Roper v. Knoxville Assisted Living Retirement Community, LLC (TV2)

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Tennessee
DecidedJuly 11, 2022
Docket3:20-cv-00439
StatusUnknown

This text of Roper v. Knoxville Assisted Living Retirement Community, LLC (TV2) (Roper v. Knoxville Assisted Living Retirement Community, LLC (TV2)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Roper v. Knoxville Assisted Living Retirement Community, LLC (TV2), (E.D. Tenn. 2022).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT EASTERN DISTRICT OF TENNESSEE

CURTIS L. ROPER, ) ) Plaintiff, ) ) v. ) No.: 3:20-CV-439-TAV-DCP ) KNOXVILLE ASSISTED LIVING ) RETIREMENT COMMUNITY, LLC d/b/a ) MANORHOUSE AT KNOXVILLE and ) MANORHOUSE MANAGEMENT, INC., ) ) Defendants. )

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER This matter is before the Court on defendants’ motion for summary judgment [Doc. 74]. Plaintiff filed a response [Doc. 83], and defendants filed a reply [Doc. 90]. This matter is now ripe for adjudication. For the reasons discussed below, defendants’ motion [Doc. 74] will be DENIED. I. Background Defendant Knoxville Assisted Living Retirement Community, LLC d/b/a Manorhouse at Knoxville (“Manorhouse”) is an entity, previously owned by defendant Manorhouse Management, Inc., that operates as an assisted living and memory care facility [Doc. 75-2 p. 4; Doc. 75-3 p. 2; see Doc. 80 ¶¶ 2–3]. In June 2019, defendants hired plaintiff to serve as Manorhouse’s laundry aide on Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays and van driver on Tuesdays and Thursdays [Doc. 75-2 p. 5; Doc. 75-1 p. 27; Doc. 83-1 pp. 45– 46]. At plaintiff’s interview, plaintiff informed his then-prospective supervisor Jamie Akins that he suffered from a hernia [Doc. 75-1 pp. 15–16]. After being hired, plaintiff received lifting training, and was informed that he should request assistance to lift any items he considered too heavy to lift alone [Doc. 75-2 pp. 5, 38].

As a van driver, plaintiff drove Manorhouse’s van to transport its residents to their various appointments and errands [Doc. 75-1 p. 18]. Manorhouse’s van driver job description provides that the van driver is responsible for “[a]ssist[ing] all passengers into and out of the van,” “[s]ecuring passengers with wheelchairs into seats with seatbelts,” and refraining from “transport[ing] any passenger in a wheelchair” rather than “in a seat

wearing a seatbelt” [Doc. 75-2 p. 50]. Defendants assert that, based on this description, plaintiff was required to lift residents from their wheelchairs into seats on the van [Id. at 7]. By contrast, plaintiff asserts that residents either walked onto the van or were lifted onto it in their wheelchairs via the van’s mechanical lift [Doc. 83-1 p. 51]. Moreover, plaintiff suggests that wheelchair-bound residents were always transported in their

wheelchairs such that he never needed to lift them, and plaintiff states he was never informed this practice was inappropriate [Id. at 54–56]. Additionally, plaintiff states that caregivers or others were generally available to assist if lifting had been necessary [Id. at 51–53; Doc. 83-2 pp. 72–74]. Defendants assert that while caregivers sometimes assisted the van driver, this was not due to any requirement of Manorhouse and therefore that the

van driver needed to be able to lift residents without assistance [Doc. 75-2 p. 7]. When plaintiff was not driving on Tuesdays and Thursdays, he performed maintenance tasks and

2 sometimes lifted furniture and other items [Id. at 6]. Plaintiff suggests these lifting obligations began only after he began working at Manorhouse [Doc. 75-1 pp. 27–28]. In the laundry aide position, plaintiff was required to collect, wash, dry, fold, and

put away residents’ laundry and linens using Manorhouse’s industrial washers and dryer [Doc. 75-2 pp. 7–8; see id. at 54 ]. Plaintiff used a laundry cart to transport laundry around Manorhouse [Doc. 75-1 p. 19]. Defendants aver that lifting baskets of laundry in residents’ rooms, transferring washed laundry to the dryer, and moving laundry detergent containers could entail lifting over 10 pounds [Doc. 75-2 p. 8]. Defendants also state that the laundry

aide needed to carry laundry up and down stairs when the elevator at Manorhouse was inoperable. Defendants recognize that other employees would occasionally help carry laundry up and down the stairs, but defendants assert this was not required [Id.]. Citing testimony of Manorhouse’s other laundry aide, plaintiff disagrees, arguing that lifting was not necessary for the laundry aide position as the laundry aide could separate laundry into

smaller loads to obviate the need to carry over 10 pounds, other employees consistently helped the laundry aide carry laundry up and down stairs, and the laundry aide never needed to lift residents [Doc. 83-9 pp. 26–28, 33–36, 38–39]. On November 13, 2019, plaintiff provided Akins with a doctor’s note indicating he could not lift more than 10 pounds for medical reasons [Doc. 75-1 p. 45; Doc. 75-2 p. 58].

Defendants assert they first learned of plaintiff’s lifting restriction due to his hernia at this time [Doc. 75 p. 12]; however, plaintiff asserts he also informed them of his restriction on

3 several prior occasions [Doc. 75-1 pp. 29–30]. Other managers eventually received the doctor’s note, including Alicia Fields, Manorhouse’s Executive Director, Elizabeth Wilkins, Manorhouse Management’s Director of Human Resources, and Jim Bonnell,

Manorhouse Management’s Chief Operating Officer [Doc. 75-2 pp. 2, 9; Doc. 75-3 p. 5]. On November 14, 2019, Wilkins and Bonnell exchanged the following text messages: Bonnell: I will call you shortly. Are you aware of [plaintiff’s] doctors [sic] note that says he can’t lift anything over 10lbs?

Wilkins: Ok. I’m actually taking a PTO day today . . . . Can I text you . . . this afternoon? I know nothing about [plaintiff] – is this a work related injury?

Bonnell: That’s fine. Wasn’t aware you were off today. [Plaintiff] has a hernia that he’s had for a while.

Wilkins: Are we able to accommodate his restrictions? We don’t have to as this was not work related. We should discuss.

Bonnell: Agreed.

[Doc. 75-2 p. 9; Doc. 75-3 p. 11]. On November 18, 2019, Wilkins, Akins, Fields, and plaintiff met and discussed plaintiff’s doctor’s note and job duties [Doc. 75-2 p. 10]. Defendants suggest that at this meeting, the parties discussed plaintiff’s medical condition and limitations, including his lifting restriction, the job descriptions for the van driver and laundry aide positions, the requirements of every other position, and the need for defendants to keep their residents safe [Id. at 10–13]. However, plaintiff suggests that defendants simply showed him his job descriptions, made him sign them, and terminated him [Doc. 75-1 pp. 47–51]. Plaintiff

4 claims not to have seen the job descriptions prior to this day [Id. at 50]. Plaintiff also avers he offered to serve as a laundry aide or in the receptionist position––which plaintiff alleged was available at the time––until after he had hernia surgery and that defendants rejected

these proposals [Id. at 48]. Plaintiff suggests that the managers never mentioned his inability to lift at least 10 pounds [Id. at 50–51]. Ultimately, defendants terminated plaintiff at the meeting “due to the fact that he could not perform the essential functions of any position for which he was qualified . . . .” [Doc. 75-2 p. 14]. Defendants claim they considered that plaintiff’s

restriction prevented him from lifting residents onto the van and laundry as needed and were concerned that plaintiff could have injured himself or others while working [Id. at 11, 13]. Defendants aver they relied on Fields’s training as a nurse, Wilkins’s training in human resources, and the managers’ experience with plaintiff [Id. at 12]. Ultimately, plaintiff filed this action, which asserts claims under the Americans with

Disabilities Act (“ADA”), the Tennessee Human Rights Act (“THRA”); and the Tennessee Disability Act (“TDA”) for retaliation, discrimination, and failure to participate in the interactive process and offer reasonable accommodations [Doc. 80 ¶¶ 18–21]. Defendants’ instant motion seeks summary judgment as to all of plaintiff’s claims [Doc. 74].1

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Roper v. Knoxville Assisted Living Retirement Community, LLC (TV2), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roper-v-knoxville-assisted-living-retirement-community-llc-tv2-tned-2022.