Case Information
*1
Bеfore TACHA , Chief Judge, MURPHY , Circuit Judge, and CAUTHRON , [**] Chief District Judge.
After examining the briefs and appellate record, this panel has determined unanimously that oral argument would not materially assist the determination of this appeal. See Fed. R. App. P. 34(a)(2); 10th Cir. R. 34.1(G). The case is therefore ordered submitted without oral argument.
*2
Plaintiff Victor Davila appeals from the entry of summary judgment for
defendant Qwest on his claims under Title VII, 42 U.S.C. § 2000e
et seq. , and the
Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA), 42 U.S.C. § 12101
et seq. “We review
grants of summary judgment de novo to determine whether any genuinе issue of
material fact exists, viewing all evidence and any reasonable inferences that might
be drawn therefrom in the light most favorable to the non-moving party.”
Croy v.
Cobe Labs., Inc. ,
Plaintiff, an Hispanic male, worked for defendant as an operator for twenty years. When that job phased out, he took a new positiоn as a network technician and was transferred to a facility in Silverthorne, Colorado, which he claims was a racially hostile workplace. During this period, in January and September of 1998, plaintiff was involved in two incidents triggering final warnings of dismissal for workplace violence. Such warnings authorize an employee’s immediate discharge upon further violation of company policy for up to a year. Following the second incident, plaintiff took a temporary disability leave and sаw psychiatrist Marjorie Lavin and therapist David Dowell. Doctor Lavin attributed plaintiff’s behavior to a type of bipolar disorder induced by medication–in this case the Prozac plaintiff *3 had been taking for depression since late 1997 on the prеscription of his family physician. Doctor Lavin treated plaintiff for two months, discontinuing the Prozac in favor of Depakote, and then released him to work without restrictions. She testified that she felt the specification of work restrictions, if any, was a matter for plaintiff and his therapist. There is nothing in our record indicating that David Dowell imposed or suggested any work restrictions.
Plaintiff expressed concern about returning to Silverthorne, however, and was reassigned to a facility in Denver, where he rеported in December 1998, after completing a one-month suspension for the September incident. He testified that he did not encounter any harassment or discrimination while working in Denver. In April, plaintiff backed a company truck into a vehiclе in a customer’s parking lot. When later confronted by the vehicle’s owner, plaintiff said he would pay for the damage personally and did not report the accident. The company nevertheless learned of the accident from the vehicle owner. Based on the unreported accident and the final warning of dismissal in plaintiff’s file, the company fired plaintiff. Three months later, on July 21, 1999, he filed a claim with the Colorado Civil Rights Division and the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC). After this claim was rejеcted and the EEOC issued a right-to-sue letter, plaintiff commenced this action in district court.
Plaintiff alleges under Title VII that he was subjected to a racially hostile work environment during his time in Silverthorne and then received a racially discriminatory discharge following the April incident in Denver. He alleges under the ADA that defendant also discriminated against him on the basis of his bipolar disability and that he ultimately lost his job in part as a result of such discrimination. The district court relied on several alternative bases for rеjecting these claims. We affirm on the particular grounds discussed below and thus need not address the additional, legally redundant deficiencies identified by the district court.
Title VII Claims
Timely pursuit of administrative redress is a prerequisite to filing suit under
Title VII. Boyer v. Cordant Techs., Inc.
,
Plaintiff insists the district court overlooked two incidents that occurred within the 300-day window and invokes the continuing-violation doctrine to tie his stale hostile-environment allegations to these more recent incidents. We reject both steps of this argument.
In his deposition, plaintiff conceded thаt he suffered no racial harassment in Denver. Thus, after noting that plaintiff did not return to work at the Silverthorne facility after taking disability leave in early September 1998–more than 300 days before he filed his administrative claim–the district court concluded that plaintiff’s own testimony showed that his hostile work environment claim was time-barred. In a hindsight-aided effort to circumvent the legal consequences of his factual concession, plaintiff argues that although he never returned to work at Silverthorne after the September incident, the incident had led to his November 1998 suspension (upon his release for work) within the 300-day period. The problem with this tack is that plaintiff did not allege in his complaint, aver in an affidavit, assert in his deposition, or claim in the Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(f) scheduling order that his suspension was racially motivated. Rather, he complained only that the union was not timely notified and that the underlying confrontation (with an Hispanic friend and coworker) was not physically violent. He cannot save his time-barred hostile-environment claim now by trying to tie his suspension for a racially neutral incident to his allegations of harassment in the workplace.
His effort to use his April 1999 termination for the same purpose falters for
similar reasons. His termination was based on the warning of dismissal issued for
the September incident and his subsequent misconduct regarding the unreported
accident in Denver. As we have just noted, the former has no substantiated link
to the alleged harassment in Silverthorne, and the latter involves an analytically
discrete act patently unconnected with such harassment.
See generally Nat’l R.R.
Passenger Corp. v. Morgan ,
Plaintiff also argues that, in any event, his termination is actionablе as an
example of disparate treatment, because a white employee, Paul Teel, was not
terminated for an accident with a company vehicle. The district court held that
plaintiff had failed to establish that Teel was similarly situated. We agree. Teel’s
affidavit shows that, unlike plaintiff, he did eventually inform the company about
his accident. And there is no evidence that Teel was under a final warning of
dismissal at the time. The district court properly compared relevant employment
circumstances, including distinguishing features of plaintiff’s work history and
of the instances of misconduct involved, and correctly concluded that plaintiff
had failed to establish a triable issue of disparate treatment.
See Aramburu v.
Boeing Co. ,
Finally, plaintiff objects in passing that it was improper for the magistrate
judge to assess the merits of his Title VII allegations when defendant had sought
summary judgment on the distinct ground that plaintiff had abandoned any claim
under Title VII at a prior scheduling hearing. It is questionable whеther this bald,
cursory complaint “frame[s] and develop[s] an issue sufficient to invoke appellate
review.” Murrell v. Shalala ,
ADA Claims
The ADA’s provisions governing employment discrimination incorporate
the procedural rules of Title VII, including the time bar discussed above.
See
Davidson v. Am. Online, Inc.
,
But plaintiff’s own evidence negates any basis for an ADA claim for this
time period. The medical record indicates thаt he had been released for work
without restrictions.
[1]
And, by his own account, he was able to perform his job
satisfactorily, did not encounter disability (or race) based harassment, and had no
interpersonal problems with co-workers. He was eventuаlly terminated, but for
misconduct involving deceit that had no inherent or demonstrated connection with
his claimed disability. See Bones v. Honeywell Int’l, Inc.
,
Plaintiff tries to circumvent these patent deficiencies in his ADA claim by noting that he was terminated for concealing a workplace accident while subject *9 to a final warning of dismissal and that thе warning had been for interpersonally threatening conduct related to (indeed, leading to the diagnosis of) his bipolar condition. Thus, plaintiff argues, his termination was ultimately on account of his disability, which defendant should, instead, have accommodаted. This argument rests on a tacit assumption about ADA accommodation that is untenable.
In essence, plaintiff’s position is that when defendant learned his workplace
violence was evidently rooted in a bipolar condition, defendant was required to
retroactively excuse any misconduct related to that condition. But, as many cases
have recognized in various contexts, excusing workplace misconduct to provide a
fresh start/second chance to an employee whose disability could be offered as an
after-the-fact excuse is not a required accommodation under the ADA.
See, e.g. ,
Hill v. Kan. City Area Transp. Auth.
,
In sum, neither the immediatе ground for plaintiff’s termination, nor the antecedent disciplinary violation placing him in an employment status vulnerable to termination, implicate ADA protections. We conclude that plaintiff’s ADA claim must fail as a matter of law.
The judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED.
Entered for the Court Michael R. Murphy Circuit Judge
Notes
[*] This order and judgment is nоt binding precedent, except under the doctrines of law of the case, res judicata, and collateral estoppel. The court generally disfavors the citation of orders and judgments; nevertheless, an order and judgment may be cited undеr the terms and conditions of 10th Cir. R. 36.3.
[**] The Honorable Robin J. Cauthron, Chief District Judge, United States District Court for the Western District of Oklahoma, sitting by designation.
[1] Plaintiff’s functional improvement and consequent release for work were practically related to his use оf medication prescribed by Dr. Lavin and, thus, it might be maintained that this was in a sense a de facto restriction. Indeed, plaintiff seems to suggest that defendant failed to accommodate his condition by not pre-approving time off for him to secure rеfills as needed–a matter he said he mentioned in passing, but did not pursue, at a meeting with his supervisors in January 1999. Whatever merit this general line of argument might have is undercut here by the undisputed testimony of Dr. Lavin, who made it clear that plaintiff could have secured refills by a phone call to her office, obviating the need for any accommodation by defendant in the way of time off from work.
