Rooney, Daniel P. v. Koch Air, LLC

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedJune 6, 2005
Docket03-3862
StatusPublished

This text of Rooney, Daniel P. v. Koch Air, LLC (Rooney, Daniel P. v. Koch Air, 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
Rooney, Daniel P. v. Koch Air, LLC, (7th Cir. 2005).

Opinion

In the United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit ____________

No. 03-3862 DANIEL P. ROONEY, Plaintiff-Appellant, v.

KOCH AIR, LLC, Defendant-Appellee. ____________ Appeal from the United States District Court for the Southern District of Indiana, Indianapolis Division. No. IP IP01-1228-C-M/S—Larry J. McKinney, Chief Judge. ____________ ARGUED SEPTEMBER 14, 2004—DECIDED JUNE 6, 2005 ____________

Before EASTERBROOK, MANION, and WOOD, Circuit Judges. WOOD, Circuit Judge. Shortly after he began working for Koch Air, LLC, Daniel Rooney injured his back. Five years later, he injured it again. These injuries limited Rooney’s ability to do his job; unable to reach a satisfactory arrange- ment with the company, he eventually resigned. In August 2001, Rooney sued Koch Air under the Americans with Disability Act (ADA), 42 U.S.C. §§ 12101, et seq., and Indiana state law, claiming that Koch Air had discriminated against him and constructively discharged him on account of his disability. He also alleged that Koch Air retaliated against him in violation of Indiana law for his act of filing 2 No. 03-3862

a worker’s compensation claim. The case comes to us after the district court granted Koch Air’s motion for summary judgment, finding that Rooney had failed to submit evidence showing that a similarly situated nondisabled employee had been treated more favorably than he was. While this may be so, we affirm for a more fundamental reason: he has not shown that he is disabled for purposes of the ADA.

I In January 1994, Rooney began working in the Customer Assurance Department of Koch Air, a distributor of heating and air conditioning products. A few months later, Koch Air promoted him to the position of Manager of that depart- ment. This position required Rooney to provide customers with technical and warranty support. Often he could do this by telephone, but he also had to make occasional trips to job sites, where he would frequently need to access crawl spaces, bend, kneel, lift, and work at unprotected heights. In April 1994, only a few months after he was hired, Rooney suffered an injury to his head, neck, and back that required him to undergo a C-4 vertebrectomy and an inner body fusion. After the surgery, he took a three-month leave of absence from work. In August of that same year, Rooney received a work clearance from the Indiana Center for Rehabilitation Medicine that listed several work restrictions. Notably, he was told to avoid crawl spaces and attics, to alternate sitting with 15-30 minutes of standing and walk- ing, and to avoid unprotected heights and repeated bending. In 1995, Koch Air demoted Rooney to Assistant Customer Assurance Manager, the position he held until he resigned. David Boone, Rooney’s supervisor from 1996 until February of 2000, testified that “because of Danny’s disabilities and restrictions, he was made the ‘inside’ person.” In other words, Koch Air placed Rooney in the lower job because of his work restrictions. As an Assistant Customer Assurance No. 03-3862 3

Manager, Rooney’s duties included addressing customer satisfaction, training end-user customers, and troubleshoot- ing problems with customers’ heating and air conditioning units. William Sircy, Rooney’s manager after Boone resigned, testified that Assistant Customer Assurance Mangers are also required to make job-site visits, and on the site they “must be able to lift, bend, enter crawl spaces, kneel, squat, and climb stairs and ladders.” Unfortunately, Rooney suffered a second back injury in July 1999. This injury occurred while Rooney was working at Koch Air, when he reached for a lower file cabinet drawer. About eight months later, Rooney underwent a second round of back surgery. After about a month’s recovery, he returned to work at Koch Air. Rooney filed a worker’s com- pensation claim for this injury. After Rooney returned again to full-time work in May 2000, he refused to perform any job-site visits with the exception of two: one on May 8, 2000, and the other on July 31, 2000. His refusal forced Sircy to do all of the job-site visits. Finding that state of affairs problematic, Koch Air ordered Rooney to undergo a functional capacity evaluation. The results of the evaluation indicated that Rooney could per- form all the functions required for job-site visits, including being able to bend partially, squat, kneel frequently, and crawl occasionally. On July 11, 2000, Suzanne Pursell, the Operations Manager at Koch Air, sent Rooney an email after receiving the functional capacity evaluation report. In the email she reported that Koch Air was “pleased the FCE’s [functional capacity evaluation] report indicated that you could climb ladders on a limited basis, enter crawl spaces on a limited basis, drive to customer sites and training locations and perform other duties temporarily removed from you [sic] job requirements.” She went on to explain that the position of an Assistant Customer Assurance Manager included the responsibility to travel to job sites to provide technical assistance to dealers in “trouble shooting 4 No. 03-3862

of equipment on performance issues.” The email also notified Rooney that his personal doctor, Dr. Peter Hall, should review a copy of the report and “if he disagrees with anything on this report he will need to send us his concerns in writing.” Dr. Hall responded in a brief letter dated July 18, 2000, that acknowledged that he had reviewed the functional capacity evaluation report. He commented that, in his opinion, Rooney had reached “maximum medical recovery” and that he estimated Rooney had a permanent partial impairment of 20% of his body. In a second letter from Dr. Hall dated August 8, 2000, which Rooney submitted for his worker’s compensation claim, Dr. Hall indicated that Rooney should not bend, but that he agreed with the func- tional capacity report that Rooney could “occasionally kneel, crawl, climb ladders and stairs.” These letters set the stage for Rooney’s resignation. On September 11, 2000, Sircy issued Rooney a written repri- mand for disregarding his instructions to deliver a check for training materials to Radio Shack. Rooney received an employment counseling session as a result of this incident. The next day, Rooney failed to report to work. Pursell called Rooney and told him that he would need to submit a doctor’s note for his absence. On either September 12 or 13, Rooney gave Pursell a signed note announcing his refusal to per- form any further job-site visits. In the note, Rooney wrote that he was “not mentally or physically comfortable enough at this time to put [himself] into a situation, which could cause further damage.” On September 13, Rooney returned to work and Pursell issued him a final written warning for his failure to provide a doctor’s excuse for his absence. Nevertheless, at the same time, in light of Rooney’s stated position that he could no longer perform job-site visits, Koch Air offered Rooney a new position that did not include that task. On the negative side, the new position came with an hourly rate of pay that was less than what Rooney had been No. 03-3862 5

earning as an Assistant Customer Assurance Manager. Rooney rejected the offer and resigned from Koch Air on September 15, 2000. Shortly thereafter, he filed a complaint with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) and two months later, after receiving his right-to- sue letter, he brought this action in federal court in August 2001. Discovery followed in due course. Critically for our pur- poses, Rooney testified at his deposition that after his surgery in March 2000, he was able to perform all major life activ- ities such as sleeping, bathing, dressing himself unassisted, exercising, and performing basic household tasks.

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Rooney, Daniel P. v. Koch Air, LLC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rooney-daniel-p-v-koch-air-llc-ca7-2005.