With no explanation, chose the best option from "A", "B", "C" or "D". to Perelman v. Adams 35, when Perelman requested them in 2007. Perelman contends that he only discovered the lack of payment, however, af ter he received the purchase agreements in 2010. We agree with the District Court that a reasonably diligent person, “shocked and dismayed,” id., in 2007 that his wishes with respect to the trust had not been carried out, would not have waited three more years before viewing the purchase agreements. Perelman’s complaint does not allege any facts with respect to the three-year lapse between the 2007 meeting and his 2010 discoveries. At the motion to dismiss stage, a plaintiff who seeks to invoke equitable tolling need only “plead the applicability of the doctrine.” See Oshiver v. Levin, Fishbein, Sedran & Berman, 38 F.3d 1380, 1391 (3d Cir.1994) (<HOLDING>). Here, however, Perelman has not made any

A: holding that a teachers complaint to school authorities that her principal had instructed her to make improper changes in her own students grades was unprotected because it was made pursuant to her official duties
B: holding that a plaintiff who pled in her complaint that her law firm actively misled her in support of her request for application of the discovery rule had sufficiently pled the application of the doctrine
C: holding that threatening employee to mind her own business investigating her videotaping her without her permission and forcing her to take polygraph could not be considered adverse employment actions because they had no effect on conditions of employment
D: holding that where the plaintiff discovered the injury on the very datedefendant informed her of her discharge the discovery rule offered no relief in relation to the timeliness of the filing of her discriminatory discharge claim
B.