B.C. v. Robert Wood Johnson Barnabas Health

CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedOctober 10, 2025
DocketA-1553-22
StatusUnpublished

This text of B.C. v. Robert Wood Johnson Barnabas Health (B.C. v. Robert Wood Johnson Barnabas Health) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
B.C. v. Robert Wood Johnson Barnabas Health, (N.J. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION This opinion shall not "constitute precedent or be binding upon any court ." Although it is posted on the internet, this opinion is binding only on the parties in the case and its use in other cases is limited . R. 1:36-3.

SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY APPELLATE DIVISION DOCKET NO. A-1553-22

B.C.,

Complainant-Appellant,

v.

ROBERT WOOD JOHNSON BARNABAS HEALTH,

Respondent-Respondent. ___________________________

Submitted March 17, 2025 – Decided October 10, 2025

Before Judges Gummer and Jacobs.

On appeal from the New Jersey Division on Civil Rights, Department of Law and Public Safety, Docket No. EM15HB-67274.

Clifford G. Stewart, attorney for appellant.

Apruzzese, McDermott, Mastro & Murphy, attorneys for respondent Robert Wood Johnson Barnabas Health (Mark J. Blunda, of counsel and on the brief; Catherine A. Morris, on the brief).

Matthew J. Platkin, Attorney General, attorney for respondent New Jersey Division on Civil Rights (Donna Arons, Assistant Attorney General, of counsel; Douglas R. Praschak, Deputy Attorney General, on the brief).

The opinion of the court was delivered by

GUMMER, J.A.D.

Complainant B.C. appeals from a denial by the New Jersey Division on

Civil Rights (the Division) of her motion to reconsider its prior determination

finding "no probable cause" to support her allegations against respondent Robert

Wood Johnson Barnabas Health (RWJBH).1 B.C. contended RWJBH had

discriminated against her in violation of the New Jersey Law Against

Discrimination (LAD), N.J.S.A. 10:5-1 to -50. Because the Division's decision

was not arbitrary, capricious, or unreasonable and was supported by the record,

we affirm.

I.

On January 25, 2019, B.C. filed a verified complaint with the Division.

Citing N.J.S.A. 10:5-12(a) and (d), she alleged RWJBH had violated the LAD

by failing to provide a reasonable accommodation for her disability and

1 We refer to complainant by her initials because the Division did so in its initial determination and denial of the reconsideration motion. Consistent with N.J.A.C. 13:4-2.10, the Division used her initials because it discussed her personal medical information in those decisions. A-1553-22 2 terminating her employment in retaliation for complaining of "discriminatory

comments" made by coworkers about her disability. According to B.C., she was

"injured in a workplace incident" in December 2017 while employed by RWJBH

as an apheresis technician. 2 She asserted that in January 2018, she had sought

and received "a workplace accommodation of desk duty due to her disability."

According to B.C., she sent an email sometime around August 1, 2018, to

Aleda Sadowski, an advanced practical nurse employed by RWJBH, asserting

some coworkers had referred to her as a "half person" and had said she "should

be home on disability, among other discriminatory comments." She alleged she

was subsequently "subjected to an adverse employment action" when, on

November 21, 2018, she was informed "she was discharged because the worker's

compensation doctor deemed her disability as permanent and as such

[r]espondent could no longer accommodate her." In the complaint, B.C. asserted

her disability was not permanent, RWJBH was able but unwilling to

accommodate her, and RWJBH had discharged her as a reprisal for her

complaining about the statements allegedly made by coworkers.

2 According to RWJBH, B.C. was employed by Robert Wood Johnson University Hospital, not RWJBH. A-1553-22 3 After B.C. filed the complaint, the Division conducted an investigation in

which it interviewed B.C. and reviewed documents submitted by the parties.

Based on that investigation, the Division made the following factual

conclusions, which are supported by credible evidence in the record. After B.C.

was injured during a blood drive in December 2017, she was "under restrictions

that precluded her from performing the lifting, standing, traveling, and other

physical demands that are necessary to perform the essential function of an

[a]pheresis [t]echnician," which is "collecting blood." The apheresis-technician

position "requires frequent walking; standing for long periods; occasional

stretching, bending, and lifting of equipment and supplies; and the ability to

transport coolers with blood products from various sites, including mobile blood

drives around the state of New Jersey, to a laboratory."

In January 2018, while B.C. pursued treatment for her injury, RWJBH

accommodated her restrictions "by assigning her to perform light clerical and

receptionist tasks in the Blood Services Department." RWJBH temporarily

reassigned her to the Pathology Department. RWJBH subsequently returned

B.C. to the Blood Services Department, but because she had not yet recovered

from her injury, she again was assigned light-duty work.

A-1553-22 4 On September 30, 2018, after learning she would be reassigned back to

the Blood Services Department, B.C. sent an email to Sadowski, questioning the

reassignment and asserting she had been assigned to the Pathology Department :

due to the hostility that I was receiving from my coworkers in the blood service department because I was on modified duty. These included but [were] not limited to the following statements: 1. They do not want to work with a half of a person. 2. I should not be working and should be home on disability. 3. It was not fair for the staff to work hard and I was not able to help them.

On October 16, 2018, B.C. forwarded the September 30 email to Human

Resources representative Shalini Harinarain, who responded the next day and

requested a meeting. B.C. did not respond to that request. In its investigation,

the Division found no evidence B.C. had made any internal complaints of

harassment, other than the September 30 and October 16 emails, and no

evidence to support her contention she was temporarily assigned to the

Pathology Department because of any harassment complaints she had made.

On November 8, 2018, B.C.'s doctor3 issued a report in which he

discharged her from medical care for her December 2017 injury and concluded

she had reached "MMI [maximum medical improvement]" for her injury and

3 Records indicate the doctor had been assigned to treat B.C. in connection with her worker's compensation claim. A-1553-22 5 remained under several work restrictions. He stated B.C. should not lift or carry

more than ten pounds and should "[a]void bending, twisting, lifting from [the]

floor." Based on that report, RWJBH determined it could not return B.C. to her

position as an apheresis technician because her physical restrictions

permanently prevented her from performing the position's essential function of

blood collection.

Human Resources representative Marygene Muller met with B.C. on

November 23, 2018, to discuss her work restrictions and potential

accommodations. B.C. signed an accommodation request form Muller had

prepared, stating she could not drive ten or more miles, was limited in "bending,

lifting, sitting for long periods of time," and was requesting a "position with

limited movement (head and neck)." Muller provided B.C. with forms to

request a leave of absence, a leave under the Family and Medical Leave Act of

1993 (FMLA), 29 U.S.C. §§

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