Kiely v. Heartland Rehab ( 2004 )


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    Pursuant to Sixth Circuit Rule 206           2    Kiely v. Heartland                           No. 02-2054
    ELECTRONIC CITATION: 2004 FED App. 0060P (6th Cir.)        Rehabilitation Servs., et al.
    File Name: 04a0060p.06
    _________________
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS                                                    COUNSEL
    FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT                      ARGUED: Charles M. Sirhal, Bloomfield Hills, Michigan,
    _________________                        for Appellant.       Susan Healy Zitterman, KITCH,
    DRUTCHAS, WAGNER, DeNARDIS & VALITUTTI,
    DANIEL P. KIELY,                 X                       Detroit, Michigan, for Appellee. ON BRIEF: Charles M.
    Plaintiff-Appellant,    -                      Sirhal, Bloomfield Hills, Michigan, for Appellant. Susan
    -                      Healy Zitterman, Karen B. Berkery, KITCH, DRUTCHAS,
    -  No. 02-2054         WAGNER, DeNARDIS & VALITUTTI, Detroit, Michigan,
    v.                     -                      for Appellee.
    >
    ,
    HEARTLAND REHABILITATION -                                 NELSON, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which
    SERVICES, INC., and HEALTH                               ROGERS, J., joined. GILMAN, J. (pp. 10-11), delivered a
    -                      separate opinion concurring in part and dissenting in part.
    CARE AND RETIREMENT               -
    CORPORATION , d/b/a               -                                          _________________
    GEORGIAN BLOOMFIELD,              -
    Defendants-Appellees. -                                                    OPINION
    -                                          _________________
    N
    Appeal from the United States District Court          DAVID A. NELSON, Circuit Judge. This is a disability
    for the Eastern District of Michigan at Flint.      discrimination case brought under Michigan law. The
    No. 01-40149—Paul V. Gadola, District Judge.         question we are asked to decide is whether, notwithstanding
    the plaintiff’s attempt to reconcile what looked like
    Argued: February 5, 2004                  inconsistent positions, the fact that the plaintiff had signed a
    social security disability application in which he swore that he
    Decided and Filed: February 26, 2004             was “disabled” and “unable to work” precluded him as a
    matter of law from showing that he was capable of
    Before: NELSON, GILMAN, and ROGERS, Circuit            performing the essential functions of his job.
    Judges.
    We conclude that the statements made by the plaintiff in his
    application for social security disability benefits were not
    necessarily inconsistent with the claim that he could do his
    job. We further conclude that the plaintiff proffered an
    adequate explanation of the seeming inconsistency. The
    district court having entered summary judgment for the
    1
    No. 02-2054                         Kiely v. Heartland      3    4    Kiely v. Heartland                          No. 02-2054
    Rehabilitation Servs., et al.             Rehabilitation Servs., et al.
    defendant on an estoppel theory with which we find ourselves        On July 10, 1998, Heartland terminated Mr. Kiely’s
    unable to agree, under the circumstances presented here, we      employment.       Heartland’s human resources manager
    shall vacate the judgment and remand the case for further        explained in a letter dated July 29, 1998, that the termination
    proceedings.                                                     was prompted by “increasing concerns” about the safety of
    Kiely and his patients. In addition to mentioning the
    I                                  incidents described in the co-worker’s memorandum, the
    letter alluded to an episode in which a wheelchair that Mr.
    The plaintiff, Daniel Kiely, suffers from severely impaired   Kiely was pushing became stuck at an elevator door. The
    vision caused by a degenerative eye disease. The Social          letter also recounted efforts Heartland had made to
    Security Administration determined in the late 1970s that Mr.    accommodate Kiely’s impairment, including a rearrangement
    Kiely was legally blind, and he was awarded social security      of gym equipment and a reduction in Kiely’s bedside
    disability insurance (“SSDI”) benefits on the strength of that   assignments. (The latter accommodation had been made at
    determination. Mr. Kiely received SSDI benefits while            Mr. Kiely’s request.)
    attending college and, to the extent permitted by law, while
    working thereafter.                                                 After receiving unemployment compensation for about a
    year, Mr. Kiely applied for SSDI benefits. His application
    In April of 1995 Mr. Kiely was hired by defendant             stated that he “became unable to work because of [his]
    Heartland Rehabilitation Services, Inc., as a physical therapy   disabling condition on July 7, 1998,” and said that he was
    assistant. In that capacity he worked with patients in a         “still disabled.” Mr. Kiely began to receive SSDI benefits
    gymnasium and in the patients’ rooms, helped patients to         (some of which were for the latter part of 1998) in 1999.
    perambulate with walkers and other assistive devices, and
    transported patients in wheelchairs.                               With the filing of a complaint in a Michigan state court on
    May 17, 2001, Mr. Kiely commenced an action against
    Mr. Kiely’s performance was evaluated in July of 1995 and     Heartland for disability discrimination under both the
    in April of 1996, 1997, and 1998. He received overall ratings    Michigan Persons with Disabilities Civil Rights Act and Title
    ranging from “average” (1995 and 1998) to “definitely above      VII of the U.S. Civil Rights Act of 1964. Heartland removed
    average” (1997). None of his evaluations suggested that Mr.      the case to federal district court.
    Kiely’s visual impairment prevented him from performing his
    duties safely and effectively.                                      Following discovery, Heartland moved for summary
    judgment. The company maintained that Mr. Kiely could not
    In July of 1998 a co-worker expressed concern that Mr.        establish a prima facie case of discrimination under either
    Kiely’s poor vision created a “potentially hazardous             Michigan law or Title VII. In the portion of its argument that
    situation.” In a memorandum to Kiely’s superiors, the co-        is relevant here, Heartland submitted that by stating in his
    worker said that Kiely had bumped into people and inanimate      SSDI application that he was “disabled,” Mr. Kiely had
    objects, had failed to notice that beds were occupied, had not   estopped himself from contending that he was capable of
    seen that a patient was wearing a gait belt, and had been        performing the essential functions of his job. In response to
    oblivious to individuals handing him papers.                     this argument, Mr. Kiely pointed out that because his
    blindness was a “listed” condition under the Social Security
    No. 02-2054                           Kiely v. Heartland         5    6    Kiely v. Heartland                           No. 02-2054
    Rehabilitation Servs., et al.                Rehabilitation Servs., et al.
    Act, it entitled him to SSDI benefits regardless of his actual        App. 1998), appeal denied, 
    603 N.W.2d 785
    (Mich. 1999).
    ability to do his job.                                                The Michigan courts recognize that the word “disabled,”
    when used in the social security context, does not necessarily
    The district court, as we have seen, granted Heartland’s           connote a literal inability to work. For one thing, the Social
    motion for summary judgment. In so doing, the court held              Security Act’s definition of “disability” does not take into
    first that Title VII does not prohibit discrimination on the          account the possibility of accommodation – thus, “a plaintiff
    basis of disability. As to Mr. Kiely’s state-law claim, the           could be disabled under the SSA and still be qualified to
    court held that Kiely had not adequately explained the                perform the duties of his job . . . with reasonable
    apparent conflict between the representations in his SSDI             accommodation.” 
    Id. at 339-40.
    For another thing, the social
    application and his present claim. Mr. Kiely moved for                security regulations call for the awarding of SSDI benefits to
    reconsideration and, when that motion was denied, filed this          any applicant who is not working and who has a “listed”
    timely appeal.                                                        impairment (see 20 C.F.R. pt. 404, subpt. P, app.1), regardless
    of whether the applicant is actually able to work. See
    II                                    Cleveland v. Policy Management Systems Corp., 
    526 U.S. 795
    , 804 (1999). A declaration of disability in an SSDI
    Mr. Kiely has not appealed the summary judgment on his              benefits application is thus not always equivalent to a factual
    Title VII claim. The sole issue before us, therefore, is              statement that the applicant cannot perform the essential
    whether the statements in Kiely’s SSDI application barred             functions of his job. See 
    id. at 802.
    On the contrary, such a
    recovery on his Michigan disability discrimination claim as           declaration “often implies a context-related legal conclusion,
    a matter of law. Our standard of review is de novo. See, e.g.,        namely, ‘I am disabled for purposes of the Social Security
    Fox v. Van Oosterum, 
    176 F.3d 342
    , 347 (6th Cir. 1999).               Act.’” 
    Id. To prevail
    on an employment discrimination claim under                 At least as often, of course, the term “disabled” is used in
    the Michigan Persons with Disabilities Civil Rights Act,              SSDI applications in a literal sense. Accordingly, a plaintiff
    Mich. Comp. Laws §§ 37.1101 et seq., a “plaintiff must show           alleging disability discrimination “cannot simply ignore the
    (1) that he is [disabled] as defined in the act, (2) that the         apparent contradiction that arises out of” an earlier claim that
    [disability] is unrelated to his ability to perform his job duties,   he is disabled. 
    Id. at 806.
    Applying Cleveland – an
    and (3) that he has been discriminated against in one of the          Americans with Disabilities Act case – to cases brought under
    ways delineated in the statute.” Chmielewski v. Xermac, Inc.,         Michigan law, the Michigan Court of Appeals has held that
    
    580 N.W.2d 817
    , 821 (Mich. 1998). Mr. Kiely cannot prevail            the plaintiff must offer a plausible explanation of the seeming
    on his state-law claim, accordingly, if his blindness rendered        contradiction. See, e.g., Kerns v. Dura Mechanical
    him unable to perform the duties of a physical therapy                Components, Inc., 
    618 N.W.2d 56
    , 59-60 (Mich. App. 2000),
    assistant.                                                            appeal denied, 
    624 N.W.2d 187
    (Mich. 2001). “To defeat
    summary judgment, that explanation must be sufficient to
    Under Michigan law, declarations of disability in an SSDI           warrant a reasonable juror’s concluding that, assuming the
    application do not necessarily bar a plaintiff from proving a         truth of, or the plaintiff’s good faith belief in, the earlier
    claim of disability discrimination. See, e.g., Tranker v.             statement, the plaintiff could nonetheless ‘perform the
    Figgie International, Inc., 
    585 N.W.2d 337
    , 339-40 (Mich.             essential functions’ of her job, with or without ‘reasonable
    No. 02-2054                         Kiely v. Heartland           7   8      Kiely v. Heartland                          No. 02-2054
    Rehabilitation Servs., et al.                   Rehabilitation Servs., et al.
    accommodation.’” 
    Cleveland, 526 U.S. at 807
    , as quoted in               It seems to us that a reasonable juror could accept Mr.
    
    Kerns, 618 N.W.2d at 59
    .                                             Kiely’s explanation. That is, a reasonable juror could
    conclude that when Kiely stated in his application that he was
    In our judgment, the explanation offered by Mr. Kiely was          “disabled” and “unable to work,” he meant only “I am entitled
    sufficient to get him past the estoppel hurdle. In his               to SSDI benefits.” As we have previously recognized, such
    memorandum opposing Heartland’s motion for summary                   statements in an application for SSDI benefits are “open to
    judgment, Kiely argued that                                          interpretation”:
    “[t]here is no conflict or misrepresentation on Plaintiff’s            “In determining precisely what the plaintiff ‘admitted’ in
    part for the purpose of reinstating his statutory                      the application, one must consider the context in which
    entitlement to Social Security benefits, based upon his                the statements were made. Portions of the [SSDI]
    prior determination as being statutorily blind by the SSA,             application and other forms require the applicant merely
    and, at the same time, being fully competent to return to              to check off boxes without comment, or require the
    the position of a PTA . . . .”                                         applicant to fill in blanks with little room given for
    elaboration. In short, the employee may not have a fair
    He then cited a Seventh Circuit case, Overton v. Reilly, 977             opportunity to accurately explain the details of the
    F.2d 1190, 1196 (7th Cir. 1992), where that court held that “a           employee’s medical condition and his ability or inability
    finding of disability” under the Social Security Act “is                 to work for purposes of [disability discrimination laws].”
    consistent with a claim that the disabled person is ‘qualified’          Griffith v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc., 
    135 F.3d 376
    , 382 (6th
    to do his job.” Mr. Kiely emphasized the following language              Cir. 1998), cert. denied, 
    526 U.S. 1144
    (1999).
    from Overton:
    The record of the case at bar does not disclose whether the
    “First, the [Social Security Administration] may award             application forms completed by Mr. Kiely afforded him a
    disability benefits on a finding that the claimant meets           “fair opportunity” to specify that a listed impairment, rather
    the criteria for a listed disability, without inquiring into       than an actual inability to work, made him eligible for
    his ability to find work within the economy. . . . As it           benefits. A reasonable juror could easily find, however, that
    turns out, the [Social Security Administration] granted            his legal blindness was the basis on which Mr. Kiely expected
    benefits to the plaintiff on this 
    basis.” 977 F.2d at 1196
    .        to receive benefits. He had received benefits because of
    blindness in the past, and, given the degenerative nature of his
    It is true that Overton deals with the effect of an                disease, he had every reason to believe he was eligible to
    administrative determination of disability rather than the           receive benefits on that basis again. Mr. Kiely thus had no
    effect of statements made by the applicant. But the thrust of        need to claim that he was actually unable to work. Indeed, he
    Mr. Kiely’s explanation is reasonably clear: he applied for          testified under oath that he had not intended such a claim;
    SSDI benefits on the basis of his legal blindness – a listed         when asked at his deposition whether he had applied for
    impairment – and not on the basis of an inability to work. For       benefits “claiming to be totally disabled,” Kiely responded,
    that reason, he suggested, the statements made in his SSDI           “No, blind.” We think that a reasonable juror could accept
    application were not inconsistent with his claim that he could       this interpretation of the SSDI application.
    perform the duties of his job.
    No. 02-2054                         Kiely v. Heartland       9    10   Kiely v. Heartland                           No. 02-2054
    Rehabilitation Servs., et al.              Rehabilitation Servs., et al.
    Because the declarations of disability in Mr. Kiely’s SSDI       _____________________________________________
    application can be interpreted as “context-related legal
    conclusion[s]” rather than “purely factual statement[s]”           CONCURRING IN PART, DISSENTING IN PART
    regarding inability to work, 
    Cleveland, 526 U.S. at 802
    , the       _____________________________________________
    declarations do not preclude a finding that Kiely can perform
    the essential functions of his job. The district court erred in      RONALD LEE GILMAN, Circuit Judge, concurring in part
    holding to the contrary.                                          and dissenting in part. I fully concur in the majority’s
    conclusion that Daniel P. Kiely is not estopped by his
    III                                 allegedly inconsistent positions from pursuing his disability-
    discrimination claim. But I disagree with the majority’s
    Heartland urges us to affirm the judgment on the alternative    decision not to undertake an evaluation of the record to
    ground that Mr. Kiely is, in point of fact, unable to perform     determine whether this case presents a genuine issue of
    the essential functions of his job safely. This we decline to     material fact regarding Kiely’s ability to safely perform the
    do. The district court did not evaluate the record as a whole     essential functions of his job.
    to determine whether it presents genuine issues of material
    fact with respect to the underlying merits of Mr. Kiely’s            Based upon the record before us, I am convinced that we
    claim. Although we could undertake such an evaluation             would have vacated the grant of summary judgment even if
    ourselves, it seems to us preferable to give the district court   the district court had ruled against Kiely on the merits.
    an opportunity, if asked, to do so in the first instance.         Heartland, after all, was aware of Kiely’s statutory blindness
    at the time of his hire and considered him qualified.
    The order granting Heartland’s motion for summary               Furthermore, the four formal evaluations of Kiely’s job
    judgment is VACATED, and the case is REMANDED for                 performance covering the duration of his employment at
    further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.           Heartland rated him as either “average” or “definitely above
    average.” Finally, Kiely testified in his deposition that he had
    no difficulty transporting patients within the facility, that he
    was able to treat patients in their rooms, that he had no
    trouble negotiating hallways, and that he would not need any
    additional accommodations if he were to be reinstated at
    Heartland. This evidence seems more than sufficient to create
    a genuine issue of material fact. See Griffith v. Wal-Mart
    Stores, Inc., 
    135 F.3d 376
    , 383-84 (6th Cir. 1998) (holding
    that a genuine issue of material fact was created by the
    plaintiff’s “proof that he had performed the sales associate job
    for approximately two years and had received favorable
    evaluations”).
    Permitting the district court to entertain a second motion for
    summary judgment under these circumstances will serve only
    No. 02-2054                          Kiely v. Heartland       11
    Rehabilitation Servs., et al.
    to delay the trial that this case ultimately merits. See Salazar-
    Paucar v. I.N.S., 
    281 F.3d 1069
    , 1076 (9th Cir. 2002) (“[W]e
    generally do not remand when on the record before us, it is
    clear that we would be compelled to reverse [the BIA’s]
    decision if it had decided the matter against the applicant.”)
    (quotation marks omitted). So although I would normally
    agree with the majority’s proposition that we should give the
    district court the first crack at evaluating the underlying
    merits of a claim, I believe that to do so here would be
    counterproductive in light of a record clearly showing that a
    genuine issue of material fact exists regarding Kiely’s ability
    to safely perform the essential functions of his job.
    I would therefore vacate the order granting Heatland’s
    motion for summary judgment and remand for a trial on the
    merits.