Foster v. Mountain Coal Company

830 F.3d 1178, 32 Am. Disabilities Cas. (BNA) 1629, 2016 U.S. App. LEXIS 13564, 2016 WL 3997425
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedJuly 26, 2016
Docket15-1025
StatusPublished
Cited by167 cases

This text of 830 F.3d 1178 (Foster v. Mountain Coal Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Foster v. Mountain Coal Company, 830 F.3d 1178, 32 Am. Disabilities Cas. (BNA) 1629, 2016 U.S. App. LEXIS 13564, 2016 WL 3997425 (10th Cir. 2016).

Opinion

PHILLIPS, Circuit Judge.

Eugene Foster appeals from a district-court order granting summary judgment in favor of Mountain Coal Company, LLC (Mountain Coal) on his retaliation claims under the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA), 42 U.S.C. § 12203(a). Specifically, Foster appeals the district court’s disposi-tive conclusion that his requests for accommodation were inadequate and untimely. Exercising jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291, we reverse and remand to the district court for further proceedings. 1

FACTUAL BACKGROUND

In November 2004, Foster began working at Mountain Coal’s West Elk Mine (West Elk) in Colorado. On February 5, 2008, while working as a long-wall maintenance supervisor, Foster turned his head quickly and felt a pop in his neck. Because his neck was still hurting the next day, Foster sought care at the Delta County Memorial Hospital emergency room. After receiving treatment, Foster had the emergency-room doctor complete a return-to-work form that detailed Foster’s injury, excused Foster from work on February 6 and 7, and authorized Foster to return to work on February 8. Although he ordinarily would have returned to work on February 8, Foster had a regularly-scheduled week off beginning that day and continuing until February 15. And Foster had already scheduled a hernia operation for February 15 that required a recovery period extending until March 28. In all, Foster missed work from February 6 to March 28.

A. Mountain Coal Rejects Original Return-to-Work Form

On February 10, Ed Langrand, the Manager of Human Resources at Mountain Coal, called Foster to a meeting with West Elk management to discuss the neck injury. Foster testified that sometime during the meeting, a West Elk work-safety manager “jumped out of his chair and stated he had talked to so-and-so in St. Louis, and this was not going to be a workmen’s comp accident.” Appellant’s App. vol. 2 at 412. Although Foster was surprised by the safety manager’s outburst, the meeting continued. Langrand, along with other senior managers at West Elk, recommended that Foster see Dr. Thomas Dwyer, an orthopedic specialist, about his neck. During the meeting, Foster provided Langrand the return-to-work *1181 form that the emergency-room doctor had completed. But Langrand rejected the form, directing Foster to have a doctor complete a Mountain Coal return-to-work form as company policy required. Foster agreed that he would do so when he went to the hospital for his hernia operation on February 15.

B. The Disputed Return-to-Work Form

During his deposition, Foster testified about his efforts to get a doctor to complete the Mountain Coal return-to-work form for his neck injury during his hospital stay from February 15 to February 17. Specifically, Foster asked his fiancée to get the form filled out by the emergency-room doctor who had seen him on February 6. This effort failed when the emergency-room doctor declined to complete Mountain Coal’s forms.

Faced with this, Foster told Langrand that the emergency-room doctor had refused to complete Mountain Coal’s form. In response, Langrand told Foster to have Dr. Dory Funk — Foster’s primary-care doctor — complete Mountain Coal’s form. Foster attempted to do so. But when Foster arrived at Dr. Funk’s office, he learned that Dr. Funk was on vacation. Facing that impediment, he left the blank Mountain Coal form with an office receptionist, who told Foster she would “see about getting it filled out when Dr. Funk returned” and would call Foster to report any developments. Appellant’s App. vol. 5 at 959.

About a week later, someone from Dr. Funk’s office called Foster to tell him he could pick up the completed form. According to Foster, he then retrieved the form and took it straight to the West Elk office. Nobody was at the West Elk office except a receptionist whom Foster did not know. After waiting for an hour and a half, Foster got an envelope from his truck, put the completed form in the envelope, and left it on the desk of a human-resources clerk, Sandra White. Foster further testified that, while speaking by telephone with a Mountain Coal employee regarding his disability benefits on March 13, he also spoke with White, who told him she had not received the form and needed him to provide another one. Apparently, five days after- talking to White,. Foster again went to Dr. Funk’s office, obtained another form that Dr. Funk dated and signed on March 18, and soon afterward dropped off the form at West Elk.

At this point in Foster’s deposition, the attorneys representing Foster and Mountain Coal both agreed to discontinue Foster’s deposition because he had become incoherent after ingesting his pain medication. When Foster’s deposition resumed two months later, Foster testified differently about what occurred after he allegedly placed the Mountain Coal form on White’s desk.

This second time, Foster testified that Langrand had told him to obtain the completed form on March 17 — not that White told him to obtain the completed form on March 13. Under this account, Foster testified that he understood that White had not received the completed form Foster left on her desk, but apparently White never told him to obtain a new one. Instead, on March 17, Langrand told Foster to return a completed form to Mountain Coal. Foster testified that he went to Dr. Funk’s office the day after speaking with Langrand; obtained a second completed form, dated March 18; and took it to West Elk. Mountain Coal acknowledges that it received this completed return-to-work form.

C. Foster Visits with Dr. Dwyer

On March 10, at Mountain Coal’s direction, Foster met with Dr. Dwyer about his neck pain. After Foster’s initial examination, Dr. Dwyer set out to learn more *1182 about Foster’s condition by reviewing one of Foster’s previous MRIs, by ordering another MRI, and by obtaining the treatment notes of Dr. Karen Nelson, who had given Foster injections to help alleviate pain. On March 24, Foster returned to Dr. Dwyer’s office for a second scheduled office visit. By then, Dr. Dwyer had received the earlier MRI records and the results from the additional MRI, but still had not received Dr. Nelson’s injection notes. After reviewing the MRIs, Dr. Dwyer wrote in his notes that he doubted that he would “ever recommend surgery to address all of the degenerative changes in [Foster’s] spine,” but that with more information “a more limited surgical intervention could potentially be appropriate” after “significant consideration and discussions with Foster] about expectations.” Appellant’s App. vol. 8 at 1631-32. Before proceeding further, Dr. Dwyer still wanted to obtain Dr. Nelson’s notes and to visit more with Foster about treatment options. Foster’s next appointment with Dr. Dwyer was set for April 4.

D. April 3 Meeting

On March 31, Foster returned to work after his hernia-operation doctor provided him a Mountain Coal return-to-work form on March 25. The form excused Foster from work from February 15 until March 28. 2

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830 F.3d 1178, 32 Am. Disabilities Cas. (BNA) 1629, 2016 U.S. App. LEXIS 13564, 2016 WL 3997425, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/foster-v-mountain-coal-company-ca10-2016.