Weisberg v. Riverside Township Board of Education

180 F. App'x 357
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedMay 11, 2006
Docket04-4533
StatusUnpublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 180 F. App'x 357 (Weisberg v. Riverside Township Board of Education) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Weisberg v. Riverside Township Board of Education, 180 F. App'x 357 (3d Cir. 2006).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

STAPLETON, Circuit Judge:

I.

Appellant Charles Weisberg (“Weisberg”) filed this suit against the Riverside Township Board of Education,- the former Superintendent of Schools for the Riverside School District, J. Alan Ferner (“Ferner”), and the Business Administrator of the School District, Jodi Lennon. He alleged that the defendants violated the ADA by failing to provide “reasonable accommodations” for his alleged disability and that the defendants unlawfully disclosed his medical information in violation of his constitutional right to privacy.

The defendants moved for summary judgment and the District Court granted their motion. With respect to Weisberg’s ADA claim, the District Court ruled that Weisberg was not “disabled” under the ADA and therefore not entitled to the Act’s protections. The Court ruled that Weisberg was not substantially limited in the major life activities of learning and working. The Court noted that Weisberg had presented evidence showing that his tested abilities in reading comprehension, mental speed, and error monitoring were below average. But the Court reasoned *359 that merely being “below average” could not entitle one to the ADA’s protections because that would imply that roughly half the population of the United States was “disabled” and Congress had estimated that only 43,000,000 Americans suffered from one or more physical or mental disability.

The District Court emphasized that merely having an impairment does not determine “disability” status under the ADA, and that the inquiry encompasses the impairment’s impact on the life of the individual. The District Court reviewed the evidence showing the many activities Weisberg is capable of doing:

Weisberg has acknowledged that he has been able to do his job and to do it well. He is able to work forty hours per week. He attends Monday night football games at Giants Stadium, eats out an average of three nights per week, and enjoys various activities in Atlantic City casinos.

App. at 31. In light of Weisberg’s affirmative capabilities, the District Court reasoned that while a reasonable jury could find that Weisberg has an impairment, a reasonable jury, viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to Weisberg, “could not find that he is substantially limited in any major life activities, and therefore could not find that Weisberg has a disability under the meaning of the ADA.” Id. Accordingly, the District Court did not reach the question of whether Weisberg had suffered an adverse employment decision, or whether Weisberg’s claim was time-barred, as the defendants had argued.

With respect to the two privacy violations Weisberg raises on appeal, the District Court ruled that the defendants had not violated Weisberg’s constitutional rights. It ruled that because an action under § 1983 cannot be based on negligent conduct of state actors, Weisberg’s claim stemming from the accidental placement of his accident report in an envelope given to another teacher must fail. As for a joke about Weisberg’s CAT scan, the District Court characterized it as a “minor annoyance” that cannot support a federal case. Id. at 33 (quoting Doe v. SEPTA, 72 F.3d 1133, 1137 (3d Cir.1995)).

This appeal followed. We will affirm essentially for the reasons given by the District Court.

II.

Weisberg is the Director of the Riverside School District Child Study Team. He is responsible for overseeing the evaluation and placement of special education students. As the Director of the Child Study Team, he oversees and evaluates staff members. In addition, he manages the District’s grant applications and ensures compliance with state and federal rules pertaining to special education.

In June 1998, Weisberg was injured while sitting at his desk at work. A large wooden speaker fell off the wall behind him and struck him on the head, shoulder and back. He was subsequently diagnosed with “post concussive syndrome” or “concussive brain injury.” App. at 78. Since the injury, Weisberg has suffered from fatigue and has had difficulty with his concentration and memory.

A number of physicians have examined and evaluated Weisberg since his injury. A report prepared by Dr. Rolland Parker summarizes those evaluations as finding, inter alia, that Weisberg:

• suffers from stress, anxiety and depression that adversely affect attention, concentration, and speed.
• has suffered from “profound, incapacitating fatigue since the accident” that “markedly interferes in his ability to function” and stems from his depression.
*360 • scores highly on intelligence tests, but lower on measures of attention and concentration, reading comprehension, and working memory.
• is slow to carry out many tasks, even those he is able to perform well.
• suffers from headaches, poor memory and irritability.

In addition, an unsworn e-mail from Weisberg’s wife to Dr. Parker indicates that reading has become tedious for Weisberg, that he has become very forgetful, irritable and argumentative, that Weisberg sleeps 16 hours or more at least one day a week, and that he is generally fatigued and lethargic.

At work, Weisberg has difficulty writing reports and feels like it now takes longer to do than before his injury. He also loses track of appointments. He is frequently late, which he attributes to his fatigue, and he is often absent or leaves work early in order to attend physician appointments. His fatigue prevents him from working longer than an eight-hour day, or if he does work longer than eight-hour days, he is unable to work all five days in a week. Despite these difficulties at work, Weisberg testified that he is able to do his job well.

In June 1998, Weisberg filed an employee incident report with the School District that contained information regarding the nature and extent of his injury. The report was accidentally stuffed into an envelope with another teacher’s contract. Weisberg does not believe “by any stretch of the imagination” that the report was intentionally placed in the other teacher’s envelope, and agrees that it was done by accident. App. at 124.

On a separate occasion, Weisberg walked into a meeting that was underway to find the group of teachers laughing. Ferner explained that he had just joked to the group that “they had gotten the results of [Weisberg’s] CAT Scan, and as we all knew, there was nothing there.” Def-App. at 121. Weisberg did not understand the comment as a joke because his condition was “serious stuff’ to him, and he viewed the comment as ridicule. Moreover, he was upset that Ferner had access to information regarding his CAT scan.

Weisberg is a New York Giants football fan. Despite his fatigue and other ailments, Weisberg was able to attend nearly all of the Giants’ home games.

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180 F. App'x 357, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/weisberg-v-riverside-township-board-of-education-ca3-2006.