The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (“EEOC”) filed suit Under the Americans with Disabilities Act (“ADA”), 42 U.S.C. § 12101
et seq.,
alleging that
I. BACKGROUND
In September 1992, Judith Keane began working at the Sears River Oaks department store in Calumet City, Illinois. As a sales associate in the intimate apparel department, Keane’s tasks included handling purchases, assisting customers, sizing racks, and occasionally transporting money to and from cash registers. In the course of her employment with Sears, Keane also worked in other departments, such as handbags, sportswear, and women’s dresses. Typically, Keane’s work shifts lasted five to six hours. '
In the summer of 1994, Keane began to experience a numbness in her right leg that would onset toward the end of her work shift. While the numbness did not impact Keane’s ability to walk short distances in her work area during her shift, it did sometimes preclude Keane from taking longer walks such as those required to reach the employee cafeteria or the food court. Becаuse of the difficulties she was encountering, Keane asked her supervisor, Jacqueline Klisiak, if Keane could eat in the intimate apparel stockroom. Though Klisiak acquiesced to Keane’s request, later that year she announced a blanket policy that eating in the stockroom was forbidden.
In the fall of 1994, as Keane’s condition began to worsen, she approached Klisiak and inquired as to whether Keane could be permitted to use the shoe stockroom as a shortcut. Kеane explained that using the stockroom would reduce by half the distance she would have to walk from her car to her department within the store. Klis-iak referred Keane to the shoe department manager Joy Krumweide, who denied the request. In November, Keane repeated her request to the store manager Dave Allen. Allen, like Krumweide before him, denied Keane’s request. The . following month, Keane began to rely on the assistance of a cane when taking longer walks through the store.
In lаte December 1994, Keane was diagnosed with “neuropathy,” a general description of nerve damage, which was the result of nón-insulin diabetes.- Keane’s neurologist, Dr. Hanlon, provided Keane with a note on which Hanlon had written that Keane should avoid walking long distances and for prolonged periods. Keane provided that note to a supervisory coworker, who left the note for Klisiak. In January of 1995; Klisiak reviewed the note and determined that the post-holiday reduction in hours was sufficiently limiting the length of Keane’s walking periods. Roughly during the same time period, Klisiak gave Keane permission to use the shoe stockroom as a shortcut. However, the first day Keane attempted to use it, Krumweide yelled at Keane to “get out.”
In an attempt to further lessen her walking distance, Keane asked Allen if she could park in the merchandise pick-up lot. Allen denied that request but suggested that instead, Keane park in a handicap space outside her department. Parking outside Keane’s department did not lessen her commute, as she still had to walk across the store to the employee check-in location before she could commence work in her department.'
In April of 1995, Allen spoke to Keane and requested that she have her physician fill out a Sears’ Physician Certification Form in order to provide the company
In May 1995, Keane met with Klisiak. At that meeting Keane was informed that Allen had denied her request to use the shoe stockroom shortcut. Furthermore, Klisiak provided Keane with a new work schedule which required Keane to work on Thursday evenings and Fridays. Though Keane protested that she had always been and was likewise then unavailable to work on Thursday evenings and Fridays, Klisiak replied that the schedule could not be changed. Feeling that Sears had failed to accommodate her disability and was attempting to make her work еnvironment inhospitable, Keane believed she had no choice other than to resign.
The EEOC filed suit against Sears alleging that the company had failed to reasonably accommodate Keane’s disability, in violation of the ADA. When Keane was granted leave to intervene, her amended complaint further alleged that Sears had constructively discharged Keane from her position. Sears filed a motion for summary judgment on both claims. The district court determined that summary judgment was appropriate on plaintiffs’ first claim after it had concluded that Keane was not disabled within the terms of the ADA. Specifically, the court held that since Keane was able to walk with the assistance of a cane she was not substantially limited in her ability to walk, and thus not disabled. With regard to Keane’s claim of constructive discharge, the district court bypassed the question of whether such a claim is cognizable under the ADA. Rather, the court concluded that even assuming such a claim is theoretically viable, in Keane’s cаse the claim would fail, as she was not (1) disabled, and (2) subjected to conditions that were so intolerable as to require resignation. Thus, the court likewise granted Sears summary judgment on the constructive discharge claim. The EEOC and Keane now appeal, arguing that disputed issues of fact exist as to whether Keane is disabled as the term is understood under the ADA.
II. DISCUSSION
A. Standard of Review
In reviewing a district court’s grant of summary judgment, we assess the record
de novo
and reach our own conclusions of law or fact as they flow from the record beforе us.
Miranda v. Wisconsin Power & Light Co.,
In resolving a motion for summary judgment, we will neither come to a conclusion on factual disputes nor weigh conflicting evidence.
Miranda,
B. “Failure to Reasonably Acoommo-date” Claim
On appeal, plaintiffs first contend that the district court erred in granting Sears summary judgment on the claim that Sears failed to reasonably accommodate Keane’s disability. The ADA prohibits discrimination by covered entities, including private employers, against qualified individuals with a disability.
Sutton v. United Air Lines, Inc.,
In concluding that summary judgment was appropriate for Sears on plaintiffs’ “failure to reasonably accommodate” cause of action, the district court focused almost exclusively on the first prong of the above three-part inquiry. Upon determining that Keane was not disabled under the ADA, the court resolved that the entire claim must fail.
1
. Our review must there
Under the Act, a disability is defined as: “(A) a physical or mental impairment that substantially limits one or more of the major life activities of such individual; (B) a record of such an impairment; or (C) being regarded as having such an impairment.” 42 U.S.C. § 12102(2). Plaintiffs have not advanced that Keane should be considered disabled under either subsections (B) or (C). Rather, they suggest solely that Keane’s neuropathy substantially limits her ability to engage in the major life activity of walking.
2
In determining whether an individual is substantially limited in a major life activity, we examine whether that individual, when comрared to the general population, is unable to perform or is significantly restricted as to the condition, manner, or duration under which she can perform that major life activity.
Duda v. Board of Educ. of Franklin Park Pub. Sch. Dist. No. 8h,
Once again, it is not our role to come to a decision as to whether Keane was disabled under the ADA.
See Miranda,
In reaching this decision, we focus on two distinct factors. First, and of paramount relevance to summary judgment proceedings, we find that there exist disputed issues of material fact regarding whether or not Keane is disabled under the ADA. Specifically, we believe there is conflicting evidence surrounding whether Keane’s neuropathy substantially limits her ability to walk. When determining whether an impairment is substantially limiting, courts should consider the nature and severity of the impairment, its duration or expected duration, and its permanence or longterm impact.
See Hamm v. Runyon,
While such a dispute is sufficient to require our remanding of this case to the district court, we further note certain absences in the record. We believe it is important to point these out, as their presence could assist a court in making a proper determination as to whether an individual is substantially limited in a major life activity, and thus disabled under the ADA. First, the record is incomplete regarding the actual distances that Keane was able to walk. In the course of oral argument, counsel for both sides stated only that these were not long distances. Further, we do not find any evidence of how Keane’s impairment limited her ability to walk in comparison to the average member of the population. As we have noted above, such an inquiry, if not required, is certainly helpful in resolving any dispute as to whether someone is substantially limited in a major life activity. However, in the absence of such a comparison, we suggest that a summary judgment determination is problematic.
Additionally, we note that Keane’s use of a mitigating device, without a study of its effects, cannot, by itself, support a finding that' Keane was not substantially limited in her ability to walk. The district court was correct in analyzing Keane’s disability with reference to the mitigating device, as
Sutton
mandates. However, we must caution, thаt the use of a mitigating device does not automatically bar any possibility of a person being considered disabled. The
Sutton
approach does not unilaterally exclude from the category of disabled all those who use a mitigating device to combat the effects of an impairment. Rather,
Sutton
merely dictates that the analysis of whether a person is substantially limited in a major life activity must be conducted with reference to the mitigating device.
Because of disputes regarding the severity of Keane’s condition, along with absences in the record regarding facts that would' have assisted in the resolution' of those disputes, we cannot conclude that Keane was not disabled as a matter of law.
4
The district court did not
C. “Constructive Discharge” Claim
Plaintiffs’ second argument on appeal is that the district court erred in granting Sears summary judgment on plaintiffs’ claim of constructive discharge. Initially, we note that this Circuit has not yet determined whether a claim of constructive discharge stemming from a hostile work envirоnment is cognizable under the ADA.
See Miranda,
A claim of discriminatory constructive discharge would require a plaintiff to demonstrate first that she was constructively discharged — that the employer made the working conditions so intolerable as to force a reasonable person to leave.
Miranda,
Thаt being said, plaintiffs have not offered sufficient evidence to create a triable issue of fact with respect to a claim of constructive discharge. “[U]nless condi
Finally, we note that the district court was correct in determining that quitting was not the only option available to Keane. A perusal of the record seems to indicate that there was poor communication between bоth sides through out this matter. Instead of discussing the new work schedule and Allen’s refusal to allow Keane to use the shoe room shortcut, Keane resigned. While this was certainly her prerogative, we do not believe this was her only option. Though the situation may have been uncomfortable, we cannot conclude that a reasonable person in her position would have been compelled to resign. Because the district court correctly determined that there is no disputed issue of material fact regarding this claim of the plaintiffs, and that Sears was entitled to judgment as a matter of law, we affirm the grant of summary judgment for Sears on plaintiffs’ claim of constructive discharge.
III. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we Affirm the district court’s grant of summary judgment to the defendant on plaintiffs and intervenor’s claim for constructive discharge; we REVERSE the district court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of the defendant on plaintiffs and intervenor’s claim for failure to reasonably accommodate a disability under the ADA; and we Remand this case to the district court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. The district court was correct in noting that plaintiffs' claim could not survive absent a determination that Keane was considered disabled under the ADA. "The Act is not a general protection of medically afflicted persons .... If the employer discriminates against them on account of their being (or being believed by him to be) ill, even permanently ill, but not disabled, there is no violation.”
Christian v. St. Anthony Med. Ctr., Inc.,
. The complaint below also рuts forth that Keane was substantially limited in her ability to stand. The district court did not believe that any such difficulties warranted a determination that Keane was disabled. On appeal, plaintiffs do not challenge that ruling.
. As the Supreme Court noted in
Sutton
it is unclear how much, if any weight, should be given to these regulations, which were promulgated by the EEOC.
. In determining that summary judgment is inappropriate we note one additional point raised by the defendant. Though the gravamen of Sears’ claim is that, as a factual matter, Keane is not significantly impaired in her ability to walk, Sears does present one interesting argument that demands our attention. Sears contends that despite how substantially limiting the court might consider Keane's neuropathy, it cannot qualify as a disability under the ADA, in that the condition wаs episodic. Keane does not dispute that her condition worsened the longer and farther she was forced to walk, and hence is to a certain extent "episodic.” The defendants rely on our decision in
Vande Zande
v.
Wisconsin Dep’t of Admin,
for the proposition that intermittent, episodic impairments are not disabilities.
. We do not mean to suggest with this opinion that the determination as to whether an individual falls within the ADA's definition of "disabled” is a question that under different circumstances could not properly be resolved via summary judgment. We have noted in the area of Title VII cases that though discrimination cases frequently hinge on the issue of intent, which is often a contestable issue of material fact, there is no separate standard governing summary judgment in Title VII cases which precludes its use.
Wallace,
. We note however that a claim for constructive discharge appears to arise under the general prohibition against discrimination with respect to terms or conditions of employment contained in 42 U.S.C. § 12112(a).
See also
29 C.F.R. § 1630.4(f) (stating that it is unlawful to discriminate against a disabled employee in regard to any "term, condition, or privilege of employment.”). In addition, a claim for constructive discharge is cognizable under Title VII, an area of law often consulted when analyzing claims under the ADA.
See Miranda,
