Todeschi v. Sumitomo Metal Mining Pogo, LLC

394 P.3d 562, 33 Am. Disabilities Cas. (BNA) 724, 2017 WL 1534545, 2017 Alas. LEXIS 50
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedApril 28, 2017
Docket7167 S-15542/S-15571
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 394 P.3d 562 (Todeschi v. Sumitomo Metal Mining Pogo, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Todeschi v. Sumitomo Metal Mining Pogo, LLC, 394 P.3d 562, 33 Am. Disabilities Cas. (BNA) 724, 2017 WL 1534545, 2017 Alas. LEXIS 50 (Ala. 2017).

Opinion

OPINION

MAASSEN, Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

A mine supervisor suffered back injuries over the course of his career and required several surgeries. His employer terminated his employment following his request for an accommodation and his renewed pursuit of a three-year-old workers’ compensation claim. The supervisor sued, alleging breach of the covenant of good faith and fair dealing and unlawful discrimination based both on a disability and on his assertion of the workers’ compensation claim. The employer defended on grounds that the supervisor could no longer perform the essential functions of his job and had declined an offered accommodation; it also asserted that it was not liable for the workers’ compensation claim. A jury returned a special verdict finding the employer liable for breach of the covenant of good faith and fair dealing and awarding the supervisor $215,000 in past lost income, but finding in the employer’s favor on the supervisor’s other claims.

The supervisor appeals. He argues that the superior court erred when it (1) denied his motion for a directed verdict on whether he has a disability; (2) denied his motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict due to an inconsistency between the jury’s decisions of two of his claims; (3) declined to give a burden-shifting or adverse inference instruction based on alleged spoliation of evidence; and (4) raised a statute of limitations defense by way of a jury instruction. The employer cross-appeals, arguing that the superior court erred in excluding one of its witnesses.

Seeing no error, we affirm. Because we resolve the appeal in the employer’s favor, we do not reach the employer’s cross-appeal.

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

A. Facts

Nathaniel Todeschi began work at Pogo Mine in November 2005. The mine was operated by Teck-Pogo, Inc., which later merged *567 with another company to form Sumitomo Metal Mining Pogo, LLC (Sumitomo), the defendant in this case. Sumitomo stipulated in the trial court that, for purposes of employer liability, it was the operator of Pogo Mine the entire time Todeschi worked there.

Todeschi was promoted to a supervisor position after less than a year at the mine. Sumitomo does not dispute that his work performance was at least acceptable.

As a supervisor, Todeschi was responsible for the safety and production targets of up to ten employees. He directed their activities, provided support, and ensured their safety and efficiency. This required that he spend a large part of his workday underground. According to Sumitomo’s job description, underground mine supervisors could travel up to 30 miles in the mine during one 13-hour shift. For these purposes Sumitomo provided both trucks and Kubota tractors; the tractors had minimal suspension, but Sumitomo claimed it could neither completely eliminate their use nor significantly improve their suspension.

Todeschi had a history of job-related back injuries, which he testified were aggravated whenever he had to drive a tractor. His first back surgery was before he worked at Pogo Mine. He had another surgery in 2008, but it was ineffective; according to Todeschi, he had a herniated disk that broke into fragments. He testified that in order to continue working without pain he consumed so many painkillers that his doctor thought he had cirrhosis of the liver. He had a back fusion in May 2009 to address the problem.

When Todeschi returned to work at the mine later that year, Paul Brunelle, a Pogo general foreman, assigned him to a special project that kept him at a desk. When the special project was completed Todeschi resumed his duties as an underground supervisor. His physician had given him a full medical release with no restrictions, but, according to Todeschi, the doctor had not anticipated that he would be required to drive a tractor again.

Todeschi soon sent an email to Chad Omaha, another Pogo general foreman, stating that he would “not operate a Kubota tractor for any reason” because of the risk of further injury to his back. He said Sumitomo was “asking [him] to choose between [his] job and [his] ability to walk and have a normal life” and he had “made all the compromises [he was] going to make on the issue.” He asked for other “suitable reliable transportation ... so that [he might] continue in [his] current capacity as a shift supervisor” and concluded that he would “give it [until] Monday to see if suitable arrangements are made[;] if not you do as you choose.” Todeschi apparently continued working his shifts for awhile, using a truck. But in the meantime, Sumitomo supervisors and the company’s attorney, Sean Hal-loran, began discussing by email how Todes-chi’s injury might be accommodated and whether he should be terminated instead.

A few weeks after Todeschi’s email ultimatum, Sumitomo sent him to an independent medical exam with Dr. John Michael James. Sumitomo’s human resources manager, Thomas Brokaw, provided Dr. James with a newly drafted job description that included a requirement that mine supervisors be able to “replace water pumps (lifting 601bs to 2501bs depending on the pump being replaced) on their own.” Dr. James found the lifting requirement to be unreasonable for even a healthy employee; he concluded that Todes-chi could lift items up to 50 pounds occasionally, should not lift anything more than 40 pounds repetitively, and should be provided a truck as an accommodation.

Having received Dr. James’s evaluation, Sumitomo terminated Todeschi’s employment effective that day on grounds that he “could not perform his regular job due to strict lifting limitations and other restrictions as indicated by [Dr. James].” Sumitomo claims its motivation for firing Todeschi was his inability to drive a tractor, though the termination notice did not say so. Todeschi contends, on the other hand, that Sumitomo fired him because he requested the accommodation and because he had sought to reopen a workers’ compensation claim he originally filed after his 2007 workplace injury.

Todeschi testified that he abandoned the 2007 workers’ compensation claim after Kim Witt, the Pogo human resources manager at the time, told him he would lose his job if he *568 pursued it. Todeschi testified that he used his private insurance to pay for the required medical care but refused to release the workers’ compensation insurer, which is why the claim remained open in 2010, Halloran, Sumi-tomo’s attorney, testified that Todeschi’s renewed pursuit of the claim was irrelevant to Sumitomo because it predated Sumitomo’s operation of the mine and was covered by its predecessor’s insurance, Todeschi settled the claim for $80,000 in 2011, while this suit;was pending,

Todeschi filed his complaint against Sumi-tomo in February 2011. He alleged claims for (1) discrimination on the basis of a disability under AS 18.80.220(a)(1); 1 (2) failure to accommodate his disability under the same statute; 2 (3) breach of the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing; and (4) discrimination under AS 23.30.247(a) based, on his assertion of the workers’ compensation claim. 3

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Bluebook (online)
394 P.3d 562, 33 Am. Disabilities Cas. (BNA) 724, 2017 WL 1534545, 2017 Alas. LEXIS 50, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/todeschi-v-sumitomo-metal-mining-pogo-llc-alaska-2017.