Plaintiff Patricia Homeyer brought suit against her former employer, Stanley Tul-chin Associates, Inc. (“STA”), claiming she was fired in violation of the Americans with Disabilities Act (“ADA”), 42 U.S.C. § 12201 et seq. Homeyer alleged that she suffered from chronic severe allergic rhinitis and sinusitis and that her condition was aggravated by the environmental tobacco smoke (“ETS”) at STA’s office. She claimed that after requesting an accommodation from STA several times for her “disability,” she was terminated. The district court found that Homeyer could plead no facts demonstrating she was “disabled” within the meaning of the ADA and thus dismissed her claim. We reverse and remand.
I.
When reviewing a motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim, we must accept as true the factual allegations of the complaint and draw all reasonable inferences in the plaintiffs favor.
Lashbrook v. Oerkfitz,
In June of 1992, Homeyer informed STA of her respiratory condition and of the fact that the ETS in the building exacerbated her breathing difficulties. She requested a reasonable accommodation for her “disability” and suggested “some specific possibilities.” STA refused her request, instead advising her to seek employment elsewhere. After several more requests elicited the same answer, Homeyer filed an ADA claim with the EEOC and an Illinois Workers’ Compensation claim. In August of 1993, with no accommodation forthcoming, Homeyer sought a doctor-prescribed medical leave from STA (until a smoke-free environment could be provided). STA denied her request, and she was terminated.
Following her termination, Homeyer filed this suit, alleging discrimination and retaliation under the ADA and also asserting several state law claims. STA moved to dismiss the complaint, claiming Homeyer could not *961 establish the threshold requirement that she suffered from a “disability” as defined by the ADA. The district court agreed and dismissed the action. The court found that Homeyer could not claim that her “sensitivity to ETS” substantially impaired her ability to find employment as a typist generally. It therefore concluded that Homeyer’s major life activity of working was not substantially limited and she was not disabled or entitled to protection under the ADA
II.
We review a district court’s grant of a motion to dismiss
de novo. City Nat’l Bank of Florida v. Checkers, Simon & Rosner,
An ADA plaintiff must suffer from a “disability” as defined in the Act in order to invoke the Act’s protection.
Hamm v. Runyon,
The district court recognized that Homey-er’s complaint alleged that her physical condition (chronic severe allergic rhinitis and sinusitis) substantially impaired her ability to breathe and that her condition, when aggravated by ETS, substantially limited her ability to work. With these allegations, it would seem that under the liberal federal notice pleading standards, Homeyer sufficiently pled the initial element of an ADA claim, i.e., that she suffers from a “disability” as defined in the Act. Homeyer was not required to plead facts or evidence to support her allegations; she was not even required to include a theory of the ease. Her complaint was clear enough to inform STA of her claim.
See Daniels v. USS Agri-Chemicals,
Nonetheless, the district court dismissed Homeyer’s claim, concluding that “Homeyer is not a qualified individual with a disability, and accordingly, is not entitled to the protection of the ADA....” The court seemed convinced that although Homeyer’s condition may have prevented her from working at STA, there was no set of facts under which Homeyer could prove that “her sensitivity to ETS substantially limits her ability to find employment as a typist generally.” Such a showing, the court correctly noted, was necessary for Homeyer to succeed on her claim that she was “disabled” because her ability to work was substantially limited. It is now well-established that “an inability to perform a particular job for a particular employer” is not sufficient to establish a substantial limitation on the ability to work; rather, “the impairment must substantially limit employment generally.”
See Byrne v. Board of Educ.,
First, the court discussed only why Homeyer could not establish that her major
*962
life activity of
working
was impaired, disregarding her contention that she was “disabled” because her major life activity of
breathing
was substantially limited by her respiratory condition. This would provide a separate basis for protection under the Act.
1
It is possible that the district court concluded that Homeyer’s chronic severe allergic rhinitis and sinusitis could not (aside from its possible effect on her ability to work) constitute a substantial limitation on the activity of breathing as matter of law. A disability determination, however, should not be based on abstract lists or categories of impairments, as there are varying degrees of impairments as well as varied individuals who suffer from the impairments.
See Forrisi v. Bowen,
is not necessarily based on the name or diagnosis of the impairment the person has, but rather on the effect of that impairment on the life of the individual. Some impairments may be disabling for particular individuals but not for others, depending upon the stage of the disease or disorder, the presence of other impairments that combine to make the impairment disabling or any number of other factors.
29 C.F.R.App. § 1630.2(j). This is why a determination of disability must be made on an individualized, case-by-case basis.
See Byrne,
Second, we find premature the district court’s conclusion that Homeyer cannot establish that her major life function of working is substantially limited because she cannot prove that “her sensitivity to . ÉTS” forecloses her ability to work as a typist. The court’s conclusion is necessarily based on the finding that there are sufficient typist positions in smoke-free environments in Homeyer’s geographical area, which would enable Homeyer to work with her condition. Again, however, this conclusion is a factual determination, and is therefore not the type of finding that is generally appropriately made on a motion to dismiss. We have stated that in determining whether a particular impairment constitutes a significant barrier to employment for a particular person, a court should consider “the number of and type of jobs from which the impaired
*963
individual is disqualified, the geographical area to which the individual has reasonable access, and the individual’s job expectations and training.”
Byrne,
In effect, the court took judicial notice of the prevalence of smoking bans in office buildings and of the large number of typist positions available in the Chicago area. In urging the affirmance of the district court, STA asks us to do the same, pointing to statistics cited in law review articles and other journals regarding the decrease in smoking at the workplace. We do not believe the relevant fact is within the realm of judicial notice; we hesitate to say, based on generalized data collected in law review articles, that the prevalence of work environments with no-smoking policies with typist positions in Homeyer’s geographical area is indisputable. Homeyer is seeking the chance to prove the proposition is debatable. Additionally, it is possible that many of these supposed alternative workplaces are not sufficiently “smoke-free” to accommodate Hom-eyer’s condition or are unsuitable for various other reasons, such as incompatibility with Homeyer’s training, skills, or expectations. It is precisely because there are usually many person-specific considerations that are relevant to the issue of disability that we have held that the finding should be based on an individualized inquiry and is “best suited to ease-by-case determination.”
Byrne,
In the cases primarily relied upon by the district court, the conclusion that the plaintiffs employment was not limited generally was reached only after an analysis of specific evidence on a motion for summary judgment or following a trial.
See id.
(jury trial);
Gupton,
Because we cannot agree with the district court that there is no set of facts under which Homeyer can prove that her respiratory ailments, which are aggravated by ETS, render her disabled under the ADA, we REVERSE the district court’s dismissal and Remand the case for action consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. STA argues that where, as here, plaintiffs alleged limitation is tied directly to her workplace environment (Homeyer cannot breathe because of the ETS at STA), the plaintiff's condition should be analyzed only as a possible limitation on her ability to work. This may be true where the plaintiff's impairment manifests itself only at work. It cannot be, however, that every plaintiff that merely links an existing disability to the workplace is limited to an "ability to work” analysis, for then every "disability” claim asserted in an action against an employer would collapse into an "ability to work” analysis. For example, a person in a wheelchair who seeks an accommodation from his employer would have to prove that his employment opportunities were limited generally in order to establish a "disability” under the Act; he would be unable to simply claim that his major life function of walking was substantially impaired. Homeyer did not allege that her "disability” was only tied to the workplace; rather, she alleged that her breathing was generally impaired by her respiratory condition and was aggravated by the ETS at STA: Additionally, Homeyer did not claim that it was only at work that ETS aggravated her ailment; there may be many other places where her condition combined with ETS limits her ability to breathe. Given Homeyer’s allegations, she should be given the opportunity to prove that she is "disabled” because her ability to breathe, separate and apart from her ability to work, is impaired. After further discovery, it may become apparent that this is not the situation, but it is too early in the litigation to rule out this possibility.
