Chаrles Wessel died of brain and lung cancer. While he was ill, his supervisor fired him. Before he died, the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) and Wes-sel sued his employer and his supervisor, charging that they had violated the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA), 42 U.S.C. § 12111 et seq. A jury found for the EEOC and Wessel and awarded Wessel $572,000 in back pay, compensatory damages, and punitive damages. This multi-faceted appeal requires us to examine issues ranging from individual liability under the ADA to the district court’s evidentiary admissions to the
I. Background
AIC Security Investigations, Ltd., (AIC), provided security guards for residential and commercial property in the Chicago area. It employed about 300 people. AIC was a wholly-owned subsidiary of AIC International, Ltd., which wаs owned and run for many years by Victor Vrdolyak. In 1986, Victor Vrdolyak hired Charles Wessel as executive director of AIC, at that time the top management position.
In June 1987, Wessel learned he had lung cancer. Over the following five years he underwent a series of surgeries and treatments, including radiation and chemotherapy. In April 1992, Wessel was diagnosed with inoperable metastatic brain cancer, a terminal illness. Between 1987 and 1992, Wessel suffered a variety of effects from his cancer and treatment, including shortness of breath from having parts of his lungs removed, nausea from radiation and chemotherapy, and somewhat reduced memory capacity due to the effects of brain tumors. He missed work at times, but he continued his employment essentially full-time.
In July 1992, Victor Vrdolyak’s wife, Ruth Vrdolyak (the Vrdolyak of this case), took over ownership as sole shareholder of AIC and AIC International, following the death of her husband. She also began operating AIC on a day-to-day basis. Vrdolyak knew that Wessel was ill, and, on July 29, 1992, she fired him.
Wessel filed a complaint with the EEOC. On November 5, 1992, the EEOC sued AIC and Ruth Vrdolyak, alleging violation of the ADA; Wessel intervened as a plaintiff. After a nine-day trial, a jury found that AIC and Vrdolyak had violated the ADA. The jury awarded $22,000 in back pay, $50,000 in compensatory damages, $250,000 in punitive damages against AIC, and $250,000 in punitive damages against Vrdolyak.
Post-trial motions hammered out the final disposition of the case. The district court granted injunctive relief against AIC, ordering a variety of measures to prevent future discrimination. The district court ordеred AIC to pay the $22,000 back pay award, plus interest, and the court further ruled that AIC and Vrdolyak were jointly and severally liable for the $50,000 in compensatory damages.
As to the punitive damages, the court noted that 42 U.S.C. § 1981a(b) caps at $200,000 the total amount of compensatory and punitive damages that can be awarded in favor of one plaintiff against a defendant of AIC’s size, although the statute forbids the court to inform the jury of that limit. In addition, the district court found that $250,000 per defendant in punitive damages was excessive. For these two reasons, the district court reduced the total award of punitive damages to $75,-000 each for Vrdolyak and AIC, thus placing the total award at the maximum amount allowable, $200,000. The district court made AIC and Vrdolyak severally liable for their shares of the punitive damages.
II. Analysis
A. Vrdolyak’s Liability As an Individual
Vrdolyak argues that, as an individual, she cannot be sued under the ADA. Vrdolyak made this same argument to the district court, which rejected it, siding instead with the EEOC’s and Wessel’s opposite interpretation of the statute. However, we join analogous decisions of our sister Circuits in holding that individuals who do not independently meet the ADA’s definition of “employer” cannot be held liable under the ADA. This is a pure question of law; we review the district court’s disposition of it de novo. Pilditch v. Board of Educ.,
The ADA forbids discrimination by any “covered entity,” defined as “an employer, employment agency, labor organization, or joint labor-management committee.” 42 U.S.C. §§ 12112(a); 12111(2). “Employer” is “a person engaged in an industry affecting commerce who has 15 or more employees ... аnd any agent of such person.” 42 U.S.C. § 12111(5)(A).
The ADA’s definition of “employer” mirrors the definitions of “employer” in Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and in the
Numerous district court decisions in this Circuit have addressed the question of individual liability under the ADA, Title VII, and the ADEA.
While no Circuit has directly confronted the question of individual liability under the ADA, five Circuits have explicitly addressed individual liability under Title VII and the ADEA. Four have rejected individual liability. Smith v. Lomax,
The EEOC and Wessel, fighting against the weight of authority, rely primarily on their own “plain language” interpretation of the ADA’s definition of “employer.” They argue that because “employer” is defined to include “a person ... and any agent of such' person,” and Vrdolyak as president of AIC is an agent of AIC, she must be liable. While this reading has some surface appeal, Miller,
That conclusion accords with the rest of the structure of the ADA, Title VII, and the ADEA Those statutes all limit employer liability to employers with either fifteen or twenty, or more, employees. That limitation struck a balance between the goal of stamping out all discrimination and the goal of protecting small entities from the hardship of litigating discrimination claims. See Miller,
The original design of damage awards under the ADA, Title VII, and the ADEA buttresses our conclusion. Until 1991, a successful plaintiff could recover only back pay and equitable relief such as reinstatement. Those types of remedies typically are only obtainable from an employing entity, not from a mere individual. Grant,
The EEOC and Wessel respond that the Civil Rights Act of 1991, 42 U.S.C. § 1981a, negates that conclusion. That Act allowed successful plaintiffs under Title VII and the ADA to obtain compensatory and punitive damages in addition to the already available types of remedies.
However, we conclude the opposite, namely that the Civil Rights Act of 1991 further shows that Congress never intended individual liability. First, at the time it defined “employer” in the ADA, Title VII, and the ADEA, Congress granted only remedies that an employing entity, not an individual, could provide. It is a long stretch to conclude that Congress silently intended to abruptly change its earlier vision through an amendment to the remedial portions of the statute alone.
Second, although it allowed new types of damages, the Civil Rights Act of 1991 limited the amount of monetary recovery under Title VII and the ADA, by placing caps on the total amount of compensatory and punitive damages that could be awarded to any complaining party. Congrеss enacted a sliding scale of caps, increasing the possible award as the number of employees of a liable party increased. The lowest cap is $50,000, “in the case of a respondent who has more than 14 but fewer than 101 employees.” 42 U.S.C. § 1981a(b)(3)(A). Congress enacted no cap for individuals. That omission implies it did not consider individuals liable.
We reject that Chicken Little-esque argument. The employing entity is still liable, and that entity and its managers have the proper incentives to adequately discipline wayward employees, as well as to instruct and train employees to avoid actions that might impose liability. See Miller,
B. Admission of Wessel’s Videotaped Deposition
In November 1992, Wessel made a videotaped deposition, to preserve his testimony in case he died or was otherwise unable to testify. At trial, the district сourt admitted the videotape into evidence, even though Wessel did testify. AIC and Vrdolyak argued after the verdict that the district court erred by admitting the videotape. In their post-trial motions, they relied on Fed. R.Crv.P. 32(a)(3)(E), which provides that the deposition of an available witness may be used as evidence only when “exceptional circumstances” exist. The district court rejected their argument as forfeited because although AIC and Vrdolyak objected at the time of admission, they brought up Rule 32 only after trial, rather than objecting on that ground when the videotape was tendered.
AIC and Vrdolyak make the same Rule 32-based argument to us, although they con
As the district court noted when it denied AIC’s and Vrdolyak’s post-trial motions, the videotape was not useless duplicative testimony. It provided demonstrative evidence of Wessel’s mental and physical condition soon after his firing, such as his ability to communicate with others. Wessel’s condition had deteriorated dramatically by the time he testified, so the tape was evidence that would have allowed the jury to infer that Wessel was still able to adequately perform his job when he was fired, an issue that AIC and Vrdolyak hotly disputed. Furthermore, the district court limited any possible prejudice by restricting the plaintiffs’ direct examination of Wessel at trial, while allowing unlimited cross-examination by AIC and Vrdol-yak. Such precautions restored any skewing of the balance resulting from the videotape’s admission. We see no plain error.
C. Jury Instructions
AIC and Vrdolyak contend that the district court erroneously rejected two jury instructions they proposed. Our review is limited. Maltby v. Winston,
The first rejected instruction invоlved AIC’s “direct threat” defense. AIC and Vrdolyak maintained that Wessel was fired because his allegedly unsafe driving posed a threat to workplace safety. 42 U.S.C. § 12113 provides:
(a) It may be a defense to a charge of discrimination under this Act that an alleged application of qualification standards, tests, or selection criteria that screen out or tend to screen out or otherwise deny a job or benefit to an individual with a disability has been shown to be job-related and consistent with business necessity, and such performance cannot be accomplished by reasonable accommodation, as required under this title.
(b) The term “qualification standards” may include a requirement that an individual shall not pose a direct threat to the health оr safety of other individuals in the workplace.
The ADA defines “direct threat” as “a significant risk to the health or safety of others.” 42 U.S.C. § 12111(3).
Therefore, any defense based on a qualification standard that adversely affects the disabled must be consistent with business necessity. It would seem that a requirement that employees not pose a significant safety threat in the workplace would obviously be consistent with business necessity: a safe workplace is a paradigmatic necessity of operating a business. See Fitzpatrick v. City of Atlanta,
So why the debate about the instruction? The district court gave the jury the following direct threat instruction, slightly different from either instruction originally tendered by the parties:
It is the defendants’ defense that Charles Wessel posed a threat to the health and safety of himself or others in the workplace.
You may find that Charles Wessel posed a direct threat only if the defendants have*1284 proven by a preponderance of the evidence that, more likely than not, Charles Wessel in the performance of an essential function of his job posed a significant or substantial harm to himself or others in the workplace that could not be eliminated or reduced by a reasonable accommodation,
(emphasis added).
The limitation of the defense to “in the performance of an essential function of his job” was added at the EEOC’s insistence during the jury instruction conference. AIC and Vrdolyak objected, because if the jury determined that driving was not an essential function of Wessel’s job, it could not rationally find that Wessel posed a direct threat. The district court, however, after some debate added the contested language. It apparently thought that the only effect of the addition would be to reinforce the principle that any threat had to be significant for the defense to succeed. When denying post-trial motions, the district court further reasoned that AIC’s alternate version of the defense would invite abuse of the ADA. The court thought that it would be “absurd” to allow employers to define jobs to include the performance of non-essential functions and to then permit the employer to fire an employee for being unable to safely perform those nonessential functions.
However, another mechanism of the ADA eliminates the possibility of such abuse. Even for employees who do pose a direct threat, an employer must make reasonable accommodations. 42 U.S.C. § 12113(a). The ADA defines “reasonable accommodation” to include restructuring a job, such as by removing non-essential functions from the job. See 42 U.S.C. § 12111(9)(B); see also 29 C.F.R. § 1630.2(o); see generally Vande Zande v. State of Wisconsin Dept. of Admin.,
To persuade the district court to add the disputed language, the EEOC relied on the interpretive guidelines of the regulations issued pursuant to the ADA “If a test or other selection criterion excludes an individual with a disability because of the disability and does not relate to the essential functions of a job it is not consistent with business necessity.” 29 C.F.R. § 1630, Appendix; see also 29 C.F.R. § 1630.2(r). That language is not directed at the direct threat defense in particular, but rather to any type of qualification standard or selection criterion. It is just a way of re-stating the point the district court missed: that any non-essential part of a job can usually be removed through a reasonable accommodation, such as a change in the job definition or a restructuring of the workplace.
Therefore, the language the district court added was a proper inquiry taken from its proper context. The instruction already required the jury to consider reasonable accommodations. An examination of the essential functions of the job is a necessary subset of the inquiry into reasonable accommodations; another jury instruction already required the jury to consider reasonable accommodations in the light of essential functions.
With this in mind, it is evident that the district court erred in phrasing this jury instruction. The instruction required that the jury consider whеther Wessel posed a danger to workplace safety in the performance of an essential function of his job. That inquiry was superfluous, but instead of being mere surplusage, the context invited the jury to consider as dispositive whether Wessel had to drive to accomplish his job. “Performance,” in the context of the instruction and arguments, clearly implied Wessel’s driving. The inquiry about essential functions should have been confined as a subset of the question of accommodation; it should not have appeared in this instruction at all.
However, we do not think that this relatively minor error prejudiced AIC and Vrdol-yak. First, if the jury did find that driving was an essential function, the net effect of the erroneous language was zero. Given that Wessel drove to and from work and frequently drove to meetings, the jury likely made that determination (although the general verdict form prevents us from knowing for
The second rejected instruction involved a “good faith accommodation” defense. The district court rejected that defense as totally inapplicable, and we agree. AIC and Vrdolyak rely on 42 U.S.C. § 1981a(a)(3), which provides:
In eases where a discriminatory practice involves the provision of a reasonable accommodation pursuant to section 102(b)(5) of the [ADA] [42 U.S.C. § 12112(b)(5) ] ... damages may not be awarded under this section where the covered entity demonstrates good faith efforts ... to identify and make a reasonable accommodatiоn. ...
But Wessel did not base his claim of discrimination on an alleged refusal by AIC to provide a reasonable accommodation under 42 U.S.C. § 12112(b)(5). Instead, Wessel claimed discriminatory firing under § 12112(b)(1).
D. Damages
1. Compensatory Damages
AIC and Vrdolyak argue that although the jury’s finding of ADA liability means that the award of some compensatory damages was appropriate, $50,000 for emotional damages was excessive. The district court upheld the damage award against post-trial challenge. We review the district court’s refusal to grant a new trial on the grounds of excessive damages for an abuse of discretion. Ross v. Black & Decker, Inc.,
When reviewing a compensatory damages award, we make three inquiries: whether the award is “monstrously excessive”; whether there is no rational connection between the award and the evidence, indicating that it is merely a product of the jury’s fevered imaginings or personal vendettas;
The district court found that there was a rational connection between the evidence and the damage award, and we agree. Wessel claimed only emotional damages: basically depression, rage and fear resulting from his sudden firing. As the district court noted, Wessel’s work was a very large part of his life. He took almost no vacations, and his son testified that he sometimes even put his company above his family. Cоupled with that background, the evidence showed that Wessel’s wrongful firing was emotionally wrenching, even though he underwent no formal psychological treatment. He was cut off from one of the major defining aspects of
We have previously upheld numerous similar awards.
2. Punitive Damages
AIC and Vrdolyak maintain that there was insufficient evidence to support an award of punitive damages. However, they have forfeited that argument. AIC and Vrdolyak concede that although after the verdict they filed a motion for judgment as a matter of law under Rule 50(b), arguing that there was insufficiеnt evidence to support any award of punitive damages, they had not earlier moved for judgment as a matter of law at the close of the evidence pursuant to Rule 50(a) (what used to be called a motion for a directed verdict). That failure kills their argument. “It is well established in this Circuit that the sufficiency of the evidence supporting jury submission of a case or the jury’s findings is not reviewable on appeal unless the party seeking review has made a timely motion for a directed verdict in the trial court.” Hudak v. Jepsen,
Refusing to concede that they are barred, AIC and Vrdolyak try to make use of a perceived escape hatch. They point out that in a few instances we have allowed something other than a motion for a directed verdict at thе close of evidence to preserve the objection.
The 1991 amendments to Rule 50 erased the Benson end-run around the Rule. Rule 50 now specifies that only a proper Rule 50(a) motion preserves the issue for later review, and that a proper motion is one that is explicitly a motion for judgment as a matter of law. “Such a motion shall specify the
Finally, AIC and Vrdolyak argue that $150,000 total in punitive damages was excessive. We realize, of course, that the primary responsibility for deciding the apрropriate amounts of such damages rests with the jury, and that the district court has already carefully reviewed the appropriateness of the verdict. We therefore review the district court’s decision not to grant a new trial deferentially, for an abuse of discretion. Cash v. Beltmann North American Co.,
We do not find $150,000 excessive. That award is three times the amount of compensatory damages, and statutes routinely provide for double and treble damages awards to deter and- punish, though we note that here no fixed ratio is necessary or desirable. Furthermore, $150,000 is not out-of-line with awards we have upheld in the past. See Hamed v. General Accident Ins. Co.,
Moreover, AIC is not a small company: it employed over 300 employees. Although AIC did not see fit to introduce extensive evidence of its value, evidence did show that AIC had gross yearly revenues of several million dollars. We think it reasonable to suppose that a sizeable award is both suitable and necessary to punish and deter a corporation of this size. See Cash,
As we have already noted, however, Vrdol-yak cannot be hеld liable for her apportioned $75,000 share of the $150,000 punitive damages award. While the district court made AIC and Vrdolyak severally liable for their shares, it did so under the impression both would pay. Therefore, we remand the punitive damages award to the district court for consideration of whether Vrdolyak’s share of punitive damages should drop out or should instead be imposed on AIC.
E. Attorney’s Fees
After the district court entered judgment, Wessel petitioned for $100,709.70 in attorney’s fees and $7,878.24 in costs. 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-5 provides that in the discretion of the court “the prevailing party, other than the Commission or the United States” may recover “reasonable” attorney’s fees and costs. The attorney’s fees Wessel requested
Wеssel supported his petition with detailed records. AIC and Vrdolyak filed objections to Wessel’s petition, arguing that the amount requested was excessive. Wessel replied to AIC’s objections. On July 27, 1994, the district court awarded Wessel $48,632.98 in fees and the entire requested amount in costs. AIC and Vrdolyak appeal only the determination of attorney’s fees; Wessel cross-appeals.
The district court first determined that the hourly rates charged by Wessel’s attorneys were reasonable. However, the court found that a few specific billings were unreasonable. In addition, the court agreed with AIC that Wessel’s $107,000 fee request was
wholly unreasonable considering the EEOC’s representation of Wessel’s interest in this matter.... [E]ven if the EEOC had not been representing Mr. Wessel I havе a hard time concluding that over $100,000.00 of time was spent in preparing for a case that received such an early trial date and had limited discovery motions. Counsel argues that Mr. Wes-sel’s interests were different from that of the EEOC but I find that they were very much related and a substantial portion of Lindquist & Vennum’s work was in fact duplicative of the EEOC’s_ It is undisputed that Mr. Wessel was represented at trial by three EEOC attorneys. These attorneys handled the bulk of the trial and the preparation of such. Further, while Lindquist & Vennum certainly contributed substantive arguments at trial it was not commensurate with what they are asking. Therefore ... Lindquist & Vennum’s fee award will be reduced by fifty (50) percent after subtraction of the previously disallowed items.
The district court also discussed several specific areas where Lindquist & Vennum duplicated the EEOC’s work.
We review an award of attorney’s fees for an abuse of discretion. Smith v. Great American Restaurants, Inc.,
The district court did not abuse its discretion. “Ours is not a case where the court eyeballed the request and cut it down by an arbitrary percentage because it seemed excessive to the court.... Rather, the district court took evidence and considered the nature of the ease and the details of the request.” Tomazzoli v. Sheedy,
III. Conclusion
We REVERSE the district court as to the issue of Ruth Vrdolyak’s individual liability. Therefore, in accordance with the judgment below, AIC is liable for $22,000 (plus interest) in back pay, $50,000 in compensatory damages, $48,632.98 in attorney’s fees, and $7,878.24 in costs. We REMAND to the district cоurt to determine the proper imposi
Notes
. Interpretation of the ADEA is sometimes different from interpretation of Title VII and the ADA, because the ADEA incorporated some provisions of the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA), which in some instances make it easier for plaintiffs to recover. However, the ADEA does not incorporate the FLSA's definition of "employer”; the ADEA's definition is instead essentially identical to Title VII's. Miller v. Maxwell's Int’l Inc.,
. We use "individual liability” to mean the liability of individuals who do not otherwise meet the statutory definition of employer. For example, no party disputes that a sole proprietor who employs more than fifteen people in his business would be liable as an "employer” under the ADA, even though not liable in his purely individual capacity. We address only personal capacity liability, which is sometimes called "supervisor liability” because that is the most common situation in which the question arises.
. We have previously recognized this issue but we have never been obliged to address it directly. Compare DeLuca,
.Sauers v. Salt Lake County,
. Although the ADA became effective after the Civil Rights Act of 1991 went into effect, the ADA was passed before the Act.
. Faced with this argument, Wessel contends that the logical conclusion instead is that Congress intended no cap at all on individual liability, but rather that individuals be liable for any amount, be that $5 or $5 billion. Granted, that is a possible interpretation, but we think it highly improbable.
. This argument, and its variants, are not uncommon. See, e.g., Jendusa,
. Where the individual owns all or a significant share оf the employing entity, he will be disciplined directly by the financial loss he must absorb, whether or not there is individual liability.
. Wessel and the EEOC argue that sometimes the employer may be bankrupt or otherwise judgment-proof, so individual liability will be the only possible way a plaintiff can recover. While true, that is not enough for us to upset the structure Congress has set up.
. We emphasize that our holding only applies directly to the ADA, though it obviously affects the resolution of the very similar questions under Title VII and the ADEA. See Birkbeck,
. The EEOC also argues that even if individuals cannot be liable under the ADA, Vrdolyak can somehow be liable as AIC's "alter ego." However, this argument is forfeited because it was not raised before the district court. Citizens Ins. Co. v. Barton,
. As alrеady discussed, reasonable accommodations were an issue at the trial, but Wessel’s claim was not that AIC and Vrdolyak were liable for failing to provide reasonable accommodations.
. "Monstrously excessive” is, of course, a rather vague standard for review. We have suggested that perhaps it should be folded into the rationality inquiry. See Abernathy v. Superior Hardwoods, Inc.,
. This is the first damages award under the ADA we have reviewed. However, cases involving termination found wrongful under other civil rights laws are, for this purpose, just as useful as cases involving the ADA would be.
. AIC and Vrdolyak also want us to recognize an exception to our general refusal to review forfeited sufficiency of the evidence arguments, where “plain error” existed or "manifest injustice” would otherwise result. We have severed times mentioned this exception, generally with faint disapproval, but we have never adopted it. See, e.g., Hudak,
. Warlick dealt with a case to which the amended version of Rule 50 was not applicable, so Benson still controlled. See Warlick,
. AIC and Vrdolyak point to Ramsey v. American Air Filter Co.,
. Because we have already determined that Vrdolyak was not properly joined as a defendant, she cannot be liable for fees or costs.
. The case before us is not analogous to Hutchison v. Amateur Electronic Supply, Inc., 42 F.3d 1037, 1048 (7th Cir.1994). In Hutchison, we found an abuse of discretion, but the court made a more cursory examination of the fee request. Furthermore, we found that “more important” than the arbitrary nature of the reduction was the plaintiff’s lack of opportunity to fully present his side of the argument before the district court made the reduction. Here, in contrast, Wessel and AIC extensively briefed all the issues.
