DeCaro v. Hasbro, Inc.

580 F.3d 55, 74 Fed. R. Serv. 3d 538, 22 Am. Disabilities Cas. (BNA) 458, 2009 U.S. App. LEXIS 19707, 2009 WL 2767296
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedSeptember 2, 2009
Docket09-1054
StatusPublished
Cited by48 cases

This text of 580 F.3d 55 (DeCaro v. Hasbro, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
DeCaro v. Hasbro, Inc., 580 F.3d 55, 74 Fed. R. Serv. 3d 538, 22 Am. Disabilities Cas. (BNA) 458, 2009 U.S. App. LEXIS 19707, 2009 WL 2767296 (1st Cir. 2009).

Opinion

SELYA, Circuit Judge.

This appeal involves two claims of instructional error and a belated claim of error concerning the procedure to be followed by a trial court under the 2003 amendments to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 51. Concluding, as we do, that no substantive or procedural error tainted the challenged jury instructions, we affirm.

I. BACKGROUND

We rehearse here only those facts necessary to place this appeal in context.

Plaintiff-appellant Emilio DeCaro worked for defendant-appellee Hasbro, Inc., at its plant in Longmeadow, Massachusetts, for over two decades, most recently as a “first pressman.” In that capacity, the plaintiff operated large-scale printing presses used to embellish thousands of sheets of cardboard and paper hourly.

In 2001, the plaintiff informed Hasbro that his doctors had diagnosed him as afflicted with multiple sclerosis. Notwithstanding this diagnosis, he valiantly continued to work. By 2005, however, his condition had deteriorated and he began a regimen of chemotherapy. He left work and, in July of that year, applied for Social Security Disability Insurance (SSDI) benefits.

The plaintiffs SSDI application has particular pertinence here. In it, he made a series of factual averments touching upon his physical condition, some in his own hand and others in the form of answers provided orally to a government scrivener who typed his responses into the application. These averments (the accuracy of which was disputed at trial) included claims that the plaintiff was unable to work and descriptions of his particular physical impairments.

*58 The plaintiff attempted to return to work on November 29, 2005. A company nurse dashed his hopes; after observing the plaintiffs physical appearance, she forbade him from resuming his position without a doctor’s note. On November 30, the plaintiffs physician wrote a letter opining that the plaintiff should eschew employment until the following February.

On February 2, 2006, the plaintiff again tried to reclaim his job. The company demurred, citing the lack of a contemporaneous medical clearance. This sort of pas de deux occurred at least twice more during the next four months; the short of it is that Hasbro did not allow the plaintiff to return to work.

Disappointed by Hasbro’s unwillingness to restore him to its work force, the plaintiff brought suit against the company in a Massachusetts state court. In his complaint, filed on June 9, 2006, he asserted a gallimaufry of discrimination and breach of contract claims, all arising under state law. This asseverational array included claimed violations of Massachusetts’s principal anti-discrimination statute (Massachusetts General Laws ch. 15133).

Hasbro removed the case to the United States District Court for the District of Massachusetts on the basis of diversity of citizenship and the existence of a controversy in the requisite amount. See 28 U.S.C. §§ 1332(a)(1), 1441. Following a period of pretrial discovery, the district court granted summary judgment in Hasbro’s favor on the breach of contract claim. 1 An eight-day jury trial ensued on the state-law discrimination claims.

As the trial wound down, the district court convened a charge conference, see Fed.R.Civ.P. 51(b), to discuss how the jury was to be instructed. A court reporter attended the charge conference and memorialized what transpired. The court commented upon the parties’ proposed instructions and indicated generally which instructions it would give and which it would eschew.

Among other things, Hasbro proposed an instruction concerning both the effect of the statements contained in the plaintiffs application for SSDI benefits and his receipt of those benefits. Its proposed instruction read in relevant part:

On his application for those benefits Mr. DeCaro represented that he was disabled and unable to work. Mr. DeCaro is bound by his statements on his application for disability and you must presume the truth.

The court noted that it would give an SSDI instruction, but not one that was stated “with as much intensity” as Hasbro’s suggested instruction. Instead, the court planned to “say that the jury is entitled to take into consideration the statements made by Mr. DeCaro in his application for [SSDI] benefits” and may find that those statements “are evidence that in fact he viewed himself as unable to perform the essential functions of his job.”

Switching to a different subject, the plaintiff noted conflicting characterizations of the evidence about what Hasbro knew anent his disability and whether and when he had requested some sort of accommodation to permit him to work notwithstanding that disability. Accordingly, he proposed an instruction relating to an employer’s duty under Massachusetts law to provide a reasonable accommodation, even in the absence of any request that it do so. The court stated that it had read the relevant case law, see, e.g., Leach v. Comm’r of Mass. Rehab. Comm’n, 63 Mass.App.Ct. 563, 827 N.E.2d 745, 749 (2005), and had concluded that Massachusetts law does not *59 impose such an affirmative duty on the employer in the circumstances at hand.

The attorneys for the parties delivered their summations the next day. Immediately thereafter, the court charged the jury and simultaneously gave a written copy of the charge to each party.

With respect to the receipt of SSDI benefits and the statements made in the plaintiffs application for those benefits, the court instructed:

Defendant has pointed to the fact that, while plaintiff was out on voluntary medical leave, plaintiff applied for, and has been continuously receiving, social security disability benefits since November 2005. Plaintiffs application for those benefits included representations about the physical requirements of the first pressman position and statements about his physical limitations at the time of his application.
You should examine the statements made by plaintiff in the application for social security disability benefits and consider whether these statements constitute admissions by him that he was in fact unable to perform the essential functions of his job, with or without a reasonable accommodation, at the time he completed his social security disability application. A plaintiff is not permitted to say one thing in applying for disability benefits and another thing, entirely the opposite, in seeking damages for discrimination.
In making this examination you should consider all the facts and circumstances surrounding the submission of the application. To the extent that you find that statements made in plaintiffs application for social security disability benefits were made by plaintiff, you may decide that they reflected the truth when made, and you may consider them as evidence related to Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
580 F.3d 55, 74 Fed. R. Serv. 3d 538, 22 Am. Disabilities Cas. (BNA) 458, 2009 U.S. App. LEXIS 19707, 2009 WL 2767296, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/decaro-v-hasbro-inc-ca1-2009.