MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
NOW bеfore the Court are H.J. Heinz Company’s Motion to Strike Plaintiffs Demand for Compensatory and Punitive Damages and to Dismiss Plaintiffs Claim for Disability Discrimination or Alternatively for Summary Judgment, filed on October 29, 1993. Having reviewed these materials, the Court concludes that Defendant’s motion should be considered as one for summary judgment. Having carefully considered these filed materials, the summary judgment evidence and the applicable law, the Court concludes that Defendant’s motion should be, and hereby is, GRANTED in part and DENIED in part.
This is an employment discrimination ease. Plaintiff, who was fifty-three when he filed this suit, worked for Defendant Heinz from the summer of 1966 until April 30, 1992. Before termination, he worked as regional manager of grocery specialty sales. Plaintiff was supposedly let go because of a consolidation of the company. However, he alleges that younger, less experienced and less qualified employees were favorably treated over him. Plaintiff is also a long-term, insulin dependent diabetic. He asserts that employees who were not similarly situated fared better than he did in the consolidation.
After his termination, Plaintiff interviewed with Defendant Ore-Ida on August 19, 1992 for the рosition of Texas regional grocery sales manager. Three days later, he received a rejection letter stating that another candidate whose qualifications more closely matched the position’s requirеments had been selected. However, Plaintiff alleges that a younger, less experienced candidate was selected for the position. Also, during the interview the fact of his being a diabetic surfaced, although the partiеs dispute how the issue came up.
Based on these facts, Plaintiff asserts, causes of action under the Age Discrimination in Employment Act, 29 U.S.C. §§ 621-634, (ADEA), the Americans With Disabilities Act of 1990, 42 U.S.C. §§ 12101-12213, (ADA), and the Texas Commission on Human Rights Act, Tex.Rev.Cxv.StatANN. art. 5221k (TCHRA). Defendant’s motion attacks Plaintiff’s claims for compensatory and punitive damages under the TCHRA and ADEA and also argues that Plaintiff lacks a disability cognizable under the TCHRA. Plaintiff does not dispute the correctness of Defendant’s argument regarding recovery of compensatory and punitive damages under the ADEA. (PL’s Resp. at 2 n. 2.) Consequently, the only issues remaining in the instant motion arise under the TCHRA.
Federal courts adjudicate motions for summary judgment under a familiar standard: The movant must show the absеnce of any genuine issue of material fact and entitlement to judgment as a matter of law. Slaughter v. Southern Talc Co.,
Defendant relies extensively on a decision of the Supreme Court of Texas in its argument that Plaintiff does not have a disability under the TCHRA. In considering the plaintiffs status as “handicаpped” under the TCHRA, the court in Chevron Corporation v. Redmon,
A review of the statutes and the legislative history of this Act reveals that the legislature was concerned with protecting persons with impairments of an incapacitating nature. Furthermore, the legislature obviously chose not to employ the definition of “handicap” in the federal Rehabilitation Act, 29 U.S.C. § 701-796L In*817 fact, the legislature did not even refer to that Act in section 1.02 describing the purposes of the Act.
Id. at 317-18. The court recоgnized the decisions of other state courts considering similar issues, and noted that an Illinois court held that the test for whether a person is handicapped is whether the person’s disability is generally perceived as one severely limiting him in performing work-related functions. Id. at 318. The court concluded thus:
We believe the same reasoning applies in this case. While under article 5221k, [i.e. TCHRA] a person may not sue if his handicap impairs his ability to do that particular job, in order for a disability to be considered a handicap in the first place it must be one which is generally perceived as severely limiting him in performing work-related functions in general.
Id. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit has recognized the Texas Supremе Court’s narrow construction, stating that Redmon adopts “a very restrictive definition of ‘handicap’ for purposes of the Texas Commission on Human Rights Act.” Chandler v. City of Dallas,
Defendant casts Plaintiff’s diabetes as insufficiently impairing to bring him within the TCHRA, under Redmon’s formulation. Defendant stаtes that “Plaintiff himself testified that his blood sugar levels are under control, that he only once had an episode in which he lost consciousness, that his diabetes never interfered with his broker relationships, that he is not disabled and wanted tо work, and that his treating physician told him that his medical history did not prohibit plaintiff from working.” (H.J. Heinz Company’s Mem. Authorities at 14) (citations omitted.) In light of Redmon, these assertions do not bode well for Plaintiffs TCHRA claim.
Plaintiff, however, argues that the TCHRA’s definition of “disability” hаs strong affinities with the federal ADA and the Rehabilitation Act of 1973. Because the Supreme Court of Texas has noted that Article 5221k of the TCHRA is to be construed in conformance with its federal counterpart according to Plaintiff, this Court shоuld deny Defendant’s motion. The Court has already denied Defendant Ore-Ida’s motion for summary judgment on the ADA issue. See Coghlan v. H.J. Heinz Co.,
Plaintiff also persuasively distinguishes Redmon by demonstrating crucial differences between the law construed in Redmon and amendments to the TCHRA occurring in 1989.
The wording of [a policy provision in the 1977 amendments] contrasting the “handicapped” with the “able-bodied,” reveals that when employment discrimination based on handicap was added to the Act, the legislature was concerned with serious impairments.
When enacting article 5221k, the legislature chose to define “handicapped person” identically to the definition in article 4419e and the Human Rеsources Code....
Redmon,
Defendant’s next salvo attacks Plaintiffs claim for compensatory and punitive damаges under the TCHRA. Defendant contends that the TCHRA’s language expressly limits recovery to equitable relief and asserts that because the legislature amended the TCHRA in 1993 to provide for recovery of compensatory and punitive damages, the recovery of such legal relief under the pre-’93 amendment TCHRA would be coun-terintuitive. The Court finds one of the cases over which the parties spar dispositive of the legal/equitable dilemma. Defendant reliеs on Central Power & Light Company v. Caballero,
We decline to adopt the court of appeals’ reading of TCHRA, and hold that once a litigant is authorized to proceed in court under the statute, he is entitled to a jury trial for damages.
Caballero v. Central Power and Light Company,
This determination may not foreclose all doubt regarding the possibility of recovering punitive damages under the TCHRA, though. Granted, the TCHRA language over which the parties struggle appears to contemplate equitable recovery, and it certainly does; the question though is whеther that relief is exclusively equitable. On this point, the language in Caballero appears to leave no room for interpretation: “We ... hold that ... a litigant ... is entitled to a jury trial for damages.” Once this conclusion is certain, that punitive damages are available does not seem too distant a conclusion. In Azar Nut Company v. Caille,
The term “damages” standing apart seems to be an unrestricted standard which would allow punitive dаmages, and such a definition was conceded by petitioner upon oral argument in this court. Thus, the question becomes whether by adding the word “reasonable” to the bill, the legislature intended to preclude punitive damages in this situation. We hold that it did not.
Id. at 669. This Court does not even have the word “reasonable” to ponder. The Court concludes, then, that punitive damages are available under Plaintiffs TCHRA action.
Defendant’s motion regarding the unavailability of compensatory and punitive damages under the ADEA is granted. The motion in all other regards is denied.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. The statutory structure underpinning Plaintiff’s claim apparently came into existence in 1969 and was codified at Tex.Rev.Civ.Stat.Ann. art. 4419e. This enactmеnt received an employment discrimination provision in 1975. This law was repealed and recodified in the Texas Human Resources Code, at TexHuman Res.Code Ann. § 121.001 and following, which in turn was repealed and recodified as the Texаs Commission on Human Rights Act, Tex.Rev.Civ.Stat Ann. art. 5221k, under which Plaintiff sues. That provision was also repealed effective September 1, 1993 and recodified in the Labor Code. However, the latest recodification provides that the repealed law is carried in effect for complaints filed before September 1, 1993.
