Cheryl M. Hooven-Lewis v. Louis Caldera, Secretary of the Army

249 F.3d 259, 11 Am. Disabilities Cas. (BNA) 1495, 2001 U.S. App. LEXIS 7933, 2001 WL 460753
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedMay 1, 2001
Docket00-1439
StatusPublished
Cited by435 cases

This text of 249 F.3d 259 (Cheryl M. Hooven-Lewis v. Louis Caldera, Secretary of the Army) 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
Cheryl M. Hooven-Lewis v. Louis Caldera, Secretary of the Army, 249 F.3d 259, 11 Am. Disabilities Cas. (BNA) 1495, 2001 U.S. App. LEXIS 7933, 2001 WL 460753 (4th Cir. 2001).

Opinion

Affirmed by published opinion. Judge LEE wrote the opinion, in which Judge WILLIAMS and Judge TRAXLER joined.

OPINION

LEE, District Judge:

Plaintiff-Appellant Cheryl M. Hooven-Lewis appeals a final order of the United States District Court for the District of *262 Maryland granting DefendanL-Appellee Louis Caldera’s motion for summary judgment and entering judgment for Appellee on Appellant’s claims. Appellant Hooven-Lewis alleged that the Army discriminated against her in violation of the Rehabilitation Act because of her disability (a hand tremor); that the Army subjected her to placement in improper job positions and terminated her in retaliatipn for her Equal Employment Opportunity activity, in violation of the Rehabilitation Act; and that the Army terminated her in violation of the Whistleblower Protection Act for informing on .superiors who failed to report errors in laboratory data.

The issues before the Court are whether Hooven-Lewis has a disability under the Rehabilitation Act or was regarded- by her employer as having such a disability, whether Hooven-Lewis made out a prima facie case of retaliation under the Rehabilitation Act, and whether the Merit Systems Protection Board was arbitrary and capricious or abused its discretion in finding that Hooven-Lewis’ employer did not terminate her for informing upon her superi- or. The Court holds that Hooven-Lewis does not have a disability under the Rehabilitation Act because she does not have a condition that substantially limits her in any major life activity. In addition, Hoo-ven-Lewis’ employer does not perceive hel-as having such a disability. The Court further holds that Hooven-Lewis has not made out a prima facie case of retaliation under the Rehabilitation Act because she has failed to show a causal connection between protected activities and alleged acts of reprisal. The Court also holds that Hooven Lewis’ whistleblower- retaliation claim fails because the Merit Systems Protection Board did not act arbitrarily or abuse its discretion in dismissing Hooven-Lewis’ whistleblowing claim; the record before the Court demonstrates that the Board considered the evidence and made a reasoned decision.

FACTS

Plaintiff-Appellant Cheryl Hooven-Lew-is entered active duty in the United States Army in January, 1985. While enlisted, Hooven-Lewis received training as a medical laboratory specialist 1 and was ultimately assigned to the Walter Reed Army Hospital Institute of Research (“Walter Reed”). After her discharge from duty in January, 1988, Hooven-Lewis obtained civilian employment at Walter Reed as a biological laboratory technician. Between January, 1988 and May, 1989, Hooven-Lewis worked under the supervision of Dr. Susan Loring while she was in training. From 1989 to 1993, Hooven-Lewis worked in the division of retrovirology under Dr. Victoria Polonis. Her job involved working with laboratory specimens, various chemicals, and electrical and mechanical laboratory equipment. During her time with Dr. Polonis, Hooven-Lewis suffered from an undiagnosed hand tremor. Dr. Polonis accommodated Hooven-Lewis’ tremor by not requiring her to handle any hazardous or infectious substances. Other laboratory technicians would lyse the live infectious cells, rendering them inactive.

When Dr. Polonis resigned her commission, Hooven-Lewis was recruited to work in several laboratories because of her excellent work record and commendations. Hooven-Lewis accepted a position with Dr. Maryanne ' Vahey in October, 1993. When interviewing with Dr. Vahey, Hoo-ven-Lewis told Dr. Vahey that her previous supervisors had not required Hooven-Lewis to work with lethal pathogens or live materials that were highly infectious *263 and dangerous. Dr. Vahey assured Hoo-ven-Lewis that it would not be a problem. However, Hooven-Lewis did not tell Dr. Vahey about her hand tremor. Upon beginning work with Dr. Vahey, Hooven-Lewis continued to do much of the same work with chemicals and lysed infectious agents that she had done with Dr. Polonis. In addition to the laboratory “bench work,” Hooven-Lewis also organized the lab and did administrative work. Most of the administrative work was done at home.

In November, 1993, Hooven-Lewis discovered some errors in the data in Dr. Vahey’s lab. Hooven-Lewis discussed the errors with Dr. Vahey. Hooven-Lewis expressed the concern that the errors could result in inaccurate experiments because other labs shared Walter Reed’s results for use in their experiments. Dr. Vahey assured Hooven-Lewis that she would alert the partner labs to the errors. Hoo-ven-Lewis consulted with her previous supervisor, Dr. Loring, and obtained her opinion that the errors could result in AIDS patients receiving improper dosages of their medications. A week later, in December of 1993, doctors diagnosed Hoo-ven-Lewis as having a physiological hand tremor that caused difficulty with fine motor dexterity. However, Hooven-Lewis did not ask to be removed from her job as a technician because she was not working with active (non-lysed) HIV. In that same month, Dr. Vahey ordered her lab staff to throw away all protocols and records that had been used in several experiments, including those experiments containing erroneous data. 2

Walter Reed promoted Hooven-Lewis to a supervisory position as “a laboratory protocol manager” in February, 1994. However, the work Hooven-Lewis performed remained substantially the same, constituting mostly bench work and administrative work performed at home after business hours. From February to April, 1994, Hooven-Lewis discovered other errors in the lab and communicated them to Dr. Vahey. In May, Hooven-Lewis learned that Dr. Vahey had not told the other labs of the errors, and that a researcher at Walter Reed was going to present findings based on the erroneous data at an AIDS conference in Japan. Hooven-Lewis confronted Dr. Vahey about this, and Hooven-Lewis asserts that Dr. Vahey reacted angrily.

• In early June, 1994, Dr. Vahey ordered Hooven-Lewis to begin working with active (non-lysed) HIV samples. On August 23, 1994, Dr. Vahey told Hooven-Lewis to leave the lab after Hooven Lewis refused to let Dr. Vahey communicate with her doctor about her hand tremor. In a meeting on August 30, 1994, several division heads met with Hooven-Lewis to discuss Hooven-Lewis’ medical condition and her duties. Colonel David Burke, the director of the Retrovirology Division, decided to take Hooven Lewis out of retrovirology and detail her to other duties pending an evaluation of her medical problem and the impact Hooven-Lewis’ medical condition would have on her work handling dangerous infectious, radioactive, and chemical substances. That same day, Hooven-Lew-is told Colonel Burke about the laboratory errors and Dr. Vahey’s requiring her to work with unlysed agents.

With the help of the Walter Reed personnel office, Hooven Lewis was placed in several temporary assignments pending her medical determination. On October 7 and 11,1994, Hooven-Lewis first consulted *264 the office of Equal Employment Opportunity (“EEO”) about her rights and about filing a complaint of discrimination. In that same month, Hooven-Lewis requested that she be permitted to return to Dr. Vahey’s lab or be transferred to another lab within Retrovirology.

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249 F.3d 259, 11 Am. Disabilities Cas. (BNA) 1495, 2001 U.S. App. LEXIS 7933, 2001 WL 460753, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cheryl-m-hooven-lewis-v-louis-caldera-secretary-of-the-army-ca4-2001.