94-000070 Gloria Wright vs. Hca Central Florida Regional Hospital
 Status: Closed
Recommended Order on Wednesday, July 27, 1994.


View Dockets  
Summary: Petitioner failed to file petiton within 35 days of notice; claim barred; excusable neglect not shown.

1STATE OF FLORIDA

4DIVISION OF ADMINISTRATIVE HEARINGS

8GLORIA A. WRIGHT, )

12)

13Petitioner, )

15)

16vs. ) CASE NO. 94-0070

21)

22HCA CENTRAL FLORIDA REGIONAL )

27HOSPITAL, INC., )

30)

31Respondent. )

33_________________________________)

34RECOMMENDED ORDER OF DISMISSAL

38Pursuant to notice, the above-styled matter was heard before the Division

49of Administrative Hearings by its duly designated Hearing Officer, Daniel M.

60Kilbride, on June 22, 1994 in Orlando, Florida. The following appearances were

72entered:

73APPEARANCES

74For Petitioner: Steve Prince, Qualified Representative

80o/b/o Gloria Wright

83111 Hughes Avenue

86Sanford, Florida 32771

89For Respondent: Elizabeth McArthur, Esquire

94Robert Hinkle, Esquire

97Aurell Radey Hinkle Thomas & Beranek

103Suite 1000, 101 North Monroe Street

109Tallahassee, Florida 32302

112STATEMENT OF THE ISSUES

116Whether the Petition for Relief from an unlawful employment practice was

127timely filed with the Florida Commission on Human Relations.

136Whether the Division of Administrative Hearings has jurisdiction to conduct

146a formal hearing under the provisions of Section 120.57(1), Florida Statutes, if

158the Petition was not timely filed.

164PRELIMINARY STATEMENT

166On March 10, 1993, Petitioner filed a complaint with the Florida Commission

178on Human Relations charging Respondent with committing an unlawful employment

188practice. The Commission conducted an investigation and issued a No Cause

199determination. The parties were notified of the Commission's action by letter,

210dated August 24, 1993. On September 30, 1993, the FCHR Executive Director

222issued a Notice of Dismissal, for the reason that a Petition for Relief had not

237been filed. On October 13, 1993, Petitioner filed a Petition. On November 18,

2501993, the FCHR issued an Order to Show Cause why the Petition should not be

265dismissed. Petitioner responded to the Order by transmitting a package to the

277Commission on November 30, 1993. The Commission did not rule on the show cause

291order, but transmitted to the Division of Administrative Hearings a Petition for

303Relief, together with all other "pleadings and jurisdictional papers heretofore

313filed in this proceeding". This matter was assigned to the undersigned Hearing

326Officer and a hearing was set on the threshold issue of timeliness and

339jurisdiction. Following a continuance granted at the request of the parties,

350this matter was heard on the threshold issues.

358At the hearing, Petitioner was present and requested that she be

369represented by Steve Prince, as her Qualified Representative. Mr. Prince

379testified that he had extensive experience as a paralegal and teacher of

391paralegals in the area of employment discrimination and administrative and civil

402litigation, and that he was familiar with all applicable substantive and

413procedural statutes and rules. The hearing officer authorized him to act as the

426Qualified Representative of the Petitioner at the hearing pursuant to Rule 60Q-

4382.008, Florida Administrative Code. Petitioner testified in her own behalf and

449offered no exhibits in evidence. Respondent offered two exhibits in evidence

460and did not call any witnesses to testify. The hearing was recorded, but a

474transcript was not prepared. Petitioner did not filed proposed findings of fact

486or conclusions of law. Respondent filed its proposals on June 27, 1994. My

499rulings on Respondent's proposals are contained in the Appendix attached hereto.

510Based upon all of the evidence, the following findings of fact are

522determined:

523FINDINGS OF FACT

5261. On December 30, 1993, the Florida Commission on Human Relations (FCHR)

538transmitted to the Division of Administrative Hearings (DOAH) a Petition for

549Relief from an Unlawful Employment Practice, together with all other "pleadings

560and jurisdictional papers heretofore filed in this proceeding."

5682. The pleadings and papers transmitted by FCHR show that Petitioner filed

580a complaint with FCHR on March 10, 1993, charging an unlawful employment

592practice by Respondent in connection with a denial of a raise in salary.

6053. On August 24, 1993, the FCHR concluded its investigation into the

617matter and issued its determination of No Cause to believe that an unlawful

630employment practice has occurred.

6344. Notice of that determination was served on Petitioner and Respondent on

646August 24, 1993 by regular mail.

6525. The Notice of Determination of No Cause served on Petitioner included

664the following statement:

667The parties are advised that the Complainant

674may request that a formal, post-investigative

680proceeding be conducted. The Request for

686Hearing/Petition for Relief must be filed

692within 30 days of the date of mailing of this

702Notice and should be in compliance with the

710provisions of Rule 60Y-5.008 and Chapter

71660Y-4, Florida Administrative Code. A

721Petition for Relief form is enclosed. If you

729elect to file a Petition for Relief, it may

738be beneficial to seek legal counsel prior

745to filing the petition.

7496. Petitioner received the Notice of Determination.

7567. Petitioner understood that, under the FCHR rules cited in the Notice,

768the requirement for the petition to be "filed" meant that the petition had to

782actually be received by the FCHR.

7888. On September 30, 1993, 37 days after the Notice was served, the FCHR

802Executive Director issued a Notice of Dismissal, for the reason that no Petition

815for Relief had been filed.

8209. On October 13, 1993, Petitioner transmitted to the FCHR her Petition

832for Relief, requesting an administrative hearing. The petition was submitted on

843the form provided by the FCHR, and was accompanied by a transmittal letter from

857the Petitioner on her letterhead stationery that identified the enclosures. It

868was filed with the FCHR on October 18, 1993.

87710. After receiving the October transmittal, on November 18, 1993, the

888FCHR issued an Order to Show Cause, directing the Petitioner to provide reasons

901why the late-filed petition should not be dismissed.

90911. Petitioner responded to the show cause order by transmitting a package

921to the FCHR on November 30, 1993. It contained her response to the show cause

936order, a copy of the petition transmitted in October, and another original

948petition on a second form that Petitioner said was provided to her by the FCHR.

963This transmittal was also accompanied by a transmittal letter on Petitioner's

974letterhead stationery, describing the contents.

97912. The FCHR did not rule on the sufficiency of Petitioner's response, but

992rather transmitted the pleadings (including the show cause order and response)

1003to DOAH for further proceedings.

100813. At the same time of the transmittal to DOAH, FCHR also issued a notice

1023of the petition to Respondent advising it of the requirement to file an answer

1037to the Petition for Relief.

104214. CFRH timely filed its answer with affirmative defenses, including the

1053first affirmative defense that "the Petition for Relief is untimely."

106315. The Petitioner made two mailings of petitions: one mailing was made

1075to transmit one form petition that she had completed in October, 1993, and a

1089second mailing was made in November with a copy of the first form plus another

1104original form filled out by Petitioner.

111016. Petitioner also testified that she mailed another petition, without a

1121transmittal letter, on September 20, 1993.

112717. There was no evidence presented that a Petition was received by FCHR

1140in September 1993 or that the document was returned to Petitioner as undelivered

1153mail.

1154CONCLUSIONS OF LAW

115718. The Division of Administrative Hearings has jurisdiction over the

1167subject matter of this proceeding, and the parties thereto, pursuant to

1178subsection 120.57(1) and 760.11(7), Florida Statutes.

118419. The threshold issue in this matter is whether DOAH has jurisdiction to

1197proceed to the merits of this matter, or whether the proceeding must be

1210dismissed based on the untimeliness of the Petition for Relief and therefore the

1223claim is barred.

122620. Section 760.11, Florida Statutes addresses the administrative and

1235civil remedies that can be invoked by the Petitioner based on an assertion of an

1250unlawful employment practice. The first step is the filing of a complaint with

1263the FCHR, which investigates the complaint and renders an initial determination.

1274This procedure was followed in this case, and the FCHR issued its determination

1287of No Cause on August 24, 1993.

129421. Under the Florida Civil Rights Act of 1992, the Division of

1306Administrative Hearings is charged with the responsibility to conduct a formal

1317hearing when the FCHR has issued a No Cause determination and the request for a

1332hearing has been timely filed. Section 760.11(7), Florida Statutes. Subsection

1342(7) describes the administrative remedy available after a no-cause

1351determination, as follows:

1354The aggrieved person may request an

1360administrative hearing under s. 120.57, but

1366any such request must be made within 35 days

1375of the date of determination of [no]

1382reasonable cause . . . If the aggrieved

1390person does not request an administrative

1396hearing within the 35 days, the claim will

1404be barred.

1406Section 760.11(7), Florida Statutes.

141022. The FCHR's rules similarly require a timely request for an

1421administrative hearing, by providing for the filing of a petition within 30 days

1434of service of a notice of determination of no cause, with 5 days time added for

1450service by mail. Rules 60Y-5.004(5), 60Y-5.008, and 60Y-4.007, Florida

1459Administrative Code.

146123. By rule, FCHR has made it clear that the requirement for "filing" of a

1476document as used in its rules is a requirement for "actual receipt of the

1490document by the Clerk of the Commission at its office." Rule 60Y-4.004(1),

1502Florida Administrative Code reads as follows: "Filing" or "file" with the

1513Commission, means actual receipt of a document by the Clerk of the Commission at

1527its office . . ." The procedural rules in Chapter 60Y-4, including this "filing

1541means actual receipt" rule, were cited to the Petitioner in the Notice of

1554Determination: No Cause, and were understood by her.

156224. The only exception in the FCHR rules that would allow a late-filed

1575petition is as follows:

1579For good cause shown, the Chairperson may

1586grant an extension of time to file the

1594Petition for Relief from an Unlawful

1600Employment Practice, provided the motion for

1606extension of time is filed within the 30-day

1614period prescribed by Rule 60Y-5.008(1).

1619Rule 60Y-5.008(2), Florida Administrative Code. Petitioner did not seek relief

1629from the filing deadline under this extension provision.

163725. Section 760.11(7), Florida Statutes, requires the timely submission of

1647a request for an administrative hearing, or else the claim is "barred". The

1661Petition for Relief was not timely filed, hence the Petitioner's claim must be

1674deemed barred.

167626. Petitioner has failed to establish excusable neglect, which might,

1686under certain circumstances, excuse a delinquent filing. See, e.g., Machules v.

1697Department of Administration, 523 So.2d 1132 (Fla. 1988). 1/

170627. In Machules, the Florida Supreme Court described the parameters of the

"1718equitable tolling" doctrine as follows:

1723Generally, the tolling doctrine has been

1729applied when the plaintiff has been misled or

1737lulled into inaction, has in some

1743extraordinary way been prevented from

1748asserting his rights, or has timely asserted

1755his rights mistakenly in the wrong forum.

1762523 So.2d at 1134.

176628. It is undisputed that the first petition to be actually received by

1779the FCHR, and thus filed within the meaning of its rules, was on October 18,

17941993, approximately 20 days past the statutory deadline.

180229. The only reason offered by Petitioner for her untimely-filed petition

1813is her claim that she mailed a petition on September 20, 1993 that was lost in

1829the mail. Petitioner argues that if that petition had not been lost in the mail

1844it would have been timely received by the FCHR. However, Petitioner's claim of

1857an earlier-mailed petition is rejected as not supported by the greater weight of

1870credible evidence. The claim is not substantiated by any documentary evidence

1881and is inconsistent with other testimony by the Petitioner. The fact that

1893documentary evidence supposedly exists but was not produced at the final hearing

1905adds to the lack of credibility of Petitioner's claim.

191430. Petitioner's claim of a September mailing is inconsistent with the

1925Petitioner's own testimony that she made only two mailings of petitions to the

1938FCHR. The testimony of a September 20 mailing is also inconsistent with the

1951practice followed by Petitioner with her other mailings. In all other

1962instances, the Petitioner used transmittal letters and retained copies of the

1973petitions. However, she was unable to produce tangible evidence of any mailing

1985in September.

198731. There was no evidence of any September mailing having ever been

1999received by the FCHR or having been returned to Petitioner as undelivered mail.

201232. Petitioner's written response to the FCHR show cause order failed to

2024identify the date on which an earlier petition was supposedly mailed. However,

2036at the hearing, Petitioner testified that a petition was mailed on September 20.

2049When asked how she could now recall the date of the September mailing,

2062Petitioner testified that she maintained a detailed log of her mailings. Yet

2074despite her understanding that the purpose of the hearing was for her to prove

2088why she did not timely file her petition, she did not produce the log that would

2104presumably provide documentation of a September mailing.

211133. Petitioner did not claim that she was lulled into inaction by anything

2124said or done by the FCHR or by Respondent CFRH, or that she was misled in any

2141fashion, or that she suffered from any misapprehension with respect to her

2153obligations under the FCHR rules for filing her petition. She did not testify

2166to any confusion regarding the deadline, regarding how to fill out the form, or

2180regarding where it was to be filed. Instead, she testified that she understood

2193the filing requirement and understood that it meant actual receipt by FCHR.

220534. In this case, there is no competent evidence from which to conclude

2218that the Petitioner timely asserted her rights, or was misled or lulled into

2231inaction, or otherwise prevented from asserting her rights. Instead, the

2241evidence shows that the Petitioner fully understood her obligation to file a

2253petition on time, and had no excuse for failing to do so.

2265RECOMMENDATION

2266Based on the foregoing findings of fact and conclusions of law, it is

2279RECOMMENDED that a Final Order be entered dismissing with prejudice the

2290Petition for Relief in DOAH Case No. 94-0070 and FCHR Case No. 93-3143, for

2304failure to timely file the Petition.

2310DONE AND ENTERED this 27th day of July, 1994, in Tallahassee, Leon County,

2323Florida.

2324_____________________________________

2325DANIEL M. KILBRIDE

2328Hearing Officer

2330Division of Administrative Hearings

2334The DeSoto Building

23371230 Apalachee Parkway

2340Tallahassee, Florida 32399-1550

2343(904)488-9675

2344Filed with the Clerk of the

2350Division of Administrative Hearings

2354this 27th day of July, 1994.

2360ENDNOTE

23611/ The Machules tolling doctrine may be inapplicable in any event, because its

2374application is dependent on a threshold finding that the statutory period for

2386administrative petitions is not jurisdictional in the sense that failure to

2397comply is an absolute bar to further proceedings but instead is subject to

2410equitable considerations such as tolling. Machules, 523 So.2d at 1133, n. 2.

2422Here, there is a statute expressly providing that failure to timely request an

2435administrative hearing does indeed result in the claim being "barred." Section

2446760.11(7), Florida Statutes.

2449APPENDIX

2450Petitioner did not submit proposed findings of fact.

2458Respondent's proposed findings of fact.

2463Accepted in substance: paragraphs 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 14

2479(in part).

2481Rejected as irrelevant or addressed in the Preliminary Statement in this

2492Order: paragraphs 12, 13, and 15.

2498Rejected as a comment on the evidence or argument: paragraph 14 (in part),

251116, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21.

2517COPIES FURNISHED:

2519Elizabeth McArthur, Esquire

2522Robert Hinkle, Esquire

2525Aurell Radey Hinkle Thomas &

2530Beranek

2531Suite 1000, 101 North Monroe Street

2537Tallahassee, Florida 32302

2540Mark E. Edwards, Esquire

2544Jeanne Casstevens Thomas

25472501 Park Plaza

2550Nashville, Tennessee 37203

2553Gloria Wright

2555111 Hughes Avenue

2558Sandford, Florida 32771

2561Sharon Moultry, Clerk

2564Human Relations Commission

2567325 John Knox Road

2571Building F, Suite 240

2575Tallahassee, Florida 32303-4149

2578Dana Baird

2580General Counsel

2582Human Relations Commission

2585325 John Knox Road

2589Building F, Suite 240

2593Tallahassee, Florida 32303-4149

2596NOTICE OF RIGHT TO SUBMIT EXCEPTIONS

2602All parties have the right to submit written exceptions to this Recommended

2614Order. All agencies allow each party at least 10 days in which to submit

2628written exceptions. Some agencies allow a larger period within which to submit

2640written exceptions. You should contact the agency that will issue the final

2652order in this case concerning agency rules on the deadline for filing exceptions

2665to this Recommended Order. Any exceptions to this Recommended Order should be

2677filed with the agency that will issue the final order in this case.

Select the PDF icon to view the document.
PDF
Date
Proceedings
Date: 01/27/1995
Proceedings: Final Order Dismissing Petition for Relief from Unlawful Employment Practice filed.
PDF:
Date: 01/26/1995
Proceedings: Agency Final Order
PDF:
Date: 01/26/1995
Proceedings: Recommended Order
Date: 08/12/1994
Proceedings: Exceptions to Recommended Order filed. (From Steve Prince)
PDF:
Date: 07/27/1994
Proceedings: Recommended Order of Dismissal sent out. CASE CLOSED. Hearing held 6-22-94.
Date: 06/27/1994
Proceedings: CFRH'S Proposed Recommended Order filed.
Date: 06/22/1994
Proceedings: CASE STATUS: Hearing Held.
Date: 05/31/1994
Proceedings: Confirmation letter to Court Reporter from Hearing Officer`s secretary re: hearing date sent out. (Court Reporter: Verbatim Reporters)
Date: 05/31/1994
Proceedings: Notice of Hearing sent out. (hearing set for 6/22/94; 1:00pm; Orlando)
Date: 05/10/1994
Proceedings: Letter to DMK from Mark E. Edwards (re: response to order) filed.
Date: 04/21/1994
Proceedings: Order Continuing Hearing sent out. (hearing date to be rescheduled at a later date; parties to file status report within 10 days of this order)
Date: 04/20/1994
Proceedings: (Petitioner) Request for Continuance filed.
Date: 04/19/1994
Proceedings: Letter to DMK from E. McArthur (RE: Request for Continuance) filed.
Date: 04/08/1994
Proceedings: Order sent out (Respondent`s Motion to continue Granted; 4/21/94; 1:00pm hearing presently scheduled shall address the issue of timely filing)
Date: 04/08/1994
Proceedings: Amended Notice of Hearing sent out. (hearing set for 4/21/94; 1:00pm;Orlando)
Date: 03/14/1994
Proceedings: (Respondent) Motion for Continuance filed.
Date: 02/24/1994
Proceedings: Notice of Hearing sent out. (hearing set for 4/21/94; 1:00pm; Orlando)
Date: 01/31/1994
Proceedings: CC Respondent`s Answer filed.
Date: 01/13/1994
Proceedings: Initial Order issued.
Date: 01/03/1994
Proceedings: Transmittal of Petition; Charge of Discrimination; Notice of Determination: No Cause; Determination: No Cause; Petition for Relief; Notice to Respondent of Filing of Petition for Relief from an Unlawful Employment Practice; Response to Order to Show Cause

Case Information

Judge:
DANIEL M. KILBRIDE
Date Filed:
01/03/1994
Date Assignment:
01/13/1994
Last Docket Entry:
01/27/1995
Location:
Orlando, Florida
District:
Middle
Agency:
ADOPTED IN TOTO
 

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Related Florida Statute(s) (2):

Related Florida Rule(s) (2):