Louis Nese claims that his employer violated the Americans with Disabilities Act, 42 U.S.C. § 12101(ADA), by reducing his wages and then terminating him because of its incorrect perception that he had a disability. The district court granted summary judgment for the employer and Nese appeals.
Nese, who is now in his forties, began having epileptic seizures when he was 15 years old. He has taken prescription medication to control his seizures for about 27 years. He experiences no side effects from the medication and has regularly worked as a carpenter for various employers, including Handy Andy ■ and Builders Square. He has also run a company of his own, though it apparently was not profitable. The defendant, Julian and Nordic Industries, Inc. (that’s the name we find in one brief — the other says Nordic Construction Services, Inc.), which we will refer to as Nordic, is a general contractor providing commercial and residential services and fire and water damage restoration. Administaff is a professional personnel management company, providing services to Nordic.
Prior to Nese’s employment with Nordic and while he ran his own business, he was a member of the Downers Grove (Illinois) Chamber of- Commerce and of a business networking group called the Lodge. Only one construction contractor was allowed to be a member of the Lodge. Nese held that membership. Also, though, Tom Julian, the owner of Nordic, was a member of the Lodge in his capacity not as a contrac *640 tor, but as the owner of a cleaning service. The two men were acquainted and, in fact, it appears that Julian was instrumental in obtaining Nese’s membership in the Lodge. The two men also assisted each other in generating business.
In August 2000, Julian hired Nese to work for Nordic on a 90-day trial basis. Nese informed Julian that he did not have a driver’s license at that time because he had suffered a seizure. Nevertheless, Julian hired him and provided another employee to drive Nese to work until he was able to regain his driver’s license. Nese’s hourly rate of pay was $22.50 per hour.
However, in February 2001, Nese’s hourly rate was reduced to $18.00 per hour. The controversy between the parties arises at this point. The wage rate was changed either because Nese’s work pace was not up to the standard of the other carpenters or because other workers were making less and the disparity was causing a problem. There is a controversy also over whether any Nordic employee had talked to Nese about problems with his work. When Nese’s hourly rate was decreased, Julian completed an employee status change form which, at that time, did not contain any comments regarding the pace of his work. At some time, however, the form was amended and a comment was added that Nese’s “[w]ork pace is not to standards of peers.”
As to the pace of his work, Nese contends that it “may not have been exactly” like that of the other workers, but it was comparable. His supervisor, Gary Boerma, asked Nese and other carpenters to pick up the pace. Then in September 2001, Boerma completed a performance evaluation of Nese. The evaluation, in its present form, has a section covered with “whiteout.” Nese says the white-out was not there when he first saw the evaluation. Boerma says it was and that it covered a comment that another Nordic employee found unprofessional. The original comment was, “Louis has worked for himself for a long time and has apparently never had to shift gears.” After that comment was covered, Boerma wrote, “He needs to complete assigned task within acceptable time frame, also needs to learn new tasks and methods.” A month later, Nese was given a raise to $18.50 per hour.
Then in November 2001, Nordic received a letter from a legal advocacy group acting on Nese’s behalf. The letter accused Nordic of possible discriminatory acts relating to the company’s treatment of Nese. In January 2002, Nese was transferred to the side of Nordic’s business which did insurance repair work. Julian completed an employee status change form that documented the transfer. On the form, Julian wrote, “Pace of work is still a problem — -smaller jobs will be better suited to gauge pace.” A few weeks later, Nese was placed on temporary layoff due to lack of work. By October, Nese apparently felt that he had been fired. Following the layoff, Nese worked fixing up a home and since May 2003 has worked for a company called One Stop Construction. He admits that he can perform carpentry work.
The basis of Nese’s appeal is, of course, that in some manner Nordic lowered his wages and then terminated him because of his disability — epilepsy. He does not claim, however, that his epilepsy actually makes him disabled within the meaning of the ADA. His claim is that Nordic perceived him as disabled and then made adverse employment decisions because of that perception.
We review the grant of summary judgment
de novo. Silk v. City of Chicago,
To establish disability discrimination, Nese must show that he is disabled within the meaning of the ADA, that he is qualified to perform the essential functions of the job, either with or without a reasonable accommodation, and that he suffered from an adverse employment action because of his disability.
Byrne v. Board of Educ., School of West Allis-West Milwaukee,
If an ADA plaintiff establishes a prima facie case, the burden shifts to the employer to offer a legitimate nondiscriminatory reason for the employment decision. If the employer succeeds, then the burden reverts to the plaintiff to show that there is a genuine dispute of material fact that the proffered reason for the employment action is pretextual.
DeLuca v. Winer Indus., Inc.,
Perhaps realizing that there is nothing in this record to show that epilepsy had anything to do with Nordic’s actions, nor has it limited his ability to work, Nese contends that he should prevail at the summary judgment stage because evidence that Nordic was aware of his seizure disorder should be combined with the evidence that Nordic “concocted” a pretextual justification for the termination — that is, that his work pace was slow. He sees evidence of pretext in the fact that the evaluation form has a whited-out statement. Nese wants us to collapse the requirement for a prima facie case under
McDonnell Douglas Corp. v. Green,
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The source of the argument is a case from the Court of Appeals for the Sixth
Circuit—Ross v. Campbell Soup Co.,
Because, under the “regarded as” prong, Ross’s prima facie showing that he is disabled turns upon the employer’s state of mind and how it thought Ross’s back condition affected his performance as an employee, evidence of the employer’s state of mind that would ordinarily be used to prove motive or discriminatory intent may also be probative of Ross’s status as a person with a disability as defined by the ADA. Thus, evidence that the company created a pretextual reason for Ross’s firing may tend to prove that it regarded Ross as a disabled employee.
A later case from the same court may, however, reveal the limits of the
Ross
holding. In
Cotter v. Ajilon Services, Inc.,
The
Ross
approach was soundly rejected by the Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit in
Rakity v. Dillon Companies, Inc.,
Mr. Rakity interprets Ross to mean the issue of pretextually concealed discrimination and the issue of “regarded as” disabled should be treated as one and the same. This proposed modification of the McDonnell Douglas framework would open the protected class to individuals who neither have an actual disability nor can even present triable evidence their employer believed they have a disability. We do not think the Sixth Circuit intended such an interpretation, and if it did, we decline to follow it.
Like the Tenth Circuit, we also decline to follow Ross.
An employer is not guilty of discrimination every time it takes an employment action for one reason, but provides a different explanation to the employee. For example, perhaps the employer terminates an employee simply because her supervisor does not get along with her. That might not be a reason the employer wants to admit openly, so, instead, work deficiencies—real or imagined—are cited as the basis for the action. Even though we could wish such shenanigans never happened, we suspect they do, and they do not violate the employment laws unless, for instance, the real reason the supervisor dislikes the employee is based on some protected characteristic. That is why the employee must first establish that she falls into a protected group before we look at either real reasons or pretextual ones for the employment action. In other words, to say the employer was less than perfectly frank does not prove that the employer acted as it did for discriminatory reasons.
We will examine Nese’s claim in the same manner that we have long examined all such claims. Nese is an epileptic. A medical condition, however, by itself does not constitute a disability under the
*643
statute.
Toyota Motor Mfg., Ky., Inc. v. Williams,
Finally, the evidence of pretext is itself thin. The claim is, in part, that the statement “Louis has worked for himself for a long .time and has apparently never had to shift gears” was covered up and the statement “He needs to complete assigned task within acceptable time frame, also needs to learn new tasks and methods” was substituted. We are at a loss to understand how the former statement reveals discrimination or, in fact, how it is significantly different from the latter. The comment that Nese had no ability to shift gears can be interpreted as saying he needed to learn new tasks, etc. The fact that he worked for himself might also be seen as a reason that he did not complete tasks in a time frame acceptable to Nordic. Nothing indicates a belief that the reason Nese’s work was not quite up to par was that he was disabled and unable to perform a broad range of jobs.
For these reasons, the judgment of the district court is Affirmed.
