Gamber v. Missouri Department of Health & Senior Services

225 S.W.3d 470, 2007 Mo. App. LEXIS 828, 2007 WL 1595121
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 5, 2007
DocketWD 67170
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 225 S.W.3d 470 (Gamber v. Missouri Department of Health & Senior Services) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gamber v. Missouri Department of Health & Senior Services, 225 S.W.3d 470, 2007 Mo. App. LEXIS 828, 2007 WL 1595121 (Mo. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

ROBERT G. ULRICH, Judge.

Karen Gamber appeals the directed verdict in favor of the Missouri Department of Health and Senior Services (DHSS) on her claims of disability discrimination and constructive discharge. She presents three points on appeal, arguing that the directed verdict was error because “sufficient” material facts were disputed and because her supervisor was an agent of DHSS. All three points are denied, and the judgment of the trial court is affirmed.

Facts

In the light most favorable to Karen Gamber, the plaintiff at trial, the facts are as follows. Dunn v. Enter. Rent-A-Car Co., 170 S.W.3d 1, 3 (Mo.App. E.D.2005). Karen Gamber worked as a social worker for the Missouri Division of Aging in the Benton County office from June 1997 to December 1997. Pam Lowe was her supervisor during her employment with the Division of Aging. Employment with the Division of Aging involved working with the elderly.

In December 1997, Ms. Gamber began working for the Missouri Division of Family Services in the Pettis County office. This employment involved Ms. Gamber’s working with families and children. After approximately seven years, Ms. Gamber desired to work with the elderly again as opposed to working with families and children.

In November 2002, while she still worked for the Division of Family Services, Ms. Lowe approached Ms. Gamber about Ms. Gamber’s desire to become employed once again by the Missouri Department of Health and Senior Services (DHSS), formerly called the Division of Aging. Ms. Lowe initially indicated that Ms. Gamber could work for DHSS in the Pettis County office. The Pettis County offices for the Division of Family Services and DHSS were located in the same building in Pettis County. Ms. Gamber lived nineteen miles from the Pettis County office. Ms. Gamber was not hired to work in the DHSS Pettis County office, though, because of a hiring freeze affecting that position.

Upon being informed that the position in Pettis County was unavailable due to a *473 hiring freeze, Ms. Lowe informed Ms. Gamber that a position was available in the DHSS Hickory County office. Ms. Gam-ber lived 70 miles from this office, and she did not want to drive 140 miles each day commuting to work. Ms. Lowe urged Ms. Gamber to consider the Hickory County position, assuring Ms. Gamber that it was relatively easy to transfer and that she would be transferred to Pettis County within six months. The policy of DHSS is that employees are placed on probation for a year, which can be reduced to six months. Employees may not transfer to another office while on probation. Ms. Lowe further stated that she knew how to work around the rules. If there was any problem with a transfer, Ms. Lowe said that she could treat the situation as a rehire. Ms. Lowe told Ms. Gamber that she would be transferred to Pettis County by her six-month re-employment date. Ms. Gamber accepted the position with the Hickory County office in December 2002. Ms. Gamber would not have gone to work for DHSS if Ms. Lowe had not promised her a transfer to Pettis County. Ms. Lowe was Ms. Gamber’s supervisor upon her reemployment by the Department of Health and Senior Services.

On March 5, 2003, Ms. Lowe emailed Ms. Gamber. The email stated that Kathie Moore, Ms. Lowe’s supervisor, was advertising open positions in the region encompassing Pettis County. Ms. Lowe advised Ms. Gamber to express her interest in the open positions to Ms. Moore. Ms. Moore informed Ms. Gamber that she could not transfer at that time because she was still on probation. Another person was given that job. Ms. Lowe informed Ms. Gamber that another social worker in the Pettis County office would be retiring in the near future and, accordingly, another position would become available.

Ms. Gamber began feeling ill in February 2003. In April 2003, she was diagnosed with uterine cancer. On April 30, 2003, Ms. Gamber had a total hysterectomy, and her doctor instructed that she be off work until June 16, 2003.

On June 12, 2004, Ms. Gamber called Ms. Lowe and told her that she had been released to go back to work the next Monday, June 16, 2003. Ms. Lowe told Ms. Gamber not to come back on June 16 because she needed her to be at one-hundred percent, and Ms. Gamber should wait until July 1 to return to work.

While Ms. Gamber was recuperating, two positions opened in the Pettis County office. One was the position of a retiring social worker and the other was the frozen position originally offered to Ms. Gamber. The two persons hired to fill those positions began their employment on July 1, 2003.

When Ms. Gamber returned to work on July 1, 2003, she discovered that the two open positions had been filled. That same day, Ms. Lowe gave Ms. Gamber her six-month mid-point evaluation. In the evaluation, Ms. Lowe found that certain evaluation criteria were not met due to Ms. Gamber’s two month absence while she was recuperating from her illness. James Cook, Ms. Lowe’s supervisor, subsequently informed Ms. Lowe that he was concerned because Ms. Gamber’s case record did not contain sufficient documentation of egregious acts committed by Ms. Gamber to warrant her mid-point evaluation being so negative.

During the same conversation in which she was given her evaluation, Ms. Gamber spoke to Ms. Lowe about being transferred to the Pettis County office and asked why she had not been given one of the two open positions in Pettis County. Ms. Lowe responded that Ms. Gamber would not be transferred because Ms. *474 Lowe feared that Ms. Gamber’s cancer would recur, that Ms. Gamber might die, that Ms. Gamber might have to take off time to go to a physician, and that the Pettis County office was too busy for Ms. Gamber because Ms. Lowe needed employees at one-hundred percent in that office.

Ms. Gamber then began to speak with Ms. Lowe about her future with DHSS. As she looked at her evaluation, Ms. Gam-ber stated that it was not a good evaluation and asserted that it judged her unfairly. Ms. Lowe then asked Ms. Gamber what she was going to do. Ms. Gamber stated that she could not continue to drive 70 miles each way to work. She stated, “I guess I’ll find another job.” Ms. Lowe replied, “I think that would be best.” Ms. Gamber tendered her resignation on July 31, 2003, to be effective August 15, 2003.

Ms. Gamber filed a charge of discrimination with the Missouri Commission on Human Rights alleging that DHSS engaged in discriminatory actions. The Missouri Commission on Human Rights issued her a right-to-sue letter, and she filed a petition against DHSS on April 5, 2004, alleging claims pursuant to the Missouri Human Rights Act (MHRA) 1 and the common law. The petition contained two Counts. Count I asserted a claim for violation of the MHRA based on perceived disability. Count II asserted a claim for retaliation in violation of the MHRA. The petition averred that Ms. Gamber was discriminated against because of her uterine cancer and was forced to terminate her employment.

Trial in this matter began on March 28, 2006. At the close of Ms. Gamber’s evidence on March 29, 2006, the trial court granted DHSS’s oral motion for directed verdict. Ms. Gamber filed a motion for new trial on April 26, 2006, which was denied on August 4, 2006.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
225 S.W.3d 470, 2007 Mo. App. LEXIS 828, 2007 WL 1595121, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gamber-v-missouri-department-of-health-senior-services-moctapp-2007.