Gage v. Rymes Heating Oils, Inc.
Filing
29
///ORDER granting in part and denying in part 12 Motion for Summary Judgment. So Ordered by Judge Paul J. Barbadoro.(jna) Modified on 3/1/2016 to add: ///(vln).
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE DISTRICT OF NEW HAMPSHIRE
Mariah J. Gage
v.
Case No. 14-cv-480-PB
Opinion No. 2016 DNH 038
Rymes Heating Oils, Inc.
MEMORANDUM AND ORDER
Mariah J. Gage sued her former employer, Rymes Heating
Oils, Inc., alleging that Rymes violated both the Americans with
Disabilities Act (“ADA”) and New Hampshire’s Law Against
Discrimination by demoting and firing her on the basis of her
disability, an episodic migraine condition.
She also claims
that Rymes wrongfully discharged her in violation of New
Hampshire law.
Rymes has responded with a motion for summary
judgment.
I.
BACKGROUND
Gage worked at Rymes for approximately nine months, from
September 2012 until June 25, 2013.
Rymes hired Gage to work as
a receptionist at the company’s Pembroke, NH office, where her
responsibilities included greeting and assisting customers,
scanning and filing documents, and running various errands
outside the office.
Megan Enright.
Gage’s immediate supervisor at Rymes was
At the outset of her employment, Gage signed a document
outlining the company’s personal and sick time policy.
12-3.
Doc. No.
That document detailed how Rymes employees accrued, and
were required to use, paid vacation and “personal time,” which
employees could use for “temporary absence due to appointments,
illness or injuries.”
Id. at 3.
personal time on a weekly basis.
Employees accrued vacation and
After a ninety-day
probationary period, full-time employees were entitled to ten
vacation days per year, accrued at a rate of 1.5396 hours per
week, plus six paid personal days, accrued at a rate of .93
hours per week.
In addition, Rymes gave all of its full-time
employees eight hours of unpaid personal time.
The policy
provided that, “[i]n the event an employee exceeds the limits
outlined in this document an employee will be terminated
immediately.”
Id. at 3.
Rymes’ operations manager, Charles Cosseboom, was
responsible for hiring and firing decisions at Rymes.
As
Cosseboom explained during his deposition, Rymes did not always
fire an employee who missed work without previously accruing
sufficient personal time.
See Doc. No. 14-3 at 4.
Cosseboom
stated, however, that Rymes did not have any “written
guideline[s]” regarding whether an employee would be fired for
excessive absenteeism.
Id.
2
From the beginning of her employment through June 11, 2013,
Gage had fourteen unexcused absences, where she either arrived
to work late, left work early, or missed work for an entire day
without having accrued the necessary personal time.
12-5 at 2.
Doc. No.
Neither party has provided a detailed explanation
for these absences.
At her deposition, however, Gage stated
that she missed work for several reasons, including to care for
her son when he was ill, to attend family court proceedings, and
to travel to visit her boyfriend in another state.1
Doc. No. 14-
2 at 6.
Gage also missed work due to her own illnesses.
On March
27 and 28, 2013, she was out due to a flu-like illness.
According to Gage, she was stricken with “a virus” on March 27,
and “suffered uncontrollable bouts of nausea on March 27, 2013
and the following day.”
Doc. No. 14-4 at 1.
Gage visited her
The record also contains a note from Concord Pediatrics
certifying that Gage was absent from work on October 19, 2012,
and would be absent again on October 22, to bring her son to the
doctor. Doc. No. 14-7 at 32. In addition, the record contains
four Rymes “employee requests for vacation/personal time payout”
forms. Id. at 28-31. These documents suggest that Gage
requested, and her supervisor approved, 8.5 hours off on April
5, 2013 for an unspecified reason; 4.5 hours off on April 8,
2013, apparently for an appointment for her son; four hours off
on June 5, 2013, apparently for her son’s surgery; and eight
hours off on July 18, 2013 for an unspecified reason. Id.
During the deposition of Gage’s former supervisor, Megan
Enright, Gage’s counsel asked Enright about several of Gage’s
specific absences. Id. at 13-14. Enright stated that she could
not recall why Gage left early or arrived late on the specific
dates discussed. Id.
1
3
doctor on March 27, who wrote a note stating “[p]lease excuse
[Gage] from work today, March 27, 2013 and March 28, 2013, for
legitimate medical reasons.
call.”
If you have any questions, please
Doc. No. 14-7 at 27 (doctor’s note).
Gage returned to work on March 29, 2013 and gave the
doctor’s note to her supervisor, Megan Enright, and to HR
Generalist Dean Tremblay.
That same day, Enright and Tremblay
met with Gage to discuss her absences.
During the meeting,
Enright and Tremblay reminded Gage of the company’s attendance
policy, and told her that her job was in jeopardy because she
had been absent without the appropriate personal time accrued.
Doc. No. 14-4 at 1-2.
Gage further recalls that, during that
meeting, Tremblay “specifically warned [her] that the next time
[she] missed work for any reason [she] would be terminated.”
Id. at 2.
On April 1, 2013, several days after Gage missed work due
to her “flu like” illness, Gage and Enright discussed Gage’s
health condition via instant message.
Enright asked Gage
whether she was feeling better, and Gage responded that she had
“a massive migraine right now, slightly queasy stomach but over
all not bad, I think I have a sinus coming AGAIN.”
Doc. No. 14-
7 at 35 (emphasis in original).
Gage had no additional unexcused absences until June 12,
2013.
That morning, Gage awoke at approximately 5:30 a.m. with
4
a severe right-sided headache and numbness on the left side of
her body.
Doc. No. 14-4 at 2.
She was unable to dress herself,
unable to “compose a text [message to a coworker describing her
symptoms] that made any sense,” and was unable to “find words”
when trying to speak with her mother, Debra Gage.
Id.
that Gage was having a stroke, Gage’s mother called 911.
Fearing
Gage
was taken by ambulance to Concord Hospital for treatment.
Id.;
Doc. No. 14-6 at 1.
At about 6:30 or 7:00 a.m. on June 12, Debra Gage called HR
Generalist Tremblay, and left a voicemail explaining that Gage
would not be at work that day, that she “believed that [Gage]
was suffering a stroke, and that an ambulance had just taken
[Gage] to Concord Hospital.”
Doc. No. 14-6 at 1.
When Tremblay
did not return Ms. Gage’s call, Ms. Gage called Rymes again
later in the day.
The person who answered her call responded
that Tremblay was not available “but that [her] message had been
received.”
Id.
An emergency room report memorializes Gage’s treatment at
Concord Hospital.
The report describes Gage as a “23-year-old
female with a history of chronic migraines” and a family history
of migraines.
Doc. No. 12-4 at 2.
According to the report,
Gage explained her condition as “her typical headache,” but that
she had never before “had the other symptoms,” namely the
numbness and cognitive impairments, alongside her headache.
5
Id.
The doctor notes that he had “a long conversation with [Gage and
Gage’s mother] about the suspicion that [her condition]
represents a complex migraine and not a TIA [transient ischemic
attack] or stroke.”
Id. at 3.
The report further indicates
that the doctor did “not think this represents a TIA.”
Id.
Instead, the doctor diagnosed Gage with a “[c]omplex
migraine,” which had likely been exacerbated by Gage’s new birth
control medication.
Id. at 3-4.
The doctor recommended “close
follow up with the primary care in the next 24 hours” and outpatient MRI and MRA imaging.
Id.
The doctor also recommended
that Gage see a headache specialist “as she clearly states to me
that she gets headaches on a regular basis going back to an
early age of 8 with a strong family history.”
Id. at 4.
The
report, which the doctor signed electronically at 11:15 that
morning, indicates that Gage’s symptoms had “completely
resolved.”
Id. at 3.
Meanwhile, also on June 12, several of Gage’s co-workers
discussed her condition via instant message.
At 1:05 that
afternoon, Enright sent a message to her immediate supervisor,
Megan Wilson, stating that Enright was “super annoyed with the
whole [Gage] thing.”
Doc. No. 14-7 at 43.
Wilson responded
that she had “already made [operations manager Cosseboom] aware”
and said that “it was just a matter of time . . . .”
Id.
Enright replied that she knew that Gage was not “feeling good on
6
Monday and she had to go to the doctor’s [M]onday night because
they thought she had a blood clot, then she was taken by
ambulance last night or this morning, [I] would really like to
know why the hell she couldn’t call in herself.”
Id. at 43.
Several minutes later, Enright told Wilson that she had “just
talked to [Gage’s friend and co-worker Crystal Rockwell, who]
said that they think that [Gage] had a stroke, she was sluring
[sic] her words this morning and every [sic] confused and
couldn’t form a sentence.
She is in the [emergency room] and
they are running test[s] to see what is going on.”
Id.
Later that afternoon, Enright, Wilson, Cosseboom, and
Tremblay decided to “have a talk” with Gage when she returned to
work.
Id. at 7.
Gage’s superiors considered firing her
following her June 12 absence, but instead decided to move her
to a different desk in the office and to take away some of her
previous job tasks.
Id. at 8.
In describing this decision, Enright explained that Gage’s
superiors “felt at that time that she was not able to sit up at
the front receptionist desk as . . . her attendance wasn’t there
to help walk in customers, which was what [Rymes] really
needed.”
Id.
Enright said that Cosseboom “simply moved [Gage]
away from the front desk so she didn’t have to help walk in
customers, as she constantly had migraines, and she was never
there to help walk in customers.”
7
Id. at 9.
Following June 12,
Gage kept her same pay rate and “all the same benefits,” as well
as “the same job duties as she was doing [before] minus helping
walk the customers or driving to the bank or the Post Office.”
Id.
Gage returned to work on June 13, 2013, the day after her
hospitalization.
That morning, Enright asked Gage about the
June 12 incident via instant message, writing “[h]ey, we never
got in touch with your mom yesterday, what’s going on?”
36.
Id. at
Gage responded “transient [i]schemic attack (mini stroke),”
but said that she was “alright though, just have to have an MRA
and stuff done.”2
Id.
Gage also gave a doctor’s note to
Tremblay.
That same day, Enright and Tremblay again met with Gage to
discuss her absences.
According to Gage’s version of that
conversation, Tremblay “did not ask [her] anything about [her]
condition and instead just told [her] that he was demoting [her]
from [the] receptionist position.”
Doc. No. 14-4 at 2.
According to Tremblay’s summary of that same meeting, Enright
and Tremblay told Gage that her job was in jeopardy because of
her absences, and said that Gage would be moved to a different
desk, and would no longer greet customers or run errands.
A magnetic resonance angiogram, or MRA, is a noninvasive test
that is used in evaluating the blood vessels in a patient’s
brain and neck.
2
8
Gage reports that she was “humiliated” and “saddened by the
loss of job responsibilities.”
Doc. No. 14-4 at 3.
Gage’s coworkers apparently noticed the change too.
A number of
In a June
21, 2013 instant message exchange, Wilson told Enright that “so
far 3 people have asked [Gage] why she is back here,” to which
Enright responded, “good! Must be embarrassing for her.”
No. 14-7 at 46.
Doc.
In that same conversation, Enright told Wilson
that she was “dieing [sic] to catch [Gage] on her cell phone or
online so we can just send her home.”
Id.
The final incident preceding Gage’s termination allegedly
occurred on June 24, 2013, although the parties dispute what
happened that day.
According to Tremblay, another Rymes
employee told Tremblay that Gage was crying in the basement of
Rymes’ office building.3
Enright then went to the basement to
look for Gage, but could not find her there or anywhere else in
the building.
Doc. No. 14-8 at 11.
Tremblay then went into the
basement himself and looked around, but was similarly unable to
find Gage.
Tremblay reported that Gage “was nowhere to be found
for 30 minutes.”
Id.
This apparently was not the first time that Gage was found
crying in the basement. In a June 21, 2013 instant message
conversation, Enright told Tremblay that Gage “is at the filing
cabinets now . . . I just went down stairs and she was filing.
She isn’t crying anymore but I asked why she was cring [sic] and
she said that she just has a wicked headache.” Doc. No. 14-7 at
39.
3
9
Gage disputes this account.
She reports that she was
filing documents in the basement on June 24, and was “suddenly
overcome with emotion” because she “felt as though [she] was
walking on eggshells at Rymes and that the company was going to
fire me the first chance it got.”
Doc. No. 14-4 at 3.
Gage
claims that both “Ms. Enright, and later Mr. Tremblay, came down
to the basement where [she] was filing” documents, and Gage
states that she “separately spoke with each of them.”
Id.
Gage
contends that she “never went missing from the Rymes building on
June 24, 2013, nor did anyone . . . ever question [her] about
supposedly having been absent from the workplace” that day.
Id.
Following Gage’s alleged thirty-minute absence from the
Rymes offices on June 24, Tremblay consulted with Cosseboom, and
Cosseboom decided to fire Gage.
The next day, June 25, Enright
and Tremblay told Gage that her employment had been terminated.
Rymes reports that it fired Gage “for performance issues and
attendance issues,” Doc. No. 14-7 at 49, though Cosseboom stated
at his deposition that Gage’s attendance was “the primary
reason” for her firing.4
Doc. No. 14-3 at 7.
More specifically,
at Cosseboom’s deposition, Gage’s counsel asked, “under Rymes’
strict attendance policy, [does it] matter what the reason was
For the purposes of its summary judgment motion, Rymes assumes
that Gage’s absences were the sole reason for her firing. Doc.
No. 16 at 6 n.2.
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for her absence on June 12[?]”
Id.
Cosseboom responded that
“[t]he last [absence] is always the one that’s the problem, but
the ones before that, there wasn’t an individual event with
[Gage], one absenteeism.”
II.
Id.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
Summary judgment is appropriate when the record reveals “no
genuine dispute as to any material fact and [that] the movant is
entitled to judgment as a matter of law.”
56(a).
Fed. R. Civ. P.
The evidence submitted in support of the motion must be
considered in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party,
drawing all reasonable inferences in its favor.
See Navarro v.
Pfizer Corp., 261 F.3d 90, 94 (1st Cir. 2001).
A party seeking summary judgment must first identify the
absence of any genuine dispute of material fact.
v. Catrett, 477 U.S. 317, 323 (1986).
Celotex Corp.
A material fact “is one
‘that might affect the outcome of the suit under the governing
law.’”
United States v. One Parcel of Real Prop. with Bldgs.,
960 F.2d 200, 204 (1st Cir.1992) (quoting Anderson v. Liberty
Lobby, Inc., 477 U.S. 242, 248 (1986)).
If the moving party
satisfies this burden, the nonmoving party must then “produce
evidence on which a reasonable finder of fact, under the
appropriate proof burden, could base a verdict for it; if that
party cannot produce such evidence, the motion must be granted.”
11
Ayala—Gerena v. Bristol Myers—Squibb Co., 95 F.3d 86, 94 (1st
Cir.1996); see Celotex, 477 U.S. at 323.
III.
ANALYSIS
Gage has brought three claims against Rymes.
She first
alleges that she suffered a disability – an episodic migraine
condition – while she was employed at Rymes, and claims that
Rymes violated both the ADA (Count I) and Section 354-A of the
New Hampshire Revised Statutes Annotated (Count II) by (1)
“demoting” and ultimately firing her on the basis of her
disability, and (2) otherwise failing to accommodate her
disability.
In Count III, Gage asserts that her firing also
constituted a wrongful discharge under New Hampshire law.
Rymes presents various challenges to Gage’s claims.
It
argues that Gage’s ADA and Section 354-A claims fail because she
did not suffer from a “disability,” as defined by the ADA and
Section 354-A.
It further contends that, even assuming that
Gage had such a disability, summary judgment is appropriate on
Counts I and II because (1) any adverse employment action
against Gage was a result of her excessive absenteeism rather
than her disability, and (2) Gage never requested an
accommodation for her disability.
Rymes also asserts that
Gage’s wrongful discharge claim fails because Gage cannot show
either that her termination was motivated by bad faith,
12
retaliation, or malice, or that she was fired for performing an
act encouraged by public policy.
A.
I address each argument below.
Disability Claims5
1.
Disability
Title I of the ADA prohibits discrimination “against a
qualified individual on the basis of disability.”
12112(a).
42 U.S.C. §
A plaintiff can bring two types of ADA claims: a so-
called “accommodation claim” and a “discrimination claim.”
To make out a viable “accommodation claim,” a plaintiff must
show that “(1) [she] is disabled within the meaning of the ADA,
(2) [she] was able to perform the essential functions of the job
with or without a reasonable accommodation, and (3) [her
employer], despite knowing of [her] disability, did not
reasonably accommodate it.”
115, 119 (1st Cir. 2003).
Rocafort v. IBM Corp., 334 F.3d
To survive summary judgment on a
“discrimination claim,” a plaintiff must present sufficient
evidence for a reasonable juror to find “(1) that [she] was
‘disabled’ within the meaning of the ADA; (2) that [she] was
Gage has brought virtually identical claims pursuant to both
the ADA (Count I) and Section 354-A (Count II). As both this
court and the New Hampshire Supreme Court have recognized,
claims under Section 354-A are construed in conformity with the
ADA. See Montemerlo v. Goffstown Sch. Dist., SAU No. 19, 2013
DNH 134, 13-14. Accordingly, and as both Rymes and Gage agree,
the parties’ arguments regarding Gage’s Section 354-A claim rise
and fall on the same bases as their ADA arguments. See Doc.
Nos. 12-1 at 15; 14-1 at 13 n.3. My analysis of Gage’s ADA
claim therefore applies equally to Gage’s Section 354-A claim.
5
13
able to perform the essential functions of [her] job with or
without accommodation; and (3) that [she] was discharged or
adversely affected, in whole or in part, because of [her]
disability.”
See Thornton v. United Parcel Serv., Inc., 587
F.3d 27, 34 (1st Cir. 2009).
Thus, both a discrimination claim
and an accommodation claim require proof that the plaintiff was
“disabled” within the meaning of the ADA.
The ADA defines “disability” with respect to an individual
as “(A) a physical or mental impairment that substantially
limits one or more major life activities of such individual; (B)
a record of such an impairment; or (C) being regarded as having
such an impairment . . . .”
42 U.S.C. § 12102(1).
Here, Gage
proceeds primarily under the first (“actual disability”)
category of the disability definition.6
Gage argues that she is disabled because she suffers from
disabling episodic migraine headaches.
Rhymes responds by first
claiming that Gage waived her episodic migraine claim because
she disavowed any such claim during her deposition.
In the
Gage does not assert that she was “regarded as” being disabled
pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 12102(1)(C). She does argue, however,
that she had a “record of” disability when she was fired. Doc.
No. 14-1 at 21-22. This argument consists almost exclusively of
Gage stating that she “had a record of receiving emergency room
treatment on June 12, 2013 . . . .” Id. Because Gage did not
develop this secondary argument, and because it ultimately has
no impact on Rymes’ motion, I do not address her claim in
detail.
6
14
alternative, it argues that the evidence Gage points to in
support of her claim is simply insufficient to satisfy her
burden of proof on the issue.
I begin with Rymes’s waiver
argument.
a.
Waiver
Gage alleged in her complaint that she is disabled in part
because she “suffers from migraine headaches that substantially
limit her in major life activities.”
Doc. No. 1 at 4.
During
her deposition, however, Gage engaged in the following exchange
with Rymes’ attorney:
Q:
A:
Q:
A:
Q:
A:
Q:
[Y]our lawsuit . . . alleges that you suffer from
a disability; is that right?
At the time, yes.
Okay. And that disability was migraines?
I had a stroke.
And the stroke was your disability?
That day, yes.
Okay. Did you have any other disability during
your course of your employment at Rymes?
No.
A:
Doc. No. 14-2 at 4.
Rymes argues that this exchange effectively
waived any claim that Gage suffers from disabling migraine
headaches.
Rymes bases its waiver argument on decisions from other
jurisdictions in which courts have ruled that a plaintiff’s
deposition testimony waived a cause of action or theory of
liability asserted in the plaintiff’s complaint.
See, e.g.,
Buenrostro v. Potter, 176 F. App’x 828, 829 (9th Cir. 2006);
15
Johnson v. E.A. Miller, Inc., 172 F.3d 62 (10th Cir. 1999);
Butler v. Exxon Mobile Corp., 838 F. Supp. 2d 473, 486 (M.D. La.
2012).
The First Circuit has not adopted such a rule, however,
and I decline to do so here.
Rymes finds no support for its waiver argument in either
the rules of civil procedure or the rules of evidence.
Although
the rules of civil procedure specify that an admission made in
response to a request for admission under Fed. R. Civ. P. 36
conclusively establishes the fact admitted, the rules governing
depositions do not give similar effect to deposition testimony.
Further, the applicable rule of evidence, Fed. R. Evid.
801(d)(2), is flatly inconsistent with Rymes’ argument as it
treats a party opponent’s statement in a deposition as an
“evidentiary admission,” which may be offered in evidence by an
adversary without preventing the deponent from later introducing
other evidence that explains or contradicts the admission.
See
Keller v. United States, 58 F.3d 1194, 1198 n.8 (7th Cir. 1995).
I am reluctant to treat an evidentiary admission in a
deposition as the functional equivalent of an admission under
Rule 36.
Few deponents are trained lawyers.
Litigants do not
necessarily understand the legal theories on which their claims
are based.
They make honest mistakes, forget pertinent facts,
and misunderstand the significance of the questions being asked.
See Weiss v. Union Cent. Life Ins. Co., 28 F. App’x 87, 89 (2d
16
Cir. 2002); Guadagno v. Wallack Ader Levithan Assocs., 950 F.
Supp. 1258, 1261 (S.D.N.Y. 1997).
In the interests of fairness,
then, a party should ordinarily be allowed to explain or
controvert an admission made during a deposition.
See Lee v.
Smith & Wesson Corp., 760 F.3d 523, 528 (6th Cir. 2014).
Here, pursuant to this general rule, it is appropriate to
treat Gage’s deposition testimony as an evidentiary admission.
At the deposition, Rymes counsel asked Gage to describe her
“disability,” Doc. No. 14-2 at 4, a question that required Gage,
a lay-person, to understand both her medical condition, and the
legal definition of “disability.”
Gage’s response – that her
only “disability” was a “stroke” on June 12 – was inconsistent
with both the disability pled in her complaint (migraine), and
her June 12 diagnosis (complex migraine).
Under these
circumstances, it would be inequitable to treat Gage’s testimony
as a binding admission.
See Lee, 760 F.3d at 528 (“A tort
plaintiff should be able to testify honestly to his memory of
what happened and still have his lawyer argue that on the
evidence as a whole it is more probable than not that the memory
was faulty.”).7
Rymes is also off base in claiming that this issue is governed
by the so-called “sham affidavit” rule. According to this rule,
“[w]hen an interested witness has given clear answers to
unambiguous questions, [s]he cannot create a conflict and resist
summary judgment with an affidavit that is clearly
contradictory, but does not give a satisfactory explanation of
7
17
I accordingly reject Rymes’ argument that Gage’s deposition
testimony prevents her from arguing that her episodic migraine
condition constituted a disability under the ADA.8
b.
Sufficiency
Gage asserts that she was actually disabled when she worked
for Rymes due to an episodic migraine condition, and that her
June 12, 2013 complex migraine9 was a severe manifestation of
why the testimony is changed." Colantuoni v. Alfred Calcagni &
Sons, Inc., 44 F.3d 1, 4-5 (1st Cir. 1994). The rule thus
allows courts, under appropriate circumstances, to ignore an
affidavit that was produced solely to defeat summary judgment.
That rule is inapposite here, however, because Gage does not
rely upon a self-serving affidavit to oppose Rymes’ motion for
summary judgment. Instead, as explained below, Gage cites other
evidence - medical records, instant message exchanges, and
others’ deposition testimony – to show that she in fact suffered
from chronic migraines. The sham affidavit rule therefore does
not bar Gage from advancing an evidentiary theory that is
inconsistent with her deposition testimony.
Rymes attempts to bolster its waiver argument by pointing to
the fact that Gage waited until her surreply memorandum to
present her episodic migraine argument. Although there is
precedent at the appellate level for the proposition that an
argument that is not presented in an opening brief is waived,
see, e.g., North American Specialty Ins. Co., 258 F.3d 35, 45
(1st Cir. 2001), Rymes does not cite to this case law or
otherwise explain how such a rule should be applied in the trial
courts. Because this argument has not been properly developed
as a distinct basis for the relief Rymes seeks, I decline to
consider it.
8
At various times, including in her briefs, Gage has suggested
that she suffered a transient ischemic attack or “mini stroke”
or “stroke” on June 12. See Doc. Nos. 14-1 at 14; 14-2 at 4;
14-7 at 36. There is, however, no medical evidence in the
record to support her claim. Instead, Gage was actually
diagnosed with a complex migraine, and the emergency report
repeatedly indicates that the doctor did “not think [Gage’s
9
18
that condition.
The ADAAA provides that “[a]n impairment that
is episodic or in remission is a disability if it would
substantially limit a major life activity when active.”
U.S.C. § 12102(4)(D).
42
Courts must consider whether an episodic
impairment substantially limits a plaintiff’s major life
activities “without regard to the ameliorative effects of
mitigating measures,” such as medication.
see 29 C.F.R. § 1630.2(j)(1)(vi).
Id. at § 12102(4)(E);
Here, Gage argues that, when
active and unmitigated, her migraine condition substantially
limits her major life activities of “feel[ing],” “speak[ing],”
and “communicat[ing].”
Doc. No. 20 at 2.
In response, Rymes does not dispute that, in some
circumstances, an episodic migraine impairment could constitute
a disability.
Instead it argues that Gage has proffered
insufficient evidence to show either that she actually suffered
from migraines, or that her condition substantially limited her
with respect to major life activities.
For the reasons set
forth below, Gage has provided minimally sufficient evidence to
support her episodic migraine claim.
First, there is enough evidence for a reasonable juror to
find that Gage actually suffered from a migraine condition.
That evidence includes Gage’s June 12, 2013 “chronic migraine”
condition] represents a TIA.” Doc. No. 12-4 at 2.
refer to Gage’s June 12 impairment as a migraine.
19
I therefore
diagnosis, and her statements, recorded in the June 12 hospital
report, that she had experienced migraines on a “regular basis”
since age eight.
Doc. No. 12-4.
Megan Enright’s statements,
including her reference in an instant message exchange to Gage
having a “wicked headache” on June 21, 2013, and her deposition
testimony that Gage “constantly had migraines,” substantiate
Gage’s claim.
See Doc. No. 14-7 at 9, 39.
Second, there is also sufficient evidence to support Gage’s
contention that her migraine condition substantially limited her
major life activities of “feel[ing],” “speak[ing],” and
“communicat[ing]” when active.
Doc. No. 20 at 2.
That evidence
again largely consists of Gage’s comments regarding her June 12
migraine, which produced numbness and cognitive impairments.
See Doc. Nos. 12-4; 14-4.
And, again, Enright’s deposition
testimony that Gage “constantly had migraines, and . . . was
never [at the reception desk] to help walk in customers”
arguably corroborates Gage’s claim that her migraine condition
was substantially limiting when active.
This evidence is undoubtedly thin.
There is no evidence,
for example, that Gage’s migraines were as debilitating on any
other occasion as during her June 12 episode - the evidence in
fact suggests that her June 12 migraine was unusually serious.
Moreover, Gage has not provided medical evidence, or even her
own affidavit, describing the frequency or intensity of her
20
headaches.
Nonetheless, the ADAAA and accompanying regulations
demand a generous view of Gage’s proffer.
The substantial
limitation standard “is not meant to be . . . demanding,” and a
plaintiff “usually will not [be required to produce] scientific,
medical, or statistical analysis” to show that her impairment
imposes a substantial limitation.
(v).
29 C.F.R. § 1630.2(j)(1)(i)-
Based upon the ADAAA’s plaintiff-friendly standard, then,
and when drawing every reasonable inference in Gage’s favor, a
reasonable juror could find that Gage’s migraine condition, when
active and unmitigated, substantially limited her with respect
to the major life activities of feeling, speaking and
communicating.
I thus decline to grant Rymes’ motion for
summary judgment on this basis.10
2.
Discrimination Claims
Rymes next contends that, even assuming that Gage had a
qualifying disability, her disability discrimination claims fail
because Rymes fired her for excessive unexcused absences rather
than because she suffered from migraines.
Gage responds that
In her initial objection to Rymes’ motion for summary judgment,
Gage argued that her June 12 migraine – standing alone, and
without any evidence that she had previously experienced a
similar event - was sufficiently severe to qualify as a
disability. At oral argument, however, Gage’s counsel abandoned
this argument. I therefore need not consider whether that
single episode, which produced serious symptoms for about six
hours before Gage’s symptoms “completely resolved,” could
qualify as a disability under the ADA and the ADAAA.
10
21
Rymes’ proffered justification for her “demotion” and dismissal
was a pretext for discrimination, and that she was actually
“demoted” and fired because of her disability.11
In ADA cases that lack direct evidence of discriminatory
motive, courts apply the familiar burden shifting framework
established in McDonnell Douglas Corp. v. Green, 411 U.S. 792
(1973).
See Patten v. Wal-Mart Stores East, Inc., 300 F.3d 21,
24-25 (1st Cir. 2002).
Under this framework, the plaintiff must
first establish a prima facie case of discrimination.
Concord Gen. Mut. Ins. Co., 2009 DNH 074, 14-15.
Duhy v.
If the
plaintiff succeeds in establishing a prima facie case, the
burden shifts to the employer to provide a non-discriminatory
reason for the adverse employment action.
Id.
If the employer
satisfies this burden, the burden shifts back to the plaintiff
to show that employer’s stated reason for the adverse employment
action was a pretext for discrimination.
Id.
Rymes contends that Gage cannot show that its proffered
justification for moving and then firing her – namely, her
Rymes also argues that Gage’s move from the reception desk did
not constitute an adverse employment action. Doc. No. 12-1 at
9-10. I need not resolve this issue here, however, in light of
my ultimate conclusion that Gage’s discrimination claim survives
summary judgment. Although I refer to this move as a “demotion”
for the sake of brevity, I express no opinion regarding whether
Gage’s change in responsibilities constituted an adverse
employment action.
11
22
failure to abide by the company’s personal time policy - was a
pretext for discrimination.
There is no “mechanical formula for
finding pretext,” and instead “it is the type of inquiry where
everything depends on the individual facts.”
Kelley v.
Correctional Med. Servs., Inc., 707 F.3d 108, 116 (1st Cir.
2013) (citations and alterations omitted).
A plaintiff can show
pretext in a variety of ways, including through “evidence of
differential treatment in the workplace, statistical evidence
showing disparate treatment, temporal proximity of an employee's
protected activity to an employer's adverse action, and comments
by the employer which intimate a retaliatory mindset.”
Mesnick
v. Gen. Elec. Co., 950 F.2d 816, 828 (1st Cir. 1991) (internal
citations omitted); see Bellerose v. SAU No. 39, 2014 DNH 265,
16.
Finally, the First Circuit has cautioned courts to be
“particularly cautious about granting the employer’s motion for
summary judgment” in cases where “the issue becomes whether the
employer’s stated nondiscriminatory reason is a pretext for
discrimination.”
Kelley, 707 F.3d at 115-16.
Here too, Gage has produced minimally sufficient evidence
to support her claim that Rymes’ proffered reason for firing her
was a pretext for unlawful disability discrimination.
That
evidence includes Enright’s instant message exchanges regarding
Gage’s headaches, and her deposition testimony that Gage was
moved from the reception desk after June 12, 2013 in part
23
because she “constantly had migraines, and . . . was never there
to help walk in customers.”
Doc. No. 14-7 at 9.
Viewed
generously, these statements suggest that Gage’s supervisors
were aware of her migraine condition, and believed that her
condition adversely affected her job performance.
These remarks
are particularly helpful to Gage’s claim given Enright’s role in
the discussion that led to Gage’s termination, and the close
temporal connection between the conversations, Gage’s change in
responsibilities, and her June 25 firing.
See Kelley, 707 F.3d
at 117 (“One well-established method of demonstrating pretext is
to show that discriminatory comments were made by the key
decisionmaker or those in a position to influence the
decisionmaker.”) (citations and internal punctuation omitted).
Thus, viewed in the light most favorable to Gage, there is
sufficient record evidence that Rymes’ proffered reason for
firing her was a pretext for discrimination.
3.
Accommodation Claims
Although Gage has presented minimally sufficient disability
discrimination claims, Rymes is entitled to summary judgment on
Gage’s accommodation claims.
See Doc. No. 12-1 at 14-15.
Gage contends that, because she disclosed that she was
absent from work on June 12, 2013 due to “stroke-like symptoms,”
Rymes was obligated to allow her a one-day leave of absence as
an accommodation for her disability.
24
Doc. No. 14-1 at 22-24.
She also appears to argue that Rymes violated the ADA by failing
to initiate an interactive dialogue with Gage to address her
potential need for an accommodation.
Id. at 22-23.
In
response, Rymes argues that Gage’s disclosure was insufficient
to trigger any duty to accommodate.
An employer must make reasonable accommodations for an
employee’s known disability.
See 42 U.S.C. § 12112(b)(5)(A).
In assessing whether a proposed accommodation is “reasonable,”
federal regulations provide that “it may be necessary for [an
employer] to initiate an informal, interactive process with the
individual with a disability in need of the accommodation.”
C.F.R. § 1630.2(o)(3).
29
According to EEOC interpretive guidance,
an employer’s duty to engage in interactive process is triggered
“[o]nce an individual with a disability has requested provision
of a reasonable accommodation.”
29 C.F.R. pt. 1630, app. §
1630.9.
In the First Circuit, “[a] plaintiff must explicitly
request an accommodation, unless the employer knew one was
needed.”
Jones v. Nationwide Life Ins. Co., 696 F.3d 78, 89
(1st Cir. 2012).
Thus, “[a]n accommodation request must be
sufficiently direct and specific, and it must explain how the
accommodation is linked to plaintiff’s disability.”
Id.
“This
means not only notice of a condition, but of a causal connection
between the major life activity that is limited and the
25
accommodation sought.”
Id. (internal quotation marks omitted).
Typically, the ADA’s reasonable accommodation requirement is not
triggered until the employee makes such a request “[b]ecause an
employee’s disability and concomitant need for an accommodation
are often not known to the employer until the employee requests
an accommodation.”
Reed v. LePage Bakeries, Inc., 244 F.3d 254,
261 (1st Cir. 2001).
Here, Gage has presented insufficient evidence to support a
viable accommodation claim.
First, Gage concedes that she never
actually requested an accommodation.
See Doc. No. 14-2 at 5.
Second, even viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to
Gage, she has not adequately shown that Rymes knew of her
alleged need for an accommodation following her June 12
hospitalization.
Instead, the record shows that, upon returning
to work on June 13, Gage told co-workers that she had missed
work on June 12 because of a TIA or “stroke.”
When Enright
asked about Gage’s condition on June 13, Gage said that she had
suffered a “transient [i]schemic attack (mini stroke),” but said
that she was “alright though, just have to have an MRA and stuff
done.”
Doc. No. 14-7 at 36.
Thus, in describing the June 12
episode, Gage gave no indication that her hospitalization was
connected with her migraine condition.
She likewise did not
suggest that she had ever experienced a TIA before, or that she
might experience a similar condition in the future.
26
Under these
circumstances, Gage’s disclosure was insufficient to trigger any
duty to engage in interactive process or accommodate her
disability.
Accordingly, her accommodation claim fails as a
matter of law.
B.
Wrongful Discharge Claim
Gage finally alleges that she was wrongfully discharged in
violation of New Hampshire law, specifically contending that she
was fired “with bad faith and malice, in retaliation against her
for performing acts encouraged by public policy, including
seeking necessary medical treatment at an emergency room and
staying home when instructed to do so by her doctors.”
1 at 6.
Doc. No.
Rymes moves for summary judgment, arguing both that
Gage’s firing was a product of her absenteeism, not bad faith,
retaliation, or malice, and that New Hampshire law does not
recognize taking sick time as an actionable public policy.
Under the facts of this case, Rymes’ second argument is
persuasive, and entitles it to summary judgment on Count III.
To make out a viable wrongful discharge claim under New
Hampshire law, a plaintiff must show that (1) her termination
was motivated by bad faith, retaliation or malice; and (2) that
she was terminated for performing an act that public policy
would encourage or for refusing to do something that public
policy would condemn.
246, 248 (2006).
Lacasse v. Spaulding Youth Ctr., 154 N.H.
Thus, “[t]he first prong focuses on the nature
27
of the employer’s actions, while the public policy prong
pertains to the employee’s acts.”
Duhy, 2009 DNH 074, 27
(citations and punctuation omitted).
“[O]rdinarily the issue of
whether a public policy exists is a question for the jury, [but]
at times the presence or absence of such a public policy is so
clear that a court may rule on its existence as a matter of
law.”
Short v. Sch. Admin. Unit No. 16, 136 N.H. 76, 84 (1992)
(citations and punctuation omitted).
This is one of those
times.
Gage claims that she was fired for engaging (or refusing to
engage) in three actions that implicate public policy.
She
principally argues that public policy encourages an employee to
take time off from work when seriously ill.
In the alternative,
she argues that public policy encourages “a person suffering
from stroke-like symptoms to seek emergency medical treatment,”
and “discourage[s] such a person from getting behind the wheel
and driving to work, endangering herself and others.”
14-1 at 25; see Doc. No. 20 at 5.
Doc. No.
I address, and ultimately
reject, each argument in turn.12
Gage does not appear to base her wrongful discharge claim on an
argument that firing a disabled person violates public policy.
To the extent that she is making that argument, her argument
fails as a matter of law. The second element of a wrongful
discharge claim “focus[es] on the acts of the employee and on
their relationship to public policy, not on the mere
articulation of a policy by the employee.” Frechette v. WalMart Stores, Inc., 925 F. Supp. 95, 98 (D.N.H. 1995).
12
28
As a preliminary matter, I recognize that there may be
circumstances in which public policy would encourage an employee
to take sick time.
See Duhy, 2009 DNH 074, 29-30.
Barring
unusual circumstances not present here (i.e. a highly contagious
and life threatening illness), however, public policy only
encourages such conduct where the employee has some enforceable
right to take sick time.
Thus, public policy may encourage an
employee to take sick time where the employee has a contractual
right to sick time under her employment agreement.
But cf.
Gavin v. Liberty Mut. Group Inc., 2012 DNH 154, 18-20 (rejecting
argument that public policy encourages employees to take sick
leave pursuant to the employer’s “flexible time off” policy);
Duhy, 2009 DNH 074, 29 (rejecting “as a broad proposition,
[that] public policy encourages employees to take vacation days
or file health insurance claims through the policy offered by
their employer”).
Public policy may also encourage an employee
to use sick time that she is entitled to take under state or
Accordingly, “[a] condition that is protected by public policy,
such as sickness, disability, and age, as distinguished from
acts by the employee that are protected by public policy, does
not satisfy the second element of a wrongful discharge claim.”
Schomburg v. Dell, Inc., 2006 WL 2864048 (D.N.H. Oct. 4, 2006)
(emphasis in original). Indeed, “the New Hampshire Supreme
Court has made clear [that] the common law cause of action for
wrongful discharge is not the proper means by which to remedy a
discharge that was motivated by someone’s status or physical
condition.” Parker v. MVM, Inc., 2006 DNH 070, 6. Thus, to the
extent that Gage bases her wrongful discharge claim upon her
status as a disabled person, her claim fails.
29
federal law.
For example, if an employee is entitled to sick
time as an accommodation for her disability pursuant to the ADA,
and the employer fires the employee for taking that leave, the
employee might be able to make out a viable wrongful discharge
claim.
See Faulkner v. Mary Hitchcock Mem’l Hosp., 2013 DNH 152
(rejecting argument that Section 354-A preempts wrongful
discharge claim based upon employer’s alleged failure to
accommodate employee’s disability).
Here, however, Gage had neither a contractual right to sick
time nor a statutory right to miss work on June 12.
According
to Rymes’ leave policy, employees are entitled to eight hours of
unpaid personal time per year, and accrue paid vacation and
personal time (after a ninety-day probationary period) on a
weekly basis.
See Doc. No. 12-3.
If an employee misses work
without first accruing sufficient personal time, that employee
is subject to immediate termination.
Yet, when Gage missed work
on June 12, 2013, she did not have enough leave time accrued to
cover that absence.
In fact, she had fourteen absences in
excess of her accrued time before June 12, none of which were
due to her claimed disability.
Doc. No. 12-5 at 2.
She
likewise had no statutory right to miss work that day.
As
explained above, Gage had no right to a reasonable accommodation
30
pursuant to the ADA or Section 354-A.13
Accordingly, the absence
of Gage’s proffered public policy is sufficiently clear that I
may reject her claim as a matter of law.
Gage’s alternative public policy arguments are more easily
dispatched.
Without providing legal authority or other support,
Gage contends that public policy “would encourage a person
suffering stroke-like symptoms to seek emergency medical
treatment” and “would also discourage such a person from getting
behind the wheel and driving to work, endangering herself and
others.”
Doc. No. 14-1 at 25.
Even assuming that public policy
encourages individuals to seek necessary medical care and
discourages impaired driving, Gage has presented no evidence
that she was actually fired for such conduct.
Instead, the
record at most shows that she was fired for taking an
unauthorized absence from work on June 12.
And, as explained
above, that conduct cannot form the basis of a viable wrongful
discharge claim under the facts of this case.
IV.
CONCLUSION
For the reasons set forth above, Rymes’ motion for summary
judgment (Doc. No. 12) is granted in part and denied in part as
to Count I and Count II, and granted as to Count III.
The only
Gage also has not argued that she was entitled to take sick
leave under the Family and Medical Leave Act.
13
31
claims that remain are Gage’s claims that she was discriminated
against because of her disability in violation of state and
federal law.
SO ORDERED.
/s/ Paul Barbadoro
Paul Barbadoro
United States District Judge
March 1, 2016
cc:
Benjamin T. King, Esq.
David W. McGrath, Esq.
Courtney H.G. Herz, Esq.
32
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