Carol N. Cooper, an Individual v. Neiman Marcus Group, a Delaware Corporation, Susan B. Zegers, an Individual, Maria Dempsey Rebolledo, an Individual

125 F.3d 786
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedDecember 4, 1997
Docket96-15068
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 125 F.3d 786 (Carol N. Cooper, an Individual v. Neiman Marcus Group, a Delaware Corporation, Susan B. Zegers, an Individual, Maria Dempsey Rebolledo, an Individual) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carol N. Cooper, an Individual v. Neiman Marcus Group, a Delaware Corporation, Susan B. Zegers, an Individual, Maria Dempsey Rebolledo, an Individual, 125 F.3d 786 (9th Cir. 1997).

Opinion

REINHARDT, Circuit Judge:

Carol N. Cooper appeals the grant of summary judgment in favor of defendants, including her employer Neiman Marcus Group, on her claim of constructive discharge under the Americans with Disabilities Act. We reverse.

BACKGROUND

In 1984, Cooper began working as an Executive Secretary with Neiman Marcus at its store in Newport Beach, California. She was transferred in 1991 to the Scottsdale, Arizona store and assigned to work as a secretary for Susan Zegers and other executive staff. Although she was not given a written job description until after this dispute arose, in 1987 Cooper was asked, in a job evaluation questionnaire, to outline what she thought her job entailed. She wrote: “[s]ee that all facets of the executive office run in smooth, efficient manner — relieving executive staff and store manager in particular of routine matters. Serve as key communication post for the store, a resource for executive staff, store personnel and customers as well as Dallas.”

During the summer of 1992, Cooper began having trouble speaking, which manifested itself as slurred speech. Her condition worsened from June to December and she began to notice that her speech was slurred more *788 often and that she was unable to enunciate clearly. She was diagnosed with dysarthria or slurred speech, but no underlying medical condition has ever been found.

The first time Neiman Marcus raised a question concerning Cooper’s performance was in February 1993, when Susan Zegers, the store manager and person who had hired Cooper, discussed with her the deterioration in her speech. In early April 1993, Cooper met with Zegers and Maria Dempsey-Rebolledo, the human resources manager, who recommended that she take a thirty-day leave of absence in order to undergo speech therapy. Cooper declined their offer, stating that she wanted to continue working while she obtained the necessary therapy. All three agreed to that compromise. Neiman Marcus, however, continued to be unhappy with her speech.

Cooper underwent testing and evaluation at the Arizona State University Department of Speech and Hearing Science on April 20, 1993. Although her speech was slurred, the evaluator indicated that “she demonstrated sufficient loudness during testing procedures ... [and] receptive and expressive language skills, voice quality, and fluency were judged to be within normal limits.” Cooper was diagnosed with dysarthria, but “no abnormalities of the oral mechanism” were found. Cooper was labeled a “good candidate for speech therapy” and another evaluation was ordered in six months. However, even with the prescribed therapy Cooper’s speech did not improve.

Zegers and Dempsey again met with Cooper on May 25,1993 and agreed that Cooper would continue to attend speech therapy and that she would be permitted to leave work early to do so. The notes memorializing that meeting state that no action would be taken until the end of June, at which point Cooper’s progress would be evaluated to see if she was speaking at the “standard level.” According to the notes, “[i]t was discussed that our expectation was that Carol needed to be able to do the core of her job to a standard level which was verbally communicating one on one as well as answering the phone.”

Beginning June 15, 1993, Zegers began documenting complaints from individuals both in and outside the store who had commented about Cooper’s speech. While some of the individuals described her as sounding drunk or as if she were taking drugs, none ever complained that Cooper failed to provide all the requested information.

In response to Cooper’s request for a description of her duties, Zegers and Dempsey prepared a description of her functions as executive secretary in July 1993. The description outlined a job that included extensive communication with those both in and outside the store and included tasks such as “[i]nitiate calls for Store Manager and Executives as business dictates” and “[c]ommunieate to all levels of staff within the store and within the total company.” The description also stated that one of Cooper’s duties was to assume responsibility for all communications by the Public Relations staff in their absence. In a deposition taken after this litigation commenced, Cooper denied that this had previously been one of her responsibilities. Moreover, Cooper states that she was less than confident in the accuracy of the job description because it was created after she made the request and did not come from the corporate headquarters.

On July 9,1993, another meeting was held at which Zegers and Dempsey informed Cooper that her speech had failed to improve and as memorialized in a memo by Dempsey, “[b]ecause communicating is the core of [the] job and [you are] unable to perform this to a standard level a 90 day probation will begin.” (emphasis added). Cooper was then given two options as recorded in the memorandum:

Option # 1
A 90 day probation would commence in which you opt to formally advise us that you will leave Neiman Marcus and collect full pay for the 90 day period. This allows *789 you to take this time to seek outside retraining or opportunities. After this 90 day period termination results, a two and a half week severance would ensue. In addition any unused vacation would be paid at this time.
Option # 2
A 90 day probation would commence in which you would continue to work and attempt to perform to a standard level in your job, specifically focusing on your communication being at a standard level, whether by phone or in person. If you did not perform to a standard level termination would result and payment of the two and a half weeks severance would ensue. In addition any unused vacation would be paid at this time.

At this meeting, Cooper asked about the possibility of applying for another position in the store that did not require significant verbal communication, such as gift wrapping. Dempsey stated that the pay would be substantially lower and that there were no positions at that time.

In a memorandum to Dempsey and Zegers dated July 22, 1993, Cooper again inquired about other opportunities in the company. She also explained that she thought she was doing her job well and that she was communicating effectively. In response to the complaints Zegers began collecting in June, Cooper suggested that perhaps some of Zegers’ outside calls could be rerouted to another secretary. Cooper did not think that this would impose significant hardship on the company.

At a July 27 meeting, Zegers and Dempsey discussed Cooper’s suggested job modifications with her. According to the memorandum memorializing this meeting, Dempsey explained to Cooper that because communication was the core of her job and because her “speech and verbal communication continue to be below the standard level of this position,” no accommodation could be made. Cooper then agreed to take the 30-day leave of absence, originally offered her in April 1993, commencing on August 1. On August 27, she was to inform Neiman Marcus as to which option she was choosing with respect to the 90-day “probationary period”.

On July 30, Cooper was given a job performance evaluation prepared by Zegers for the period covering June 1992 to May 1993.

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Bluebook (online)
125 F.3d 786, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carol-n-cooper-an-individual-v-neiman-marcus-group-a-delaware-ca9-1997.