This is a suit under the Americans with Disabilities Act charging that the plaintiffs employer failed to accommodate his disability. After a bench trial, the district judge found that the plaintiff was physically incapable .of working full time, even with an accommodation, and therefore was not within the Act’s protections. We think the judge was right, and that in any event the plaintiffs claim is barred by the doctrine of estoppel.
The plaintiff was a laborer for the park district until he injured his back in 1979. The injury precluded his ever returning to his laborer’s job. In 1985, however, pursuant to a “light duty” program of assigning injured employees to less strenuous jobs until they recover from their injuries, the plaintiff was given the job of answering the phone at a park district office near his home. He was told he could leave work whenever he felt pain or stress, and in accordance with this dispensation he would typically leave work after only two or three hours, though he was being paid the full wages of a laborer who works eight hours a day.
After four years of this, the park district fired the plaintiff after catching him on videotape twisting, bending, and climbing in and out of trucks. At an internal park district appeal hearing in 1992, he testified that while ready, willing, and able to return to any position that was lighter than his old position of laborer, he still felt “the same way like from the day I got hurt” back in 1979. His appeal was turned down, precipitating this suit.
The employment provisions of the Americans with Disabilities Act provide relief only to persons who are capable, with or without an accommodation that would make it possible for them to work despite a disability, to perform the essential functions of their job, 42 U.S.C. § 12111(8);
Morgan v. Joint Administration Board,
But there is a more fundamental objection to the plaintiffs claim. The doctrine of estoppel prevents a litigant from repudiating a representation that has rea
Estoppel is a general doctrine of American law,
Dormeyer v. Comerica Bank-Illinois,
The doctrine of judicial estoppel is not strictly applicable here, because DeVito obtained benefits upon a claim of total disability without suing for them. But the cases we cited after “see also,” together with our decision in
Wilson v. Chrysler Corp.,
Since different statutes define total disability differently, the employee will sometimes be able to explain away the apparent inconsistency of his positions; but not here. The park district was entitled to rely on the plaintiffs implicit representation (implicit in his behavior in his light-duty job answering the phone) that he could work no more than two or three hours a day and on his explicit representation that his condition had not improved since the original injury.
Affirmed.
