Duane Spence v. Patrick Donahoe

515 F. App'x 561
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 21, 2013
Docket11-3203
StatusUnpublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 515 F. App'x 561 (Duane Spence v. Patrick Donahoe) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Duane Spence v. Patrick Donahoe, 515 F. App'x 561 (6th Cir. 2013).

Opinion

HELENE N. WHITE, Circuit Judge.

Duane Spence appeals the district court’s grant of summary judgment in Defendants’ (collectively, USPS) favor dismissing his claims for disability discrimination, hostile work environment, and retaliation under the Rehabilitation Act, and his state-law claim for intentional-infliction-of-emotional-distress. We AFFIRM.

I.

Spence, born in August 1944, began working for the United States Postal Service (USPS) in 1981. In 2004 and 2005, Spence worked as an equipment maintenance mechanic at the Bulk Mail Center in Cincinnati, Ohio (BMC). Spence asserts that while clearing a paper jam on a conveyor belt on October 16, 2004, he felt a momentary sharp pain in his neck, left shoulder, and left arm. Spence continued to work, believing he had not suffered a reportable injury, but on October 28, he awoke with severe pain that increased throughout the day. On November 2, 2004, Spence saw his doctor, Marc Alexander, who restricted Spence from work pending further tests. Spence called his supervisor, Sharon Maggioncalda, and told her about the pain, his doctor’s visit, and his need to miss some work.

An MRI taken on November 4 revealed a herniated disc in Spence’s neck. Spence believed he had suffered the injury clearing the jam in October. On November 9, Spence called Maggioncalda, informed her of the diagnosis, and reported that he was scheduled to see a neurologist, Dr. Ringer, on November 18. Prior to that appointment, Spence filled out a CA-1 workers’ compensation form at the request of another supervisor, Gerald Adkins.

Dr. Ringer gave Spence a work note that listed four options: “no work,” “sedentary work,” “light work,” and “medium work.” Dr. Ringer checked “no work,” restricting Spence until his next appointment on December 16. Spence saw Dr. Ringer again on December 16 and discussed his job duties with him. Dr. Ringer completed another work note restricting Spence from all work for at least two months. When Spence gave Adkins that note, Adkins reminded him that limited-duty work was available. Spence declined limited-duty work, told Adkins that he was still suffering from a lot of pain, and pointed out that Dr. Ringer’s form indicated “no work.”

*564 After completing a series of physical-therapy sessions, Spence visited his brother in Las Vegas on January 10. After a few days Spence realized he had not progressed as much as he thought and cut his trip short by six days.

While Spence was off work, the Postal Inspection Service initiated an investigation of his claimed injury. Postal Inspector Gregory Duerstock testified that the discrepancy between the date of Spence’s injury and the date it was first reported likely triggered the investigation. As part of the investigation, inspectors visited Dr. Ringer’s office to inquire whether Spence had told Dr. Ringer that limited or light duty was available. According to Duer-stock’s Investigative Memorandum, Dr. Ringer’s office manager confirmed with Dr. Ringer that Spence had not presented the limited-duty option to Dr. Ringer. Dr. Ringer eventually submitted a modified patient work note directly to USPS stating that Spence could perform limited-duty work as of January 24, 2005. The Investigative Memo also reported that, during his time off, Spence was observed going into a gym, gambling at a casino, and going to a travel agency to book a trip to Las Vegas. The Memo also noted that inspectors observed Spence carrying luggage, bending, and pushing a cart at the Indianapolis Airport. Duerstock never spoke to Spence regarding the investigation. Spence testified that he did not receive notice of Dr. Ringer’s modified note permitting him to return to limited duty work as of January 24, 2005.

On February 15, 2005, Spence again saw Dr. Ringer, who allowed him to return to “light work” with a 20-pound lifting restriction. When Spence reported for work on February 17, 2005, Adkins, who knew about the Investigative Memo, called Spence to a pre-disciplinary hearing, asked him questions about his time off, and told him that he was being accused of committing fraud by filing a false workers’ compensation claim. After the meeting, Adkins tried to send Spence home, saying that there was no limited-duty work for him. When Spence expressed surprise that no work was available, Adkins told Spence to sign a letter to the plant manager requesting light duty. Spence did not know there was a difference between limited and light duty 1 and signed the letter, after which he was assigned to work on carriage repair, which involves lifting carriages that weigh more than twenty pounds. Spence did not object to the assignment because he was afraid to make more complaints. Spence claims Adkins grinned and told Spence that “there’s more evidence coming,” and made a sarcastic remark about Spence carrying his own luggage.

Spence claims that he was harassed after he returned to work. He found the word “THIEF” written in his work area, and “Spence please leave” and “Spence is gone” on the work calendar. He noticed that a piece of cardboard that normally secluded the area where he was stationed had been removed, which he believed was so that he could be watched.

Spence testified that around February 19, during a morning meeting, Adkins told the union steward he was shorthanded and needed another employee because “the only one I have left is that piece of shit over there,” referring to Spence. (Spence Dep., R. 12-1, at 19.) Spence also testified that on February 24, while speaking to *565 technical supervisor Richard Eckes, Adkins gestured to Spence and asked whether Eckes needed any help from “someone useless.” (Spence Aff., R. 21-1, at ¶ 28.) Adkins further said that he did not “have any problems calling a piece of shit a piece of shit.” (Id.) When Eckes asked Adkins if he had Spence “counting carbon sheets,” Adkins answered, ‘Yes, that’s all he can do.” (Id.) Spence testified that when he later asked Adkins and another supervisor for cushioned anti-fatigue matting, he was given a hard time and eventually walked away without any matting as Adkins and other employees made sarcastic comments and laughed. Later that day, Spence came to Adkins with a request for parts and Adkins told Spence that another supervisor was in charge that day and to take the parts off his desk before he hit Spence in the “f_ing head with them.” (Id. at ¶ 30.)

On February 25, Adkins conducted a second pre-disciplinary interview, during which he asked Spence about his trip to Las Vegas and showed Spence a DVD of the Postal Inspector’s video surveillance of him, which contained footage of Spence’s engaging in various activities, including traveling to stores and restaurants and carrying luggage at the airport. Adkins made comments during the interview suggesting that USPS had more evidence against him. Over the next few days Spence began to believe he was being watched by USPS officials including Adkins. On February 28, Spence suffered a breakdown and went to see Dr. Alexander. Dr. Alexander recommended mental-health specialists who treated Spence and took him off work on March 2.

On March 4, Spence received a notice of proposed removal (termination) signed by Adkins and Earl Briggs, the Manager of Maintenance Operations.

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