Tony Gunter v. Bemis Co.,Inc.

906 F.3d 484
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedOctober 16, 2018
Docket17-6144; 6185
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 906 F.3d 484 (Tony Gunter v. Bemis Co.,Inc.) 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
Tony Gunter v. Bemis Co.,Inc., 906 F.3d 484 (6th Cir. 2018).

Opinion

SUTTON, Circuit Judge.

Tony Gunter injured his shoulder on the job. After Gunter had surgery to repair the injury, his doctor imposed work restrictions. Thinking the restrictions prevented him from performing his job, his employer, Bemis Company, fired Gunter. Gunter sued, alleging Bemis violated the Americans with Disabilities Act. A jury ruled in favor of Gunter and awarded him damages, some of which the district court reduced. The parties cross-appealed. We affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand for further proceedings.

I.

Bemis prints material used as graphics on the outside of Huggies diapers. Gunter started working at Bemis's predecessor company in 1989, and Bemis acquired the company in 1997. In January 2013, Gunter injured his right shoulder while working as a press assistant for the company. Gunter continued to work while going to physical therapy for six months, but his shoulder didn't improve. Bemis referred Gunter to Dr. Garside, who performed surgery on his shoulder in August 2013.

Gunter returned to light duty a month or two later. A few months after that, in December 2013, he returned to his job as a press assistant with temporary restrictions: no reaching with his right arm and no performing overhead work.

In May 2014, Bemis sent Gunter to complete a functional capacity evaluation as part of processing his workers' compensation claim. The evaluator determined that Gunter could perform jobs with light physical demands. Based on the requirements in Bemis's job description, however, Gunter needed to be able to do jobs with *488 medium physical demands. The evaluation concluded that Gunter did not satisfy "the strength/lifting/carrying or the right [upper extremity] positional demands of his job." Pl.'s Ex. 10 at 1; Appellant's App. 7.

Bemis received a copy of the evaluation but allowed Gunter to continue working with a temporary no-overhead-work restriction while Dr. Garside reviewed the report. In June 2014, Dr. Garside authorized Gunter to return to regular duty with these restrictions: Gunter could not work overhead with his right arm, could lift up to 40 pounds occasionally and 20 pounds frequently from the floor to his waist, could lift up to 20 pounds occasionally from his waist to his chest, could not lift overhead, and could occasionally outstretch his right arm. Bemis received the report, and Gunter continued working.

On July 2, Bemis placed Gunter on paid leave, reasoning that it could no longer accommodate his restrictions. On July 18, the HR manager and the health and safety manager met with Gunter for about an hour to discuss the situation. Gunter remained on leave after the meeting. Bemis fired Gunter on November 3, 2014, however.

Gunter filed this lawsuit, alleging that Bemis violated the Americans with Disabilities Act. After a five-day trial, the jury returned a verdict in Gunter's favor, finding that Bemis violated the Act by firing Gunter because of his disability, by failing to accommodate his disability, and by failing to engage with him in the interactive process. The jury awarded Gunter $181,522.61 in back pay, $92,000 in compensatory damages, and $315,000 in front pay. The district court modified the judgment in part, eliminating the damages for lost insurance benefits. Bemis appealed, and Gunter cross-appealed.

II.

The company challenges the judgment on three grounds: (1) Gunter cannot perform the essential functions of the job and therefore is not entitled to any relief; (2) the front-pay and back-pay awards should be reduced because Gunter did not mitigate his damages; and (3) the district court erred in instructing the jury about the possibility of front pay.

Liability . Bemis claims that the Act does not apply because, in the aftermath of Dr. Garside's restrictions, Gunter could not do the job. On this record, that was the jury's call, not ours.

Under the Act, an employer may not discriminate against a "qualified individual" because of his disability. 42 U.S.C. § 12112 (a). A "qualified individual" is "an individual who, with or without reasonable accommodation, can perform the essential functions of the employment position." Id. § 12111(8). Through it all, an employee still must be able to perform the "fundamental job duties." 29 C.F.R. § 1630.2 (n)(1).

At stake at this stage of the case is whether the doctor's restrictions mean that Bemis wins as a matter of law, even after viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to Gunter. Fed. R. Civ. P. 50(a)(1). As we see it, a reasonable jury could determine, based on the evidence presented at trial, that Gunter still could perform the essential duties of the job.

Press assistants generally ensure that Bemis's printing presses operate properly. They load raw materials and gears onto the press and fill the press with ink. They take the printed material off the press and inspect its quality. They also solve mechanical problems and "reweb" the press if material gets jammed. R. 140 at 75.

The jury heard evidence that Gunter met the job's lifting requirements. With *489 his restrictions, Gunter could lift 40 pounds from the floor to his waist up to one-third of the time. Other evidence showed that Bemis encourages employees not to lift anything over 40 pounds by themselves. The jury also heard that Bemis has lifting equipment that employees can use to lift many objects, even if an object weighs as little as 20 pounds. Press workers must lift ink buckets that weigh 20 to 30 pounds and gears that weigh between 15 and 40 pounds. But employees can ask their coworkers to help lift the heavier gears and often do. In fact, some smaller employees had asked Gunter for help carrying heavier equipment, including the gears. Employees also use ladders for equipment that needs to be lifted higher, establishing an option for workers, like Gunter, who could not lift over their waist.

The jury also heard evidence that Gunter could do the other parts of his job, even after accounting for limits on working over his head with his right arm and outstretching his right arm. Evidence showed that press assistants do not need to do overhead work, and Gunter learned to use his left arm to complete other duties.

That is all well and good, Bemis counters, but the reality remains that Gunter's functional capacity evaluation and Dr. Garside's report precluded him from satisfying the requirements of a press assistant, including lifting 45 pounds and reaching 24 inches. Even if we take a doctor's restrictions at face value, however, they do not dictate the essential functions of a job.

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906 F.3d 484, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tony-gunter-v-bemis-coinc-ca6-2018.