Robert Cady v. Remington Arms Co.

665 F. App'x 413
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedDecember 2, 2016
DocketCase 16-5035
StatusUnpublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 665 F. App'x 413 (Robert Cady v. Remington Arms Co.) 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
Robert Cady v. Remington Arms Co., 665 F. App'x 413 (6th Cir. 2016).

Opinion

COOK, Circuit Judge.

In 2013, Remington Arms Company fired its engineer Robert Cady. Cady sued, claiming wrongful discharge and failure to accommodate his back injury in violation of the Americans with Disabilities Act (“ADA”), and alleging that Remington failed to honor his severance agreement. Reasoning that Cady neither notified Remington that he was disabled nor sought an accommodation, the district court granted Remington’s motion for summary judgment on the ADA claim. The court also granted summary judgment to Remington on Cady’s contract claim, determining that Remington had cause to terminate Cady due to his refusal to perform assigned work. Cady appealed. Because a reasonable jury could find that Cady both notified Remington of his disability and requested an accommodation, we REVERSE.

I.

A. Cady’s Back Problems Before Joining Remington

In 2000, Cady hurt his back while bending over to tie his shoe. Surgery relieved the pain until 2007, when his back pain flared again. He underwent a second surgery in 2008, and for a brief period the doctor restricted him from lifting and bending. Thereafter, Cady experienced lit- *415 tie pain, and had no occasion to request work restrictions with his light-work job.

B.Cady’s Employment Problems with Remington

Cady began working as an engineer in Remington’s Kentucky facility in 2012, where he was assigned to a team developing the R-51 handgun. The position required Cady to attend meetings, deal with suppliers, solve production problems, and ensure that the designers and technical staff worked together.

From the outset, Cady clashed with team members. Cady described the environment as “hostile” and “unhealthy,” and said that he had a “degrading relationship” with his boss. Team members disliked working with Cady, too. One engineer found Cady to be “needlessly confrontational” and testified that the “stress of dealing with Mr. Cady was one factor in [his] departure from the company.” Another colleague recalled that the “team was very alienated” and that “they were not getting along well.” Yet another co-worker described Cady as “Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde,” alternatively “argumentative and confrontational” or “unconcerned” with the work. And although Cady’s performance-review rated him as a valued team member, it also noted that he “struggled with identifying his role within the team” and that his “response during points of contention bordered on personal confrontation.”

Remington reassigned Cady in April 2013 following a meeting regarding the handgun project’s status. During that meeting, Cady disagreed with his supervisor, Mike Keeney, about whether to fully disclose that the R-51 prototype had failed during a test-shoot. Cady wanted to include the details of the failure in a presentation; Keeney instead “wanted to downplay” the failure because “[h]e was afraid that the program would get cancelled.” In addition, toward the end of the meeting, Keeney congratulated another employee on the employee’s appointment to a position that Cady wanted. The news angered Cady, and he threatened to resign. Remington’s Vice President, Scott Franz, spoke with Cady after the meeting, told him to calm down, and convinced him not to quit. Shortly thereafter, Remington transferred Cady out of the work group.

C. Cady’s Back Pain Returns

According to Cady, his back began “progressively getting worse” in May 2013, shortly after Remington reassigned him to the new work group. The following month he had an MRI and scheduled a meeting with his neurologist for Friday, July 12, to discuss the MRI results. The day before the neurologist appointment, Cady told Laura Norwood, Remington’s HR manager, that he was going to the doctor due to back pain, and shared his MRI results with her. This was the first time that Cady told anyone at Remington about his back issues.

The MRI disclosed significant lower back problems, including spinal stenosis and nerve compression. Cady’s doctor prescribed only pain medication because he was concerned that another intrusive surgery might exacerbate the pain. Cady told the doctor that his job was sedentary, and they agreed that he did not need any work restrictions.

D. The Events Leading to Termination

The Monday following his doctor’s appointment, Cady traveled to the Remington facility in St. Cloud, Minnesota. Franz tasked Cady with increasing the facility’s production capacity. Among other jobs, Franz wanted Cady to assemble Creform work stations—benches made out of interlocking pipes and joints that can be customized to fit a particular manufacturing *416 task. According to Cady, his job was to train others how to build the stations, not to construct them himself.

Cady arrived at the facility on the morning of Tuesday, July 16, 2013, and met with Todd Mittelstaedt, the plant manager. Mittelstaedt told him that the facility had recently lost eleven employees and was understaffed. Furthermore, Remington’s chief operating officer had imposed a deadline to complete the Creform stations. Mit-telstaedt therefore instructed Cady to spend the next few days building work benches. Cady responded that he did not have a problem constructing the stations, though he expected other employees to help. Mittelstaedt responded that the facility’s production manager, Lee Vogel, would help Cady build the stations.

Vogel and Cady walked to a paved lot behind the facility, where the unassembled Creform components were stacked in the back of a semi-truck. Vogel climbed into the truck and pulled the parts to the mouth of the trailer bed, where Cady unloaded them. Shortly after starting the work, Cady told Vogel that his medication made him sensitive to sunlight. Vogel gave him sunscreen, and they moved to the shade.

As the morning progressed, Cady worried about aggravating his back injury. Vogel had stepped away from the project, leaving Cady to build the stations alone. According to Cady, climbing in and out of the truck to off-load the parts irritated his back. And to build the stations, he had to fasten and screw bolts, bend over, and saw pipe, which he thought might also strain his back. In addition, he fretted about standing for long periods on the pavement.

Shortly before lunch, Cady spoke with Greg Parker, one of his supervisors in Kentucky, “about the unsafe conditions” at the facility. Parker testified that Cady told him that “[h]e was concerned about his back, doing this up and down” and that “he didn’t want to stand on concrete for long periods of time because ... he felt he was hurting his back.” Cady also told Parker that “it was not conducive for him to be in the sun at that time because of his medication.” And Cady recommended that they “hire a lower paid person to .... help him do this work, that he was above this pay grade to be doing this work out in the sun,” Parker instructed Cady to ask Vogel for better accommodations at the facility.

After speaking with Parker, Cady went to the conference room and worked on his computer. Vogel found Cady in the conference room. Cady expressed reservations about continuing to build the stations, and Vogel recommended they talk to Mittel-staedt. In Mittelstaedt’s office, Cady told Mittelstaedt for the first time that he had concerns about his back.

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665 F. App'x 413, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robert-cady-v-remington-arms-co-ca6-2016.