EEOC v. Thrivent Financial for Luthera
Filing
Filed opinion of the court by Judge Tinder. AFFIRMED. Richard D. Cudahy, Circuit Judge; Ilana Diamond Rovner, Circuit Judge and John Daniel Tinder, Circuit Judge. [6444177-1] [6444177] [11-2848]
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In the
United States Court of Appeals
For the Seventh Circuit
No. 11-2848
E QUAL E MPLOYMENT O PPORTUNITY C OMMISSION,
Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
T HRIVENT F INANCIAL FOR L UTHERANS,
Defendant-Appellee.
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Eastern District of Wisconsin.
No. 2:10-cv-853—William C. Greisbach, Chief Judge.
A RGUED S EPTEMBER 7, 2012—D ECIDED N OVEMBER 20, 2012
Before C UDAHY, R OVNER, and T INDER, Circuit Judges.
T INDER, Circuit Judge. The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) brought suit against Thrivent
Financial for Lutherans (Thrivent) on behalf of Gary
Messier, alleging a violation of the medical record confidentiality requirements of the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA), 42 U.S.C. § 12111 et seq. On July 6, 2006,
Omni Resources, Inc. (Omni), a technology consulting
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agency, hired Messier to work as a temporary SAS programmer for Thrivent pursuant to an agreement between
Omni and Thrivent. After Messier left Omni and Thrivent
on December 4, 2006, Messier had a difficult time
finding a new job and began to suspect that Thrivent
was saying negative things about him to prospective
employers who called for reference checks. The EEOC
alleges that during these reference checks, Thrivent
was revealing information about Messier’s migraine
condition to prospective employers in violation of the
ADA’s requirement that employee medical information
obtained from “medical examinations and inquiries” must
be “treated as a confidential medical record.” 42 U.S.C.
§ 12112(d). The district court found that Thrivent learned
of Messier’s migraine condition outside the context of
a medical examination or inquiry. Therefore, the confidentiality provisions of 42 U.S.C. § 12112(d)(3) did
not apply, and the district court granted summary judgment to Thrivent. For the reasons explained below, we
agree that Thrivent did not learn about Messier’s
migraine condition as the result of 42 U.S.C. § 12112(d)
“medical examinations and inquiries.” Consequently,
Thrivent had no duty to treat its knowledge of Messier’s
migraine condition as a confidential medical record,
and we affirm the judgment of the district court.
I
Because Thrivent and the EEOC filed cross-motions
for summary judgment in the district court, we review
the district court’s grant of summary judgment to
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Thrivent de novo, “constru[ing] all inferences in favor of
the party against whom the motion under consideration
is made,” here, the EEOC. Hess v. Reg-Ellen Mach. Tool
Corp., 423 F.3d 653, 658 (7th Cir 2005). After hiring
Messier to serve as a temporary SAS programmer in
Thrivent’s Appleton, Wisconsin office, Omni assigned
Messier to work as a Business Analyst in the Fraternal
Support Service Department, under the supervision of
Thrivent employee John Schreiner. Messier worked at
Thrivent for almost four months without incident,
and during that time, he was “very good about notifying” both Thrivent and Omni when he planned to be
absent from work. On November 1, 2006, however,
Messier failed to report to work. Because Messier had
not notified anyone at Thrivent about his absence,
Schreiner called Messier’s Account Manager at Omni,
Thomas Brey, looking for Messier, but Brey was equally
ignorant as to why Messier had failed to report to work
that morning. A puzzled Brey then sent the following
email to Messier: “Gary, Give us a call, and give John a
call. We need to know what is going on. John called
here looking for you.” For hours, neither Schreiner nor
Brey heard anything from Messier. At last, Messier sent
the following email to Schreiner and Brey at 4:53 p.m.:
Tom/John
I’ve been in bed all day with a severe migraine.
Have not had one this severe in over six years.
Three doses of Imitrex today and I am finally
able to function. Sorry for the very late reply but
when I get migraines of this severity I am bed
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ridden until I can get them to a level so I can
function. People have many medical conditions
that are not obvious on the surface. They struggle
with them every-day and try to get thru [sic] life
one day at a time. I’ve had these migraines since
a major car accident in 1984. Because this was
a head on at 50 miles an hour I am very lucky to
have lived thru [sic] it. But these migraines are an
end result of the head trauma that I experienced
that day. I have been waiting for the medical
field to come up with a solution ever since. I am
attending a few sessions, this coming Saturday,
in a seminar sponsored by Theda-Care on Brain &
Spine conditions. Hopefully this may provide
the information that I have been searching for to
help alleviate this situation. The medical field
has come a long way since 1984. I am currently
reaping some of the benefits to help control this
problem with the medication regiment that I am
currently on. At least I am functional most days
but when I have one of the severity I had today
do not expect any response from me or even a
phone call as the pain level is so severe that it
puts most people in the hospital. I have been
dealing with this pain for a long time and I have
found the best way to deal with it is to let it run
its course. Probably a lot more than either of you
wanted to know but I want to be totally honest
with both of you. If all goes well I will be in tomorrow on schedule. I hope this answers your concerns and that I am fully commited [sic] to
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Thrivent and Omni thru [sic] the remainder of my
contract.
Gary
Brey responded to Messier’s email a few hours later
urging Messier to “get better” and to “let me know . . . [i]f
there is anything that I or Omni can do.”
Despite Messier’s assurance that he was fully committed through the remainder of his contract, Messier quit
his job with Thrivent only a month later on December 4,
2006. The record is not clear about why Messier quit,
but statements by Schreiner that “we ran into a very
strong disagreement on expectations and he walked out
on us” suggest that the parting was not on good terms.
Messier soon began looking for new employment, and
in the months that followed, three prospective employers lost interest in him after conducting reference
checks. Concerned about what Schreiner was telling
prospective employers, Messier hired Reference Matters,
Inc. (RMI), an online reference checking agency, to find
out what Schreiner was saying. On January 10, 2008,
an RMI agent called Schreiner pretending to be a prospective employer interested in hiring Messier. During
the phone conversation with RMI, Schreiner disclosed
that Messier “has medical conditions where he gets
migraines. I had no issue with that. But he would not
call us. It was the letting us know.”
Based on Schreiner’s conversation with RMI, Messier
filed a charge with the EEOC alleging disability discrimination under the ADA on August 25, 2008. The EEOC
first issued a “Letter of Discrimination” to Thrivent on
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March 15, 2010, which stated that the EEOC found reasonable cause to believe that Thrivent had violated the
ADA. When this letter failed to induce a settlement
between Messier and Thrivent, the EEOC filed the
instant action on September 30, 2010, alleging that
Thrivent had violated the ADA confidentiality provisions contained in 42 U.S.C. § 12112(d) by “revealing
to prospective employers Messier’s confidential medical information obtained from a medical inquiry.” 42
U.S.C. § 12112(d), entitled “Medical examinations and
inquiries,” provides in relevant part:
(1) In general
The prohibition against discrimination as referred
to in subsection (a) of this section shall include
medical examinations and inquiries.
...
(3) Employment entrance examination
...
(B) information obtained regarding the
medical condition or history of the applicant is collected and maintained on separate forms and in separate medical files
and is treated as a confidential medical
record, except that—
(i) supervisors and managers may
be informed regarding necessary
restrictions on the work or duties
of the employee and necessary
accommodations;
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(ii) first aid and safety personnel
may be informed, when appropriate, if the disability might require
emergency treatment; and
(iii) government officials investigating compliance with this chapter shall be provided relevant information on request; and
(C) the results of such examination are
used only in accordance with this
subchapter.
(4) Examination and inquiry
...
(B) Acceptable examinations and inquiries
A covered entity may conduct voluntary
medical examinations, including voluntary
medical histories, which are part of an
employee health program available to
employees at that work site. A covered
entity may make inquiries into the ability
of an employee to perform job-related
functions.
(C) Requirement
Information obtained under subparagraph
(B) regarding the medical condition or
history of any employee are subject to the
requirements of subparagraphs (B) and (C)
of paragraph (3).
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With this statutory language in mind, the district court
quickly realized that before it could decide whether
Schreiner’s statements to RMI violated the confidentiality provisions outlined in 42 U.S.C. § 12112(d)(3)(B),
it must first decide whether the confidentiality provisions even applied to Messier’s situation. Determining
whether these provisions applied required deciding a
threshold issue: “whether Thrivent received Messier’s
medical information through a medical inquiry.” Consequently, the district court urged both sides to file crossmotions for summary judgment on this threshold issue,
which both parties filed on March 1, 2011. In the text of
its motion, the EEOC only asked the court to find that
Messier’s disclosure of his migraine condition was “done
in the context of a medical inquiry of Messier by
Thrivent.” 1 Nevertheless, in the course of the EEOC’s
1
The EEOC’s motion for summary judgment sought only
“summary judgment on the first, third, and fifth affirmative
defenses asserted in the Answer filed by defendant Thrivent
Financial for Lutherans on November 29, 2010.” The text of
Thrivent’s first, third, and fifth affirmative defenses is as
follows:
1. The complaint fails to state a claim against Thrivent
upon which relief can be granted.
3. Thrivent was never Messier’s employer; it never
obtained any of Messier’s confidential medical information from a medical inquiry; and it never made
a medical inquiry of Messier.
5. Messier apparently voluntarily disclosed to his
employer OMNI Resources, Inc. that he missed work
(continued...)
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briefs to support its motion and to oppose Thrivent’s
motion, the EEOC argued that Messier’s disclosures
would be covered by the 42 U.S.C. § 12112(d)(3)(B) confidentiality provisions if either of the following were true:
(1) Thrivent learned about Messier’s migraine condition
in the course of conducting a medical inquiry, or
(2) Thrivent learned about Messier’s migraine condition
in the course of conducting “inquiries into the ability of
an employee to perform job-related functions” under
42 U.S.C. § 12112(d)(4)(B).
In granting Thrivent’s motion for summary judgment,
the district court focused on the EEOC’s first argument—whether Thrivent had learned about Messier’s
migraine condition through a medical inquiry—presumably since the text of the EEOC’s motion had focused
only on whether Brey’s email to Messier constituted
a medical inquiry (as opposed to a broader job-related
inquiry). The district court found that Brey’s email did not
constitute a medical inquiry because “[g]iven the vast
number of reasons an employee could miss work without informing his employer, it seems unreasonable to
assume that an employer checking in on his absent em-
1
(...continued)
assignments at Thrivent due to migraine headaches.
Messier’s voluntary disclosure of this information was
not done in the context of a medical inquiry of Messier
by Thrivent.
The EEOC’s motion for summary judgment does not mention
anything about job-related inquiries.
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ployee has the intent to request or acquire medical information.” On appeal, the EEOC drops the argument that
Brey’s email to Messier constituted a medical inquiry.
Instead, the EEOC focuses on its second argument that
the ADA’s confidentiality provisions protect all employee medical information revealed through “job-related”
inquiries. Because the EEOC’s broad construction of
the term “inquiries” in 42 U.S.C. § 12112(d) is not supported by the language of the statute, we reject the
EEOC’s second argument.
II
At heart, this case is one of statutory interpretation. If
the term “inquiries” in 42 U.S.C. § 12112(d) refers only
to medical inquiries, as Thrivent urges, then the
EEOC’s claim fails since the EEOC concedes on appeal
that Brey’s email was not a medical inquiry. On the
other hand, if the term “inquiries” in 42 U.S.C. § 12112(d)
refers to all job-related inquiries, as the EEOC urges, then
the EEOC’s claim fares better. The EEOC particularly
urges us to adopt its admittedly “liberal interpretation”
of 42 U.S.C. § 12112(d) because it is “consistent with
clear congressional intent.” But as the U.S. Supreme
Court pointed out in Chevron, U.S.A., Inc. v. Natural Resources Defense Council, Inc., 467 U.S. 837, 842 (1984),
“[w]hen a court reviews an agency’s construction of
the statute it administers,” it must first consider
“whether Congress has directly spoken to the precise
question at issue. If the intent of Congress is clear,
that is the end of the matter.” Here, we conclude that
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42 U.S.C. § 12112(d) has a “plain meaning” that cannot
be ignored, and therefore, “we do not need to reach the
question of the proper deference owed” to the EEOC’s
interpretation of the statute. Vulcan Constr. Materials, L.P.
v. Fed. Mine Safety & Health Review Com’n, ___ F.3d ___,
2012 WL 5259008, at *14 (7th Cir. Oct. 25, 2012).
In support of its motion for summary judgment, the
EEOC offered the Merriam-Webster definition of the
word “inquiry,” which can mean, among other things,
“a request for information.” Brey’s email was clearly
a request for information, and the EEOC correctly construed Brey’s email as an inquiry under this generalized
definition. Yet the EEOC’s reliance on this generalized
definition of “inquiry” ignores the specific context in
which the term “inquiry” is used throughout 42 U.S.C.
§ 12112(d).
The title of 42 U.S.C. § 12112(d) is “[m]edical examinations and inquiries.” According to the Merriam-Webster
definition, the coordinating conjunction “and” is “used
as a function word to indicate connection or addition
especially of items within the same class or type.” M ERRIAMW EBSTER D ICTIONARY O NLINE, available at http://www.
merriam-webster.com/dictionary/and (last visited Nov. 16,
2012) (emphasis added). Consequently, the use of the
inclusive conjunction “and” in the title—instead of a
limiting or contrasting conjunction such as “or”—suggests
that the examinations and inquiries referred to in the
title of section (d) are within the same class or type:
they are both medical. At the very least, the use of the
conjunction “and” indicates that the adjective “medical”
modifies both “examinations” and “inquiries.”
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The subject matter discussed in the body of section (d)
confirms that the word “inquiries” does not refer to all
generalized inquiries, but instead refers only to medical
inquiries. The entire section is devoted to a discussion of
a disabled employee’s “medical record,” “medical condition or history,” “medical files,” and medical “treatment.”
In fact, the EEOC’s argument that the term “inquiries” in
section (d) refers to all employer inquiries (not just employer medical inquiries) rests almost entirely on a
single reference to “job-related” inquiries in 42 U.S.C.
§ 12112(d)(4)(B). Yet once the “job-related” inquiries
language in section (d)(4)(B) is read in the context of the
entire section, it is easy to see that “job-related” inquiries
refer only to job-related medical inquiries:
A covered entity may conduct voluntary medical examinations, including voluntary medical
histories, which are part of an employee health
program available to employees at that work site.
A covered entity may make inquiries into the
ability of an employee to perform job-related
functions.
The sentence preceding the “job-related” inquiries language in section (d)(4)(B) discusses permissible employerinitiated medical activities, including examinations,
histories, and health programs regarding an employee’s
medical health. Logically, the next sentence continues
this discussion of permissible employer-initiated medical
activities, including job-related inquiries regarding an
employee’s medical health. In sum, the EEOC’s argument that the word “inquiries” in 42 U.S.C. § 12112(d)(4)(B)
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refers to all job-related inquiries, not just medical ones,
ignores the content of the rest of the section.
III
We are also not persuaded by the EEOC’s claim that
the case law interpreting 42 U.S.C. § 12112(d)(4)(B) is on
its side. The EEOC argues that other courts have chosen
to read the term “inquiries” more broadly and have
interpreted the term to mean all employer-initiated, jobrelated inquiries. To support this proposition, the EEOC
principally relies on two cases: Doe v. U.S. Postal Serv.,
317 F.3d 339 (D.C. Cir. 2003) and E.E.O.C. v. Ford Motor
Credit Co., 531 F. Supp. 2d 930 (M.D. Tenn. 2008).
In Doe, the plaintiff, John Doe, fell ill with an AIDSrelated illness and missed several weeks of work. It was
not clear from the facts whether the Postal Service
knew that Doe was HIV-positive; however, the Postal
Service clearly knew that Doe was ill since he had
already taken weeks of sick leave. After Doe had been
absent for two months, his supervisor sent a letter instructing him “to complete and submit, within five calendar days, a Postal Service administrative form and a
medical certificate ‘provid[ing] an explanation of the
nature of [his] illness.’ If he failed to submit these
forms, the letter warned, he would face potential disciplinary action for being absent without leave.” Doe,
317 F.3d at 341. The D.C. Circuit held that the supervisor’s letter constituted an inquiry under 42 U.S.C.
§ 12112(d)(4)(B). Id. at 344.
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In Ford Motor, John Doe, another HIV-positive plaintiff,
requested time off work one day per week so that he
could participate in an HIV-treatment study. Doe had
already missed work on previous occasions to go to HIVrelated doctors’ appointments. Before Doe’s supervisor,
Danny Dunson, would allow Doe to miss additional
work and participate in the weekly study, Dunson demanded to know Doe’s diagnosis. The court found
that these facts presented “an issue for trial as to
whether Mr. Dunson’s questioning of Mr. Doe amounted
to an inquiry.” Ford Motor, 531 F. Supp. 2d at 937.
The EEOC claims that Doe and Ford Motor stand for
the proposition that “inquiries” under 42 U.S.C.
§ 12112(d)(4)(B) include all interactions between the
employer and the employee that (1) are initiated by
the employer, and (2) result in the employee revealing
medical information. Yet in both Doe and Ford Motor,
the employers initiated the interactions with some preexisting knowledge that the employee was ill or physically
incapacitated. Additional case law supports this notion
that an employer must already know that an employee
is ill or physically incapacitated before initiating the
interaction in order for the interaction to be considered
an inquiry under 42 U.S.C. § 12112(d)(4)(B).
In Harrison v. Benchmark Electronics Huntsville, Inc., 593
F.3d 1206 (11th Cir. 2010), for example, the Eleventh
Circuit reversed a district court’s grant of summary
judgment to Benchmark, the employer, because it
found that the employee, John Harrison, had sufficiently
alleged that Benchmark made an inquiry. Harrison had
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failed a drug test administered by Benchmark. The drug
test itself did not constitute a medical examination or
inquiry since, under the ADA, drug tests are not considered medical examinations. See 42 U.S.C. § 12112(b).
Nevertheless, the court held that if Harrison’s allegations were true, what happened after the drug test did
constitute an inquiry under 42 U.S.C. § 12112(d)(4)(B). A
human resources officer confronted Harrison with his
positive drug test results. Harrison informed the officer
that his epilepsy medication likely triggered the positive
result. The human resources officer then told Harrison
to retrieve his prescription, and after he did, additionally had Harrison discuss his medication with
the drug testing agency’s medical review officer. In Harrison’s case, the employer had initiated an interaction
with Harrison after learning that he might suffer from
a drug problem, and thus, the court found sufficient
allegations of a 42 U.S.C. § 12112(d)(4)(B) inquiry.
Harrison, 593 F.3d at 1214-15.
Similarly, in Fleming v. State Univ. of New York, 502
F. Supp. 2d 324, 338 (E.D.N.Y. 2007), the plaintiff,
Dr. Lester Fleming, was a medical resident who suffered from sickle-cell anemia. During his residency,
Fleming was hospitalized for complications from the
disease, and Fleming advised his attending physicians
that he would be absent from work while he was in
the hospital. Up to this point, Fleming had never
revealed to any of his attending physicians that he
suffered from sickle-cell anemia. After learning that he
was in the hospital, one of Fleming’s attendings called
Fleming to ask why he was in the hospital. Only then
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did Fleming reveal his disease, at which point the attending advised him that he would need a doctor’s
letter in order to return to work. The court held that
these facts were sufficient to allege an inquiry under
42 U.S.C. § 12112(d)(4)(B). Like the previous cases,
the employer in Fleming initiated an interaction with
the employee after learning that he was ill.
As these cases illustrate, previous courts have required—at minimum—that the employer already knew
something was wrong with the employee before
initiating the interaction in order for that interaction to
constitute a 42 U.S.C. § 12112(d)(4)(B) inquiry. Neither
Thrivent nor Omni had any such knowledge here. There
is no evidence in the record suggesting that Thrivent
or Omni should have inferred that Messier’s absence
on November 1, 2006 was due to a medical condition.
There is no evidence in the record that Messier had
been sickly during his first four months of employment.
There is no evidence that Messier had experienced a
headache at work during his first four months. For all
Thrivent and Omni knew, Messier’s absence was just
as likely due to a non-medical condition as it was due
to a medical condition. Indeed, as Thrivent pointed
out to the district court, “Messier could have had transportation problems, marital problems, weather-related
problems, housing problems, criminal problems, motivational problems, a car or home accident, or perhaps he
simply decided to quit his job at OMNI (which he did
just a month later on December 4, 2006.)” When Brey
emailed Messier on November 1, 2006, he had no idea
that Messier was ill—let alone disabled. For this reason,
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Brey’s email cannot be an inquiry for the purposes of
42 U.S.C. § 12112(d)(4)(B).
IV
For the above reasons, we reject the EEOC’s argument that the term “inquiries” as used in 42 U.S.C.
§ 12112(d)(4)(B) refers to all job-related inquiries, and
not just medical inquiries. Because the EEOC concedes
on appeal that Brey’s email to Messier was not a
medical inquiry, Thrivent was not required to treat the
medical information that Messier sent in response to
Brey’s email as a confidential medical record. Thus,
Thrivent did not violate the requirements of 42 U.S.C.
§ 12112(d) by revealing Messier’s migraine condition
to RMI because the statute did not apply. We accordingly A FFIRM the decision of the district court
granting summary judgment to Thrivent.
11-20-12
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