Sinkler, Staceen M. v. Midwest Property

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedApril 6, 2000
Docket99-1582
StatusPublished

This text of Sinkler, Staceen M. v. Midwest Property (Sinkler, Staceen M. v. Midwest Property) 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
Sinkler, Staceen M. v. Midwest Property, (7th Cir. 2000).

Opinion

In the United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit

No. 99-1582

Staceen M. Sinkler,

Plaintiff-Appellant,

v.

Midwest Property Management Limited Partnership,

Defendant-Appellee.

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Wisconsin. No. 98 C 247--John W. Reynolds, Judge.

Argued December 2, 1999--Decided April 6, 2000

Before Ripple, Kanne and Diane P. Wood, Circuit Judges.

Kanne, Circuit Judge. Staceen Sinkler suffers from a "specific phobia" involving the operation of an automobile. Her condition makes her unable to drive anywhere unfamiliar to her, and on at least two occasions, her phobia forced her employer, Midwest Property Management Limited Partnership ("Midwest"), to make alternate travel arrangements so she could perform her job as regional sales manager. Midwest ultimately discharged Sinkler. Sinkler filed suit against Midwest, alleging that Midwest discharged her because of her phobia and failed to make reasonable accommodations for her condition, in violation of the Americans with Disabilities Act ("ADA").

Midwest moved for summary judgment, arguing that Sinkler was not a qualified individual with a disability within the meaning of the ADA because Sinkler’s specific phobia did not substantially limit her major life activity of working. The district court granted Midwest’s motion. Sinkler appeals, and we affirm.

I. History

Staceen Sinkler’s specific phobia causes her intense anxiety, distress, avoidance and feelings of derealization when she must drive in an unfamiliar area. Because of these "spontaneous panic attacks," Sinkler’s condition requires her to take alternate forms of transportation or to travel as a passenger on trips from her home in Kenosha, Wisconsin, to such nearby cities as Milwaukee or Chicago. Sinkler has always had a fear of driving. Sinkler’s physician Dr. V. K. Sharma diagnosed her condition in 1983 as a "phobia" and in 1986 as "spontaneous panic attacks." Her phobia always has hindered her ability to secure employment that would require her to drive outside of Kenosha.

Sinkler’s fear of driving has not stymied her ability to work within Kenosha. In fact, she has worked within the city for more than thirty years. She has held sales jobs for many employers, serving as a sales representative for a nursing home and as sales manager/representative for Best Western in Kenosha. Her previous employers knew about her fear of driving and did not require her to drive outside of the city. However, she has been forced to decline promotions when non-local travel would have been required.

In July 1997, Sinkler was hired by Midwest to work at its Illinois Beach Resort hotel, located in Zion, Illinois. At the time Sinkler was hired, neither she nor Midwest had determined what duties she would be required to perform. Therefore, Midwest never provided Sinkler with a description of the job of sales manager, the position she ultimately assumed. When she began work, Sinkler found that one of her responsibilities would be to travel throughout Illinois. Concerned about her ability to market the hotel throughout the state, she told her supervisor Geri Patterson that she "had a problem driving" and that she might need help to "work that out." Patterson told Sinkler that they would "work together for a while," so that Sinkler could grow comfortable with the area that she would be required to service.

Shortly thereafter, the hotel’s general manager, Steve Waak, asked Sinkler to travel to Chicago on a sales trip. Sinkler informed Waak that she would be unable to make this drive, and he approved her request to take a train instead. Later that year, Patterson asked Sinkler to travel with her to Springfield, Illinois, on a business trip. Sinkler asked Patterson to drive on this trip because Sinkler felt that she would be unable to drive that distance. Patterson indicated that she was willing to drive them both to Springfield, but Sinkler did not make the trip. She was not required to travel to Springfield because Waak decided that she needed to remain at the hotel for other reasons.

In November 1997, Drew Lombardo, a limited partner in Midwest and director of the corporate entity that was Midwest’s general partner, asked Renee Shrewsbury to visit the hotel and to uncover and report any problems that existed there. During her week stay at the hotel, Shrewsbury and Sinkler spoke once or twice about whether Sinkler could take a business trip to Springfield. Sinkler told Shrewsbury that she was afraid to drive to Springfield and asked if she would be permitted to fly there. Shrewsbury told her that Lombardo would not pay for her to fly. Later that week, Patterson, Midwest comptroller Cheryl Overton, Shrewsbury and Sinkler met for a brainstorming session. During the meeting, Sinkler again told Shrewsbury that she was unable to drive to Springfield because she was "really handicapped with that." She told Shrewsbury that if she and Patterson traveled together and Sinkler grew familiar with the route, then she might subsequently be able to make the trip by herself. Shrewsbury reported the details of these conversations to Lombardo, who remarked that he also had heard that Sinkler was afraid to drive.

In late November, with Patterson’s permission, Sinkler engaged in competitive shopping of surrounding hotels. The purposes of this activity were to acquire referral business and to determine the rates these hotels offered and the quality of service the competition provided. Around this time, Sinkler also believed that she would be more efficient if she had access to a computer. Sinkler arranged with an acquaintance to have an unused computer owned by the hotel programmed for her use. In return, Sinkler treated the programmer to dinner at the hotel. Patterson authorized both the idea of setting up the computer and the idea of giving the programmer a free dinner. Nonetheless, Lombardo was unhappy with the decision to install new software on the computer.

On November 26, 1997, Sinkler participated in a conference call with Lombardo, Shrewsbury and others. During the call, Sinkler referred to the conference call as a "waste of time," and this infuriated Lombardo. Immediately after the conference call, he decided to fire Sinkler. On December 4, Sinkler entered her office and found Lombardo there holding her personal belongings. Lombardo told her that he was firing her and blamed the firing on her "lying" to him by failing to tell him that she was handicapped. Lombardo also justified the firing on his displeasure with the decision to swap software installation for a free dinner at the hotel, his belief that her job did not require competitive shopping and on undocumented conflicts between Sinkler and her co-workers.

After her termination, Sinkler obtained a part- time sales position at Sears in Kenosha. This position did not require her to drive in unfamiliar areas. Sinkler filed a complaint against Midwest in federal district court, alleging that Midwest had discriminated against her by basing her termination on her condition and by refusing to make accommodations that would allow her to work despite her condition. Midwest filed a motion for summary judgment, seeking dismissal on the ground that Sinkler was not a qualified individual with a disability within the meaning of the ADA. Sinkler replied to this motion, and both parties supplemented their motions with affidavits.

The district court granted Midwest’s motion for summary judgment. The court observed that both parties had stipulated to Sinkler’s impairment but found that this impairment did not substantially limit Sinkler’s ability to work. The court based this finding on Sinkler’s thirty years of prior work experience.

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Sinkler, Staceen M. v. Midwest Property, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sinkler-staceen-m-v-midwest-property-ca7-2000.