Case Information
*1 Before BYE, COLLOTON, and GRUENDER, Circuit Judges.
____________
GRUENDER, Circuit Judge.
In this diversity suit brought under the Missouri Human Rights Act, Jack Noel claims SBC Internet Services, Inc. and AT&T Corp. (together, “SBC”) constructively discharged him because of his disability. Finding no genuine issue of material fact as to whether Noel was constructively discharged, the district court granted SBC’s motion for summary judgment. We affirm.
In 2006, Noel accepted a new position at SBC that involved frequent travel, which aggravated his diabetes. Two years later, Noel was hospitalized after collapsing at an airport, and the next year, SBC gave him a temporary assignment that did not involve travel. After Noel performed poorly in both his new position and the temporary assignment, SBC put him on a performance-improvement plan. Two weeks later, Noel was hospitalized again, this time for five days after suffering a breakdown. He never returned to SBC. Noel’s doctor advised Noel that further travel might be harmful, and after six months of disability leave, Noel resigned from SBC. No one at SBC told him to resign, told him he could not return to work, or ever disparaged him in any way related to his diabetes.
On appeal, Noel claims that SBC violated the Missouri Human Rights Act by
discharging him because of his diabetes, a disability.
See
Mo. Rev. Stat. § 213.055.
To prove his claim, Noel must show that (1) he “is legally disabled; (2) [he] was
discharged; and (3) [his] disability was a factor in the . . . discharge.”
See Hervey v.
Mo. Dep’t of Corrs.
,
*3
We review a grant of summary judgment
de novo
.
Torgerson v. City of
Rochester
,
We find no genuine factual dispute as to whether Noel was constructively
discharged because SBC did not “deliberately [render his] working conditions so
intolerable that [he was] forced to quit.” ,
Our conclusion finds further support in
Gambler v. Missouri Department of
Health and Senior Services
,
Ultimately, Noel argues that his work was made intolerable not by SBC but
by his own worsening health. As he puts it, “there can be a change in an employee’s
condition that makes conditions intolerable.” Noel offers no cases to support this
argument, and we find it foreclosed by the plain language of the Missouri Supreme
Court, which asks whether “an employer deliberately renders an employee’s working
conditions so intolerable that the employee is forced to quit,” ,
Because Noel does not claim he was actually discharged and has not raised a genuine issue as to whether he was constructively discharged, his Missouri Human Rights Act claim fails. We thus do not reach the parties’ other arguments. The judgment of the district court is affirmed.
______________________________
Notes
[1] The Honorable Charles A. Shaw, United States District Judge for the Eastern District of Missouri.
[2] Missouri courts sometimes have asked whether “the employer intended to
force the employee to quit,
or
the employer could reasonably foresee that its actions
would cause the employee to quit.”
DeWalt v. Davidson Serv./Air, Inc.
[3] Noel also suggests in a single, unsupported sentence that SBC constructively
discharged him by failing to accommodate his disability. As Noel did not raise this
issue before the district court, we decline to address it.
Stone v. Harry
