Calef v. FedEx Ground Packaging System, Inc.

343 F. App'x 891
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedAugust 27, 2009
Docket08-2031
StatusUnpublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 343 F. App'x 891 (Calef v. FedEx Ground Packaging System, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Calef v. FedEx Ground Packaging System, Inc., 343 F. App'x 891 (4th Cir. 2009).

Opinion

Affirmed by unpublished opinion.

Judge KING wrote the opinion, in which Judge MICHAEL and Judge GREGORY joined.

Unpublished opinions are not binding precedent in this circuit.

KING, Circuit Judge:

Tammy L. Calef asserted and pursued a disability discrimination claim under the West Virginia Human Rights Act, W. Va. Code §§ 5-11-1 to -21 (the “WVHRA”), against her employer, FedEx Ground Packaging System, Incorporated (“FedEx”). In early 2008, at the conclusion of a trial in the Northern District of West Virginia, the jury returned a verdict in favor of Calef. Thereafter, the district court awarded her more than $1.2 million in damages, prejudgment interest, attorney fees, and litigation expenses. In this appeal, FedEx raises nearly twenty contentions of error, seeking to have the judgment reversed. As explained below, we reject each of these contentions and affirm.

I.

A.

According to the trial evidence, Calef had been an employee of FedEx and its predecessors in Clarksburg, West Virginia, since 1994. 1 On January 23, 2004, Calef was laterally transferred between positions — from Dock Service Manager to Package and Delivery (“P & D”) Service Manager — at the Clarksburg home deliv *893 ery terminal. In her new role as P & D Service Manager, Calef was responsible for overseeing the work of the independent contractors who delivered packages for FedEx. 2 The work week at the terminal ran from Tuesday to Saturday.

Calefs first day as P & D Service Manager was scheduled for Tuesday, January 27, 2004. The prior Saturday, Calef injured her left hand while playing volleyball. Calef visited a doctor on Monday and, believing her injury was nonserious, reported for work on Tuesday. Upon arrival at the Clarksburg terminal that morning, she showed her hand injury to Dock Service Manager Chris Davis, with whom she had just switched positions. Calefs immediate supervisor, Terminal Manager Kyle Ryan, was aware of Calefs hand injury by at least Thursday, January 29. Each day from January 27 to 29, Calef planned to engage in nonphysical P & D Service Manager duties, such as ride-alongs with delivery drivers, but she was instead scheduled by upper-level supervisors to drive a van and deliver packages. On January 29, with her hand injury having worsened, Calef returned to the doctor and was fitted with a finger splint. Despite the increased severity of her injury, FedEx continued to assign Calef to delivery duties.

Around February 6, 2004 — as she was preparing for yet another day of delivering packages — Calef was approached by Steve Hickman, FedEx’s Regional Human Resources Manager. Hickman asked Calef if she had been “sending out resumes” and expressed an assumption that she was “looking for another job.” J.A. 1085. When Calef responded that she was not seeking another job and was “planning on retiring with FedEx,” Hickman offered Calef a three-month severance package to entice her to resign. Id. Calef refused the offer, prompting Hickman to sweeten the deal with “medical till the end of the year.” Id. Calef yet rejected Hickman’s offer, at which point he told her that “this is just between you and me.” Id. Troubled by this exchange with Hickman, Calef sought an explanation from Ryan. Ryan acknowledged that he already knew from Hickman about the offer, which left Calef confused because “[Hickman was] saying it’s just between you and me but he had already discussed it with [Ryan].” Id. at 1086. For the week thereafter, Ryan sent daily notes to Hickman, documenting problems with Calefs performance that were unrelated to her hand injury.

On Friday, February 13, 2004, Calef was assigned a delivery route with more than seventy stops. That day or the next, with her injured hand throbbing, Calef went to Ryan and told him that “[m]y hand cannot do this.” J.A. 1091-92. Ryan, following company protocol, requested a doctor’s excuse. On Monday, February 16 — in compliance with Ryan’s request — Calef visited and obtained excuses from both her doctor and her chiropractor. Calefs doctor wrote that Calef had “[limited use of [her left] hand” and that she should not “lift[ ] [more than] 20 lbs.” until March 1. Id. at 1785. The chiropractor implied that Calefs injury had been prolonged by improper use of *894 her hand, writing that “[d]ue to repeated extension of the second and third metacarpal, the pain ... has not decreased.” Id. at 1786. He further concluded that Calef was “limited on her ability to drive,” and that “[l]imiting the amount of driving would greatly improve her condition whereas driving frequently could cause her condition to worsen.” Id. Significantly, neither the doctor nor the chiropractor suggested that Calef could not, or even should not, work. Calef presented the two excuses to Ryan on Tuesday, February 17, and was permitted to perform non-delivery P & D Service Manager duties on February 17 and 18.

After complying with FedEx’s directive to again deliver packages on Thursday, February 19, 2004, Calefs hand became “green, swollen, throbbing.” J.A. 1094. She was unable to sleep that night because of the pain, and she called Davis the next morning to inform him that she would be unable to deliver packages that day. Calef reported for work that morning and then left for an afternoon doctor’s appointment, during which the doctor placed Calefs hand in a half-cast to immobilize her injury. The doctor again wrote a note to FedEx, recommending “[n]o use [of Calefs left] Arm” until March 20. Id. at 1787. Upon returning to work after her doctor’s appointment, Calef completed two handwritten reports. Although she is left-handed, Calef managed to complete the reports with her right hand. The next day, Calef rode with and trained a new driver.

Having not missed a single work day because of her January 24, 2004 hand injury, Calef again reported to work on Tuesday, February 24. That day, as she was preparing to leave on a ride — along with a temporary driver, Calef was abruptly summoned back to the terminal — Hickman was on the phone and wished to speak with her. Hickman ordered Calef to “go home,” file a claim for short-term disability benefits, and stay away from work until either he or Ryan called with additional instructions. J.A. 1101. Calef was stunned by these commands, maintaining that she was “fulfilling everything” expected of her as a P & D Service Manager. Id. Hickman’s own notes of the call reflect that Calef “questioned why she was being sent home,” and that Hickman responded by asserting “that the Company needed to assess her ability to do her job based on the restrictions imposed by her doctors.” Id. at 1521.

Hickman partially filled out — but never completed — a “Reasonable Accommodation Checklist” to determine whether Calef had a “disability that may need to be reasonably accommodated.” J.A. 1522. The author of the checklist was a FedEx equal employment opportunity (“EEO”) official, Carolyn Lyle, who had been promoted to Senior Manager of Diversity and EEO by the time Hickman ordered Calef to take disability leave.

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Bluebook (online)
343 F. App'x 891, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/calef-v-fedex-ground-packaging-system-inc-ca4-2009.