Maine Human Rights Commission ex rel. Gordon v. Canadian Pacific Ltd.

458 A.2d 1225
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedApril 15, 1983
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 458 A.2d 1225 (Maine Human Rights Commission ex rel. Gordon v. Canadian Pacific Ltd.) 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
Maine Human Rights Commission ex rel. Gordon v. Canadian Pacific Ltd., 458 A.2d 1225 (Me. 1983).

Opinion

VIOLETTE, Justice.

Plaintiffs Maine Human Rights Commission and individuals Vemard Gordon, Ron-[1227]*1227aid Knowles, and John Lyford appeal from the judgment of the Superior Court (Penob-scot County) dismissing their employment discrimination complaint following the court’s acceptance of a Referee’s Report recommending the dismissal. Plaintiffs brought this action in April, 1978, alleging that defendant Canadian Pacific Limited (CPL)2 unlawfully discriminated against the individual plaintiffs because of their physical handicaps in violation of their rights under the Maine Human Rights Act (MHRA), 5 M.R.S.A. §§ 4551-4632, and, specifically, in violation of 5 M.R.S.A. § 4572(1)(A).3 CPL admitted that Gordon was dismissed and Knowles and Lyford were not hired because of their handicaps; it argued, however, that its discrimination constituted a bona fide occupational qualification (BFOQ), 5 M.R.S.A. § 4572(1), and was permitted by the Maine Human Rights Act’s “safety” defense. 5 M.R.S.A. § 4573(4).4

On appeal, plaintiffs contend that the Referee applied the incorrect standards to uphold CPL’s defenses. We agree. We also determine that application of the correct standards requires that we reverse the finding of the Superior Court and vacate the judgment.

I.

After being dismissed or not hired by CPL, the individual plaintiffs complained to the Maine Human Rights Commission (Commission) about CPL’s physical handicap-based discrimination. The Commission found that reasonable grounds existed for the complaints and attempted, unsuccessfully, to dispose of the complaints informally, as required by 5 M.R.S.A. § 4612(3).

The Commission then brought suit in Superior Court on behalf of the individual plaintiffs. The case was tried before a Referee who ruled that the appropriate legal standard to determine the adequacy of CPL’s defenses was “to determine if, in fact, a given job qualification has been adopted in a bona fide manner, or if the excluded handicap has a rational relationship to the safety of those who engage in the operation of the business .... ” Applying that standard, the Referee concluded that CPL’s employment practices did not violate the MHRA. He therefore recommended judgment for the defendant CPL. The Referee’s Report was accepted by the Superior Court over plaintiff’s objections and judgment for defendant was entered dismissing the complaint.

A. Yernard Gordon

Vemard Gordon was hired by CPL as a seasonal “cookee,” or cook’s helper, in May 1976. Although Gordon wore a leg brace, CPL did not require a physical examination of him at any time prior to or during his employment. Gordon worked from May [1228]*1228until July, 1976 and, according to undisputed testimony, performed his job satisfactorily. When one of his superiors learned that Gordon wore a leg brace, Gordon was ordered dismissed. No inquiry was made into the adequacy of Gordon’s performance.

CPL’s Chief Medical Officer, Dr. William May, testified that when he reviewed Gordon’s case in 1977, he informed Gordon’s Division Superintendent that, had he been asked about Gordon’s continued employment, he would not have considered Gordon’s handicap a disability and would have considered Gordon acceptable for employment as a cookee. Dr. Max P. Rogers, a general surgeon and Medical Director of the Southern Railway System, however, testified for CPL that no one with Gordon’s handicap would be able to serve as a cookee without the risk of injury to themselves or others.

B. Ronald Knowles

After undergoing a laminectomy and spinal fusion in 1972, Ronald Knowles applied for employment with CPL as a trainman in 1973 and 1976. In 1973, he received a pre-employment medical examination from a CPL approved medical examiner (CPL examiner)5 who noted Knowles’s recent surgery but approved his fitness for employment as trainman. The report was then forwarded to Dr. May. Dr. May told the CPL regional superintendent that if Knowles was applying for employment, he should be rejected because of his back condition. If, however, he was a regular employee applying to return to work after surgery, then his medical condition was satisfactory.

Knowles was then examined by a CPL Area Medical Officer6 and by Dr. John McGinn, the private orthopedic surgeon who had performed Knowles’s surgery. Both concluded that Knowles had fully recovered from the surgery. Dr. McGinn’s report did not reach Dr. May’s office but, in spite of the Area Medical Officer’s report, Knowles’s first application was finally rejected.

In 1976, Knowles reapplied for a trainman position with CPL. This time, Dr. May’s office received a second report from Dr. McGinn affirming Knowles’s full recovery. Dr. May’s office, noting that further examinations would not alter its decision, again rejected Knowles.

Dr. May testified before the Referee that CPL did not hire applicants until six trou-blefree years following a laminectomy and spinal fusion. The six year period was based on Dr. May’s conclusion after discussions with company consultants that, after six troublefree years, most workers did not suffer further related injuries. Dr. May did acknowledge that some applicants might safely enter the CPL labor force in less than six years. Dr. Rogers recommended a longer wait after such surgery, testifying that, even eight years after a laminectomy and spinal fusion, anyone working as a trainman would be likely to reinjure his back.

C. John Lyford

John Lyford, a seasonal heavy laborer for CPL from 1970-78, unsuccessfully applied for permanent employment as a sectionman in 1974 and 1976. In 1974, Lyford was examined by a CPL examiner who discovered that Lyford had a heart murmur. The physician nevertheless found him fit for [1229]*1229employment as a sectionman. Dr. May’s assistant, Dr. Katz, overruled that recommendation but suggested that Lyford’s application would be reconsidered if Lyford were to obtain a more thorough cardiac examination. Lyford then consulted Dr. James K. Conrad, a cardiologist, who examined Lyford and forwarded the results of his examination to CPL. Dr. Conrad diagnosed Lyford’s heart murmur as caused by a “bicuspid aortic valve7 ... which is of no hemodynamic consequence,” i.e., it did not interfere with the flow of blood within Ly-ford’s heart, and noted that “[t]here is no reason for [Lyford] to have any reason to anticipate any real difficulty in this minimal lesion.” Dr. Katz told the CPL regional superintendent that the cardiologist had confirmed Lyford’s heart murmur, that the murmur was “a potentially disabling condition,” and that Lyford’s application was again rejected.

On the recommendation of his immediate supervisor, who was pleased with Lyford’s work as a seasonal employee, Lyford reapplied for permanent employment as section-man in 1976. His heart murmur was not detected during the pre-employment physical and the CPL medical examiner recommended Lyford’s employment. Lyford’s previous medical history was brought to Dr. May’s attention, however, and Lyford was again rejected. The reason given the CPL medical examiner by Dr. May was that, according to the medical literature, Lyford’s heart murmur could lead to a condition which often resulted in sudden heart failure later in life.

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MAINE HUMAN RIGHTS COM'N, ETC. v. Canadian Pac.
458 A.2d 1225 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1983)

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Bluebook (online)
458 A.2d 1225, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maine-human-rights-commission-ex-rel-gordon-v-canadian-pacific-ltd-me-1983.