First, thе procedural posture of this case requires brief discussion. An earlier version of this opinion suggested that rehearing en banc was warranted for the full court to consider overruling EEOC v. Humiston-Keeling,
In this case, the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) asks this court to change its interpretation of the Americans with Disabilities Act, 42 U.S.C. § 12101 et seq. (ADA). The case turns on the meaning of the word “reassignment.” The ADA includes “reassignment to a vacant position” as a possible “reasonable accommodation” for disabled employees. 42 U.S.C. § 12111(9). The EEOC contends that “reassignment” under the ADA requires employers to appoint employees who are losing their current positions due to disability to a vacant position for which they are qualified. Hоwever, this court has already held in Humiston-Keeling,
In 2003, United Airlines set out Reasonable Accommodation Guidelines that address accommodating employees who, bеcause of disability, can no longer do the essential functions of their current jobs even with reasonable accommodation. While the guidelines note that “transfer ... [to] an equivalent or lower-level vacant position” may be a reasonable accommodation, the guidelines specify that the transfer process is competitive. Accordingly, employees needing accommodation will not be automatically placed into vacant positions but instead will be given preferential treatment. This allows employees needing accommodation to submit an unlimited number of transfer applications, be guaranteed an interview and receive priority consideration over a similarly qualified applicant — that is, if two candidates are equally qualified, the employee-aрplicant seeking accommodation will get the job.
The EEOC filed suit in San Francisco, alleging that United’s policy violates the ADA. The district court granted United’s motion to transfer the case to Illinois. That district court granted United’s motion to dismiss the suit under Rule 12(b)(6). The court noted that binding precеdent, Humiston-Keeling, 227 F.3d at
We review a dismissal under Rule 12(b)(6) de novo. Tamayo v. Blagojevich,
The district court noted that HumistomKeeling is directly on point and has not been overruled by the Seventh Circuit. The district court is correct on both points. Humistom-Keeling involved a worker, Houser, who could no longer perform her conveyor job due to an injured arm.
The EEOC invites this court to overturn Humistom-Keeling, arguing that Barnett undercuts the reasoning of HumistonKeeling. In Barnett, the Supreme Court considered reassignment under the ADA in the context of a seniority system.
The Supreme Court first noted that “[t]he simple fаct that an accommodation would provide a ‘preference’ — in the sense that it would permit the worker with a disability to violate a rule that others must obey — cannot, in and of itself, automatically show that the accommodation is not ‘reasonable.’ ” Id. at 398,
The EEOC points out that U.S. Airways relied heavily on Humiston-Keeling and, more importantly, that the Barnett Court flatly contradicted much of the language of Humiston-Keeling. U.S. Airways argued that it was not required to grant a requested accommodation that would violate a disability-neutral rule, using the аrgument from Humiston-Keeling that the ADA is “not a mandatory preference act” but only a “nondiscrimination statute.”
The analysis of Barnett’s impact on Humistonr-Keeling is further complicated by the fact that we are not the first panel to consider this issue. This court considered Barnett’s relationship to Humistonr-Keeling, albeit in an abbreviated fashion and without the benefit of briefing, in Mays v. Principi,
[Barnett ] holds that an employer is not required to give a disabled employee superseniority to enable him to retain his job when a more senior employee invokes an entitlement to it conferred by the employer’s seniority system. If for “more senior” we read “better qualified,” for “seniority system” we read “the employer’s normal method of filling vacancies,” and for “superseniority” we read “a break,” U.S. Airways becomes our case.
Id. at 872 (internal citation omitted).
The EEOC argues, and we agree, that the Mays Court incorrectly asserted that a best-qualified seleсtion policy is essentially the same as a seniority system. In equating the two, the Mays Court so enlarged the narrow, fact-specific exception set out in Barnett as to swallow the rule. While employers may prefer to hire the best qualified applicant, the violation of a bеst-qualified selection policy does not involve the property-rights and administrative concerns (and resulting burdens) presented by the violation of a seniority policy. To strengthen this critique, the EEOC points out the relative rarity of seniority systems and the distinct challenges of mandating rеassignment in a system where employees are already entitled to particular positions based on years of employment.
The Supreme Court has found that accommodation through appointment to a vacant position is reasonable. Absent a showing оf undue hardship, an employer must implement such a reassignment policy. The Mays Court understandably erred in suggesting that deviation from a best-qualified selection policy always represented such a hardship.
In any event, the Barnett framework does not contain categorical exceptiоns. On remand, the district court must conduct the Barnett analysis. In this case, the district court must first consider (under Barnett step one) if mandatory reassignment is ordinarily, in the run of cases, a reasonable accommodation.
For its part, United argues that this court should not abandon Humiston-Keeling, in pаrt because the Eighth Circuit explicitly adopted the reasoning of Humiston-Keeling in Huber v. Wal-Mart,
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the district court is Reversed and we Remand this matter to the district court for further consideration consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. A helpful summary of the Barnett framework is provided in Shapiro v. Township of Lakewood,
It therefore appears that the Court has prescribed the following two-step approach for cases in which a requested accommodation in the form of a jоb reassignment is claimed to violate a disability-neutral rule of the employer. The first step requires the employee to show that the accommodation is a type that is reasonable in the run of cases. The second step varies depending on the outcome of the first step. If the accommodation is shown to be a type of accommodation that is reasonable in the run of cases, the burden shifts to the employer to show that granting the accommodation would impose an undue hardship under the particular circumstances of the case. On the other hand, if the accommodation is not shown to be a type of accommodation that is reasonable in the run of cases, the employee can still prevail by showing that special circumstances warrant a finding that the aсcommodation is reasonable under the particular circumstances of the case.
. Instead, the employer placed the disabled employee in a clerical position.
. We do not believe this step will cause the district court any great difficulty. This is the vеry accommodation analyzed in Barnett. There, the Supreme Court "assume[d] that normally such a request would be reasonable within the meaning of the statute, were it not for one circumstance, namely, that the assignment would violate the rules of a seniority system.”
. It is also worth noting that the Supreme Court granted certiorari in Huber, but the
