WILLIAM ESHLEMAN, Appellant v. PATRICK INDUSTRIES, INC.
No. 19-1403
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT
May 29, 2020
PRECEDENTIAL. On Appeal from the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania (D.C. No. 5-17-cv-004427). District Judge: Hon. Jeffrey L. Schmehl. Argued September 26, 2019.
Before: SMITH, Chief Judge, MCKEE, and PHIPPS Circuit Judges
PRECEDENTIAL
UNITED STATES COURT
FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT
No. 19-1403
WILLIAM ESHLEMAN,
Appellant
v.
PATRICK INDUSTRIES, INC.
On Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania
(D.C. No. 5-17-cv-004427)
District Judge: Hon. Jeffrey L. Schmehl
Argued September 26, 2019
(Opinion filed: May 29, 2020)
Samuel A. Dion [Argued]
Dion & Goldberger
1845 Walnut Street
Suite 1199
Philadelphia, PA 19103
Counsel for Appellant
Kenneth D. Kleinman
Stevens & Lee
1818 Market Street
29th Floor
Philadelphia, PA 19103
Theresa M. Zechman [Argued]
Stevens & Lee
51 South Duke Street
P.O. Box 1594
Lancaster, PA 17602
Counsel for Appellee
OPINION OF THE COURT
McKEE, Circuit Judge
William Eshleman appeals the District Court‘s grant of Patrick Industries’
I. BACKGROUND
A. Facts
According to the First Amended Complaint,2 Eshleman started working as a truck driver for Patrick Industries in July 2013.3 Between October 14, 2015 and December 14, 2015, Eshleman took medical leave to undergo surgery to remove a nodule from his left lung.4 He told his supervisor that the nodule had to be removed and tested for cancer.5 After two months of medical leave, Eshleman returned to work in his full capacity, without restrictions.6 However, about six weeks later, Eshleman suffered a severe respiratory infection lasting from January 27, 2016 until January 31, 2016.7 His supervisor approved two vacation days during this time.8 With his physician‘s approval, Eshleman returned to work in his full capacity on February 1, 2016.9 At the end of his shift on his second day back, Patrick Industries fired him.10
The Superintendent where Eshleman worked told Eshleman he was terminated due to “performance issues.”11 However, Eshleman reminded the Superintendent that his performance review from early January 2016 had been excellent, with all 4.5‘s and one five out of a possible five in each category evaluated.12 Thereafter, the Superintendent claimed that Eshleman was fired because he had not called out sick during his recent leave for the upper respiratory infection.13 Later, Eshleman learned that the reason for his termination
As we noted at the outset, Eshleman sued Patrick Industries alleging that the real reason for his termination was that he was regarded as disabled in violation of the ADA and that the shifting reasons for his termination were merely a pretext for illegal disability discrimination.15 According to Eshleman, Patrick Industries fired him because they “perceived that [Eshleman] suffered from [a] long-term or chronic medical condition which would affect his attendance in the future, like it had in the immediate past, due to what they perceived as continuing medical issues.”16 He claims that Patrick Industries, based solely on his recent record of medical issues and the resulting nine-and-a-half weeks of work that he missed in a fifteen week period because of his lung biopsy and respiratory infection, concluded that he “was unreliable, a liability, and unable to perform a wide range of jobs.”17
B. The ADA
The Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 prohibits covered entities from discriminating against qualified employees based on their disabilities.18 To state a claim under the ADA, a plaintiff must demonstrate: “(1) [s/]he is a disabled person within the meaning of the ADA; (2) [s/]he is otherwise qualified to perform the essential functions of the job, with or without reasonable accommodations by the employer; and (3) [s/]he has suffered an otherwise adverse employment decision as a result of discrimination.”19 For the purposes of the ADA, plaintiffs are disabled if they: (1) have “a physical or mental impairment that substantially limits one or more” of their “major life activities“; (2) have “a record of such an impairment“; or (3) are “regarded as having such an impairment.”20
Eshleman claims that Patrick Industries fired him because the company regarded him as disabled in violation of
However, the ADA limits “regarded as” claims by excluding “impairments that are transitory and minor.”24 Accordingly, if the perceived disability is “transitory and minor,” a plaintiff cannot state a “regarded as” discrimination claim.25 The ADA defines “transitory” as “an impairment with an actual or expected duration of 6 months or less,” but does not define “minor.”26 The District Court concluded that the face of Eshleman‘s complaint fell within this exception and therefore dismissed his suit under
The District Court relied on “the temporal proximity between Mr. Eshleman‘s medical absences and his termination...to support an inference that Patrick Industries regarded [him] as disabled” and concluded that Eshleman sufficiently pled a “regarded as” claim under the ADA.27 Nevertheless, the court dismissed the complaint with leave to amend for failure to state a claim because the court held that the “[c]omplaint lacks any proof that his surgery and severe upper respiratory infection were anything but transitory and minor.”28
The Amended Complaint included additional information about the nature and purpose of Eshleman‘s medical leave but did not negate the transitory and minor exception. Accordingly, the District Court granted Patrick Industries’ motion to dismiss the First Amended Complaint.29 In doing so, it reiterated that Eshleman had pled a plausible “regarded as” claim. However, relying upon our decision in Budhun v. Reading Hospital and Medical Center,30 the District Court held that Eshleman‘s alleged impairment was objectively transitory and minor because “the actual or expected duration...lasted less than six months.”31 This appeal followed.32
II. DISCUSSION
Eshleman argues that the District Court committed two errors in dismissing his complaint. He alleges that the District Court failed to consider whether his actual impairment—lung surgery to remove a nodule and test it for cancer—was non-minor.33
A. Pleading Standard
At the motion to dismiss stage, before the plaintiff has had the benefit of discovery, all that is required is “a short and plain statement of the claim showing the pleader is entitled to relief.”35 However, the complaint “must contain sufficient factual matter, accepted as true, to ‘state a claim to relief that is plausible on its face.‘”36 A claim is plausible when the facts alleged “allow[] the court to draw the reasonable inference that the defendant is liable for the misconduct alleged.”37
As noted earlier, the District Court held that Eshleman pled sufficient facts to state a “regarded as” claim under the ADA. That determination is not challenged on appeal; therefore, we address only whether Eshleman‘s complaint sufficiently alleges a regarded-as impairment that is not transitory and minor.
B. Transitory and Minor
While Eshleman concedes that his actual impairments—surgery to remove a nodule from his lung and a severe upper respiratory infection—were transitory because they lasted less than six months, he argues that the District Court was nonetheless required to separately evaluate whether his impairment was “minor.” We agree.
In carving out “transitory and minor” impairments from “regarded as” claims, the ADA specifically defines “transitory” as “an impairment with an actual or expected duration of 6 months or less.”38 The ADA does not, however, apply this definition to minor. While the statute is silent on the meaning of “minor,” the ADA regulations clearly state that an employer must establish that the perceived impairment is objectively both transitory and minor.39
The regulations, like the statute, define “transitory” as “lasting or expected to last six months or less” but similarly do not extend this definition to “minor.”41 In addition, the regulations refer to the time limitation as “[t]he six-month ‘transitory’ part of the ‘transitory and minor’ exception,”
The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission‘s interpretive guidance provides further justification for treating transitory and minor as separate and distinct components of the “transitory and minor” exception.43 The EEOC once again states that the “transitory and minor” exception requires a showing that the impairment is both transitory and minor, and clarifies that the six-month time limit applies only to the “transitory” prong of the exception.44 Furthermore, the EEOC provides the following illustration distinguishing between transitory and minor impairments:
For example, an individual who is denied a promotion because he has a minor back injury would be “regarded as” an individual with a disability if the back impairment lasted or was expected to last more than six months. Although minor, the impairment is not transitory.45
According to the EEOC, the minor back injury lasting longer than six months is not “transitory and minor” because it meets only the “minor” prong of the exception but is not transitory. The converse must also be true; an impairment that is transitory because it lasts less than six months but is objectively non-minor must also fall outside the “transitory and minor” exception.
Finally, excluding only impairments that are both transitory and minor is consistent with Congress’ intent to expand ADA coverage through the ADA Amendments Act of 2008.46 As the House Judiciary Committee Report on the ADAAA explains, when including “regarded as” claims under the ADA “Congress did not expect or intend that this would be a difficult standard to meet.”47 The Report further explains that the “transitory and minor” exception was intended to weed out only “claims at the lowest end of the spectrum of severity,” such as “common ailments like the cold or flu,” and that the exception “should be construed narrowly.”48 Treating transitory and minor as separate and distinct elements is therefore consistent with the intent to afford broad coverage under the “regarded as” provision.
The District Court relied heavily on our decision in Budhun to justify dismissing Eshleman‘s claim. However, the District Court‘s analysis improperly conflated “transitory” and “minor” by mechanically applying the six-month limitation for “transitory” claims to the definition of “minor.”49
Budhun alleged, and her employer perceived, “a broken bone in her hand and nothing more,” and Budhun conceded the lost use of her fingers was only temporary.54 Thus, the temporary nature of a broken pinky finger served as a proxy for the lack of severity. Although our discussion in Budhun could be read as suggesting any impairment with an “actual or expected duration of six months or less” is necessarily “transitory and minor,” the discussion must be viewed in the context of Budhun‘s objectively non-serious pinky injury, as well as the allegedly short recovery time. Accordingly, Budhun should not be interpreted as imposing a rigid six-month-or-more requirement on establishing “regarded as” claims.
Consequently, the District Court erred by not considering whether Eshelman‘s impairment was objectively minor separately from whether it was transitory. The term “minor” is not defined in statute, and instead of formulating a broad definition of that term, courts have approached the issue on a case-by-case basis. Here, the District Court should have considered such factors as the symptoms and severity of the impairment, the type of treatment required, the risk involved, and whether any kind of surgical intervention is anticipated or necessary—as well as the nature and scope of any post-operative care. A broken pinky finger, treated with a splint, is hardly comparable to surgically removing a lung nodule. The latter involves surgery on a vital organ (which is, by definition, an invasive procedure) and all the risks and post-operative care this inevitably entails. And that is true even if the impairment has an anticipated recovery time of two months and is therefore “transitory.” Because even minimally invasive lung surgery is still thoracic surgery, more than likely requiring inpatient care, it is plausible that Eshleman‘s lung surgery was non-minor.
Moreover, Eshleman‘s case is further distinguishable from Budhun, because there it was “abundantly clear that [the employer] considered Budhun to have a broken bone in her hand and nothing more.”55 In contrast, Eshleman alleges that Patrick Industries perceived his recent
Patrick Industries points to several instances where district courts have found that impairments allegedly similar to Eshleman‘s lung surgery were “transitory and minor,” none of which we find persuasive.61 Not only are these unreported and mainly out-of-Circuit cases not binding on this Court, they also largely fail to make distinct findings about whether the impairments are both “transitory” and “minor.”62
Here, especially at the pleading stage, Eshleman‘s allegations, which are premised not only on the lung surgery but also on a close-in-time subsequent ailment affecting the same system of the body, plausibly plead a non-minor perceived impairment.
III. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we will reverse District Court‘s judgment dismissing Eshleman‘s regarded as claim under the ADA and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
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