Paul M. Cowgill
West Union, West Virginia
Counsel for Appellee
Stephen M. Fowler
Cleek, Pullin & Bibb
Charleston, West Virginia
Counsel for Appellant
Kathleen Mansheim
Assistant Attorney General
Charleston, West Virginia
Counsel for Amicus Curiae
CHIEF JUSTICE WORKMAN Delivered the Opinion of the Court.
1. A "no probable cause" determination by the West Virginia
Human Rights Commission is not an adjudication on the merits of a
discrimination complaint since the parties have not been afforded
a public hearing in which to litigate the merits of the facts and
issues propounded in the complaint.
2. "An assessment of three factors is ordinarily made in
determining whether res judicata and collateral estoppel may be
applied to a hearing body: (1) whether the body acts in a judicial
capacity; (2) whether the parties were afforded a full and fair
opportunity to litigate the matters in dispute; and (3) whether
applying the doctrines is consistent with the express or implied
policy in the legislation which created the body." Syl. Pt. 3,
Mellon-Stuart Co. v. Hall, 178 W. Va. 291, 359 S.E.2d 124 (1987).
3. While the doctrine of res judicata is applicable to the
final determinations made by the West Virginia Human Rights
Commission after conducting a public hearing on the merits of a
discrimination complaint, it is not applicable to a "no probable
cause" determination rendered by the Human Rights Commission.
4. "A plaintiff may, as an alternative to filing a complaint
with the Human Rights Commission, initiate an action in circuit
court to enforce rights granted by the West Virginia Human Rights
Act." Syl. Pt. 1, Price v. Boone County Ambulance Auth., 175 W.
Va. 676, 337 S.E.2d 913 (1985).
5. The procedures of the West Virginia Human Rights
Commission are not exclusive when the complainant files a lawsuit
in accordance with a "notice of right to sue" letter issued by the
Human Rights Commission under the following circumstances: 1) when
the complaint is dismissed by the Human Rights Commission within
180 days of the filing of the complaint for any reason other than
a final decision on the merits; (2) when no public hearing or
conciliation agreement occurs within 180 days of the filing of the
complaint; or 3) when, at the expiration of one year, no final
determination on the merits or conciliation agreement has occurred.
Workman, Chief Justice:
This case is before the Court upon a May 26, 1992, order of
the Circuit Court of Gilmer County which certified three questions
to this Court.See footnote 1
1
The lower court implicitly answered certified
questions numbered one and two in the negative and certified
question number three in the affirmative when it denied the
Appellant's, Glenville State College, motion for summary judgment.
We decline to address the certified questions as formulated since
they are largely redundant.See footnote 2
2
The question which must be addressed
is whether a "no probable cause" determination made by the West
Virginia Human Rights Commission (hereinafter referred to as HRC)
is an adjudication on the merits of a discrimination complaint
which preclude the HRC from issuing a "notice of right to sue"
letter and the plaintiff from bringing a subsequent action in
circuit court which pleads the same allegation of discrimination
due to the doctrine of res judicata. Upon review of the arguments
of the partiesSee footnote 3
3
and all the matters of record submitted before the
Court, we conclude that the HRC's determination of no probable
cause is not an adjudication on the merits.
The Appellee, Lila Pearl Jones, was employed as a secretary
for the education division at Glenville State College on August 25,
1975. The Appellee worked in the education division until she was
transferred to a similar secretarial position within the social
sciences division on December 31, 1983.
In a evaluation letter dated March 29, 1984, the Appellee was
given an unsatisfactory job evaluation by her supervisor, Delores
Mysliwiec, who was the acting chairperson of the social sciences division. That letter indicated that the Appellee was to show
improvement concerning the unacceptable job performance areas
within a month. Ms. Mysliwiec further stated in the letter that
"[i]f I were asked as division chairperson for a recommendation at
this time, I could not recommend continuing employment without
significant improvement."
By letter dated June 11, 1984, the Appellee responded to the
negative evaluation. In that letter the Appellee outlined her
education, skills and experience. She also indicated that no one
had ever personally confronted her about her poor job performance
prior to the March 29, 1984 evaluation.
The Appellee was terminated from her employment at Glenville
State College on July 31, 1984. She utilized the administrative
remedies within the West Virginia Board of Regency procedures by
filing a grievance with the Appellant. The Appellant, however,
found that her rights had not been violated. Consequently, on
October 3, 1984, after exhausting those in-house administrative
remedies, the Appellee filed a complaint with the HRC alleging age
discrimination.
The HRC apparently misplaced the Appellee's file and some five
years later, by letter dated February 17, 1989, the HRC inquired as
to whether the Appellee still desired to pursue the claim. The
Appellee responded affirmatively and in October 1989, the Appellee
was informed by the HRC that an investigator had been assigned to
her case and she was instructed to prepare herself and her
witnesses for interviews.
The Appellee was not contacted again by HRC until a
determination letter dated August 27, 1990, was sent to her and
informed her that the HRC had found no probable cause for the
allegations. The letter further indicated that the case against
the Appellant should be dismissed. The Appellee was given ten days
to appeal the determination with the HRC. The Appellee was
visiting her children and did not receive this determination letter
until October 27, 1990. She made no effort to appeal the "no
probable cause" determination within ten days after she received
the letter.
The Appellee next received a "notice of right to sue" letter dated October 25, 1990. At this juncture, she contacted an attorney who attempted to reopen the matter with the HRC to no avail. On January 29, 1991,See footnote 4 4 the Appellee filed a complaint in the Circuit Court of Gilmer County alleging age discrimination. It is the filing of this complaint with prompted the certified questions at issue.
It is helpful to examine the procedures utilized by the HRC
when a probable cause/no probable cause determination is made.
These procedures are set forth in West Virginia Code § 5-11-10
(1990)See footnote 5
5
and Title 77 of the Code of State Regulations. See 6 W.Va. C.S. R. 77-2-4 to -4.8. Once a complaint is filed with the HRC,
an investigation by the HRC into the allegations contained in the
complaint is commenced. During this investigatory stage, the HRC
assigns an investigator to the case who may conduct interviews,
order production of documents and completion of interrogatories.
See W. VA. Code § 5-11-10; 6 W. Va. C.S.R. § 77-2-4.2.
At the close of this investigation, the investigator makes a
recommendation as to whether probable cause exists to substantiate
the allegations found in the complaint. If it is determined that
probable cause exists, then a probable cause determination letter
is sent to the parties, and if conciliation is unsuccessful, the
case is set for hearing. See 6 W. Va. C.S.R. § § 77-2-4.5 to -4.6.
The public hearing which occurs before an administrative law
judge of the HRC is essentially a trial without a jury. The West
Virginia Rules of Evidence apply, witnesses testify under oath and
a court reporter is present. See 6 W. Va. C.S.R. § § 77-2-7.1 to -
8.1. At the conclusion of the hearing, the administrative law
judge renders a final decision containing findings of fact and
conclusions of law on the merits of the case. See 6 W. Va. C.S.R.
§ 77-2-9. This decision may be appealed to the HRC. Moreover,
except in limited cases, appeals from the final orders of the HRC
may be brought before this Court. See W. Va. Code § 5-11-11
(1990).See footnote 6
6
In contrast to a probable cause determination, when the
investigator makes a recommendation that no probable cause supports
the allegations in the complaint, a determination letter to that
effect is also sent to the parties. See 6 W. Va. C.S.R. 77-2-4.10.
This determination letter explains the procedure to request an
administrative review of the "no probable cause" determination.
If an administrative review of the "no probable cause"
determination occurs, the HRC reviews the investigator's
recommendation along with any new information submitted by the
parties and the initial "no probable cause" determination is either
affirmed, reversed and set for hearing, or remanded within the HRC
for further investigation. See 6. W. Va. C.S.R. § 77-2-4.8(b).
Regardless of whether the investigatory stage ends in a
probable cause or "no probable cause" determination, the plaintiff
is issued a "notice of right to sue" letter by the HRC which
notifies him of his right to file a complaint in circuit court.
See W. VA. Code § 5-11-13(b) (1990).
The Appellant relies heavily upon the decision of the United
States District Court for the Southern District of West Virginia in
Gray b. Avashia, 637 F. Supp. 960 (S.D. W. Va. 1986), to support
the contentions raised. In Gray, the Plaintiff filed claims with
the HRC alleging race, sex, reprisal and handicap discrimination
after being discharged from Union Carbide. Id. at 961. Subsequent
to investigating the complaint, the HRC issued a "no probable
cause" determination. Id. The plaintiff requested an
administrative review of the decision. The HRC, after conducting
the review, affirmed the initial determination and issued a "notice
of right to sue" letter. Id. at 961-62. The plaintiff then filed
suit in the Circuit Court of Kanawha County, whereupon Union
Carbide removed the suit to federal court. Id. at 962.
The Gray court concluded that the HRC improperly issued the
"notice of right to sue" letter because "[t]he Commission . . .
[had] no authority to issue the right to sue letter. . . ." Id. at
963. The district court determined that the "notice of right to
sue" letter was "void and of no effect" since statutorily the HRC
can only issue such a letter when there has been no decision on the
merits or no conciliation agreement reached by the HRC. Id., see
also W. Va. Code § 5-11-13(b). Therein lies the flaw in the logic
utilized by the district court. It is clear from the Gray decision
that the court presumed that there had been an adjudication on the
meritsSee footnote 8
8
of the discrimination complaint by the HRC when it made the
"no probable cause" determination and conducted an administrative
review of that determination. This is simply not the case as
indicated by the HRC procedures outlined in Section II of this
opinion and by this Court in Allen v. West Virginia Human Rights
Commission, 174 W. Va. 139, 324 S.E.2d 99 (1984).
In Allen, this Court described the probable cause
determination process as follows:
[U]nlike ordinary civil litigation, complaints
before the Human Rights Commission are
scrutinized in order to determine whether
probable cause, traditionally the test for
determining the legitimacy of complaints of
criminal conduct, exists to substantiate the
allegations in those complaints. This,
however, to a certain extent, parallels the
gatekeeping function performed by private
attorneys who, prior to filing civil actions
in the appropriate forum, determine the
validity of complaints advanced by potential
litigants, and is related to the role served
by the Commission in furnishing legal
representation to complainants who reach the
hearing stage of the administrative process.
Id. at 150, 324 S.E.2d at 110-11. Hence, we recognized that the
investigation performed by the HRC was not a hearing.
Further, it was not until after the investigation and
conciliation stages were completed that we addressed the importance
of the hearing stage:
[T]he foundation on which the entire
administrative structure is built is the
ultimate disposition of complaints of unlawful
discrimination through the adjudicatory
hearing process. Without at least the
potential, if not the likelihood, of a hearing
on the merits of complaints of unlawful
discrimination, the remainder of the
administrative process is rendered a
meaningless exercise in chest thumping.
Id. at 150-51, 324 S.E.2d at 111. Implicit in this language is the
significant point that an adjudicatory hearing resulting in a
decision on the merits of a discrimination case does not occur
until this hearing phase.
Thus, we are unpersuaded by the prediction made by the
district court in Gray as to how this Court would interpret the
West Virginia Human Rights Act. To label the investigatory
procedure utilized by the HRC in making a "no probable cause"
determination an adjudication on the merits of the case would be a
ruse. Accordingly, we hold that a "no probable cause"
determination by the HRC is not an adjudication on the merits of a
discrimination complaint since the parties have not been afforded
a public hearing in which to litigate the merits of the facts and
issues propounded in the complaint.
This holding is supported by this Court's decision in Perilli
v. Board of Education Monongalia County, 182 W. Va. 261, 387 S.E.2d
315 (1989). In Perilli, we held that the plaintiff, Perilli was
entitled to a jury trial on the factual claims presented in a sex
discrimination case. Id. at 262, 387 S.E.2d at 316, Syl. Pt. 3.
This holding which mandated a jury trial in circuit court was
rendered despite the fact that the plaintiff had initially filed a
complaint with the HRC. Id. Like the present case, the HRC made
a "no probable cause" determination and issued a "notice of right
to sue" letter pursuant to West Virginia Code § 5-11-13(b) prior to
the commencement of the plaintiff's action in circuit court. Id.
Similarly, the Appellee in the present case is entitled to pursue
her age discrimination claim in circuit court.
This Court has previously stated in Liller v. West Virginia
Human Rights Commission, 180 W. Va. 433, 376 S.E.2d 639 (1988) that
the doctrine of res judicata only applies when "the decision . . .
[is] rendered pursuant to the agency's adjudicatory authority and
the procedures employed by the agency must be substantially similar
to those used in a court of law." Id. at 440, 376 S.E.2d at 646.
We have also enunciated that the following three factors should be
the focus of whether res judicata and collateral estoppel are
applicable to a hearing body: "(1) whether the body acts in a
judicial capacity; (2) whether the parties were afforded a full and
fair opportunity to litigate the matters in dispute; and (3)
whether applying the doctrines is consistent with the express or
implied policy in the legislation which created the body." Syl.
Pt. 3, in part, Mellon-Stuart Co. v. Hall, 178 W. Va. 291, 359
S.E.2d 124 (1987).
In applying these factors to the present case, it is clear
that the HRC has only acted as an investigatory body, not a
judicial body, in ascertaining whether probable cause existed to
support the allegations in the complaint. This again is
highlighted by the investigatory procedures set forth in Section II
of this opinion which indicate that the investigator may conduct
interviews of witnesses and order production of documents and
completion of interrogatories, but none of this is even required
prior to making a probable cause determination. Moreover, no type
of formal public hearing occurs at this stage, merely an
investigation which is similar to the discovery process in a civil
action. See McCulty v. Rockefeller, 570 F. Supp. 1455, 1459 (S. D.
W. Va. 1983) ("If the 'court' is an administrative agency, it must
have been acting in a judicial capacity and the issues in dispute
must have been properly before it.")
Consequently, the parties are not afforded any full and fair
opportunity to litigate the matters in dispute at the probable
cause determination stage. While the procedure does provide for
the parties to submit evidence and names of witnesses, no
opportunity to litigate is present. In fact, in the present case,
the Appellee was not given the chance to provide her own account of
what occurred or to submit the names of any witnesses. As a matter
of record, she was not even provided with the evidence the
Appellant presented to contradict her allegations until after the
"no probable cause" determination had been made.
Finally, it is without question that the doctrine of res
judicata would apply to the HRC decisions if a public hearing and
final determination on the merits had occurred. This becomes
evident in light of West Virginia Code § 5-11-13(a) (1990) which
provides that the statutory procedure for pursuing a claim before
the HRC "shall, when invoked, be exclusive and the final
determination therein shall exclude any other action, civil or
criminal, based on the same grievance of the complainant
concerned."
Based upon the application of the factors enunciated in
Mellon-Stuart Co., we hold that while the doctrine of res judicata
is applicable to the final determinations made by the HRC after
conducting a public hearing on the merits of a discrimination
complaint, it is not applicable to a "no probable cause"
determination rendered by the HRC.
An ancillary matter which also must be addressed is the
exclusiveness of remedies concerning discrimination claims
discussed by this Court in Price v. Boone County Ambulance
Authority, 175 W. Va. 676, 337 S.E.2d 913 (1985) and provided for
by the Legislature in West Virginia Code § 5-11-13(a). This Court
held in syllabus point 1 of Price that "[a] plaintiff may, as an
alternative to filing a complaint with the Human Rights Commission,
initiate an action in circuit court to enforce rights granted by
the West Virginia Human Rights Act." 175 W. Va. at 676, 337 S.E.2d
at 913. We also stated that "[t]hese two avenues are, of course,
mutually exclusive, as [West Virginia Code] § 5-11-13(a) makes
clear." Id. at 679, 337 S.E.2d at 916.
The law concerning the exclusiveness of remedies is clear; a
final determination on the merits of a discrimination case before
the HRC precludes filing an action before the circuit court and
vice versa. However, West Virginia Code § 5-11-13 must be read and
considered in its entirety prior to determining whether the
proceedings before the HRC have culminated in a final determination
on the merits thereby excluding an action in circuit court.
West Virginia Code § 5-11-13(b) provides, in pertinent part
Notwithstanding the provisions of
subsection (a) of this section, a complainant
may institute an action against a respondent.
. . at any time within ninety days after the
complainant is given notice of a right to sue
pursuant to this subsection(b) . . . . If a
suit is filed under this section the
proceedings pending before the commission
shall be deemed concluded.
The commission shall give a complainant
who has filed a complaint a notice of a right
to sue forthwith upon (1) the dismissal of the
complaint within one hundred eighty days of
the filing thereof for any reason other than a
decision on the merits of the case, or (2) the
expiration of a period of one hundred eighty
days during which period no public hearing has
been held on such complaint and the commission
and the respondent have not entered into a
conciliation agreement to which the
complainant is a party: Provided, That the
commission shall also give the complainant
notice of a right to sue in any case in which,
after the expiration of one year, the
complaint has not been determined on its
merits or a conciliation agreement entered
into to which the complainant is a party.
Subsection (b) of West Virginia Code § 5-11-13 indicates that
the procedures of the HRC are not exclusive when the complainant
files a lawsuit in accordance with a "notice of right to sue"
letter issued by the HRC under the following circumstances: 1)
when the complaint is dismissed by the HRC within 180 days of
filing of the complaint for any reason other than a final decision
on the merits; 2) when no public hearing or conciliation agreement
occurs within 180 days of filing the complaint; or 3) when, at the
expiration of one year, no final determination on the merits or
conciliation agreement has occurred. It is also evident that since
the HRC routinely issues the "notice of right to sue" letters after
a "no probable cause" determination, the HRC is complying with this
statutory provision because no final determination on the merits,
no public hearing and no conciliation agreement has occurred at
this stage of the HRC proceedings. Thus, in this case, the
Appellee was properly given a "notice of right to sue" letter after
the "no probable cause" determination was made by the HRC. Such
letter did not violate this Court's decision in Price or the
exclusiveness of remedy provisions found in West Virginia Code § 5-
11-13(a)See footnote 9
9
Based upon the foregoing opinion, we answer the certified
questions as formulated. This action is hereby dismissed from the
docket of this Court.
1. Does the investigation, hearing and
decision-making process at the West Virginia
Human Rights Commission comply with minimum
levels of due process, such that any
subsequent attempt to pursue the same claims
in another forum would be barred by the
doctrine of res judicata[?]
2. Does a finding of 'no probable cause'
by the West Virginia Human Rights Commission
on a claimant's human rights complaint
preclude subsequent litigation in a circuit
court alleging the same claim of
discrimination?
3. When the Human Rights Commission
enters a finding of no probable cause on the
merits of a claimant's claim of age
discrimination, and subsequently issues a
notice of right to sue letter; does the
claimant in fact have a right to sue having
already received a determination on the merits
of her age discrimination claim?