Elizabeth Hancock v. Tae Yang, LLC d/b/a Cave B Inn & Spa Resort

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedMarch 14, 2023
Docket38525-6
StatusUnpublished

This text of Elizabeth Hancock v. Tae Yang, LLC d/b/a Cave B Inn & Spa Resort (Elizabeth Hancock v. Tae Yang, LLC d/b/a Cave B Inn & Spa Resort) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Elizabeth Hancock v. Tae Yang, LLC d/b/a Cave B Inn & Spa Resort, (Wash. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

FILED MARCH 14, 2023 In the Office of the Clerk of Court WA State Court of Appeals Division III

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON DIVISION THREE

ELIZABETH HANCOCK, ) ) No. 38525-6-III Appellant, ) ) v. ) ) TAE YANG, LLC, a Washington limited ) UNPUBLISHED OPINION liability company d/b/a, and, Cave B Inn ) & Spa Resort, ) ) Respondent. )

SIDDOWAY, C.J. — Elizabeth Hancock appeals the summary judgment dismissal

of her disability discrimination claims against her former employer, Tae Yang, LLC. Her

claims were based on Tae Yang’s handling of her absenteeism and physical limitations

when she was experiencing the first symptoms of multiple sclerosis. Although there are

disputes over some of what was said and done, Tae Yang argued that essential elements

of Ms. Hancock’s claims failed as a matter of law. We agree and affirm.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

Tae Yang, whose primary business is hotel management and event planning,

owned and operated the Cave B Inn and Spa Resort (Cave B) in Quincy from July 2017

until November 2020. Although Cave B offered year-round lodging, its principal source

of revenue was from hosting weddings and other events. At the time Tae Yang acquired No. 38525-6-III Hancock v. Tae Yang, LLC

Cave B, the plaintiff, Elizabeth Hancock, was working for the inn and spa as a part-time

banquet server and bartender. As a banquet server, Ms. Hancock mainly worked

wedding events, setting up tables and food, serving guests, and cleaning up afterward.

She was employed at an hourly rate of $13.

In mid-March 2018, Tae Yang promoted Ms. Hancock to event coordinator, a full-

time position. She was offered the promotion by M.K. Yi, Cave B’s general manager.

Ms. Yi described the event coordinator position as responsible for overseeing events,

managing employees, and “making sure that everything is set up perfectly and all the

guests are happy.” Clerk’s Papers (CP) at 95. Ms. Hancock described the job similarly,

emphasizing the setting up, and testifying, “I was pretty much the contact from the

beginning to the end of the events for the customers.” CP at 116. As event coordinator,

Ms. Hancock’s hourly rate increased to $16.

Two months after her promotion, Ms. Hancock worked what her fiancé recalled

being an 18-hour shift, at the end of which she was numb from the waist down. Ms.

Hancock believes it was on May 16, 2018. When the numbness had not gone away the

next day, she began seeing doctors. The only documentation of her appointments in the

record is a medical release that reflects treatment she received at the offices of

Confluence Health in Wenatchee on May 17 and 24, 2018. She and her fiancé

acknowledge there were other appointments and emergency room visits, however. Ms.

Hancock testified, “I needed to see a lot of doctors” and “was having a lot of doctors’

2 No. 38525-6-III Hancock v. Tae Yang, LLC

appointments.” CP at 120. Her fiancé testified, “She was missing a lot of work.”

CP at 150.

By Saturday, May 19, 2018, Ms. Hancock had told Ms. Yi and Kelly Johnson,

Cave B’s sales manager, about her medical concern, because on that day Ms. Hancock

was asked to prepare a note affirming she wished to work and was able to work. As sales

manager, Ms. Johnson put the banquets together, so she and Ms. Hancock worked

together and Ms. Hancock and Ms. Yi both viewed Ms. Johnson as Ms. Hancock’s

supervisor. While Ms. Johnson perceived Ms. Yi, as general manager, to be Ms.

Hancock’s supervisor, Ms. Johnson acknowledged that as sales manager, she “oversaw

the performance of the events and things like that.” CP at 136.

Ms. Johnson recalls the women’s discussion on May 19 as being one of two

meetings that she and Ms. Yi had with Ms. Hancock to talk about Ms. Hancock’s missed

work, her condition, her limitations, and how to accommodate them. Both Ms. Johnson

and Ms. Yi viewed Ms. Hancock as a good employee. Ms. Yi testified that her reason for

wanting the note from Ms. Hancock was “to make sure she is working on her own will

. . . so she doesn’t complain that I made her work when she was not in good health or

she’s not able to work.” CP at 100-01.

In electronic mail from Ms. Yi to Ms. Hancock the following evening, May 21,

Ms. Yi expressed concern about the long hours Ms. Hancock had worked the day before,

and stated:

3 No. 38525-6-III Hancock v. Tae Yang, LLC

When are you planning on coming in? I will need your doctor’s note when you c[o]me back to work next time. I really don’t want your condition to get worse by working more hours. You will know best but since you already took days off due to your illness I really need to have your doctor’s note in the file.

CP at 55. Ms. Hancock’s e-mail response on Monday morning, May 21, said she would

be in the next day with a doctor’s note.

Instead, it was not until sometime after May 24, 2018, that Ms. Hancock brought

in the doctor’s note Ms. Yi had requested. It was the medical release reflecting her

treatment at Confluence Health, and was unsigned. But it had otherwise been completed,

and stated that Ms. Hancock had been released to work as of May 17, 2018, with the

following restrictions: “light duties, with limited weight lifting < 20 lbs. Standing limited

to 1-2 hrs. and requiring rest.” CP at 58.

Ms. Hancock admitted when deposed that the event coordinator position—being

“in charge of setting up and the staff and the events”—is a “pretty physically demanding

job.” CP at 116. She testified that as accommodations, she requested “a lot of additional

help that included two different leads that took on some of my duties,” and requested

“that I spend more time on the computer.” CP at 51. Asked how Ms. Yi and Ms.

Johnson responded, Ms. Hancock testified, “I was told that I would . . . get help,” and she

testified that initially, she did. CP at 122.

Indeed, Ms. Yi testified that she was concerned that Ms. Hancock not perform any

work not authorized by the medical release, and she required other Cave B staff to step in

4 No. 38525-6-III Hancock v. Tae Yang, LLC

as needed. Ms. Hancock’s briefing on appeal misleadingly characterizes this testimony

(e.g., CP at 105-06) as meaning it was a simple matter for Cave B to have multiple

employees do the work required by the event coordinator position. The evidence

demonstrates otherwise.

Ms. Hancock’s payroll records reveal that working in the event coordinator

position before she began experiencing symptoms of multiple sclerosis—between mid-

March and May 12, 2018—she was working from 60 to 96 hours every two-week period.

She was averaging approximately 72 hours per two-week period during that time frame.

By contrast, after she began experiencing symptoms, she worked a total of only 29

hours in the two-week period from May 13 to May 26, and a total of only 28 hours in the

two weeks from May 27 to June 9.

Ms. Johnson testified that during this time frame, there were “a couple of

occasions” when Ms. Hancock failed to place orders for wine and linens needed for

weddings, “and the day of the wedding we didn’t have the wine and the linens.” CP at

134-35. She testified that on the last wedding Ms. Hancock was supposed to work, “she

had a doctor’s appointment and ended up not showing up for work.” CP at 135. Ms.

Johnson also testified that during the period of Ms. Hancock’s frequent doctors’

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