Thе question is whether this Iowa-law case alleging disability retaliation was for the jury to decide. The District Court
**
granted summary judgment for Tyson Fresh Meats, Inc. James Diaz aрpeals. He made many federal and state discrimination claims in the District Court, but all have dropped out except one: he contends Tyson retaliated against him for seeking accommodation for a disabled subordinate contrary to the Iowa Civil Rights Act. We review
de novo,
considering the genuinely disputed faсts in the light most favorable to Diaz.
Torgerson v. City of Rochester,
1. Diaz supervised аbout forty-five people at a Tyson hog-processing plant in Iowa. He had worked at the plant for about fifteen years, starting on the production line and rising to a supervisor on the cut floor. The teams on the floor had
When Gonzalez went back to thе plant nurse for his one-week check up, his shoulder was hurting again. And Gonzalez explained that his 50% restriction was not being followed. The human resources office, and eventually the plant manager, John McNamara, investigated. McNamara faced conflicting stories from Diaz and Hanson about who had deсided how much Gonzalez would work. McNamara decided to fire Diaz because it was undisputed that he knew Gonzalez’s work restriction and failed to honor it. MсNamara testified on deposition that, if Hanson was the one responsible for making Gonzalez work beyond his restriction, then Hanson — not Diaz — probably would hаve lost his job.
2. The Iowa Civil Rights Act forbids retaliation against anyone who opposes disability-based employment discrimination or who obeys the Act. Iowa Cоde §§ 216.6 & 216.11. We analyze Diaz’s retaliation claim like an ADA-retaliation claim because an Iowa court would do so.
Young-Losee v. Graphic Packaging Int’l, Inc.,
In the usual retaliation claim under the Act, the familiar
McDonnell Douglas
framework applies. The plaintiff must make a
prima facie
case by showing protected activity, adverse employment action, and causal linkage.
Kratzer v. Rockwell Collins, Inc.,
The term “cat’s paw” derives from a fable conceived by Aesop, put into verse by La Fontaine in 1679, and injected into Unitеd States employment discrimination law by Posner in 1990. See Shager v. Upjohn Co.,913 F.2d 398 , 405 (C.A.7 1990). In the fable, a monkey induces a cat by flattery to extract roasting chestnuts from the fire. After the cat has done so, burning its paws in the process, the monkey makes off with the chestnuts and leaves the cat with nothing.
Staub,
According to Diaz, Hanson was the biased subordinate and McNamara the duped decisionmaker. There is, as Tyson notes, some tension in Diaz’s argument. Our cat’s paw cases involve what our Court calls direct-evidence claims,
e.g., Qamhiyah,
3. Was there, on the record as a whole, a genuine dispute for trial on whether Hanson’s retaliatory animus was a proximate cause of Diaz’s firing? Guided by our сat’s paw precedents and Staub, we think not. First, the proof fails on discriminatory intent. Hanson ignored Diaz’s repeated requests for help accommodating the injured employee’s work restriction; he instructed Diaz not to honor the restriction; and he let Diaz take the fall when the policy violation came to light. But these facts do not establish, or tend to establish, Hanson’s intent to get Diaz fired in retaliation for Diaz’s repeated requests to accommodate the injured worker. On deposition, Diaz confirmed Hanson’s motivation: Hanson lied to protect himself, nothing else.
Q. Did you feel that Mr. Hanson lied with regard to the Javiеr Gonzale[z] situation?
A. Yes.
Q. Did you think that Mr. Hanson lied to try to protect himself?
A. Yes.
Q. Can you think of any other reason that Mr. Hanson would have lied?
Q. Beyond trying to protect himself?
A. No.
Joint Appendix at 40.
Second, the proof fails on causation. Hanson did not report Diaz’s violation of the work restriction. He did not recommend that Diaz be disciplined. McNamara did not rely on Hanson’s story in deciding to fire Diaz. Hanson’s general and longstanding hostility to providing extra help to any supervisor anytime is certainly somewhere in the chain of causаtion leading to Diaz’s firing. It is simply too far removed from Diaz’s particular request for help in Gonzalez’s place, however, to create a jury question on disability retaliation in this case.
BCS Services, Inc. v. Heartwood 88, LLC,
Third, even if Hanson set Diaz up for discipline in retaliation for trying to obey the Act by accommodating the injured worker, the plаnt manager’s decision was untainted.
Richardson,
Affirmed.
Notes
The Honorable Robert W. Pratt, Chief Judge, United States District Court for the Southern District of Iowa.
