Court Opinion

ID: 9428116
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-08-02 23:22:51.645607+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:23:11.871818
License: Public Domain

Justice Stewart,
with whom Justice Brennan and Justice Marshall join, dissenting.
I agree with the Court that the unlawful employment practice alleged in the respondent’s complaint was a discrimina*263tory denial of tenure, not a discriminatory termination of employment. See ante, at 257-259, and nn. 8, 9. Nevertheless, I believe that a fair reading of the complaint reveals a plausible allegation that the College actually denied Ricks tenure on September 12, 1974, the date on which the Board finally confirmed its decision to accept the faculty’s recommendation that he not be given tenure.
Therefore, unlike the Court, I think Ricks should be allowed to prove to the District Court that the allegedly unlawful denial of tenure occurred on that date.1 As noted by the Court, see ante, at 260, n. 13, if Ricks succeeds in this proof, his § 1981 claim would certainly be timely, and the timeliness of his Title VII claim would then depend on whether his filing of a complaint with the Delaware Department of Labor entitled him to file his EEOC charge within 300 days of the discriminatory act, rather than within the 180 days’ limitation that the Court of Appeals and the District Court assumed to be applicable.2
A brief examination of the June 26, 1974, letter to Ricks *264from the Board of Trustees, quoted by the Court, ante, at 253, n. 2, provides a reasonable basis for the allegation that the College did not effectively deny Ricks tenure until September 12. The letter informed Ricks of the Board’s “intent not to renew” his contract at the end of the 1974-1975 academic year. And the letter suggested that the Board was so informing Ricks at that time only to ensure technical compliance with College and American Association of University Professors requirements in case it should later decide to abide by its earlier acceptance of the faculty’s recommendation that Ricks be denied tenure. The Board expressly stated in the letter that it had “no way of knowing” what the outcome of the grievance process might be, but that a decision of the Board’s Educational Policy Committee favorable to Ricks would “of course . . . supersede any previous action taken by the Board.”
Thus, the Board itself may have regarded its earlier actions as tentative or preliminary, pending a thorough review triggered by the respondent’s request to the Committee. The Court acknowledges that this letter expresses the Board’s willingness to change its earlier view on Ricks’ tenure, but considers the grievance procedure under which the decision might have been changed to be a remedy for an earlier tenure decision and not a part of the overall process of making the initial tenure decision. Ricks, however, may be able to prove to the District Court that at his College the original Board response to the faculty’s recommendation was not a virtually final action subject to reopening only in the most extreme cases, but a preliminary decision to advance the tenure question to the Board’s grievance committee as the next conventional stage in the process.3
*265Whether this is an accurate view of the tenure process at Delaware State College is, of course, a factual question we cannot resolve here. But Ricks lost his case in the trial court on a motion to dismiss. I think that motion was wrongly-granted, and that Ricks was entitled to a hearing and a determination of this factual issue. See Abramson v. University of Hawaii, 594 F. 2d 202 (CA9).
I would, therefore, vacate the judgment of the Court of Appeals and remand the case to the District Court so that it can make this determination and then, if necessary, resolve whether Title VII allowed Ricks 300 days from the denial of tenure to file his charge with the Commission.

 The Court treats the District Court’s determination of June 26, 1974, as the date of tenure denial as a factual finding which is not clearly erroneous. Ante, at 261-262. But it must be stressed that the District Court dismissed Ricks’ claims on the pleadings, and so never made factual determinations on this or any other issue.

 Title VII would allow Ricks 300 days if he had “initially instituted” proceedings with a local or state agency with authority to grant him relief. 42 U. S. C. § 2000e-5 (e); see Mohasco Corp. v. Silver, 447 U. S. 807. To benefit from this provision, however, Ricks would arguably have had to make a timely filing with the state agency. Delaware law requires that a charge of discrimination be filed with the Department of Labor within 90 days after the allegedly discriminatory practice occurred or within 120 days after the practice is discovered, whichever date is later. Del. Code Ann., Tit. 19, § 712(d) (1979). Neither the District Court nor the Court of Appeals considered the timeliness of Ricks’ filing with the state agency, nor the significance of the state agency’s action in waiving jurisdiction over Ricks’ charge, and so these questions would be appropriately addressed on remand.

 This view is consistent with the policies and model procedures of the American Association of University Professors, AAUP Policy Documents and Reports 15, 29 (1977); see Board of Regents v. Roth, 408 U. S. 564, 578-579, and n. 17; Brief for AAUP as Amicus Curiae 9-10, on whose *265requirements the Board of Trustees in this case expressly relied in explaining its action in the June 26 letter.