After Lulling Pro Se Plaintiff Into Thinking The Procedure Was Proper, District Court Erred In Denying Motion To Reopen On The Last Day Of The Limitations Period
PRINCE v. STEWART (September 2, 2009)
The Chicago Teachers Union fired Earl Prince from his job. Prince filed an administrative discrimination charge. He then brought an action pro se for employment discrimination under Title VII before he received any response from the Illinois Department of Human Rights or the EEOC. The district court dismissed the complaint because Prince had not yet received a right-to-sue letter. Several months later, after Prince had received the letter, the district court granted his motion to reopen the case. The court vacated the order, however, a few days later at Prince's request. Months later, on the last day to sue, Prince again moved to reopen the case. This time, the judge turned him down -- and it was too late to file a new complaint. Prince appeals.
In their opinion, Judges Posner, Coffey and Manion reversed and remanded. The Court recognized Prince's mistake when he followed up the first order reopening his case with a request to reinstate the dismissal. He was simply going to be out of the jurisdiction for a short time and need not have worried about his temporary unavailability. However, the Court also recognized that no one was prejudiced by his mistake. If the second motion to reopen was filed in a timely fashion, the Court could not see any reason why it should not have been granted. The Court concluded that the district court’s lulling of the pro se litigant into believing that he did not have to refile his complaint amounted to equitable tolling.