Jandreau v. Shaw's Supermarkets, Inc.

2003 ME 134, 837 A.2d 142, 2003 Me. LEXIS 150, 2003 WL 22810425
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedNovember 25, 2003
DocketWCB-03-19
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 2003 ME 134 (Jandreau v. Shaw's Supermarkets, Inc.) 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
Jandreau v. Shaw's Supermarkets, Inc., 2003 ME 134, 837 A.2d 142, 2003 Me. LEXIS 150, 2003 WL 22810425 (Me. 2003).

Opinion

LEVY, J.

[¶ 1] Both Diane Jandreau and Shaw’s Supermarkets, Inc., appeal from a decision of a hearing officer of the Workers’ Compensation Board (McCurry, HO), granting Jandreau’s petition to remedy discrimination. Shaw’s contends that it was error to conclude that its termination of Jandreau’s employment pursuant to a facially neutral six-month absenteeism policy constituted discrimination in violation of 39-A M.R.S.A. § 353 (2001). Jandreau contends that the hearing officer erred in permitting Shaw’s to offset the backpay award by the amount of compensation already paid. Because we agree with Shaw’s that the hearing officer erred in finding discrimination pursuant to section 353, we vacate the decision and do not reach Jandreau’s contentions related to the nature of the remedy for that discrimination.

I. BACKGROUND

[¶ 2] Jandreau began employment by Shaw’s in 1994 and was working in its bakery in 1996 when she suffered a work-related injury to her lower back. She returned to work in the bakery after her injury with medically required work restrictions. She reinjured her back in January 2000 while lifting baking trays.

[¶ 3] Jandreau left work following the 2000 injury and underwent physical therapy. She testified that she was approved to return to work by her doctor in July 2000, subject to work restrictions that precluded repetitive bending or twisting, prolonged sitting or standing, lifting greater than twenty pounds, or working longer than four hours a day. Shaw’s informed Jan-dreau that it could not accommodate her work restrictions and terminated her from employment in July 2000, pursuant to a long-standing policy providing for the termination of part-time employees who have been absent from work for six months, regardless of the reason for the absence.

[¶ 4] In November 2000, five months after the termination, Shaw’s offered Jan-dreau reinstatement as a grocery bagger, which she declined. In a previous decree involving these parties, which is not the subject of this appeal, a hearing officer of the Board granted Jandreau’s petition for review and awarded her continuing 100% partial incapacity benefits. The hearing officer found that Jandreau had not unreasonably refused a bona fide job offer of *144 work without good and reasonable cause, because the work proffered in November 2000 was not within her work restrictions. 1

[¶ 5] Jandreau filed a separate petition to remedy discrimination pursuant to section 353 in November 2001. In the decision and subsequent findings of fact and conclusions of law that are the subject of this appeal, the hearing officer found that Jandreau’s absence from work for six months prior to her termination was due to her work-related injury. The hearing officer concluded that although Shaw’s applied a facially neutral termination policy,

[t]he effect of applying that policy here ... was to penalize the injured employee because of her exercise of her right to be out of work where the employer could not accommodate her restrictions. Shaw’s policy was facially neutral, but its actions in terminating Ms. Jandreau were not only “rooted substantially and significantly,” in Ms. Jandreau’s exercise of her rights under the Act, Shaw’s actions were solely based upon her exercise of those rights.

(quoting Lindsay v. Great N. Paper Co., 532 A.2d 151, 153 (Me.1987)). As a remedy for the discrimination, the hearing officer ordered “back pay from July 26, 2000, to the present and continuing until [Jan-dreau] is reinstated, less the workers’ compensation paid to her, and she is entitled to a reasonable attorney’s fee.”

[¶ 6] Both parties filed petitions for appellate review, which were granted and consolidated for appeal pursuant to 39-A M.R.S.A. § 322 (2001).

II. DISCUSSION

A. The Application of Section 353 to an Employer’s Facially Neutral Termination Policy

[¶ 7] Section 353 of the Act prohibits discrimination against employees “in any way for testifying or asserting any claim” under the Act. 2 The hearing officer relied on two of our decisions — Lindsay, 532 A.2d at 153-54 and Delano v. City of S. Portland, 405 A.2d 222 (Me.1979) — in concluding that the application of Shaw’s facially neutral termination policy toward Jandreau constituted a violation of section 353. We conclude that these precedents do not support a finding of discrimination in this case.

*145 [¶ 8] In Delano, the employee was reclassified to a lower pay scale after refusing to perform part of his duties in his post-injury employment that contained a risk of re-injury. 405 A.2d at 223-24. We determined that there is no per se discrimination when an employer makes a bona fide employment decision according to the employee’s post-injury ability to work, even though the employee’s inability to work may result from a work-related injury. Id. at 228-29. Because the “reclassification [was] based on the lack of bona fide qualification for the higher classified occupation,” the employer’s reclassification was not discriminatory. Id. at 229.

[¶ 9] In contrast with Delano, we found in Lindsay that an employer’s facially neutral absenteeism policy was discriminatory and contrary to section 353. Lindsay, 532 A.2d at 153. The employer, Great Northern Paper, had a “no fault” absenteeism policy whereby employees with a certain number of unexcused absences, regardless of the reason for those absences, were penalized with a two-week suspension without pay. Id. at 152. Due, in part, to Lindsay’s previously unexcused absences and, in part, to his work-related absences, Lindsay was suspended without pay for fourteen days. Id.

[¶ 10] We held that the suspension without pay was discriminatory pursuant to former 39 M.R.S.A. § 111 (1989), repealed and replaced by P.L.1991, ch. 885, §§ A-7, A-8 (codified at 39-A M.R.S.A. § 353), containing substantially similar language to current section 353. Lindsay, 532 A.2d at 153. Although the absenteeism policy was facially neutral, we found that it was discriminatory as applied to Lindsay “because it labelled] his rightful absence because of a work-related injury as an unexcused absence.” Id. Unlike Delano, where the employee was prevented by an injury from performing a job, the employee in Lindsay was able to return to his pre-injury employment. Id. at 152. Therefore, the suspension in Lindsay served no other purpose than to penalize the employee for missing work as a result of a work injury. Id. at 153.

[¶ 11] Since the hearing officer’s decision in this case, we have had another opportunity to consider the application of section 353 to a facially neutral termination or discipline policy in Laskey v.

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Bluebook (online)
2003 ME 134, 837 A.2d 142, 2003 Me. LEXIS 150, 2003 WL 22810425, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jandreau-v-shaws-supermarkets-inc-me-2003.