IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA
No. 22-0653 Filed March 8, 2023
WYNEIL HILL, Plaintiff-Appellee,
vs.
STATE OF IOWA, IOWA DEPARTMENT OF HUMAN SERVICES, and GLENWOOD RESOURCE CENTER, Defendants-Appellants. ________________________________________________________________
Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Mills County, Richard H. Davidson,
Judge.
The defendants appeal an adverse jury verdict, raising alleged evidentiary
errors by the district court. AFFIRMED.
Brenna Bird, Attorney General, and Chandlor G. Collins (until withdrawal)
and Robert J. Thole, Assistant Attorneys General, for appellants.
Gregory G. Barntsen and Joseph D. Thornton of Smith, Peterson Law Firm,
LLP, Council Bluffs, for appellee.
Heard by Bower, C.J., and Badding and Buller, JJ. 2
BADDING, Judge.
Glenwood Resource Center,1 a facility for Iowans with intellectual
disabilities and mental illnesses, appeals a jury verdict in favor of its former
employee, Wyneil Hill, on his claims of disability discrimination and constructive
discharge. Glenwood claims the district court abused its discretion in several
pretrial evidentiary rulings on the parties’ motions in limine. On the claims where
error was properly preserved for our review, we find no abuse of discretion and
affirm the judgment for Hill.
I. Background Facts
Hill is an army veteran who suffers from post-traumatic stress disorder as a
result of seeing his sergeant get shot in the stomach on a mission in the late 1980s.
Decades later, while employed at Glenwood as a resident treatment worker, Hill
was caring for a resident with a colostomy when his disorder was triggered. In an
email to his supervisor after the incident on August 3, 2019, Hill wrote that seeing
the resident’s intestines through his stoma caused him to have “flashbacks of
fellow soldiers being wounded in battle. Being close to those who have open organ
areas is bad for me. I had no clue that I would see clients like this or I could have
mentioned it specifically.”
Glenwood referred Hill to a therapist, and he remained off work through
August 13 when he met with his human resources manager, Natalie McEwen, and
a shift administrator to discuss his return to work. Hill went to the meeting in hopes
1 Because Glenwood is a facility operated by the Iowa Department of Human Services, now known as the Iowa Department of Health and Human Services, the plaintiff also named the State of Iowa and the department as defendants in his suit. We will refer to all the defendants collectively as “Glenwood.” 3
that he could go back to work the next day in an area where he would not have to
care for residents with colostomies. Despite this request, McEwen did not give Hill
a letter that she had drafted on August 12 temporarily reassigning him to a kitchen
staff position. She instead told him that Glenwood could not “100 percent
guarantee that he was never going to see the things that triggered him,” even
though there were only three to four residents—out of the 100 or so there at the
time—who had colostomies. Feeling that he had no other option, Hill resigned.
Although McEwen told him that he “could resign without prejudice,” she marked
his separation form as not eligible for rehire.
After leaving his job at Glenwood, Hill could not find other employment. He
sued Glenwood in November 2020 for disability discrimination and constructive
discharge, alleging he was not provided with reasonable accommodations for his
disability of post-traumatic stress disorder, which forced him to resign. The jury
returned a verdict for Hill on both claims, awarding him $142,500 in lost earnings
and $150,000 in non-economic damages.
Glenwood appeals, claiming the district court abused its discretion
in: (1) admitting the August 12, 2019 letter temporarily reassigning Hill to a kitchen
staff position; (2) prohibiting Glenwood from providing context for the letter and
explaining why it was not provided to Hill at the meeting on August 13; (3) excluding
evidence about Hill’s “criminal history, drug addiction, therapy records, and other
items included in his employment background checks”; and (4) admitting evidence
about the training, or lack thereof, that Hill received for his position at Glenwood. 4
II. Error Preservation
Most of Glenwood’s brief focuses on the admission of the August 12, 2019
letter into evidence. It argues that Hill used this letter “to show an accommodated
position was available and used [Glenwood’s] failure to provide the letter to him at
the August 13th meeting as proof [Glenwood was] not interested in working with
him to find an accommodation.” See Goodpaster v. Schwan’s Home Serv., Inc.,
849 N.W.2d 1, 16–18 (Iowa 2014) (discussing the elements of a reasonable-
accommodation claim). The problem, according to Glenwood, is that Hill was
being reassigned to food and nutrition services because of an investigation into his
workplace behavior and Hill’s claim that he was subjected to racial slurs, not to
accommodate his post-traumatic stress disorder. As a result, Glenwood claims
the letter “was not relevant to any claim or defense in this trial.” Glenwood also
claims that once the letter was admitted, the district court should have allowed it
to explain “why the letter was drafted, i.e., the ongoing investigations.”
We cannot address these claims because Glenwood has not provided us
with “a sufficient record disclosing the error upon which it relies.”2 Estes v.
Progressive Classic Ins. Co., 809 N.W.2d 111, 115 (Iowa 2012). Glenwood’s
motion in limine did not seek to exclude the August 12, 2019 temporary
reassignment letter, though it did ask that Hill be prohibited from offering evidence
2 Nor did Glenwood provide us with statements in its appellate brief identifying how and where error was preserved for any of the issues it raised on appeal. See Iowa R. App. P. 6.903(2)(g)(1) (requiring the argument section of appellate briefs to include a “statement addressing how the issue was preserved for appellate review, with references to the places in the record where the issue was raised and decided”). While a “party’s disregard of the rules may lead to summary disposition of the appeal or waiver of an issue,” we decline Hill’s invitation to apply that result here. See State v. Lange, 831 N.W.2d 844, 847 (Iowa Ct. App. 2013). 5
about Glenwood’s investigation into his workplace behavior and coworkers’ racial
slurs. The district court granted that portion of Glenwood’s motion, ruling at a
pretrial conference: “I’d like to make this as clean as possible and keep it a
disability case and constructive discharge, period.” So the parties were instructed
that they could not offer evidence about “Hill’s behavior or coworkers’ behavior, as
well as the racial slur” allegations.
To comply with the court’s ruling, the parties had to remove and redact
some of their proposed exhibits before trial. At the end of the pretrial conference,
the court told counsel to contact him if they had any disagreements while
completing that task. They apparently did so, as the court noted on the record
before jury selection on the first day of trial:
The court held another pretrial conference, one much briefer and was not on the record via telephone. And as part of that pretrial conference over the telephone on March 3rd, the court was appraised that the impasse involved Plaintiff’s Exhibit 17 and a similar Exhibit FF of defendant’s [the August 12, 2019 temporary reassignment letter]. The court ruled that this exhibit was admissible.
When Hill offered the letter at trial, Glenwood responded: “We would just
object in line with a prior ruling by the Court.” Trouble is, we don’t know what
objection Glenwood made to the letter at the unreported hearing or the basis for
the court’s ruling. See In re F.W.S., 698 N.W.2d 134, 135 (Iowa 2005) (“The court
may not speculate as to what took place or predicate error on such speculation.”).
Without that information, or any indication from the record that Glenwood asked to
provide context for the letter, we cannot address its first two claims on appeal. See
id. (“It is the appellant’s duty to provide a record on appeal affirmatively disclosing
the alleged error relied upon.”); see also Iowa R. App. P. 6.806(1) (“A statement of 6
the proceedings may be prepared to create a record of a hearing or trial for which
a transcript is unavailable if a party deems it necessary to complete the record on
appeal.”); Jones v. Glenwood Golf Corp., 956 N.W.2d 138, 143 n.1 (Iowa 2021)
(“A record can be made of off-the-record colloquies.”).
III. Merits
We begin our analysis of Glenwood’s remaining two claims with some basic
principles of evidence: “Relevant evidence is admissible, unless provided
otherwise. However, irrelevant evidence is not admissible. Evidence is relevant if
it has any tendency to make a fact more or less probable than it would be without
the evidence; and the fact is of consequence in determining the action.”
Eisenhauer ex rel. T.D. v. Henry Cnty. Health Ctr., 935 N.W.2d 1, 17 (Iowa 2019)
(cleaned up) (quoting Iowa Rs. Evid. 5.401, .402) . But even relevant evidence “is
not admissible ‘if its probative value is substantially outweighed by the danger of
unfair prejudice.’” McClure v. Walgreen Co., 613 N.W.2d 225, 235 (Iowa 2000)
(quoting Iowa R. Evid. 5.403). The determination of relevancy, and application of
the balancing test in Iowa Rule of Evidence 5.403, rests within the sound discretion
of the district court. Id.; see Harris v. Jones, 471 N.W.2d 818, 821 (Iowa 1991).
We will only find an abuse of that discretion if it was exercised “on grounds or for
reasons clearly untenable or to an extent clearly unreasonable.” Mohammed v.
Otoadese, 738 N.W.2d 628, 631–32 (Iowa 2007) (citation omitted).
A. Background-check evidence
Glenwood claims the district court abused its discretion in excluding
evidence that would have appeared on Hill’s background checks for employment,
including an “assault conviction from 2014,” delinquent child-support payments, 7
“drug history,” “investigations into [Hill] abusing his stepdaughter,” “criminal
history,” and “therapy records,” plus Hill’s “background and record check
evaluation” at Glenwood.3 It argues “these items were relevant with respect to
[Hill’s] claim for damages, specifically because the types of jobs he was applying
for, those in criminal justice and as a contracted driver (Uber/Lyft), perform
background checks and would disqualify and did disqualify him for employment.”
With this evidence being excluded from trial, Glenwood argues Hill was able to
testify that the reason he remained unemployed was because Glenwood marked
his separation form as ineligible for rehire.
To put this claim into context, Hill testified at trial that after leaving his job at
Glenwood in August 2019, he had been unable to find other employment despite
“filing several other applications over the course of the last three years.” Because
Hill had a master’s degree in criminal justice, he was mainly looking for jobs in the
criminal-justice field. When he did not succeed with those jobs, he expanded his
search into sales and driving services like Lyft, Uber, and Door Dash. Hill testified
3 Although the parties held a lengthy hearing on their motions in limine, Glenwood did not make any offer of proof on the evidence the court excluded or ask that its proposed exhibits be made part of the record. See Lynch v. Moreno, No. 21-0815, 2022 WL 1486185, at *4 n.6 (Iowa Ct. App. May 11, 2022) (“[T]he record that makes its way to us does not include proposed exhibits that are never marked as admitted by the district court in the judicial interface.”). Glenwood has nevertheless included some of its proposed exhibits in the appendix. As we cautioned in Lynch, “[p]ractitioners should refrain from citing items that were not admitted and including them in the appendix, as they were not made a part of the district court record and are therefore not part of the record on appeal.” Id. Because Glenwood’s proposed exhibits are not properly before us, we have not considered them in reviewing this claim. Our review is instead confined to the descriptions of the excluded evidence in the parties’ motions in limine and at the hearing on those motions, to the extent those descriptions are sufficient to provide us with a “meaningful record for appellate review.” Brooks v. Holtz, 661 N.W.2d 526, 529 (Iowa 2003) (citation omitted). 8
at his deposition that he thought his applications to those driving services were
denied because of a 2014 misdemeanor assault conviction. But at trial, he
speculated that his difficulty finding a job may have been because Glenwood listed
him as not eligible for rehire, though he also testified background checks were
performed.
The threshold problem Glenwood faces with the excluded evidence about
Hill’s “criminal history, drug addiction, therapy records, and other items included in
his employment background checks” is that we don’t know whether the employers
Hill filed applications with performed background checks. If checks were
performed, we also don’t know what information was disclosed, whether that
information included the items Glenwood wanted to get into at trial, or whether any
of it was the reason Hill was not hired. Cf. Parker v. Shatek, No. 15-1287, 2016
WL 4801605, at *1 (Iowa Ct. App. Sept. 14, 2016) (finding evidence of deceased
plaintiff’s criminal history was relevant on damages where an expert acknowledged
criminal history could affect employability).
The only information Glenwood offered on this point at the motion in limine
hearing was defense counsel’s assertion that Hill
testified in deposition that Lyft and Uber had not hired him based on his background check. And so we believe that—we’re happy to introduce evidence or attempt to introduce evidence from Lyft and Uber explaining their background checks, but those at least publicly mention assaultive or violent offenses will not allow you to be hired by those places. Additionally, those offenses, typically—especially with the one within the last ten years—will not allow you to work in a criminal justice capacity, even if it’s a misdemeanor for assault.
Later in the hearing, defense counsel continued: “[T]he jobs that Mr. Hill was
applying for are going to require background checks, drug testing and sometimes 9
polygraphs, and I can pull that at least from the applications I looked up in research
to this case.” Counsel also told the court based on his “personal experience, not
in evidence” that an applicant’s child support delinquency would appear on a
background check for “probation offices, correctional offices.” (Emphasis added.)
At a subsequent hearing on the issue, the district court noted that it asked counsel
off the record whether Glenwood had “evidence that criminal justice jobs require
clean criminal history.” In response, Glenwood gave the court a one-page exhibit
the court described as “a screen shot of probably a text that Mr. Hill received” from
Lyft that his job application was denied “based in whole or in part on information in
your background check.”
But, as the district court noted, that exhibit “doesn’t say anything else, so I
don’t know if they have specific[s] as to what [was] in the background check.”
Glenwood did not offer the court any other evidence aside from the above to
support its assertions about the background checks. See State v. Embree, No. 14-
0709, 2015 WL 9450466, at *7 (Iowa Ct. App. Dec. 23, 2015) (finding defense
counsel’s statement that he had the victim’s iPod and an exhibit with
“approximately 50 statements from [the victim’s] phone” was not “sufficient to
create a meaningful record for appellate review” where the record did not show
what was contained on the iPod and the exhibit was not part of the record). So we
are left to speculate about the content of Glenwood’s proposed evidence on the
background checks and the witness or witnesses it would present to offer the
evidence. See id. Without that necessary link, the relevancy of these items of
evidence is marginal, especially considering that Hill was hired at Glenwood after
a background check. See Parker, 2016 WL 4801605, at *1 (“Relevance is 10
contextual; it is determined by the issues raised and other evidence introduced
analyzed within the framework of the applicable law.”).
The probative value of the evidence is also limited. See State v.
Rodriguez, 636 N.W.2d 234, 240 (Iowa 2001) (“Probative value gauges the
strength and force of the evidence to make a consequential fact more or less
probable.” (cleaned up)). As the district court observed, most of the evidence that
Glenwood wanted to get into about Hill’s background was too remote in time to be
probative. See State v. Sharkey, 311 N.W.2d 68, 70 (Iowa 1981) (“Although
evidence may itself appear relevant, it may relate to a time so remote from the date
of the happening of an incident that it has little probative value.”). This includes a
1999 charge for second-degree assault, a child support delinquency in 2004, and
a 2000 charge for third-degree assault reduced to disturbing the peace,4 along with
statements in a psychosocial assessment that he struggled with a
methamphetamine addiction before 2011. The unfairly prejudicial nature of this
evidence was also high. See, e.g., Shawhan v. Polk Cnty., 420 N.W.2d 808, 810
(Iowa 1988) (noting the potential that evidence of past drug use “has for causing
unfair prejudice is high”).
As for the unspecified “therapy records” Glenwood contends should have
come into evidence, Hill’s motion in limine sought to keep out counseling progress
notes from 2014 that discussed some times when he struggled with anger issues.
Glenwood agreed at the hearing on the motions in limine that evidence from those
4 Hill disclosed these offenses to Glenwood in a record check evaluation that Glenwood listed as a proposed exhibit for trial. But, as discussed earlier, because that exhibit was not made part of the record, we are limited to counsel’s descriptions of the offenses in Hill’s motion in limine and the hearing on the motion. 11
progress notes would only be relevant if the court denied its request to exclude
evidence about its investigation into Hill’s workplace behavior and his coworkers’
racial slurs. Because that evidence did not come in, and Glenwood made no
showing as to how the progress notes would explain why Hill could not find a job
after leaving Glenwood, we find no abuse of discretion in the court’s ruling
excluding those records.
We also find no abuse of discretion in its exclusion of evidence about Hill’s
alleged abuse of his stepdaughter at some unknown time, which the parties told
the court was “unfounded.” Glenwood intended to use this evidence to explain
why Hill could not be placed in one of the all-female houses at the facility. But, as
the district court reasoned, the substantial unfairly prejudicial nature of this
evidence outweighed any limited probative value considering there was no criminal
conviction, it “involves at best [an] abuse investigation [that] was unfounded,” and
is “based on hearsay.” In any event, Hill’s supervisor testified at trial that his
request to be transferred to the all-female house was denied because of her
“concerns about his interactions and his judgment with females.” And Hill
presented evidence there were many other houses at Glenwood with vacancies
for resident treatment workers.
For these reasons, we conclude the district court did not abuse its discretion
in excluding any of the foregoing evidence.
B. Training evidence
Glenwood next claims the district court abused its discretion in allowing
testimony that Hill had not been trained to deal with residents who had
colostomies. Glenwood argues this evidence was irrelevant and unfairly 12
prejudicial because Hill was not seeking recovery for his lack of training or the
emotional distress he experienced as a result of seeing the resident’s stoma. Cf.
Couch v. Iowa Dep’t of Hum. Servs., No. 15-0432, 2016 WL 5930340, at * 5 (Iowa
Ct. App. Oct. 12, 2016) (discussing a failure-to-train claim in a discrimination case).
But it was relevant to Hill’s disability discrimination claim for Glenwood’s failure to
provide a reasonable accommodation.
The jury was instructed that in order to be successful on that claim, one of
the elements Hill had to prove was that he “was qualified to perform the essential
functions of his job position with or without accommodation.” See Rumsey v.
Woodgrain Millwork, Inc., 962 N.W.2d 9, 22 (Iowa 2021). To show he was a
qualified individual, another instruction required Hill to prove that he “possess[ed]
the requisite skill, education, experience, and training for the position he was hired
to perform.” See id. We agree with the district court the evidence was relevant on
that element of Hill’s claim—“to determine what he could tolerate as far as his
qualifications for the job.”
Testimony about Hill’s lack of training on colostomy bags was also relevant
to show this was not an essential function of his job. On that issue, the jury was
instructed that one of the factors it could consider was “the amount of time spent
on the job performing the function in question.” See Palmer Coll. of Chiropractic
v. Davenport Civ. Rts. Comm’n, 850 N.W.2d 326, 343 (Iowa 2014). As the district
court found, the fact that Hill “worked with the resource center for some four, maybe
more months before he ran into this issue” was relevant to show that working with
residents who had colostomies was not an essential function of his job. 13
As far as the rule 5.403 balancing test, we recognize that all evidence will
result in some prejudice. Pexa v. Auto Owners Ins. Co., 686 N.W.2d 150, 158
(Iowa 2004). We accordingly focus on whether that prejudice is unfair. Id. “Unfair
prejudice arises when the evidence prompts the jury to make a decision on an
improper basis, often an emotional one.” Id. On this point, Glenwood argues the
evidence “created animosity towards” it and “confused [the jury] as to what
evidence they should consider.” We disagree. While Hill’s lack of training was
discussed throughout the trial, it was used by him for the purposes identified
above, not to try to get the jury to “punish [Glenwood] for unrelated events.” On
balance, we find the district court fairly weighed the probative value of the evidence
against the probable dangers of admitting it. See Midwest Home Distrib., Inc. v.
Domco Indus. Ltd., 585 N.W.2d 735, 745 (Iowa 1998) (“Because [rule 5.403]
allows the district court to exclude relevant testimony, the court should apply the
rule sparingly.”).
Considering the “latitude afforded the district court in matters of evidence,”
State v. Thompson, 954 N.W.2d 402, 408 (Iowa 2021), we conclude the court did
not abuse its discretion in allowing testimony about Hill’s lack of training.
IV. Conclusion
We find Glenwood failed to preserve error on two of its evidentiary claims.
On the claims where error was preserved, we find no abuse of discretion in the
district court’s evidentiary rulings and affirm the judgment for Hill.
AFFIRMED.