Shaw v. Beacon Health System, Inc.
Filing
44
OPINION AND ORDER DENYING 27 Plaintiff's Motion for Partial Summary Judgment; DENYING 30 Defendant's Motion for Summary Judgment; GRANTING IN PART and DENYING IN PART 34 Plaintiff's Motion to Strike. Signed by Judge Philip P Simon on 7/19/19. (ksp)
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
NORTHERN DISTRICT OF INDIANA
SOUTH BEND DIVISION
BENITA SHAW,
Plaintiff,
v.
BEACON HEALTH SYSTEM, INC.,
Defendant.
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Case No. 3:18-cv-235-PPS
OPINION AND ORDER
Plaintiff Benita Shaw is suing her former employer, Beacon Health System, Inc.,
for allegedly discriminating against her because of her disability in violation of the
Americans with Disabilities Act. She tells me that after successfully working at one of
Beacon’s hospitals for more than two decades, she was told to reapply for her job then
denied the position because Beacon wanted someone who wasn’t disabled to do the job.
She says this constitutes two violations of the ADA: (1) disability discrimination, and (2)
a failure to accommodate. Beacon, for its part, denies any wrongdoing and seeks
summary judgment on both claims. Shaw has also moved for summary judgment but
only on her the failure to accommodate claim. My review of the evidence in this case
shows that there are some big disputed issues of fact which I cannot resolve. Beacon’s
potential liability must be determined by a jury through a trial on the merits.
Accordingly, I will deny both motions for summary judgment.
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Background
Shaw is a Registered Nurse and worked for Beacon at Elkhart General Hospital
for more than two decades. She began working at the hospital in 1995 as a Floor Nurse,
responsible for taking care of patients. In 1997, she was promoted to Charge Nurse, a
position which, in addition to patient care, involved administrative responsibilities for
other nurses, assignments and incoming patient evaluations. In 2002, she became a
Nursing Supervisor, a mostly administrative and supervisory position. In 2006, she was
promoted to Shift Coordinator for Nursing Support Services, which was also primarily
administrative in nature and responsible for staffing nurses throughout the hospital on
an as-needed basis. In this job, her primary responsibilities were scheduling, payroll,
and other administrative tasks to assist the Nursing Director at the hospital. But in the
summer of 2017, she was told she would not be retained for the position of Shift
Coordinator, the position that she had worked in for approximately 10 years. [See B.
Shaw Dep. at 30-35.]
Throughout her tenure at Elkhart General Hospital, Shaw had a medical
condition known as Reynaud’s Syndrome. She was first diagnosed with Reynaud’s in
1981. This disease causes spasms in an individual’s arteries, which then reduces blood
flow to extremities, often the fingers. This causes discoloration and numbness,
sometimes for minutes but sometimes for hours. These effects are generally triggered by
a drop in temperature or otherwise cold conditions. Shaw was also diagnosed with
scleroderma in 2005. Scleroderma is a disease which causes the hardening of connective
tissue, in Shaw’s case around her internal organs. Shaw’s scleroderma affects her lungs,
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making it difficult to breathe in cold temperatures, and it also causes digestive issues
which can interfere with her nutrition, causing her to feel fatigued. [B. Shaw Dep. at 2024.] The combination of these two conditions requires Shaw to be acutely aware of her
surrounding temperature and requires her to make efforts to ensure she stays
adequately warm.
As mentioned, when Shaw worked as a Shift Coordinator, her role was strictly
administrative in nature. But it is undisputed that the written job description for Shift
Coordinator contains additional responsibilities beyond what Shaw performed.
Specifically, the “Job Summary” states that a Shift Coordinator is:
Responsible for supporting the Nursing Director of the unit in
administrative duties. Will provide leadership by collaborating with
members of the health care team to maintain standards for
professional nursing practice. Participates in organizational and
unit-based performance improvement activities and provides input
on standards of care. Able to provide patient care at the bedside or
as charge nurse. Applies the nursing process utilizing Relationship
Based Care framework. Establishes strong patient family
relationships. Collaborates with other professional, clinical and
ancillary staff in providing quality care to patients. Displays strong
teamwork. Exhibits self-care and self-knowing in order to be
empathetic and compassionate with every interaction.
[DE 32-3.] It is further undisputed that while the ability “to provide patient care at the
bedside or as charge nurse” was part of the job summary, Shaw did not, in fact, provide
bedside patient care or work as a charge nurse while she was Shift Coordinator. Neither
party has suggested or presented evidence that Shaw’s conditions impacted her ability
to perform her administrative responsibilities as Shift Coordinator, which all parties
agree constituted the bulk of a Shift Coordinator’s professional responsibilities.
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Nonetheless, Shaw received what she calls “informal accommodations”
throughout her tenure at Beacon. She could keep a space heater at her desk, keep a
microwave and refrigerator in her office (to avoid the cafeteria which apparently was
quite cold), work from home at times, and park near the hospital instead of the
employee parking lot (to avoid walking in from the cold and be able to remote start her
vehicle from inside). [Shaw Dep. at 202-204.] Beacon also says that Shaw’s condition
was accommodated by not having her perform any of the hands-on patient care
component of her job duties. [Roberts Aff. ¶ 11. 1] According to Beacon, this is reflected
in her 2017 performance review in which she had high marks generally but an “N/A”
rating under “Patient Care Delivery.” [See DE 32-2.]
Shaw disputes this. She says instead that the evidence shows that Shaw did not
perform this aspect of her job description because she only worked less than full time
(64 hours per pay period). Her supervisor conceded that because she didn’t work full
time, Shaw did not have time to perform patient care on top of her other
responsibilities. [See Roberts Dep. at 21-24.] In any event, the parties agree that she did
not perform this aspect of her job description prior to her termination in summer 2017,
but they dispute why.
The end of Shaw’s employment with Beacon began with an “organizational
restructuring” of the hospital announced in June of 2017. [Spear Aff. ¶ 9.] Financial
Shaw has moved to strike, inter alia, Paragraph 11 of Roberts’ Affidavit. The Motion to
Strike is discussed later in this opinion and to the extent any stricken portions of any
affidavit is cited in this opinion, it is only for purposes of providing general background
information.
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losses at the hospital from decreased patient admissions and reimbursements,
necessitated a reduction in the number of “nursing leadership positions” including Shift
Coordinators. This then created the need for Shift Coordinators to be more efficient, i.e.,
perform all the tasks listed in the job summary. This included being able to fill in as a
treating nurse, such as a Charge Nurse, Nursing Supervisor or Patient Flow
Coordinator. The job summary was unchanged, but Shift Coordinators would also have
to begin working full time, although their primary responsibilities would remain
administrative. [Roberts Dep. at 46, 53, and 102.]
This is where parties’ stories really begin to diverge. On June 21, 2017, Shaw was
told about the restructuring and that she would need to re-apply for her job. [Shaw
Dep. 68-69.] Shaw began to think things over and determine whether she would be able
to competently perform the job in its expanded role, specifically whether she would be
able to fill in as a Patient Flow Coordinator or a Nursing Supervisor (the position Shaw
held from 2002-2006). [Id. at 68.]
On June 26, 2017, Beacon says Shaw informed her supervisor Deanna Roberts
that she was not going to apply for the job “because she would not perform the essential
functions of the job because the position required physical exertion and direct-hands on
patient care.” [Roberts Aff. ¶ 16.] Nonetheless, Roberts says she encouraged Shaw to
shadow a Nursing Supervisor to see whether Shaw could possibly still do the job. [Id. at
¶ 17.] After shadowing a Nursing Supervisor for four hours on June 28, Beacon says
that Shaw became physically ill and reported to Roberts “that the job shadowing
experience made her so sick that her lips and nose began to bleed.” [Id. at ¶¶ 18-20.] The
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following day, Roberts, Shaw and another member of Beacon management met. Shaw
told them that “she physically could not work as a Nursing Supervisor or Patient Flow
Coordinator.” [Id. at ¶ 21.] But despite apparently telling Beacon that she could not
physically do the job, Shaw applied for and interviewed for the Shift Coordinator
position on July 11, 2017. Three days later, she learned she didn’t get the job. [Id. at ¶¶
22, 25.]
Shaw tells a story different from Beacon’s. She admits that after learning that she
would need to reapply and that the Shift Coordinator position would have additional
responsibilities she had not previously done, she had some trepidations. Nonetheless
she says she decided to try to continue on the job. So, she undertook the shadowing of a
Nursing Supervisor on June 28, 2017 to see if she could do it. Afterward, she thought
she could. Shaw says that Beacon mischaracterizes the toll the four-hour shadowing
experience had on her. In her opposition brief, she says that her lips only began to bleed
seven hours after she did the shadowing and that it was wholly unrelated to her
Reynaud’s nor caused by shadowing a Nursing Supervisor. But curiously, Shaw fails to
cite any deposition or affidavit testimony supporting her version of events on this point
[see DE 36 at 2-3], and so I cannot credit her version what happened there. In any event,
Shaw confirms that after shadowing, she applied for the Shift Coordinator position,
which seems to contradict Roberts statement that Shaw definitively told her that she
couldn’t do the job. After all, who would tell their supervisor one day they can’t do a
job and then apply for that very same position a few days later?
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Shaw interviewed for the Shift Coordinator position on July 11 with a fourperson panel, which did not include Roberts. Three of the four interviewers selected
Shaw as their top choice for the Shift Coordinator position, and the fourth did not
record any recommendation. [Roberts Dep. at 23-76.] Around this same time, Roberts
encouraged at least one other Beacon employee to apply for the Shift Coordinator
position. Terra Morauski testified that she was asked by Roberts to apply, but she was
hesitant to do so because she did not want to compete against Shaw for the job.
Specifically, she said, “I am so conflicted[.] I really want to talk to Benita and see what
her thoughts are . . . If she truly wants the position I don’t think that I can interview as
I would be running against her for her own job.” [Morauski Dep. at 12, 17-18.] Morauski
decided to interview for the position anyway.
Prior to either Morauski or Shaw interviewing, Roberts stated in an email that
she preferred Morauski for the position. [Roberts Dep. at 76, 83.] After interviews,
Morauski was offered the job. She apparently asked Roberts whether if she declined the
offer, Shaw would get the job, and Roberts told her no. So Morauski accepted.
[Morauski Dep. at 21-22.] The decision was announced on July 14 and Roberts told
Shaw that “we are doing this for your health and your stress.” [Shaw Dep. at 211.] In a
subsequent email, Roberts also stated that “the influencing factor” in the decision was
the need to have a Shift Coordinator cover floor nurse shifts and that previously in “all
her duties assigned” Shaw had been a “great” Shift Coordinator. [Roberts Dep. at 76.]
Roberts also testified prior to making her decision, she didn’t speak with Shaw about
possible accommodations which would have allowed Shaw to better fulfill the duties of
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a Shift Coordinator. [Id. at 84.] Instead, she says she wanted someone who could “fill
the role entirely as a shift coordinator and could clinically perform all the duties.” [Id.]
But as Shaw notes, since taking the Shift Coordinator position full time, Morauski
testified that she had only filled in “here and there” in providing patient care by filling
in as a Nursing Supervisor but never worked a full shift. [Mouraski Dep. at 11.] As was
the case when Shaw held the same position previously, her focus has been on
administrative matters.
With the door to the Shift Coordinator position closed by July 14, Beacon and
Shaw tried to figure out if there was another job she could take within the organization.
Shaw met with Lesley Heckaman, Beacon’s Employee Health Manager, to discuss
possible alternative jobs or formal accommodations for the first time on July 17.
[Heckaman Dep. at 16.] During this meeting, Shaw was given a Medical Inquiry Form,
to fill out which would formally document her disability. Shaw took the form to her
treating physician (Dr. Minnie Enriquez), who filled it out and provided their
assessment of Shaw’s abilities and confirming her disability. One of the limitations
noted in the June 21 statement by Dr. Enriquez is that Shaw was “unable to perform
hands on nursing.” [DE 31 at 10.]
The day after Shaw’s meeting with Heckaman, Roberts told Shaw of an opening
for the position of a Case Manager. On July 27, Shaw shadowed another Case Manager
for half a day and afterwards Shaw stated that while shadowing her hands became
severely numb and she said she couldn’t do the job properly in that condition. But there
is a dispute between the parties as to why exactly Shaw couldn’t do the job. Beacon says
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Shaw simply said she couldn’t do the job with her disability and that was the end of the
story. But Shaw says the problem was that she could not do the job without an
accommodation from Beacon, namely she needed to have access to a heat source and be
able to take short breaks to ensure her fingers stayed warm and didn’t go numb, similar
to what she did to keep warm from 2002 to 2006 when she worked as a Nursing
Supervisor. When she shadowed the other Case Manager, she was not given the
opportunity to take a break to warm her hands, and Shaw says that as a result she
assumed taking such breaks wasn’t an option or an accommodation Beacon was willing
to give. In any event, Shaw did not apply to be or become a Case Manager.
Afterwards, Beacon looked within its organization for sedentary positions, but
nothing satisfactory was found. [Spear Aff. ¶¶ 15-16.] Heckaman, the employee
responsible for managing ADA accommodations, did not meet with Shaw again and
testified that she only had a “small understanding” of the scope of Shaw’s disability.
[Heckaman Dep. at 18.] Nonetheless, Beacon says it looked for jobs, but Shaw simply
didn’t bother to apply for anything it identified. Shaw says this was nothing more than
a sham, as Beacon only looked for jobs which required her to be sedentary, a restriction
she neither needed nor requested. On September 1, Shaw was formally separated from
her employment with Beacon and this lawsuit followed.
Discussion
Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 56 governs a motion for summary judgment.
Summary judgment will be granted “if the movant shows that there is no genuine
dispute as to any material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of
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law.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a). To prevail, a party can either point to undisputed facts
supported by evidence or point to an absence of evidence as to some element of the
other party’s claim or affirmative defense. Celotex Corp. v. Catrett, 477 U.S. 317, 322
(1986) (holding that summary judgment is appropriate “against a party who fails to
make a showing sufficient to establish the existence of an element essential to that
party’s case, and on which that party will bear the burden of proof at trial”). Summary
judgment should be denied “where there is reason to believe that the better course
would be to proceed to a full trial.” Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, 477 U.S. 242, 255 (1986).
Here, both parties are the movant and non-movant. Beacon has moved for
summary judgment on both claims alleged, and Shaw is also a movant as to the failure
to accommodate claim. When evaluating whether to grant summary judgment in either
party’s favor on the claims on which they have moved, I must view all facts “in the light
most favorable to the non-moving party.” Zuppardi v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc., 770 F.3d 644,
649 (7th Cir. 2014). In order for the non-moving party to prevail, “all that is required is
that sufficient evidence supporting the claimed factual dispute be shown to require a
jury or judge to resolve the parties’ differing versions of the truth at trial.” First Nat.
Bank of Ariz. v. Cities Serv. Co., 391 U.S. 253, 288–89 (1968). Thus, if on any element of the
cause of action in question, the non-movant can point to evidence supporting their
position, summary judgment cannot be granted.
Before getting into the substance of the summary judgment motions, there is an
initial kerfuffle about two affidavits that were submitted by Beacon in its summary
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judgment papers. Shaw has moved to strike portions of those affidavits, and that is
where I will begin.
A. Shaw’s Motion to Strike
The first step in any summary judgment decision is amassing the record
evidence from which I must decide if there are questions of material fact. In general,
judges rely on parties to marshal their own evidence in support of their arguments and
while they usually disagree as to the importance or relevancy of certain evidence, the
parties can agree as to what the universe of evidence is. Not so here. Shaw challenges
portions of two affidavits submitted by Beacon in connection with its motion for
summary judgment. Shaw says that portions of the affidavits of Cathy Spear and
Deanna Roberts, both of whom are Beacon employees who were involved in this saga,
are improper. Specifically, she argues that certain paragraphs contain legal conclusions,
lack a factual basis based upon the affiant’s personal knowledge, or contradict prior
sworn deposition testimony from these very same witnesses. Because Shaw seeks to
strike specific paragraphs and not the affidavits entirely, I will undertake the laborious
task of marching through each of the specific paragraphs being challenged.
But first, let’s review the governing law. Affidavits and declarations are familiar
forms of evidence used to support or oppose a motion for summary judgment. Federal
Rule of Civil Procedure 56(c)(4) specifically contemplates them. “An affidavit or
declaration used to support or oppose a motion must be made on personal knowledge,
set out facts that would be admissible in evidence, and show that the affiant or
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declarant is competent to testify on the matters stated.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(c)(4). But like
all testimony, if a witness does not have personal knowledge or a foundation to make
statements, the affidavit testimony is not admissible evidence. “Rule 56 demands
something more specific than the bald assertion of the general truth of a particular
matter, rather it requires affidavits that cite specific concrete facts establishing the
existence of truth of the matter asserted.” Lucas v. Chicago Transit Auth., 367 F.3d 714,
726 (7th Cir. 2004) (quoting Drake v. Minnesota Min. & Mfg. Co., 134 F.3d 878, 887 (7th
Cir. 1998)).
Affidavits also cannot be used to “correct” or impermissibly fill in gaps in a
witness’s prior deposition testimony to prevail at summary judgment. Some judges call
these “sham affidavits.” Indeed, the Seventh Circuit has noted that “A ‘sham affidavit’
is an affidavit that is inadmissible because it contradicts the affiant’s previous testimony
. . . unless the earlier testimony was ambiguous, confusing, or the result of a memory
lapse.” Cook v. O’Neill, 803 F.3d 296, 298 (7th Cir. 2015). Those are limited exceptions,
and if they do not apply and the affidavit testimony conflicts with the deposition
testimony, the later affidavit is disregarded and ignored at summary judgment. Preddie
v. Bartholomew Consol. Sch. Corp., 799 F.3d 806, 809, n.1 (7th Cir. 2015). This is entirely
sensible. A witness sitting for a deposition is subject to cross examination. A witness’s
affidavit, prepared in conjunction with a motion for summary judgment (usually
drafted by the same lawyers who are simultaneously drafting their briefs in support or
opposing summary judgment), is not subject to any cross examination. And as with
most instances, testimony subject to cross examination is held in a higher esteem than
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untested statements of potentially biased witnesses. See United States v. Funds in Amount
of Thirty Thousand Six Hundred Seventy Dollars, 403 F.3d 448, 466 (7th Cir. 2005)
(“Summary judgment would be meaningless if litigants could manufacture genuine
issues of material fact through self-serving and unsupported ‘admissions’ materially
different from positions taken in the past.”).
With these principles in mind, I’ll start with paragraphs 11 and 12 of Cathy
Spear’s affidavit. Spear worked in Human Resources for Beacon. In the two paragraphs
at issue, Spear makes the following statements:
With fewer Shift Coordinators it was essential for the employee
who would fill those roles to have the ability to perform the
Essential Job Duties of the position, including Patient Care Delivery
duties.
Thus, following the June 2017 organizational restructuring, it was
no longer possible for Beacon to accommodate Shaw’s disability by
not requiring Shaw to perform the hands-on patient care duties of
the Shift Coordinator position because the entire purpose of the
organizational restructuring was to address financial issues by
(among other things) consolidating positions and hold Shift
Coordinators accountable for all of the duties of the position.
[DE 32-1 at ¶¶ 11-2.] Shaw says both paragraphs lack factual support in the record and
are not grounded in Spear’s personal knowledge. In opposing Shaw’s motion to strike,
Beacon has filed yet another affidavit from Spear which includes additional information
regarding Spear’s work for the company and why she would have personal knowledge
of staffing issues, job requirements, and Beacon’s efforts to cut costs during its
restructuring. This leaves the issue of a lack of factual support in the record for Spear’s
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assertions. Shaw says that this lack of factual support makes Spear’s affidavit testimony
conclusory and thus impermissible. I agree.
In Lucas, the Seventh Circuit refused to consider affidavit testimony (from a
plaintiff in an employment racial discrimination case) which asserted “that AfricanAmericans were asked to change rail tires more frequently, work longer sections of the
track and were written up for reasons that non-African-Americas were not” without
setting forth any times, dates, or places of these occurrences. Lucas, 367 F.3d at 726.
Spear’s affidavit is similarly lacking in enough specifics to be credited at summary
judgment. The statements at issue are too conclusory and unsupported and are really
nothing more than the legal arguments that Beacon makes in its briefing, recast as
factual testimony. They may well be true—I just don’t know, and I don’t doubt Beacon
had a need to restructure—but they are not sufficient in this context. Accordingly, I will
strike and not consider paragraphs 11 and 12 of the Spear’s affidavit for purposes of
deciding the pending motions for summary judgment.
The next affidavit to address is that of Deanna Roberts. Roberts works as the
Director of the Medical-Surgical Unit and Nursing Support Services. The first
paragraph that Shaw challenges is Paragraph 8. Roberts states that “[t]he ability to do
hands-on nursing responsibilities and provide patient care is an essential function of the
shift coordinator position.” [DE 35-2 at ¶ 8.] Shaw says that testifying as to what is an
“essential function” of a job is a legal conclusion and that Roberts’s testimony lacks
factual support. As discussed later in this opinion, the parties agree that the test of
whether something is an essential function depends on the factors listed in 29 C.F.R. §
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1630.2(n)(3). That regulation specifies that one of the factors considered is “the
employer’s judgment” on the matter. 29 C.F.R. § 1630.2(n)(3).
Thus, Roberts opinion that “hands-on nursing” and “patient care” is an essential
function of the Shift Coordinator job seems highly relevant, and not itself a legal
conclusion, as the relevant regulations specifically note that an employer’s judgment is
one factor which goes into the determination as to whether a particular function is
essential. See 29 C.F.R. § 1630.2(n)(3). Likewise, the supplemental affidavit signed by
Roberts lists specific types of hands-on nursing care that a Shift Coordinator would be
expected to perform. [DE 41-3 at ¶¶ 5-6.] And while I find it somewhat suspect that
Roberts needed to file a supplemental affidavit to clarify and provide support for
statements made in her affidavit on top of her deposition testimony, it will be allowed
in this instance. She is a senior manager in charge of a nursing division for Beacon and
thus would clearly have knowledge on the subject. Accordingly, I will not strike
paragraph 8 of Roberts’s affidavit.
Paragraph 9 of Robert’s Affidavit states: “Shaw was unable to perform those
essential duties (i.e., hands-on nursing responsibilities and direct patient care) due to
her disability.” [DE 32-2 at ¶ 9.] Shaw says that this paragraph lacks factual support and
worse, conflicts with Roberts’ prior sworn deposition testimony. Shaw points to
Roberts’s deposition where she testified that she never observed Shaw perform or
attempt to perform patient care. When asked whether she knew if Shaw could perform
“hands-on patient care at the bedside”, Roberts responded “I did not know. I had not
observed her doing these things.” [See DE 43 at 4.]
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To overcome this rather obvious contradiction, Beacon points to three things.
None of them are availing, mostly because none of them even attempt to smooth the
obvious discrepancy between what Roberts testified to during her deposition and what
she is now saying in her affidavit. Furthermore, this statement is extremely conclusory.
Beacon’s attempt to justify it by pointing to the letter from Shaw’s treating physician
which post-dates Roberts’s decision not to select Shaw as Shift Coordinator further falls
flat. The letter itself is of course admissible, but Beacon cannot have Roberts parrot
conclusions in its favor ex ante. Without an explanation as to why this isn’t a
contradiction or attempt to explain it, I need not weigh in on whether these statements
have enough underlying factual support. Accordingly, Paragraph 9 of the Roberts
Affidavit will be stricken and not considered for purposes of summary judgment.
Shaw next challenges Paragraphs 11-12 of Roberts’s affidavit on similar grounds.
Paragraph 11 says: “Prior to June 2017, Beacon accommodated Shaw’s disability by not
requiring Shaw to perform the hands-on patient care component of her job duties.”
Paragraph 12 goes on to state:
Beacon’s accommodation of Shaw’s disability is illustrated by
Shaw’s final performance evaluation where Shaw received a score
of ‘Not Applicable’ for the ‘Patient Care Delivery’ category of
essential Job Duties (in other words, Beacon could have given Shaw
a score of ‘Unacceptable’ for the Patient Care Delivery category of
essential job duties because Shaw did not perform those duties,
which would have lowered Shaw’s performance score; but instead,
Shaw was assessed a ‘Not Applicable’ so that the limitations caused
by Shaw’s disability would not have an adverse impact of Shaw’s
performance score).
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Like with the challenged portions of the Spears’ affidavit, this reads more like a
regurgitation of Beacon’s legal theory rather than a statement from Roberts’s own
personal knowledge or factual support. For one, besides its own say so, Beacon points
to nothing in the record to show that there was in fact any formal accommodation for
Shaw. Nowhere in Roberts’s affidavit does she say when this supposed accommodation
was given or how it was ever documented. And Shaw was not referred to the Employee
Health Manager who handled ADA accommodations until after Shaw was told she
would not be able to stay on as a Shift Coordinator. Furthermore, once again, Roberts’s
deposition testimony conflicts with her affidavit here. Roberts testified that Shaw did
not perform patient care as a Shift Coordinator prior to June 2017 because she only
worked 64 hours per pay period and thus did not have time to do work beyond her
administrative and clerical work. [Roberts Dep. at 21.] This testimony is not ambiguous,
but it conflicts with Paragraphs 11 and 12. Accordingly, Paragraphs 11-12 will be
stricken and not considered for purposes of summary judgment.
Paragraph 14 states: “It was also an essential function of the Shift Coordinator
position to be able to fill in as a Charge Nurse. Shaw did not perform this duty prior to
June 2017.” For the same reasons that Paragraph 8 of Roberts’s affidavit is permissible
(she can give her opinion as to what are essential functions of the job), I will not strike
this paragraph of the affidavit. Shaw is of course free to argue this isn’t an essential
function of the job and point to the evidence which supports her position, such as the
fact that Shaw’s replacement as Shift Coordinator has never worked as a Charge Nurse
in the role. Furthermore, as discussed below, Paragraph 14 can logically be read in
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connection with Paragraph 15 and as such is at least partially consistent with Roberts’s
deposition testimony. It’s further undisputed that Shaw did not work as a Charge
Nurse while at Beacon, so there is no reason to strike that sentence.
Paragraph 15 states: “I explained that after the organizational restructuring, the
Shift Coordinator would be held accountable for assisting the Director with hands-on
patient care and filling in for Charge Nurse. As an alternative to filling in for Charge
Nurse, I also offered the option of filling in for Patient Flow Coordinator and/or
Nursing Supervisor as necessary in an effort to accommodate Shaw’s physical
limitations.” Again, Shaw says that to the extent Roberts is now trying to say she
offered Shaw an accommodation to perform the job of Shift Coordinator, she is
contradicting her prior deposition testimony. I agree. Roberts testified that she did not
even consider providing Shaw an accommodation to perform the Shift Coordinator
position. [Roberts Dep. at 55-56.] As such, Paragraph 15 is stricken to the extent it
implies that performing the role of Nursing Supervisor or Patient Flow Coordinator
instead of a Charge Nurse was a formal or legal accommodation for Shaw. But it will not
be stricken in full, and I will consider this paragraph to the extent it is offering Roberts’s
testimony as to what is an essential function of the Shift Coordinator position.
The final challenged portion of the Roberts affidavit is Paragraph 27. It states:
“Morauski was ultimately selected to fill the Shift Coordinator position due to her
experience in nursing leadership as a House Supervisor (which includes the Nursing
Supervisor and Patient Flow Coordinator job assignments), positive relationships with
staff and peers, flexibility, and voluntary participation in performance improvement
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activities.” Shaw’s issue here is with the phrasing of Roberts saying why Morauski was
“ultimately” selected as Shift Coordinator. I agree there is at least some conflict between
Roberts’s affidavit and deposition testimony. In her deposition, Roberts testified the
same general reasons, but said “most importantly, [for] this role, I needed to pick
someone that could perform clinical duties whenever asked to perform them because
quality and safety is our number one priority for all patients.” [Roberts Dep. at 76.] This
is really a quibble about adverb usage, but it is a contradiction. However, to me,
Paragraph 27 does not read as a sham, it instead reads more so as an incomplete
statement concerning Roberts’s reasoning in choosing Mouraski. It will not be stricken
but, to the extent it is considered, Roberts’s deposition testimony on the same issue will
be considered too.
B. The Parties’ Cross Motions for Summary Judgment
With the preliminary issues settled, it is time to address the heart of the matter:
the motions for summary judgment. Again, there are two claims at issue in this case:
disability discrimination and a failure to accommodate. These are similar but distinct
claims. The four elements of a prima facie disability discrimination claim are: (1) the
plaintiff is a qualified individual with a disability; (2) the plaintiff was able to meet the
employer’s legitimate expectations in terms of work performance; (3) the employee was
terminated or suffered some other adverse employment action; and (4) the disability
motivated the employer’s action. Monroe v. Indiana Dep't of Transportation, 871 F.3d 495,
504 (7th Cir. 2017). The three elements of a prima facie failure to accommodate claim
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are: (1) the plaintiff is a qualified individual with a disability; (2) the employer knew of
the disability; and (3) the employer failed to reasonably accommodate the disability.
James v. Hyatt Regency Chicago, 707 F.3d 775, 782 (7th Cir. 2013) (citing Kotwica v. Rose
Packing Co., 637 F.3d 744, 747–48 (7th Cir. 2011)). Thus, both claims require as their first
element, that Shaw show she is a “qualified individual with a disability.” No one is
disputing that Shaw has a disability in the form of her Reynaud’s Syndrome and its
attendant impairments, so we can set that issue aside.
So, what does “qualified individual” mean? “An individual is qualified if she
satisfies the pre-requisites for the position and can perform the essential functions of the
position held or desired, with or without reasonable accommodation.” Hoffman v.
Caterpillar, Inc., 256 F.3d 568, 572 (7th Cir. 2001) (citations and internal quotation marks
omitted). Again, no one disputes that Shaw satisfied the prerequisites for the Shift
Coordinator position, she is an RN and worked in that position successfully for over a
decade. Thus, it comes down to whether Shaw could perform the essential functions of
the job. Beacon says that as a matter of law Shaw could not perform the essential
functions of the Shift Coordinator position and for that (and other reasons) it is entitled
to summary judgment. Shaw disputes this and even says that she is the one entitled to
summary judgment on the failure to accommodate claim, in the process saying that the
undisputed facts show she could perform the essential functions of the Shift
Coordinator position. As discussed below, I think both parties are overplaying their
hands.
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Federal regulations include a list of seven non-exhaustive factors that are
relevant to determining “whether a particular function is essential.” 29 C.F.R. §
1630.2(n)(3). They are: “(i) The employer’s judgment as to which functions are essential;
(ii) Written job descriptions prepared before advertising or interviewing applications
for the job; (iii) The amount of time spent on the job performing the function; (iv) The
consequences of not requiring the incumbent to perform the function; (v) The terms of a
collective bargaining agreement; (vi) The work experience of past incumbents in the job;
and/or (vii) The current work experience of incumbents in similar jobs.” Id. The
Seventh Circuit has instructed district courts to look to these factors when answering
whether a particular function should be considered essential. See Lenker v. Methodist
Hosp., 210 F.3d 792, 796 (7th Cir. 2000).
In support of its argument concerning the essential functions of a Shift
Coordinator, Beacon relies heavily on Lenker v. Methodist Hosp. To be frank, I find
Beacon’s reliance on this case perplexing, as it strikes me as fatal to its core argument on
summary judgment. In that case, the Seventh Circuit affirmed a jury verdict in favor of
a hospital, not summary judgment. The posture is important because in Lerner the
question of essential function laid at the heart of the appeal. The plaintiff, a nurse,
argued that lifting a specific amount of weight was not an essential function of his job
because it “comprised at most two percent of a nurse’s day, that devices were available
to assist in lifting patients, and that all nurses were allowed to use their judgment to
determine whether they needed assistance in a particular situation and call for other
staff to help.” 210 F.3d at 796. But on the other end of the spectrum was the hospital’s
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evidence that it “considered lifting an essential function of the job, that it was part of the
job description for staff nurses, that at times, staff shortages or emergencies left a nurse
without assistance in a lifting task, and that the need for lifting was not always
predicable because patients sometimes fell or needed assistance unexpectedly.” Id. In
short, there was evidence on both sides, and it was up to the jury to make the call.
So too here. Beacon points to both the (partially stricken) Roberts affidavit to say
that “Patient Care Delivery” is an essential function and to the written job summary for
Shift Coordinators which says the same thing. Shaw responds that despite what Roberts
and job description state, in practice that just wasn’t the case. She also notes that the
person who replaced her as Shift Coordinator testified that she has never had to fill in
for a full shift as Nursing Supervisor, Patient Flow Coordinator or Charge Nurse. Shaw
also points to evidence that she wasn’t completely unable to perform patient care, and
that she could perform some of the patient care functions of a Nurse Supervisor. She
could walk and stand for prolonged periods of time, push carts and wheelchairs up to
50 pounds, position and lift patients, and provide CPR. [Shaw Aff. ¶ 32-24.] In fact, she
does these things at her current job.
Thus, she says there is evidence that extensive patient care was not an essential
function but instead de minimus functions of the job. Both parties cite evidence in their
favor which bears on the factors contained in 29 C.F.R. § 1630.2(n)(3). This is a very
similar situation in Lenker. But again, when the Seventh Circuit affirmed judgment in
the hospital’s favor, it was doing so only after the jury had the opportunity to weigh in.
A jury will have the same opportunity in this case.
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For this same reason, I find the case before me distinguishable from Stern v. St.
Anthony’s Health Center, 788 F.3d 276 (7th Cir. 2015). In Stern, the Seventh Circuit
affirmed a district court’s grant of summary judgment on ADA claims brought by the
former Director of Psychology at a hospital. The plaintiff had been let go because of
concerns and evidence of his deteriorating memory which made him unfit for his
position and unable to perform the essential clinical and administrative functions of
being the hospital’s chief psychologist. Stern, 788 F.3d at 284. The hospital’s
determination was based upon the professional evaluation of a neuropsychologist of
the plaintiff’s choosing who concluded that the plaintiff was not fit to do his job. In
opposing summary judgment, the plaintiff pointed to three pieces of evidence: his
performance evaluations, testimony from his administrative assistant, and testimony
from his wife. Id. at 286-287. With regard to the performance evaluation, which predated the onset of his memory loss, that he was performing his job adequately, the
evidence was deemed irrelevant, as the inquiry in an ADA discrimination case is
whether the employee can perform the essential functions at the time of his termination,
not at a time preceding it. Id. at 287. Likewise, the testimony from the administrative
assistant and wife, which tended to show he got his work done “as far as [the
administrative assistant] knew”, and that his wife observed him doing his job
adequately in her opinion, was not enough to rebut the professional opinion of
evaluating neurophysiologist. Id. at 287-88. Furthermore, the evidence that the plaintiff
could continue to perform his job with a reasonable accommodation, was nothing more
than “untested opinion/hope.” Id. at 289. But importantly, unlike here, there was no
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challenge as to what the underlying essential functions of the job at issue in Stern were.
That makes Stern uninstructive for deciding this issue in Beacon’s favor.
These clear questions of fact on what truly falls within the scope of the Shift
Coordinator’s “essential functions” is fatal to Shaw’s affirmative motion for summary
judgment on her failure to accommodate claim. They also prevent me from ruling in
Beacon’s favor on its main argument. But that isn’t Beacon’s only argument, and I must
address those remaining arguments.
Beacon argues is that Shaw could not perform the essential functions of the job,
regardless of its exact scope. It bases this argument primarily upon a letter from Shaw’s
medical provider Dr. Minnie S. Enriquez who stated on a “Medical Inquiry Form in
Response to an Accommodation Request” that Shaw was “unable to do hands-on
nursing responsibilities.” [DE 31 at 18.] For one, Shaw had her doctor fill out the form
after Beacon had already terminated her from the Shift Coordinator position, so it’s
unclear how this form could serve as a basis for why Beacon did not discriminate
against Shaw when it terminated her. But in any event, again, my inability to say
definitively what the “essential functions” of the Shift Coordinator position are makes it
impossible for me to rule on whether or not Shaw could perform them. If the “hands-on
nursing responsibilities” referenced by Beacon and Dr. Enriquez (or “Patient Care
Delivery” to use the language in the job description) are not essential functions of the
job, Shaw’s ability to perform them are irrelevant. This argument does not provide a
basis to grant summary judgment in Beacon’s favor.
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Furthermore, Shaw has put forth sufficient evidence to show that Shaw could in
fact perform the “Patient Care Delivery” required of a Nursing Supervisor, which is the
position she was potentially needing to fill in for from time to time. [DE 36 at 11.]
Specifically, she could walk and stand for prolonged periods of time, push carts and
wheelchairs up to 50 pounds, position and lift patients, and provide CPR. Her disability
doesn’t impact her ability to do these things, so long as she can take short breaks to
warm herself with hand warmers, or a space heater. [Shaw Aff. ¶ 32-24.] Whether this is
in fact the case and whether or not allowing Shaw to take breaks to warm herself would
be a reasonable accommodation is for the jury to decide.
Beacon’s final argument is that Shaw “refused” to engage in the “interactive
process” with Beacon after it terminated her as Shift Coordinator but then took efforts
to find her another position. According to Beacon, it was Shaw who rejected the suitable
positions it identified and thus it cannot have failed to accommodate her. Shaw says
that the fault for any failure in the interactive process wasn’t hers, but instead Beacon’s.
She says that after she was terminated, Beacon offered to have her shadow a Case
Manager but offered her nothing in terms of accommodation.
Beacon points to an email Shaw sent in which she stated that her “health issues
are going to prevent me from seeking this role” because her hands and feet became
numb while shadowing. But Shaw says that shows an incomplete picture. As she
testified, when she shadowed the Case Manager position for half a day, she wasn’t
allowed any breaks or access to a heater to warm up throughout the shift. [Shaw Dep.
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149-150.] Thus, she assumed that wasn’t an option. As a result, she says, the failure of
her potential job as a Case Manager lies with Beacon, not her.
Beacon (specifically Cathy Spear and Lesley Heckaman) then searched for
additional possible positions, but their efforts to find Shaw another job focused only on
“desk” and “seated” positions—limitations which weren’t necessary for Shaw, as she
could walk and stand just fine she says. She needed access to heat sources and short
breaks, not a chair. In effect, she is arguing that Beacon’s efforts were either a sham or
misinformed to the point that they were meaningless. While Shaw’s evidence here
seems weaker, nonetheless she has put forth enough evidence that I cannot grant
summary judgment in Beacon’s favor based on this argument. For one, as Beacon notes
a failure to engage in the interactive process is not in and of itself dispositive of the
issue. [See DE 31 (citing Rehling v. City of Chicago, 207 F.3d 1009, 1016 (7th Cir. 2000).]
Furthermore, Beacon doesn’t explain why it did not offer Shaw access to a heat source
while she shadowed the Case Manager position even though it was well-aware of her
condition and that she had used a heater in the past. Nor does Beacon say why it would
be unreasonable to let Shaw have access to such a heater or why it then limited its
search only to sedentary positions. At the same time, it may be the case that seated and
sedentary positions were the only ones which would otherwise accommodate Shaw and
her disability. In any event, the point is, I cannot say as a matter of undisputed fact that
it was Shaw who refused to engage in the interactive process which would entitle
Beacon to summary judgment on the failure to accommodate claim.
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Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, Plaintiff Benita Shaw’s Motion to Strike [DE 34] is
GRANTED in part and DENIED in part; Plaintiff Benita Shaw’s Motion for Partial
Summary Judgment [DE 27] is DENIED; and Defendant Beacon Health System, Inc.’s
Motion for Summary Judgment [DE 30] is DENIED.
SO ORDERED on July 19, 2019.
/s/ Philip P. Simon
PHILIP P. SIMON, JUDGE
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
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