Equal Employment Opportunity Commission v. Stowe-Pharr Mills, Incorporated, D/B/A Pharr Yarns

216 F.3d 373
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedJune 20, 2000
Docket99-1040
StatusPublished
Cited by113 cases

This text of 216 F.3d 373 (Equal Employment Opportunity Commission v. Stowe-Pharr Mills, Incorporated, D/B/A Pharr Yarns) 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
Equal Employment Opportunity Commission v. Stowe-Pharr Mills, Incorporated, D/B/A Pharr Yarns, 216 F.3d 373 (4th Cir. 2000).

Opinion

Reversed and remanded by published opinion. Judge MICHAEL wrote the opinion, in which Judge WILKINS and Judge KING joined.

OPINION

MICHAEL, Circuit Judge:

The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) sued Stowe-Pharr Mills, Inc. (Stowe-Pharr) under Title I of the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) and Title I of the Civil Rights Act of 1991, alleging that Stowe-Pharr had taken discriminatory employment action against its former employee, Catherine Treece. The district court granted summary judgment to Stowe-Pharr, concluding that Treeee’s statement (“I [am] unable to work”) in her Social Security Disability Insurance (SSDI) application judicially estopped the EEOC from asserting that Treece was a “qualified individual with a disability” under the ADA. A new Supreme Court case, decided after the district court ruled, requires a different approach: under Cleveland v. Policy Management Systems Corporation, 526 U.S. 795, 119 S.Ct. 1597, 143 L.Ed.2d 966 (1999), a plaintiff is permitted to explain an apparent conflict between her SSDI and ADA claims. After considering the parties’ briefs .and arguments, which take Cleveland into account, we conclude that the EEOC has made a sufficient explanation and proffer on Treeee’s behalf to avoid summary judgment on the “qualified individual” element of the ADA claim. Accordingly, we reverse the award of summary judgment to Stowe-Pharr and remand for further proceedings.

i:

We state the facts in the light. most favorable to the EEOC, the non-movant in the summary judgment proceedings. See Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, 477 U.S. 242, 255, 106 S.Ct. 2505, 91 L.Ed.2d 202 (1986). Stowe-Pharr is a textile manufacturer that operates several production facilities in Gaston County, North Carolina. Catherine Treece, who has osteoarthritis, worked in production jobs at Stowe-Pharr plants during four separate periods. Her first three turns of work were at the Crescent plant, in 1989, the 1-85 plant in 1989, and the 1-85 plant again in 1990. Stowe-Pharr claims that Treece was discharged from each of these jobs because of absenteeism. Nevertheless, Stowe-Pharr was willing to hire Treece a fourth time, and she went back to work at the Crescent plant on April 8, 1991. Because of a workforce reduction at the Crescent plant, Stowe-Pharr transferred Treece, to its United Spinners plant on August 3, 1992. About eighteen months later, on February 21, 1994, Treece was transferred at her request to the 1-85 plant, where her husband worked. Unlike the Crescent and United Spinners plants which had wooden floors, the 1-85 plant had concrete floors.

After Treece began' working at the 1-85 plant, the symptoms of her osteoarthritis, including pain, fevered inflammation, and extreme swelling, worsened. On March 26, 1994, Treece took a leave of absence for- surgery (a hysterectomy) that was not related.-to her osteoarthritis. She returned to the plant for work on May 24, 1994. Three days later, her physician, Dr. *376 Donna Vegeais, determined -that work-ing on concrete floors was exacerbating Treece’s osteoarthritis. Dr. Vegeais instructed Treece to wear support shoes and avoid working on concrete surfaces. The doctor documented these instructions by filling out a Stowe-Pharr medical form, which Treece gave to Larry Gibson, the I-85 plant superintendent on May 27, 1994. When he read the doctor’s orders, Gibson told Treece that Stowe-Pharr did not operate any plants without concrete floors. Treece knew, however, that the Crescent and United Spinners plants had wooden floors, and she requested a transfer to one of those plants. According to Treece, she could have performed any number of textile mill jobs' at Stowe-Pharr, if she had been allowed to work on a wooden floor.

Instead of transferring Treece to a different plant, Stowe-Pharr placed her on involuntary leave in late May 1994. Thereafter, on a number of occasions, she contacted Gibson and the personnel manager, Dan Tallent, to ask about a transfer. Tallent’s usual response was that he did not know of any openings, but he was still trying to place her. ' Treece persisted, telling Tallent and Gibson several times that she had heard of openings at the wooden-floored Crescent and United Spinners plants; Tallent promised to call and check on what was available. The company, however, never arranged to transfer Treece to a plant with wooden floors. She was kept on leave until she had used the maximum (six months) leave permissible in any given year. Stowe-Pharr then terminated her employment on September 14, 1994.

Stowe-Pharr’s official (litigation) position as to why it did not transfer Treece to a wooden-floored plant differs from explanations given by two plant managers. In its summary judgment papers, the company said it “does not contend that there were no open positions in plants with wooden floors to which Treece could have been reassigned. Lack of a vacancy is not asserted as a reason that Treece was not transferred.” Edward Gates, the company’s personnel director, confirmed in his deposition that the plants are constantly hiring because of large turnover. Stowe-Pharr claims that it attempted to transfer Treece to either the United Spinners or Crescent plant, but the plant managers would not agree to the transfer because of her past record of some absenteeism and a “mooning” incident at both plants. However, Raj Sawhney, manager of technical services at the Crescent plant, testified that the mooning incident would not have prevented Treece’s return to that plant. (Treece had apparently bared her buttocks on the production floor to show off a tattoo.) Sawhney downplayed the incident, characterizing it as one of the “silly things” people do at work: “People have done worse things and they have been accommodated, excused for that.” Sawh-ney said that Treece was not allowed to transfer to the Crescent plant because he did not need any help there. Rick Wright, plant manager at the 1-85 plant, testified that he could not locate an opening for Treece at a facility with wooden floors.

In January 1995, approximately seven months after she had been placed on leave and four months after her termination, Treece applied for SSDI benefits. At that time, Treece told the Social Security Administration (SSA) intake officer that she could work with an accommodation. On the advice of the intake officer, however, Treece stated in her application that she had been disabled since the time she took leave in March 1994. Specifically, her application says, “I became unable to work because of my disabling condition on March 24, 1994.” On April 23, 1995, the SSA determined that Treece became disabled on December 2, 1994, and was entitled to benefits beginning June 1995. Treece has been receiving SSDI benefits ever since. It appears that Treece’s medical condition has deteriorated since her termination. By the time she was deposed in 1997, she had “serious[] doubt[s] that [she] could work in textiles ever again.” *377 She emphasized, however, that she “felt like [she] could still work” at a wooden-floored plant when she applied for SSDI benefits.

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216 F.3d 373, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/equal-employment-opportunity-commission-v-stowe-pharr-mills-incorporated-ca4-2000.