After he was discharged from his job, plaintiff Mark Mack sued his employer, defendant Great Dane Trailers, for violation of the Americans with Disabilities Act, 42 U.S.C. § 12102, et seq. (ADA), and for retaliatory discharge under Indiana law. The district court granted summary judgment in favor of Great Dane on Mack’s state law claim, but denied summary judgment on Mack’s ADA claim that Great Dane discriminated against him because it mistakenly regarded him as disabled. The jury found in Mack’s favor on the ADA claim, and both parties appeal. We agree with Great Dane that, on the ADA claim, there was insufficient evidence from which a jury could reasonably find that Great Dane regarded Mack as substantially limited in any major life activity and that the district court erred in denying Great Dane’s motion for judgment as a matter of law. We also conclude that there was insufficient evidence that would support an inference that Mack was discharged for filing for workers’ compensation and therefore affirm the district court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of Great Dane on Mack’s state law claim for retaliatory discharge.
I. BACKGROUND
Mack worked as an assistant trailer builder, which involved many tasks that required long periods of kneeling and squatting. After less than a month on the job, Mack developed pain in his leg and Great Dane sent him to see Dr. Daria Schooler. Dr. Schooler diagnosed acute right peroneal neuropathy, commonly referred to as drop foot. A month after his injury, Dr. Schooler determined that Mack could return to sedentary work if transportation to work was provided. As his condition improved, she eased the restrictions but cleared him for work only in areas of the plant that do not require the use of heavy steel-toed work boots and prohibited kneeling and squatting. These restrictions were repeated in Dr. Schooler’s reports during the following months and in her handwritten report of November 2 (received by Great Dane on November 12). In a typewritten report accompanying the November 2 report, Schooler stated that Mack “may have plateaued” in his recovery, but “сould potentially return to work if he had a permanent work restriction of no lifting and if a custom work boot could be manufactured....” In her final report on November 30, Dr. Schooler determined that Mack had reached maximum medical improvement from his injury, and released him for a return to work with permanent restrictions of no kneeling or squatting and if he obtained the suggested custom work boot.
During this time, Mack was on workers’ compensation leave and received total temporary disability benefits. Mack repeatedly asked Great Dane to return him to work and was told that there was no available work within his restrictions. Great Dane discharged Mack effective November 12, 1997, thirteen months after his disability leave began. His temporary disability benefits continued for another month. At *780 a meeting on November 30, Greаt Dane managers told Mack that he had been discharged pursuant to a company policy under which an employee who is absent more than one year is terminated.
Mack filed suit alleging violations of the ADA and state law claims for wrongful termination and intentional infliction of emotional distress. On cross motions for summary judgment, the district court granted judgment in favor of Great Dane on Mack’s state law сlaims and his claim that he was disabled under the ADA. It denied, however, Great Dane’s motion as to Mack’s “regarded as disabled” claim. That claim went to trial and the jury rendered a verdict in favor of Mack. The court denied Great Dane’s Rule 50(b) motion for judgment as a matter of law and entered judgment on the verdict.
II. ANALYSIS
A. Americans with Disabilities Act
We review the district court’s denial of Great Dane’s motion for judgment as a matter of law de novо.
Emmel v. Coca-Cola Bottling Co. of Chicago,
An individual is disabled within the meaning of the ADA if she has “a physical or mental impairment that substantially limits one or more of the major life activities of such individual.” 42 U.S.C. § 12102(2)(A);
see also Sutton v. United Air Lines, Inc.,
(1) a covered entity mistakenly believes that a person has a physical impairment that substantially limits one or more major life activities, or
(2) a covered entity mistakenly believes that an actual, nonlimiting impairment substantially limits one or more major life activities.
Sutton,
Mack’s claim is that Great Dane believed that he was substantially limited in the major life activity of “lifting.”
1
All agree that Great Dane believed that Mack’s physical condition limited his ability to lift items at work. An imрairment that interferes with work-related tasks, however, does not necessarily rise to the level of a disability within the meaning of the ADA.
Toyota Motor Mfg., Ky., Inc. v. Williams,
When addressing the major life activity of performing manual tasks, the central inquiry must be whеther the claimant is unable to perform the variety of tasks central to most people’s daily lives, not whether the claimant is unable to perform the tasks associated with her specific job.
Id.,
Mack contends, however, that
Toyota
is distinguishable in two respects: first, because the major life activity at issue therе was performing manual tasks — not lifting — and second, because
Toyota
involved a claim of actual disability. We see no basis for confining
Toyota’s
analysis to only those cases involving the specific life activity asserted by the plaintiff in that case.
See EEOC v. United Parcel Serv., Inc.,
Furthermore, while
Toyota
did not address a claim that the employee was regarded as disabled, its analysis still controls in this case. Under the ADA, the concepts of “substantially limits” and “major life activity” are the same whether the employee is proceeding under a claim that she is actually disabled or regarded as disabled. The statute defines disability to include “being regarded as having such an impairment,” 42 U.S.C. § 12102(2)(C) — the
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referenced impairment being that described in the definition of actuаl impairment.
See
42 U.S.C. § 12102(2)(A). So if the condition that is the subject of the employer’s belief is not substantially limiting, and the employer does not believe that it is, then there is no violation of the ADA under the “regarded as” prong of the statute.
See Sutton,
Applying these principles, we conclude that Mack’s ADA claim fails as a matter of law. The parties dispute whether the evidence showed that Great Dane regarded Mack as unable to squat to lift from the floor (Great Dane’s version), or as unable to lift (Mack’s version). But one thing is clear — all the direct evidence about Great Dane’s knowledge of Mack’s physical impairment concerned lifting restrictions related to his job and there is no evidence from which a jury reasonably could infer anything about Great Dane’s belief about the extent of Mack’s limitations as to tasks central to his daily life. For example, Mack relies on one of the neurosurgeon’s reports received by Great Dane, which stated that Mack could return to work with a restriction of “no lifting” and if he wore a custom work boot. But even if the jury ignored the numerous other reports from the same doctor that identified the restriction as one on kneeling and squatting, the report itself demonstrates that the described restriction was in reference to the limitations at work and nothing more.
Aside from the reference to lifting in the doctor’s report, Mack relies on the deposition testimony of Great Dane’s human resources manager that Mack’s limitation was an “inability to lift and squat.” This phrase was in response to a question about Mack’s ability to keep his job and in the context of a discussion about his work-related restrictions. Even if the jury disbelieved the manager’s explanation at trial that his response was limited to safely lifting objects from the floor (by squatting), no jury reasonably could conclude from this single x-eference to a discussion about work-related restrictions that Great Dane believed that Mack was substantially limited in the sort of lifting that is central tо most people’s daily life.
Finally, Mack asserts that there was circumstantial evidence from which the jury could have inferred that Great Dane regarded him as disabled. For example, Mack points out that another employee — one with a similar injury but with greater work-related restrictions — was allowed to return to work after an even lengthier leave of absence and that Great Dane modified the other employee’s duties to accommodate his impairment. Mack also claims that the jury could have disbelieved Great Dane’s reason for firing him based, for example, on the fact that his leave extended beyond a year and testimony that the human resources manager had some leeway to retain Mack longer if the restrictions were lifted.
Ordinarily the relevance of an еmployer’s different treatment of two similarly situated employees, whose only relevant difference is on some characteristic that is an impermissible basis for disparate treatment, is that it supports an inference that the disparate treatment is because of that difference.
See Troupe v. May Dept. Stores Co.,
In this context, however, Mack is using the comparative and pretext evidence to support an inference not just of causation — that his membership in the group protected by the statute was the reason he was treated differently — but also the antecedent inference that he was a member of that protected group, in other words, that Great Dane regarded him as disabled within the meaning of the ADA. This inference is illogical on the particular comparison offered by Mack. Mack compares himself to an employee with a similar injury but greater restrictions who was assigned light duty work after he sought accommodations. The fact that Great Dane аccommodated the other employee but not Mack does not support the Inference that it regarded Mack as disabled. It is equally likely, if not more likely, that Great Dane regarded the other employee as disabled and therefore accommodated him but not Mack.
Mack’s pretext evidence, like his comparative evidence, is too weak to support an inferеnce that Great Dane regarded him as disabled. Great Dane’s failure to provide Mack with alternative job assignments is consistent with its assertion that it did not have work within his restrictions, 2 and Mack offered no evidence to the contrary. The fact that Great Dane allowed the leave to continue beyond a year (until his restrictions were identified as permanent) and that it could have retained Maсk longer if his restrictions had been temporary does not support an inference that its stated reason for firing him was false. Accordingly, we conclude that the jury could not reasonably find from Mack’s circumstantial evidence that Great Dane regarded him as disabled.
We do not suggest that circumstantial evidence can never be used to show that an employer regarded an employee аs disabled; the employer’s perception of the employee’s impairment is, like its intent to discriminate, a mental state and direct evidence may often be lacking.
See Troupe,
B. Wrongful Termination
Under Indiana law, “[generally, employers may terminate employеes for no cause whatsoever or for any cause at all without incurring liability.”
Hamann v. Gates Chevrolet, Inc.,
By the time he was discharged, Mack had been receiving temporary disability benefits for more than a year, timing that tends to negate, rather than support, an inference of causation.
Goetzke,
*785
Indiana courts have held, however, that more remote timing may, when coupled with other sufficient evidence, support an inference of retaliation.
See Goetzke,
III. CONCLUSION
The district court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of Great Dane on Mack’s retaliation claim is AffiRmed. The judgment entered on the jury verdict on Mack’s ADA claim is ReveRsed and the case is REMANDED.
Notes
. According to EEOC regulations, lifting is a major life activity. 29 C.F.R. pt. 1630.2(i);
see also Gillen v. Fallon Ambulance Serv., Inc.,
. Mack argues that he could have performed the work of an assistant trailer builder, but there is no question that Great Danе would have had to make some accommodation— such as allowing him to work with a special work boot and excusing him from tasks requiring him to lift heavy objects. Accommodation is not required if the employee is not covered by the statute,
Szmaj v. American Tel. & Tel. Co.,
. Given our holding, we need not reach Great Dane’s argument that the attorney’s fee awarded on this claim was excessive or Mack's argument that the district court erred in granting Great Dane’s motion for judgment as a matter of law on the issue of punitive damages.
. The case upon which Mack relies for his argument that the relevant date is when the employer was notified that the employee’s injury is permanent,
Dale v. J.G. Bowers, Inc.,
