Jacqueline Lewis v. City of Union City, Georgia

877 F.3d 1000
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedDecember 15, 2017
Docket15-11362
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 877 F.3d 1000 (Jacqueline Lewis v. City of Union City, Georgia) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jacqueline Lewis v. City of Union City, Georgia, 877 F.3d 1000 (11th Cir. 2017).

Opinions

KAPLAN, District Judge:

Jacqueline Lewis, an African-American police detective in Union City, Georgia, was terminated abruptly from her position after about ten years of service. The ostensible reason was that Ms. Lewis was absent without leave—this notwithstanding that the Union City Police Department (“UCPD”) only days earlier had placed her on indefinite administrative leave pending resolution of the question whether she safely could be subjected to a Taser shock as part of a new UCPD training policy.

Ms. Lewis here contends that her discharge reflected unlawful disability and/or racial or gender discrimination. She seeks back pay, damages, and reinstatement. The patter is before this Court on appeal from the district court’s grant of defendants’ motion for summary judgment dismissing the complaint. We hold that the evidence raised genuine issues of material fact and therefore reverse.

I. FACTS

A. Ms. Lewis’s Medical Condition

Jacqueline Lewis joined the UCPD in 2000 as a patrol officer. She was promoted to detective in 2008.

In January 2009, Ms. Lewis suffered a small heart attack. The episode was unusual in that a cardiac catheterization showed “no clot and no disease” in Ms. Lewis’s heart, although heart attacks generally are caused by a “clot inside the coronary arteries.” And while Dr. Arshed Quyyami, a Harvard-trained cardiologist who treated Ms. ipewis at Emory University’s cardiology clinic, described the damage to Ms. Lewis’s heart as being “miniscule to small,” enzyme levels confirmed the diagnosis of a heart attack. Dr. Quyyami found also that the “global function of the heart was unaffected,” though he noted that people who have had heart attacks tend to be at greater risk for subsequent heart attacks.

Ms. Lewis’s primary care doctor, Dr. Erinn Harris, noted that Ms. Lewis had some residual “mild tricuspid regurgitation” but concluded that this did not have much effect on her bodily function. Ms. Lewis occasionally did complain of paroxysmal nocturnal dyspnea—in other words, shortness of breath while lying down— which, according to Harris “can affect [Lewis’s] ability to sleep.” Dr. Harris testified, however, that Lewis does not have heart disease that “chronically affects her life.” Accordingly, Dr. Harris, following Ms. Lewis’s heart incident, cleared her to return to work without any “cardiac restrictions”: because there “weren’t any blockages to her heart.”

B. UCPD’s New Taser Policy

Prior to 2010, the UCPD allowed officers to choose which non-lethal weapons they carried. The options included oleore-sin capsicum (“OC”) spray,1 ASP batons,2 and Tasers.3 In early 2010, however, then-Police Chief Charles Odom purchased Ta-sers for all UCPD officers and required each to carry one.

Chief Odom testified that he thought Tasers were superior to the ASP baton and OC spray because Tasers would “re-duc[e] the risk of injury to officers, suspects, and the public because [a Taser] allows officers to maintain distance from an uncooperative subject when attempting to obtain compliance and effect an arrest.” Although the manufacturer, Taser International, does not require trainees to receive a Taser shock to be certified in Taser use, Odom required his officers to receive a five-second shock as part of the Taser training. In moving for summary judgment, he offered five justifications for this requirement:

“assisting [officers] in (1) evaluating the appropriate circumstances under which to deploy the Taser, (2) testifying in Court about the effects of the Taser, (3) knowing that they can go ‘hands-on’ with an uncooperative subject without being shocked, (4) considering how to defend themselves if threatened with a Taser or similar device, and (5) understanding what it feels like to be shocked by the Taser in the event of an accidental exposure so that they will have confidence in their ability to survive the experience.”

C.Ms. Lewis Is Scheduled for Taser Training

On June 14, 2010, Ms. Lewis was told to report for Taser training on June 17, 2010. Ms. Lewis was concerned that her prior heart attack might increase her risk of injury from a Taser shock as compared with the average officer. So she saw Dr. Harris, her primary care doctor, on June 15, 2010 to discuss the issue.

Dr. Harris shared Ms. Lewis’s concerns, worrying that the “electrical current ... could cause undue stress to [Lewis’s] ... heart.” Dr. Harris therefore wrote to Chief Odom. Her letter explained that she had been treating Ms. Lewis for “several chronic conditions including a heart condition” and that she “would not recommend that a Taser gun or OC spray be used on or near [Lewis] secondary to her chronic conditions.” Dr. Harris urged the department to take this recommendation “into consideration when making any decisions about occupational training.”

D. Union City’s Leave Policies

At this point we turn briefly to Union City’s policies with respect to employee leave, as they are essential to understanding events subsequent to Dr. Harris’s June 15,2010 letter.

The City of Union City’s Employee Handbook (the “Handbook”), as revised in March of 2010 and in force at the time of the events of this lawsuit, provided for various types of leaves of absence. Chapter 6, section 1.A, permitted an employee to request an unpaid leave of absence of up to 180 days. Notably, this provision stated also, however, that “[a]n employee may also be placed on leave of absence status without application.”

In addition, Union City had a medical leave policy under the Family and Medical Leave Act (“FMLA”). It provided employees with up to 12 weeks of unpaid leave for, inter alia, a “serious health condition that makes the employee unable to perform the functions of that employee’s job.” Under the procedures set forth in the Handbook, when the need for medical leave could be anticipated, the employee was required to submit the paperwork thirty days prior to the effective date of the leave. Where such need was unanticipated, however, the Handbook provided no time period within which the paperwork had to be submitted.

E. Ms. Lewis Placed on Administrative Leave

On June 17, following Chief Odom’s receipt of Dr. Harris’s June 15 letter, Assistant Chief Lee Brown notified Ms. Lewis by letter on June 17 that she was being placed on “administrative leave without compensation until such time as your physician releases you to return to full and active duty.” He wrote that he took this action due to what he described as Dr. Harris’s “instructions [that Lewis] ... not come into contact with either” a Taser or OC spray, which, Brown wrote, could happen in “a variety of [field] and office settings.” The lettey told Ms. Lewis to, contact Trade McCord in . human resources to complete “the necessary FMLA • paperwork concerning your absence.” But the letter fixed no time period during which Ms. Lewis was required to be medically cleared to return to full and active duty. Lastly, although the letter said Ms.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
877 F.3d 1000, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jacqueline-lewis-v-city-of-union-city-georgia-ca11-2017.