Higgins v. Maine Central Railroad

471 A.2d 288, 1 Am. Disabilities Cas. (BNA) 558, 1984 Me. LEXIS 608, 39 Empl. Prac. Dec. (CCH) 35,862, 47 Fair Empl. Prac. Cas. (BNA) 233
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedFebruary 9, 1984
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 471 A.2d 288 (Higgins v. Maine Central Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Higgins v. Maine Central Railroad, 471 A.2d 288, 1 Am. Disabilities Cas. (BNA) 558, 1984 Me. LEXIS 608, 39 Empl. Prac. Dec. (CCH) 35,862, 47 Fair Empl. Prac. Cas. (BNA) 233 (Me. 1984).

Opinion

NICHOLS, Justice.

On this appeal we must resolve the question of under what conditions a Maine employer may lawfully discriminate against an employee who suffers from epilepsy.

The Plaintiff, John P. Higgins, seeks review of a decision by the Superior Court granting judgment for the Defendants, Maine Central Railroad Company and Portland Terminal Company, in an employment discrimination action brought under the Maine Human Rights Act, 5 M.R.S.A. § 4551 et seq.

Because we conclude that the Defendants failed to comply with that Act, as recently interpreted in Maine Human Rights Commission v. Canadian Pacific Ltd., 458 A.2d 1225 (Me.1983), we sustain the appeal. We dismiss the Defendants’ cross-appeal which urges, in essence, a more lenient standard for them.

The Plaintiff worked for the Defendants as an enginehouse laborer and turntable operator at Portland Terminal Company’s South Portland facility known as Rigby Yard, beginning in 1969. In October, 1979, the Plaintiff suffered a back injury which caused him to be absent from work for several months. This absence led the Defendant’s chief medical officer, Joseph Earnhardt, M.D., to make inquiries concerning the Plaintiff’s health to the Plaintiff’s personal physicians, John Boothby, M.D. and Norman W. Saunders, M.D. In the process, Dr. Earnhardt discovered that the Plaintiff was an epileptic and had a history of seizures. Dr. Earnhardt notified the Defendants that the Plaintiff “has a long history of convulsive seizures” brought about by epilepsy and recommended that the Plaintiff be placed under work restrictions, including prohibitions from working around moving machinery, trains, turntables, or stationary engines with exposed shafts or gears, and from working alone. As a result, and only a few days later, the Defendants discharged the Plaintiff from service on March 3, 1980.

The Plaintiff filed a complaint with the Maine Human Rights Commission. The parties have stipulated that the Commission found reasonable grounds for believing that unlawful discrimination occurred but failed within 90 days to enter a conciliation agreement between the parties. The Plaintiff then filed a timely civil action in Superior Court, claiming unlawful discrimination under section 4572 of the Maine Human *290 Rights Act, 1 and requesting the court, in the exercise of its statutorily conferred equity power, to order the Defendants to cease unlawful discrimination, to reinstate him into his former position with full seniority rights, and to grant him lost wages, together with punitive damages, attorney’s fees, and such other relief as is deemed just.

The Superior Court, by order dated March 3, 1983, entered judgment for the Defendants following a bench trial, on the basis of the affirmative defense that the Plaintiff could not perform the duties his job entailed without endangering the health or safety of himself or others. 5 M.R.S.A. § 4573(4). 2 On appeal, the Plaintiff attacks the legal standard employed by the trial court in considering this defense and challenges several of its findings of fact as well. We agree that the trial court failed to apply the proper legal standard.

The Maine Human Rights Act (MHRA), 5 M.R.S.A. §§ 4551-4632, prohibits any employer from discharging an employee because of a physical handicap. 5 M.R.S.A. § 4572(1). “Once discrimination has been established, ... the defendant employer, to avoid liability under the MHRA, must then demonstrate that its discriminatory practices were permitted under statutorily defined exceptions to the MHRA’s general prohibitions against discrimination and were thus not unlawful.” Canadian Pacific Ltd., supra, 458 A.2d at 1230.

One such exception, known as the safety defense, permits employment discrimination in individual cases when an employee, because of some handicap, is “unable to perform his duties or perform those duties in a manner which would not endanger the health or safety of the employee or the health or safety of others.... ” 5 M.R. S.A. § 4573(4). Nine months ago we ruled that this provision requires that an employer seeking to assert the safety defense must establish “that it had a factual basis to believe that, to a reasonable probability, the employee’s physical handicap renders him unable to perform his duties or to perform such duties in a manner which will not endanger his own health or safety or the health or safety of others.” Canadian Pacific Ltd., supra, 458 A.2d at 1234. The safety defense, unlike other defenses, requires an individualized assessment of the health or safety risk in the employment, or continued employment, of a handicapped individual.

The Superior Court below, acting without the benefit of the guidance to be provided it a few weeks later by our opinion in Canadian Pacific Ltd., rested its decision on two alternative legal standards, neither of which, unfortunately, approximates the standard we were shortly to enunciate. One approach used by the trial court was to *291 apply the three-step test for determining whether a prima facie case of discrimination exists. Maine Human Bights Commission v. City of Auburn, 408 A.2d 1253, 1261-68 (Me.1979). 3 This test consists of an analysis of whether the plaintiff is a member of a protected class, whether the defendant had a nondiscriminatory reason for discharging him and whether the reason was bona fide. However, as Canadian Pacific Ltd. made very clear, this framework of analysis is applicable only to the question of whether a plaintiff has met his initial burden of showing discrimination, not to an affirmative defense. 458 A.2d at 1230. In the instant case the Defendants concede that they discriminated against the Plaintiff on account of his handicap. The issue is whether they were legally justified in so doing.

The second approach utilized by the presiding justice was to determine the existence of a rational relationship between the Plaintiff’s physical condition and the health or safety risk in his continued employment. The justice discerned “evidence, to the point of clear and convincing quantum, that there was a rational basis” (emphasis supplied) for the work restrictions placed on the Plaintiff and found that the likelihood of the Plaintiff suffering a seizure on the job was “not merely illusory.” We expressly rejected the “rational relationship” test as unduly deferential in Canadian Pacific Ltd., 458 A.2d at 1231.

Not only did the Superior Court fail to inquire whether there was a reasonable probability that the Plaintiff’s epilepsy would prevent him from performing his duties in a manner which would not endanger the health or safety of himself or others but it also failed to determine whether at the time of dismissal the Defendants had any factual basis for believing that such reasonable probability existed.

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471 A.2d 288, 1 Am. Disabilities Cas. (BNA) 558, 1984 Me. LEXIS 608, 39 Empl. Prac. Dec. (CCH) 35,862, 47 Fair Empl. Prac. Cas. (BNA) 233, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/higgins-v-maine-central-railroad-me-1984.