Gingold v. BON SECOURS CHARITY HEALTH SYSTEM

768 F. Supp. 2d 537, 2011 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 23781, 2011 WL 803028
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedMarch 1, 2011
Docket08 Civ. 2364 (VM)
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 768 F. Supp. 2d 537 (Gingold v. BON SECOURS CHARITY HEALTH SYSTEM) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gingold v. BON SECOURS CHARITY HEALTH SYSTEM, 768 F. Supp. 2d 537, 2011 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 23781, 2011 WL 803028 (S.D.N.Y. 2011).

Opinion

DECISION AND ORDER

VICTOR MARRERO, District Judge.

Plaintiff Adam Gingold (“Gingold”) brought this action against defendant Bon Secours Charity Health System (“Bon Sec-ours”) alleging that Bon Secours failed to reasonably accommodate his disability and created conditions amounting to constructive discharge, in violation of the Americans with Disabilities Act (“ADA”), 42 U.S.C. § 12112(a) and the New York Human Rights Law (“NYHRL”), New York Executive Law § 296. Bon Secours now moves for summary judgment (the “Motion”) pursuant to Rule 56 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure (“Rule 56”) on Gingold’s claims, as well as on the issue of damages, which Bon Secours contends Gingold failed to mitigate.

For the reasons discussed below, the Court GRANTS Bon Secours’s Motion in part and DENIES the remainder as moot.

I. BACKGROUND 1

From July 1997 until August 17, 2007, Gingold was employed by Bon Secours as a “PC Technician,” providing support for various information technology issues. He started out working at Bon Secours’s Good Samaritan Hospital, located in Suffern, New York, and transferred shortly thereafter to Bon Secours Community Hospital (“Community Hospital”) in Port Jervis, New York. For the duration of his employment with Bon Secours, Gingold’s immediate supervisor was Donald DeGraw (“DeGraw”), Manager of Desktop Support. DeGraw reported to David Kurilla (“Kurilla”), Executive Director of Technical Services, and Kurilla reported to Maureen Price (“Price”), Vice President of Information Services for the entire Bon Secours system.

In 2003, Gingold was diagnosed with an anxiety and panic disorder. As a result of this condition, he suffered from panic attacks which were apparently triggered by traveling out of his local area. According to medical records, Gingold first reported the symptoms to his doctor in August 2003. Several months later, in early Octo *540 ber of that year, Gingold provided a doctor’s letter to Bon Secours, which stated:

Please be advised that Adam Gingold is under my care for anxiety/panic attacks. This diagnosis manifests when he travels further than sixty-five (65) miles from his home resulting in an accelerated heart beat and palpitations which leads to him loosing [sic] feeling in his arms and legs.
Currently, he is on medication treatment [sic] which has not proved to be successful at this time.

(Bon Secours’s Rule 56.1 Statement, Ex. D.) Although Bon Secours’s entire technical staff had been invited to attend a software training program in Paramus, New Jersey later that month, Gingold did not attend, and it is undisputed that no negative employment consequences followed. There is some evidence in the record suggesting that Gingold continued to advise his supervisors of his medical condition, at least in a general manner, on several occasions over the next few years.

On June 27, 2007, Bon Secours’s Information Services Department held a conference call to discuss various issues. During the call, DeGraw informed Bon Secours’s technical support staff, including Gingold, that Bon Secours would be instituting a new rotation system (the “Rotation System”) whereby technicians at Community Hospital would be on call to provide weekend technical support coverage for several other facilities within the Bon Secours system. Price elaborated that, under the Rotation System, travel to the other facility sites would be required. Gingold later testified at deposition that management stated during the call that technicians who were unable to meet the requirements of the Rotation System could “start looking for another job.” (Bon Secours’s Rule 56.1 Statement, Ex. A at 277:14-278:5.) While Gingold admits that management was vague about the precise details of the Rotation System because the program had yet to be finalized, the technical staff was informed that management expected that the Rotation System would commence in or about September 2007. The staff were also told that they would be given four weeks’ notice prior to the start of the Rotation System, and that additional calls would be held as the details crystallized.

At some point after the June 27 call, Gingold approached DeGraw to express concern regarding his panic attack condition and the travel requirements to be imposed under the new Rotation System. DeGraw replied that he had not been aware of Gingold’s condition or that Gin-gold had previously submitted any doctor’s notes, but DeGraw said he would discuss the situation with Kurilla and Price. Next, Gingold initiated a conversation with Kurilla, during which he informed Kurilla of his medical condition and stated that he was concerned about being required to travel to other Bon Secours facilities. Kurilla responded that he would have a better idea about the possibility of accommodating Gingold once the Rotation System was closer to being finalized. Finally, Gingold went to Price, who told him that there would definitely be a Rotation System of some sort, but that the final details had not yet been presented to Bon Secours’s senior management.

On July 9, 2007, at DeGraw’s request, Gingold faxed DeGraw a copy of a doctor’s note dated January 4, 2006 stating that Gingold suffered from a panic disorder triggered by driving “out of the local area.” (Bon Secours’s Rule 56.1 Statement, Ex. F.) DeGraw responded by email asking Gingold to clarify the precise limitations on his ability to travel. Gingold testified that he spoke to DeGraw the next day and expressed concern about traveling to attend a computer training session *541 scheduled for July 12 at a Bon Secours facility in Warwick, New York, forty-five miles from Gingold’s home in Glen Spey, New York. After speaking again with Kurilla, who suggested that Gingold might attempt the drive to Warwick on July 12 in order to test how manageable the travel would be, Gingold ultimately agreed to attend the training. He later reported to his supervisors that he had experienced panic attack symptoms upon arrival at Warwick, but that those symptoms dissipated after he rested for several minutes.

Two days after the Warwick training, on July 14, 2007, Kurilla presented Gingold with a written disciplinary notice based on an unrelated incident that allegedly occurred several weeks prior, in early June 2007. Gingold testified at deposition that Kurilla also told Gingold that if Gingold was unable to travel to Warwick for rotations because of his medical condition, he would be out of a job by the second week of September. Gingold testified that, after this conversation with Kurilla, he called Price on the phone to discuss possibilities for accommodating his condition, and he proposed being granted additional opportunities to adjust to making the trip to Warwick before the Rotation System was to go into effect. According to Gingold, Price responded that there was no way to accommodate his condition and that all employees would have to meet the requirements of the Rotation System.

At some point between July 14 and July 19, 2007, Gingold.

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Bluebook (online)
768 F. Supp. 2d 537, 2011 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 23781, 2011 WL 803028, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gingold-v-bon-secours-charity-health-system-nysd-2011.