Phyllis Stallings v. Detroit Public Schools

658 F. App'x 221
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJuly 28, 2016
Docket15-2428
StatusUnpublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 658 F. App'x 221 (Phyllis Stallings v. Detroit Public Schools) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Phyllis Stallings v. Detroit Public Schools, 658 F. App'x 221 (6th Cir. 2016).

Opinion

GRIFFIN, Circuit Judge.

Plaintiff Phyllis Stallings is a former' Detroit Public Schools (DPS) teacher. She appeals the district court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of DPS on her claim that it failed to accommodate her disability in violation of state and federal law. Because Stallings has not demonstrated that she is qualified for her former position, we affirm.

I.

Plaintiff is “nationally certified ... to teach early childhood education (ECE).” She began working for DPS in 2002, and spent her career in the school’s “ECE program,” teaching prekindergarten and kindergarten courses.

Things changed in November 2012 when DPS reassigned Stallings to a fifth grade class. Plaintiff found the change “unbearable.” Although Stallings was qualified to teach up to eighth grade, she had “no experience in the upper grades,” lacked familiarity with the curriculum, and ques *223 tioned whether she possessed “the classroom management skills [necessary] for th[e] age group.” Weeks into her new assignment, Stallings aggravated a preexisting osteoarthritic knee condition while breaking up a fight between students. She took a medical leave of absence in mid-December.

Dr. Lawrence Morawa evaluated Stallings’ injury and prepared an Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) “Health Care Provider Certification” on her behalf. On the Certification, Morawa wrote that Stall-ings “cannot stand longer than a minute” and “must have a sit down job” on the “first floor only.” He clarified in a second note that Stallings’ “sit down job” should include “no classroom” work. Plaintiff submitted the Certification and the note to DPS, along with a “Request for Accommodations” form she completed personally. Instead of reiterating Morawa’s recommendation for a “sit down job” outside the classroom, Stallings stated she “need[ed] a person to assist [her]” with her teaching duties.

DPS initially rejected plaintiffs request for a “no classroom” “sit down job” as inconsistent with the essential job functions of a grade school teacher. It did, however, provide Stallings with a teacher’s aide upon her return from medical leave in January 2013. As an alternative to a first-floor classroom, defendant assigned Stallings to a second-floor classroom with elevator access, although Stallings recalled that the elevator did not work.

Three weeks later, for reasons unexplained by the record or the parties, DPS changed its position and moved plaintiff to an administrative job. Stallings worked essentially as a clerical assistant, “copying, collating,” and performing data entry. The position involved “no teaching” and “[n]o children,” meaning that Stallings “didn’t [have to] do anything that required [her] to stand.” Plaintiff remained on “desk duty” until the school year ended in June 2013. She underwent “a total left knee replacement” that same month.

In August, DPS sent plaintiff a “call back letter” directing her to report to an elementary school on the 26th for the start of the new school year. The letter did not assign Stallings a particular grade level, but specified that DPS had confirmed her for a “Teacher position.” When she reported to work, plaintiff spoke with DPS’s director of compensation and benefits, Todd Faison, and chief of human resources, Gwendolyn de Jongh. Stallings explained she was still recovering from knee surgery and requested “an illness leave, because I’m not trying to get any class work.” Faison gave plaintiff a Family Medical Leave Act (FMLA) “illness leave of absence request form,” and de Jongh excused her from work.

Stallings returned the completed FMLA form on September 3. Again, however, she provided DPS with conflicting information: Morawa stated on the FMLA form that Stallings required four months’ leave, from August 2013 to January 2014. Comparatively, in a second note plaintiff submitted, Morawa represented that Stallings’ return date was still “to be determined,” while repeating his earlier recommendation: “No classroom—sit down job only!” Complicating matters further, Stallings spent the next several days contacting DPS supervisors requesting to return to work as a classroom teacher. Noting that she spent her “entire 10 year career at DPS ... in the ECE program,” plaintiff asked to be excused from her elementary placement and reassigned to a prekindergarten class which, according to Stallings, her “physician w[ould] allow” her to teach.

Defendant denied plaintiffs request for medical leave on September 9. DPS further explained that it could not return *224 Stallings to her “[administrative] placement outside of a classroom” because such an accommodation was beyond the scope of its ADA obligations, but offered to accommodate Stallings with a teacher’s aide and an “assigned first floor classroom.” Stallings declined. She interpreted defendant’s refusal as an “ultimatum” requiring her to report to work with “no accommodations,” lest she face “retire[ment],” “resignation],” or “termination from the District.” Plaintiff retired the next day. Notifying defendant of her intent to retire, Stallings wrote that DPS’s accommodation “determination is in conflict with my surgeon’s recommendation. I am unable to fulfill my duties as an effective classroom teacher at this time.”

Stallings applied for social security disability benefits eight days after she retired. An administrative law judge ultimately determined that plaintiff was disabled as of June 17, 2013—three months before her retirement—and awarded her benefits.

Stallings subsequently filed the present action alleging that DPS failed to accommodate her in violation of the ADA and Michigan Persons With Disabilities Civil Rights Act (PWDCRA). Defendant moved for summary judgment, arguing in part that plaintiff was not a qualified individual under the ADA. The district court agreed. Recounting the evidence of Stallings’ self-professed inability to function in a classroom setting, it stated:

Not only did Stallings admit she could not perform her job, her treating doctor submitted a disability certificate [stating] ... “no classroom—sit down job only.” He also said [on the FMLA form,] “Pt is totally disabled to function in a classroom at this time.” Moreover, Stallings applied for social security disability benefits shortly after her retirement, alleging an onset date of disability of June 17, 2013, and an inability to work then— three months before she retired. Stallings was awarded benefits ... from the onset date of her disability.
⅜ ⅜ ⅜
Whether she was to be in a pre-kinder-garten class or a first grade classroom, Stalling[s] was still a classroom teacher. Her doctor said she could not perform this job; her retirement papers said she could not perform this job; her social security application said she could not perform this job beginning in June, 2013.

Finding no genuine issue of material fact on the question of whether plaintiff was qualified, the district court granted defendant’s motion. Stallings appeals the judgment.

II.

We review the district court’s grant of summary judgment de novo. Keith v. Cty. of Oakland, 703 F.3d 918, 923 (6th Cir. 2013).

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658 F. App'x 221, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/phyllis-stallings-v-detroit-public-schools-ca6-2016.