Paula McAllister v. Innovation Ventures, LLC

983 F.3d 963
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedDecember 30, 2020
Docket20-1779
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 983 F.3d 963 (Paula McAllister v. Innovation Ventures, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Paula McAllister v. Innovation Ventures, LLC, 983 F.3d 963 (7th Cir. 2020).

Opinion

In the

United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit ____________________ No. 20-1779 PAULA MCALLISTER, Plaintiff-Appellant,

v.

INNOVATION VENTURES, LLC, doing business as Living Essen- tial Defendant-Appellee. ____________________

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Indiana, South Bend Division. No. 17-CV-00867 — Jon E. DeGuilio, Judge. ____________________

ARGUED NOVEMBER 13, 2020 — DECIDED DECEMBER 30, 2020 ____________________

Before FLAUM, ROVNER, and BRENNAN, Circuit Judges. FLAUM, Circuit Judge. Plaintiff Paula McAllister suffered serious injuries in a car accident in June 2016. In the following months, her treating physicians repeatedly concluded she could not yet return to work for her employer, defendant In- novation Ventures, LLC. Innovation provided her with medi- cal leave and short-term disability benefits while she sought treatment. Once it became clear that McAllister likely could 2 No. 20-1779

not return to work until at least February 2017, Innovation ter- minated McAllister. McAllister sued Innovation. As relevant on appeal, she claimed Innovation failed to accommodate her during the summer of 2016 in violation of the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA), 42 U.S.C. § 12101 et seq. Because we agree with the district court that McAllister was not a “quali- fied individual” under the ADA, we affirm. I. Background McAllister worked for Innovation, the producer of the popular liquid dietary supplement 5-hour ENERGY. Through a staffing agency, McAllister began working as an assembly worker in October 2014. She soon directly applied to and was hired by Innovation as an assembly worker, which sometimes entailed “rework,”1 and she later became a machine operator. On June 10, 2016, an unfortunate automobile accident left McAllister with serious head and back injuries. At the hospi- tal, spinal surgeon Dr. Jeffrey Kachmann performed spinal surgery on McAllister and treated her for several injuries: a herniated disc, spinal cord compression, central cord syn- drome (which often weakens motor and sensory functioning), a closed-head injury, and a “complex,” “multi-direction lac- eration.” Shortly after her injury, McAllister sought short-term dis- ability benefits and medical leave under the Family and Med- ical Leave Act of 1993 (FMLA), 29 U.S.C. § 2601 et seq. Dr. Kachmann’s office submitted an FMLA certification indicat-

1 “Rework,” also known as “reprocessing,” was a periodic duty that Inno- vation assigned its employees, but it was not an independent job. McAl- lister’s rework required her to conduct quality checks on certain products. No. 20-1779 3

ing that McAllister had “central cord syndrome” and a “sig- nificant head injury” with “some posttraumatic subarachnoid hemorrhage and some possible posttraumatic superficial brain contusion.” On the certification, where asked what job functions McAllister “[was] unable to perform,” Dr. Kachmann wrote she could not perform “any & all” func- tions. He estimated that McAllister could not return to work until September 8, 2016. McAllister also sought short-term disability benefits. Guardian, Innovation’s benefits provider, granted these benefits partially based on Dr. Kachmann’s view that she was “totally disabled (unable to work)” and his estimate of a September return. McAllister asked Innovation’s human resources depart- ment whether she could return to work before receiving a complete medical clearance, as her doctors had imposed re- strictions on how much she could lift. According to McAllis- ter, Innovation refused, telling her that “all restrictions had to be lifted before [she] could return to work because that was the policy that the company had used.” Thereafter, McAllister fell into a frustrating cycle wherein her doctors would examine her, predict she could return to work in some number of weeks, then later elongate their pre- diction at a follow-up visit. On August 24, 2016, as her ex- pected September 8 return approached, she met with April Christlieb, Dr. Kachmann’s physician assistant. Christlieb wrote a report that she faxed to Innovation indicating that McAllister may be getting a “little bit better” but that she had hip and knee pain, foot swelling, some balancing issues, and post-concussion symptoms. Christlieb concluded, “I don’t feel at this time she is quite ready to go back to work.” 4 No. 20-1779

On October 3, 2016, McAllister again met with Dr. Kachmann’s office, which sent Innovation a work status re- port restating that McAllister still could not return to work. Despite her desire to return, McAllister recalled experiencing balance, dizziness, and memory loss issues, and some “diffi- culty getting words out.” Her doctors told Innovation that McAllister needed a neuropsychological evaluation before they could clear her and estimated that would take at least six more weeks. In the interim, Innovation’s human resources department reached out to McAllister because her FMLA leave had ex- pired. At an October 26, 2016 meeting, McAllister notified the department that she still could not return to work. Innovation told her that, per its policy, an employee unable to return to work after six months of leave would be terminated. McAllis- ter notified Innovation that she scheduled her neuropsycho- logical evaluation with another doctor, Dr. Paul Roberts. Con- sidering this upcoming evaluation, Innovation granted her re- quest for additional leave, set to expire at the time of her fol- low-up appointment with Dr. Kachmann on November 14. By the time of that appointment, however, Dr. Roberts had not completed McAllister’s testing. Dr. Kachmann’s office sent another work status report to Innovation, this time estimating that McAllister could not return to work until February 2017 to allow Dr. Roberts to finish his testing. McAllister again spoke with the human resources department, but Innovation declined to extend her leave any further and instead termi- nated her on December 14, 2016. After her termination, McAllister continued her treatment and applied for long-term disability benefits and Social Secu- rity Disability Insurance (SSDI) benefits. After completing her No. 20-1779 5

testing, Dr. Roberts opined that “most all of her mental func- tions were within the normal range or almost above normal range.” He believed that McAllister could gradually return to work, and by June 2017, she would have no restrictions. She applied for long-term disability benefits with Guard- ian in February 2017. In her application, she recounted her difficulties with memory, balance, arm and hand tremors, neck and muscle pain, basic household tasks, and numbness in her foot. Guardian granted McAllister long-term disability benefits until it terminated them in October 2018 when it de- termined she no longer had “functional deficits … that would support an inability to return to work” as a machine operator. In addition to long-term disability benefits, McAllister ap- plied for SSDI benefits in September 2017. In her application she asserted that “I BECAME UNABLE TO WORK BECAUSE OF MY DISABLING CONDITION ON June 10, 2016. I AM STILL DISABLED.” She identified several ailments that af- flicted her: brain injury, cervical vertebrae injury, tremors in right arm, head shakes, “can’t raise arms above my head,” “unsteady on my feet when up and down stairs,” and “right foot and leg numbness.” She further listed that her injuries adversely affected her ability to: lift, squat, bend, stand, reach, walk, sit, kneel, talk, climb stairs, recollect, complete tasks, concentrate, use her hands, and get along with others.

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