2002) (explaining that “discrete discriminatory acts are not actionable
    if time barred, even when they are related to acts alleged in timely filed charges”). But
    the Postal Service waived this affirmative defense by not raising it in the district court.
    See Castro v. Chi. Hous. Auth., 
    360 F.3d 721
    , 735 (7th Cir. 2004); Perry v. Sullivan, 
    207 F.3d 379
    , 382 (7th Cir. 2000).
    No. 14-3191                                                                          Page 3
    about the emergency placement in off-duty status and only mentions the earlier written
    warning in demanding that Human Resources apologize for mishandling
    Montgomery’s objections to that warning. In August 2012, one week after submitting her
    formal complaint, Montgomery received a “Letter of Decision” terminating her
    employment with the Postal Service. Afterward she did not amend her formal complaint
    to protest her discharge.
    The Postal Service rejected Montgomery’s formal EEO complaint with the
    explanation that a notice of proposed removal is not a challengeable adverse action and
    that comments made during mediation are privileged. The Postal Service noted that
    Montgomery had included allegations about the written warning and emergency
    placement when she contacted the EEO counselor. But those allegations had been
    abandoned, the Postal Service asserted, when Montgomery omitted them from her
    formal complaint. In September 2012 Montgomery appealed this decision to the Equal
    Employment Opportunity Commission.
    About three weeks later, but before the EEOC had reached a decision,
    Montgomery challenged her discharge before the Merit Systems Protection Board. By
    then Montgomery was represented by counsel, but she did not raise any claim of
    discrimination before the MSPB. In February 2013 an administrative judge upheld her
    termination as lawful, and at that point Montgomery, now pro se, asked the full MSPB to
    review the administrative judge’s decision. In her petition to the MSPB, Montgomery
    characterized her emergency placement in off-duty status as evidence of wrongdoing by
    the Postal Service. And though she did not explicitly assert age discrimination, she did
    claim that she had suffered retaliation after contacting the Office of Inspector General for
    the Postal Service and reporting her supervisors’ “illegal activities,” including falsifying
    records and nepotism.
    Meanwhile, in July 2013 the EEOC upheld the Postal Service’s rejection of
    Montgomery’s formal EEO complaint. The EEOC agreed with the Postal Service that
    Montgomery’s formal complaint includes only allegations about the notice of proposed
    removal and the employer’s purported failure to engage in good-faith discussion about
    that notice. And like the Postal Service, the EEOC concluded that these allegations do not
    state an actionable claim. Montgomery then filed this action in federal district court. In
    her October 2013 complaint, she claims that the Postal Service discriminated against her
    in violation of the Age Discrimination in Employment Act. See 29 U.S.C. § 633a. She also
    claims that she was retaliated against for contacting the Inspector General, in violation of
    No. 14-3191                                                                            Page 4
    the Whistleblower Protection Act. See 5 U.S.C. § 1221. Montgomery attached 70 pages of
    documents to her complaint, including the EEOC’s decision.
    Less than a month later the MSPB upheld the administrative judge’s decision. The
    MSPB commented that to the extent Montgomery’s “evidence implicates potential
    affirmative defenses”—which would include claims of age discrimination and
    retaliation for contacting an agency’s Inspector General, see 5 U.S.C. § 2302(b)(1)(B),
    (b)(8)(B)—those defenses came too late because Montgomery had not mentioned them
    before the administrative judge. She unsuccessfully appealed the MSPB’s decision to the
    Federal Circuit, which, in June 2014, similarly noted that it would not consider defenses
    that Montgomery never presented to the administrative judge. See Montgomery v. U.S.
    Postal Serv., 566 F. App’x 968, 971 (Fed. Cir. 2014).
    Back in the district court (and before the Federal Circuit had disposed of
    Montgomery’s appeal), the Postal Service moved to dismiss Montgomery’s federal
    complaint. The Postal Service did not discuss Montgomery’s claim under the
    Whistleblower Protection Act, presumably because her recourse for that alleged
    violation was exclusively a complaint to the MSPB, not a suit in district court.
    See 5 U.S.C. § 1221(e)(1); Richards v. Kiernan, 
    461 F.3d 880
    , 885–86 (7th Cir. 2006); Stella v.
    Mineta, 
    284 F.3d 135
    , 142 (D.C. Cir. 2002); Grisham v. United States, 
    103 F.3d 24
    , 27 (5th Cir.
    1997). On Montgomery’s claim of age discrimination, the Postal Service argued that her
    only exhausted claim—as evidenced by the EEOC’s decision—relates to the notice of
    proposed removal. And, the Postal Service continued, the EEOC had correctly
    concluded that the notice to Montgomery was not an adverse employment action that
    could support her claim of age discrimination. The Postal Service further argued that
    Montgomery could not challenge her discharge because she already was doing that in
    the Federal Circuit. Montgomery responded that this action in the district court is not
    about the notice of proposed removal, as the Postal Service asserted, or the discharge
    itself. Her claim of age discrimination, she clarified, concerns the Postal Service’s written
    warning and emergency placement in off-duty status, which occurred months before she
    received the notice of proposed termination. The Postal Service countered that
    Montgomery had not administratively exhausted her challenges to the written warning
    and emergency placement and also argued again that she was trying to litigate the same
    issues in two forums simultaneously. The district court agreed with the Postal Service on
    both grounds, granted the motion to dismiss (also forgoing a discussion of the
    whistleblowing claim), and terminated the case. The court’s reasons are set out in its
    initial decision dismissing the action as supplemented by an order denying
    Montgomery’s motion for reconsideration.
    No. 14-3191                                                                            Page 5
    On appeal Montgomery disputes the district court’s conclusion that she never
    exhausted her administrative remedies concerning the claim that age discrimination was
    the real reason she received the written warning and was placed in emergency off-duty
    status before being fired. (Montgomery also discusses her whistleblower claim, but as
    we have noted, that claim was not properly before the district court.) A written warning
    is not an adverse action, see Griffin v. Potter, 
    356 F.3d 824
    , 829 (7th Cir. 2004), so we are
    concerned only with the emergency placement.
    But if we accept Montgomery’s contention, then she is precluded from bringing
    her discrimination suit in federal district court. If Montgomery’s formal EEO complaint
    is read to include a protest of the emergency placement in off-duty status, then she
    would have filed what is known as a “mixed case complaint,” i.e., a complaint asserting
    discrimination arising from an employment action appealable to the MSPB. See 29 C.F.R.
    § 1614.302(a)(1), (b). The MSPB has jurisdiction, as relevant here, over a termination of
    employment or an unpaid suspension that lasts more than 14 days. See 5 U.S.C.
    § 7512(1), (2). Montgomery was first suspended on November 15, 2011, when she was
    placed on emergency off-duty status, which the Postal Service’s Employee Manual says
    is without pay. See U.S. POSTAL SERVICE, EMPLOYEE AND LABOR RELATIONS MANUAL
    § 651.4. And Montgomery says that her employment status was changed to leave
    without pay by May 2012. Because she was not discharged for another three months, the
    emergency placement in off-duty status was an action appealable to the MSPB because it
    was an unpaid suspension lasting more than 14 days. See Jennings v. Merit Sys. Prot. Bd.,
    
    59 F.3d 159
    , 160–61 (Fed. Cir. 1995) (discussing emergency placement in off-duty status
    of postal employee as a suspension that would invoke MSPB jurisdiction if sufficiently
    lengthy).
    When a federal employee first files a mixed case complaint with her employer
    (instead of with the MSPB), she has elected to proceed exclusively in that forum.
    See 29 C.F.R. § 1614.302(b). If the employer renders an adverse decision, the employee
    has two options: She can proceed to the MSPB with a “mixed case appeal” or file a
    discrimination suit in the district court. See 5 U.S.C. § 7702(a)(2), (3); 5 C.F.R.
    § 1201.154(b); 29 C.F.R. § 1614.302(d)(3); Kloeckner v. Solis, 
    133 S. Ct. 596
    , 601 (2012). The
    employee would not have the option, however, of proceeding to the EEOC at this stage.
    See 29 C.F.R. § 1614.302(d)(3). Only if she has taken her mixed case appeal to the MSPB
    and lost can the employee go to the EEOC, see 5 U.S.C. § 7702(b)(1); 5 C.F.R.
    § 1201.161(a); 29 C.F.R. § 1614.303(a), though she instead could bypass the EEOC and
    either file a suit in the district court—encompassing both discrimination claims and the
    action appealable to the MSPB—or abandon any claim of discrimination and ask the
    No. 14-3191                                                                             Page 6
    Federal Circuit to review only the employment action that gave the MSPB jurisdiction.
    See 5 U.S.C. §§ 7702(a)(3), 7703; 5 C.F.R. § 1201.157; 
    Kloeckner, 133 S. Ct. at 604
    ; Pueschel v.
    Peters, 
    577 F.3d 558
    , 563–64 (4th Cir. 2009); Chappell v. Chao, 
    388 F.3d 1373
    , 1378 (11th Cir.
    2004). Montgomery instead progressed to the EEOC and the MSPB simultaneously after
    the Postal Service had issued its adverse decision on her formal complaint. If we accept
    that this was a mixed case, which we must for Montgomery’s argument on appeal to
    hold, then she should not have been before the EEOC. She should have been before only
    the MSPB.
    And in front of the MSPB, Montgomery did not bring any discrimination claim.
    She effectively tried to split her theories, arguing unlawful discrimination through one
    administrative process and the merits of the adverse employment actions taken against
    her through another. This course of action was improper. By designing procedures for
    the handling of mixed cases and explicitly requiring the MSPB to decide both appealable
    employment actions and allegations of discrimination when presented with a mixed
    case appeal, see 5 U.S.C. § 7702(a)(1), Congress recognized that these are “two sides of
    the same question and must be considered together.” See Williams v. Dep't of Army, 
    715 F.2d 1485
    , 1490 (Fed. Cir. 1983) (quoting legislative history). Because Montgomery did
    not raise her discrimination claim before the MSPB, she abandoned it and cannot now
    try to raise it in federal district court. See McAdams v. Reno, 
    64 F.3d 1137
    , 1142–43 (8th Cir.
    1995) (concluding that discrimination claims had been abandoned because they were not
    raised during prior action in front of MSPB but arose from facts “overlapping” those
    presented to MSPB).
    Montgomery now has challenged in several forums the Postal Service's actions
    leading to her dismissal. We caution her that our decision in this appeal closes the book
    on the matter.
    AFFIRMED.