Getting past summary judgment and to trial is what it’s all
about. To do that takes evidence. Sometimes trial courts lose their way and by
weighing the evidence submitted on summary judgment. That’s what happened in Nigrov. Sears, Roebuck and Co., No. 12-57262 (9th Cir., Apr. 10, 2015). Fortunately for plaintiff the U.S. Ninth
Circuit Court Appeals recognized the error and sent the case back to the
district court for trial.
Plaintiff suffers from ulcerative colitis. Following his termination
he brought three disability discrimination claims: (1) termination because of
disability; (2) failure to accommodate a disability; and (3) failure to engage
in an interactive process to find a reasonable accommodation. Plaintiff’s
evidence consisted of his testimony that Sears’ managers and supervisors told
him that “[i]f you’re going to stick with being sick, it’s not helping your
situation. It is what it is. You’re not getting paid, and you’re not going to
be accommodated,” and that he was told not to be concerned about his pay issue
because he was “not going to be here anymore.” The district court viewed this
evidence as “self-serving.” The Ninth Circuit correctly viewed it for what it
was: evidence.
Plaintiff also
presented evidence that his direct supervisor had granted a late start on an
as-needed basis but the store manager still required him to arrive at the
regular start time. Summary judgment was improper because a reasonable jury
could infer that the store manager’s unwillingness to accommodate compelled plaintiff
to arrive on time every day despite his need to arrive later.
Plaintiff’s third claim survived based on evidence that Sears’s
failure to accommodate had a “chilling effect” on his right to discuss accommodations.
More to the point, the store manager’s statement to plaintiff that “You’re not
getting paid, and you’re not going to be accommodated,” was direct evidence
that Sears unlawfully refused to discuss accommodations.
As the Ninth Circuit said, “it should not take much for
plaintiff in a discrimination case to overcome a summary judgment motion.” All
it takes, of course, is evidence.
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