Whitbeck, Beverly A. v. Vital Signs Inc

                        United States Court of Appeals


                     FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA CIRCUIT


           Argued September 24, 1998     Decided November 20, 1998 


                                 No. 97-7206


                            Beverly A. Whitbeck, 

                                  Appellant


                                      v.


                             Vital Signs, Inc., 

                                   Appellee


                Appeal from the United States District Court 

                        for the District of Columbia 

                               (No. 95cv01011)


     Michael G. Kane argued the cause for appellant.  With him 
on the briefs were Vicki G. Golden and David R. Cashdan.

     Pamela J. Moore argued the cause for appellee.  With her 
on the brief was Paul J. Kennedy.

     Before:  Edwards, Chief Judge, Rogers and Tatel, Circuit 
Judges.

             Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge Tatel.




     Tatel, Circuit Judge:  In this appeal from a jury verdict in 
favor of an employer in a disability discrimination suit, we 
once again face the question of whether and to what extent 
the employer may rely on the employee's application for and 
receipt of disability insurance benefits.  Although we held in 
a previous case that the receipt of such benefits does not bar 
the employee's claim as a matter of law, we find that where, 
as in this case, the benefits applications contain information 
relevant to issues at trial, they may be admitted into evi-
dence.

                                      I


     This is not the first time this litigation has come before us.  
See Whitbeck v. Vital Signs, Inc., 116 F.3d 588 (D.C. Cir. 
1997) ("Whitbeck I").  Although we described the factual 
background of this dispute in some detail in our earlier 
opinion, we revisit those facts again as they relate to the 
issues before us here.

     Appellant Beverly Whitbeck began working as a sales 
representative for Vital Signs, Inc., a medical equipment 
manufacturer, in 1992.  Because of her outstanding sales 
performance for another medical equipment company, Vital 
Signs guaranteed Whitbeck a salary of at least $84,000 for 
her first year.  Diagnosed five months later with a severe 
spinal cord tumor, Whitbeck underwent surgery, returning 
home after several weeks of hospitalization and rehabilitation.  
Although unable to move around without a walker or a 
wheelchair, Whitbeck began working from home almost im-
mediately, initiating as much client contact as she could over 
the telephone.  As she grew stronger, she gradually in-
creased her workload.  With the help of a driver she hired 
and paid, Whitbeck started making sales calls again in July 
1993.  She soon outfitted her car with hand controls and a 
wheelchair rack, enabling her to transport herself to her 
customers on her own.  By early 1994, Whitbeck no longer 
needed a wheelchair and was able to make sales calls with the 
aid of a cane.



     In the spring of 1994, Whitbeck began to have difficulty 
walking long distances.  Her neurologist discovered that her 
tumor had regrown.  He informed her that her problems with 
walking were not likely to improve and that she might 
develop total paraplegia.  He recommended that she consider 
purchasing a motorized cart for making sales calls in the field.  
A few days later Whitbeck met with a salesperson from a 
motorized cart manufacturer to explore that possibility.

     On April 28, Whitbeck had a conversation with her supervi-
sor, Sherry Henricks, about the possibility of using a motor-
ized cart at work.  At trial, Whitbeck and Henricks offered 
conflicting versions of what they said to each other during 
that conversation.  According to Henricks, Whitbeck was 
distraught that her tumor had regrown and said that she 
would not use a motorized cart to make sales calls because 
she "couldn't see herself" doing that.  Henricks testified that 
Whitbeck explained that she had decided instead to retire on 
long-term disability.  According to Whitbeck's version of the 
conversation, Henricks flatly refused her request for permis-
sion to use a motorized cart, telling her that "it wasn't ... a 
good idea" because "it wouldn't look right."  Whitbeck testi-
fied that it was Henricks who suggested that she retire on 
long-term disability, and that Henricks even asked her if she 
could begin to advertise the availability of her position imme-
diately.

     Shortly after the April 28 conversation, Whitbeck stopped 
working altogether, and Vital Signs removed her from the 
payroll.  Whitbeck then applied for and began receiving both 
residual and short-term disability benefits from her private 
insurer.  She also applied for long-term disability benefits 
through Vital Signs's carrier, Mutual of Omaha.  Finding her 
ineligible because her condition arose less than a year after 
she began working at Vital Signs, Mutual of Omaha denied 
her claim.  Whitbeck also applied for and began receiving 
Social Security disability benefits.  Vital Signs officially ter-
minated her in November 1994.

     Whitbeck filed suit in the Superior Court for the District of 
Columbia, alleging that Vital Signs had discriminated against 



her because of her disability in violation of the District of 
Columbia Human Rights Act, D.C. Code Ann. ss 1-2501 to 
1-2557 (1992) (amended 1994).  Vital Signs removed the case 
to the United States District Court for the District of Colum-
bia based on diversity of citizenship.  With the parties' con-
sent, the matter was referred to a magistrate judge.  As we 
explained in Whitbeck I, District of Columbia courts deter-
mine the elements of a prima facie case of disability discrimi-
nation under the Human Rights Act based on cases decided 
under analogous federal antidiscrimination laws.  See Whit-
beck I, 116 F.3d at 591.  Thus, Whitbeck's claim required her 
to demonstrate that Vital Signs refused reasonably to accom-
modate her disability, and that she could have performed the 
essential functions of her job had she been so accommodated.  
See Americans with Disabilities Act, 42 U.S.C. ss 12111(8), 
12112 (1994).

     The magistrate judge granted summary judgment for Vital 
Signs, holding that Whitbeck's receipt of disability insurance 
benefits precluded her as a matter of law from demonstrating 
that she could have performed the functions of her job with 
accommodation.  See Whitbeck v. Vital Signs, Inc., 934 
F. Supp. 9, 14-15 (D.D.C. 1996).  We reversed, holding that 
because the insurance carriers made no inquiry into whether 
Whitbeck could have performed her job with reasonable 
accommodation, her application for and receipt of disability 
benefits did not bar her discrimination claim.  See Whitbeck 
I, 116 F.3d at 591-92.  Following a three-day trial on remand, 
the jury returned a verdict for Vital Signs.

     Whitbeck appeals, asserting various evidentiary errors.  
We review a trial court's evidentiary rulings for abuse of 
discretion.  See United States v. Smart, 98 F.3d 1379, 1386 
(D.C. Cir. 1996).  Even if we find error, we will not reverse 
an otherwise valid judgment unless appellant demonstrates 
that such error affected her "substantial rights."  Fed. R. Civ. 
P. 61;  Herbert v. Nat'l Academy of Sciences, 974 F.2d 192, 
200 (D.C. Cir. 1992).

                                      II


     Relying on Whitbeck I and its companion case, Swanks v. 
WMATA, 116 F.3d 582 (D.C. Cir. 1997), Whitbeck first 

challenges the magistrate judge's admission into evidence of 
her applications for disability insurance benefits.  In Whit-
beck I, we held that because the insurers' disability determi-
nations did not take into account whether she could perform 
the essential functions of her job with reasonable accommo-
dation--the critical issue in a disability discrimination suit--
the mere fact that Whitbeck had applied for and received 
private disability insurance benefits did not bar her subse-
quent disability discrimination claim as a matter of law.  See 
Whitbeck I, 116 F.3d at 591-92.  We reached the same 
conclusion in Swanks with respect to the receipt of Social 
Security disability benefits.  See Swanks, 116 F.3d at 584-87.  
Whitbeck argues that under the logic of these opinions her 
benefits applications had no relevance to her case because 
they made it no more likely that she would have been unable 
to do her job if Vital Signs had accommodated her.

     We agree with Whitbeck that the simple fact that she 
applied for and received disability insurance benefits is not at 
all probative, as a matter of fact, of whether she can perform 
her job with accommodation.  Although the fact that she 
applied for and received benefits obviously relates to whether 
she has a disability--a fact never contested by plaintiffs in 
disability discrimination cases--it has nothing to do with the 
question of reasonable accommodation.  Reasonable accom-
modation assumes the presence of a disability and turns on 
matters such as job restructuring, modification of work sched-
ules, and acquisition of assistive devices.  See 42 U.S.C. 
s 12111(9).  Accordingly, Vital Signs could not have used the 
mere fact that Whitbeck had applied for benefits to establish 
that she was so disabled that she could not perform her job 
even with reasonable accommodation.

     Whitbeck's argument, however, fails to distinguish between 
the act of applying for benefits and the information con-
tained in the applications.  As we stated in Swanks, an 
application for disability benefits would certainly be relevant 
if the claimant represented in it that she could not do her job 
even with accommodation.  Swanks, 116 F.3d at 587.  In this 
case, for example, the neurologist's statement to Mutual of 
Omaha, in which he answered "no" to the question whether 



Whitbeck's job could be "modified to allow for handling with 
impairment," was clearly relevant to her claim that she could 
perform her job with accommodation.

     Whitbeck's argument also disregards the relevance of her 
application for long-term disability benefits to Vital Signs's 
alternative theory of defense.  In addition to arguing that 
Whitbeck could not perform the essential functions of her job, 
Vital Signs contended, relying on Henricks's version of the 
April 28 conversation, that Whitbeck never even requested an 
accommodation and chose instead to try to retire on long-
term disability.  Toward that end, Vital Signs sought to prove 
that Whitbeck believed that she was eligible to receive about 
$45,000 per year in long-term benefits from Vital Signs's 
insurance carrier.  Vital Signs argued that because these 
benefits were to be calculated as a function of Whitbeck's 
earnings over the previous twelve months, and because that 
number was decreasing steadily--she no longer received a 
guaranteed salary and her disability made it difficult for her 
to earn commissions--Whitbeck decided to retire immediately 
rather than watch the amount of her benefits entitlement 
wither away while she struggled to restore her earnings to 
their former level.  According to Vital Signs, when Whitbeck 
later learned that she had been denied long-term disability 
benefits, she fabricated her story that Henricks had refused 
her request for permission to use a motorized cart.  Viewed 
in light of this theory, Whitbeck's benefits applications cer-
tainly contained relevant information.  They revealed, for 
example, that Whitbeck had been unable to work full time 
since July 1993, that her lack of "stamina" and "endurance" 
prevented her from spending a full day making sales calls, 
and that she did not know when she could resume working 
full time.  All of this information was probative of whether 
Whitbeck had a financial incentive to retire of her own 
volition, and thus whether she had actually asked Henricks 
for an accommodation.

     Indeed, given Vital Signs's argument that Whitbeck never 
asked for an accommodation, neither Whitbeck I nor Swanks 
prohibited Vital Signs from introducing even her act of apply-
ing for disability benefits.  After all, in order to prove its 



theory that the unexpected denial of long-term disability 
benefits precipitated her alleged lie about the conversation 
with Henricks, Vital Signs needed to demonstrate that Whit-
beck had actually applied for such benefits.

     Whitbeck argues that even if the applications were rele-
vant, the magistrate judge still should have excluded them as 
unduly prejudicial.  See Fed. R. Evid. 403.  This argument, 
however, rests on the assumption that Vital Signs offered the 
applications only to show that she was unable to do her job.  
But because Vital Signs also offered the applications to 
establish that Whitbeck never actually requested an accom-
modation, and because Whitbeck failed to demonstrate that 
any unfair prejudice that might have flowed from their admis-
sion substantially outweighed their relevance for that addi-
tional purpose, the magistrate judge did not abuse his discre-
tion in admitting the applications.

     As Whitbeck points out, admitting the applications without 
an explanatory instruction ran the risk that the jury would 
make the same mistake that the magistrate judge originally 
made on summary judgment:  The jury might conclude from 
the mere fact that she had applied for and received benefits 
that she could not perform the functions of her job even if 
reasonably accommodated.  An instruction might have ex-
plained to the jury the difference between obtaining disability 
benefits and prevailing in a disability suit, emphasizing that 
both can be pursued simultaneously because the former takes 
no account of the possibility of accommodation.  An instruc-
tion also might have explained that both the act of applying 
and the information revealed in the application forms could be 
relevant to issues other than the possibility of accommoda-
tion.

     Whitbeck, however, did not request such a limiting instruc-
tion at the time that Vital Signs introduced her benefits 
applications.  Instead, she proposed the following instruction 
at the end of the trial, which the magistrate judge rejected:

     I specifically instruct you that the application for and the 
     receipt by Ms. Whitbeck of disability benefits is not at all 


     inconsistent with her claim that she could perform her 
     job with a motorized scooter.

Whitbeck evidently based this instruction on our statement in 
Whitbeck I that "Whitbeck's receipt of disability benefits is 
thus not at all inconsistent with her claim that she could 
perform her job with reasonable accommodation."  Whitbeck 
I, 116 F.3d at 591 (citing Swanks, 116 F.3d at 586).  But that 
statement spoke only to the act of receiving benefits.  As we 
explained earlier, the simple fact that Whitbeck applied for 
and received benefits is not at all probative of whether she 
could perform her job with accommodation, see supra at 5, 
the only question at issue on summary judgment in Whitbeck 
I.  Here, Whitbeck's proposed instruction added the words 
"the application for" to our language from Whitbeck I, thus 
introducing ambiguity as to whether the instruction referred 
just to the act of applying for benefits or also to information 
contained in the applications.  The jury could have interpret-
ed the proposed instruction to mean that in determining 
whether Whitbeck could have done her job with accommoda-
tion, it could not consider evidence contained in the applica-
tions such as her neurologist's statement that her job could 
not be modified to accommodate her disability.  The proposed 
instruction might also have led the jury to believe that it 
could not consider the applications and information they 
contained for other purposes, such as determining whether 
the denial of long-term benefits might have motivated Whit-
beck to lie about her conversation with Henricks.  Because 
the magistrate judge was under no obligation to give a 
misleading instruction, see Joy v. Bell Helicopter Textron, 
Inc., 999 F.2d 549, 557 (D.C. Cir. 1993), he did not err in 
rejecting Whitbeck's.  Moreover, even assuming that the 
potential for prejudice gave the magistrate judge some obli-
gation to rectify the flaws in her proposed instruction, the 
failure to do so in this case was harmless because Vital Signs 
never suggested at trial that the mere fact that Whiteck 
applied for benefits was inconsistent with her discrimination 
claim.



                                     III


     Whitbeck next argues that the magistrate judge erred in 
refusing to allow her to testify about why she never com-
plained to Henricks's supervisor after Henricks allegedly 
denied her request to use a motorized cart.  Whitbeck sought 
to explain to the jury that she had not gone to Henricks's 
supervisor because she feared his reaction.  To bolster this 
explanation, she wished to testify that Henricks had previous-
ly told her that Henricks's supervisor had targeted Whit-
beck's sales territory for elimination.  The magistrate judge 
refused to allow Whitbeck to recount Henricks's out-of-court 
statement, ruling that the testimony was hearsay.  Whitbeck 
now urges (as she did to the magistrate judge) that she 
offered Henricks's statement not for its truth, but only to 
demonstrate her state of mind.

     We have no doubt that the magistrate judge erred in 
excluding this testimony.  At trial, Vital Signs elicited testi-
mony from numerous witnesses that Whitbeck was extraordi-
narily headstrong--not "the type of person to take no for an 
answer and just walk away if she wanted something."  Tr. 
10/28/97 at 107.  Vital Signs's theory, as it eventually ex-
plained to the jury in closing, was that Whitbeck's failure to 
complain to anybody else at Vital Signs after Henricks sup-
posedly denied her request for an accommodation made that 
story unbelievable;  someone "with Beverly Whitbeck's get-
up-and-go and desire and ambition and motivation," Vital 
Signs told the jury, "would [not] have walked away and 
[would have] gone to someone else."  Tr. 10/29/97 at 83.  It 
was therefore understandable that during her redirect exami-
nation, by which time Vital Signs had already introduced 
testimony about her assertiveness, Whitbeck tried to explain 
her failure to appeal Henricks's alleged decision by establish-
ing that she thought talking to Henricks's supervisor would 
do more harm than good.  Because Henricks's statement 
regarding her supervisor's intentions with respect to Whit-
beck's sales territory would have explained Whitbeck's state 
of mind when she decided against going to him, the statement 
was relevant for this non-hearsay purpose.  See United States 
v. Baird, 29 F.3d 647, 653 (D.C. Cir. 1994).  Indeed, that 



Whitbeck had not offered Henricks's statement for its truth is 
clear from the fact that the underlying question of the 
supervisor's intentions regarding Whitbeck's territory was 
entirely irrelevant to her case.  Whitbeck's lawyer more than 
adequately conveyed the purpose of the proffered testimony 
at a bench conference:  "[I]t's not hearsay in that we're not 
admitting it for the truth....  It has to do with what her 
state of mind was and why she was not assertive in going to 
[Henricks's supervisor]."  Tr. 10/28/97 at 85-86.

     The magistrate judge's error, however, was harmless be-
cause the rebuttal evidence Whitbeck sought to introduce was 
only minimally probative of why she kept quiet.  For one 
thing, Henricks's statement suggesting that her supervisor 
had considered eliminating Whitbeck's territory occurred 
months before the April 28 conversation in which Henricks 
allegedly forbad Whitbeck from using a motorized cart;  as 
such, it amounted to relatively weak state-of-mind evidence.  
Moreover, nothing in Whitbeck's proffered testimony would 
have explained why she failed to tell anyone else at Vital 
Signs--such as colleagues, human resources officers, or man-
agement other than Henricks's supervisor--that Henricks 
had denied her request for an accommodation.  Indeed, in a 
subsequent letter to the CEO of Vital Signs proposing to 
return to work on a part-time basis, Whitbeck never even 
hinted that Henricks had refused to accommodate her disabil-
ity.  Given the evidence of these other omissions, we cannot 
say that the magistrate judge's erroneous exclusion of Hen-
ricks's statement affected Whitbeck's "substantial rights."  
Fed. R. Civ. P. 61.

                                      IV


     We turn finally to Whitbeck's contention that the 
magistrate judge erred in refusing to allow two of her 
witnesses--her neighbor and sister-in-law--to testify about 
statements that she allegedly made to them regarding the 
disputed conversation with Henricks.  According to the mag-
istrate judge, the proffered testimony was hearsay.  Whit-
beck argues (as she did to the magistrate judge) that her 



statements to her neighbor and sister-in-law describing her 
conversation with Henricks qualified as non-hearsay under 
the "prior consistent statement" provision of Federal Rule of 
Evidence 801(d)(1)(B).  Rule 801(d)(1)(B) provides that out-
of-court statements are not hearsay if they are "consistent 
with the declarant's testimony and ... offered to rebut an 
express or implied charge against the declarant of recent 
fabrication."  Because such statements are only admissible to 
rebut a specific allegation of motive for fabrication--not to 
bolster the declarant's general credibility--the statements 
must have occurred before the alleged motive originated.  See 
Tome v. United States, 513 U.S. 150, 156-160 (1995).

     We think that the proffered testimony satisfied the require-
ments of Rule 801(d)(1)(B).  Because Vital Signs directly 
challenged Whitbeck's credibility by introducing evidence 
from which the jury could infer that she fabricated her 
account of the conversation with Henricks, Whitbeck sought 
to rehabilitate herself by introducing evidence that shortly 
after the conversation she told her neighbor and her sister-in-
law what Henricks had said.  These statements were admissi-
ble because she made them months before learning that she 
would not receive long-term disability benefits, the event that 
Vital Signs claimed furnished her motive to lie.

     Once again, the magistrate judge's error was harmless.  
Given the substantial rehabilitative testimony that Whitbeck 
actually elicited from these and other witnesses, the marginal 
value of the excluded statements would have been slight.  
The neighbor testified that Whitbeck seemed "upset" and 
"physically shaken" by her conversation with Henricks, and 
that Whitbeck was "confused" and "wasn't sure exactly what 
to do because of what [Henricks] had said to her."  Tr. 
10/28/97 at 103-04.  The sister-in-law testified that after the 
conversation Whitbeck appeared "depressed" and that "her 
personality totally changed."  Id. at 112.  She also testified 
that Whitbeck had "[d]efinitely not" told her that she wanted 
to retire from Vital Signs on long-term disability.  Id. at 113.  
And the motorized cart salesman testified that Whitbeck told 
him that she could not buy a cart from him because "they 
didn't go for the idea of using the [cart] to get to work."  Tr. 



10/27/97 at 19.  Because Whitbeck could have relied on all of 
this testimony to rebut Vital Signs's allegation that she lied 
about what Henricks said to her, the magistrate judge's error 
was harmless.

                                      V


     The verdict in favor of Vital Signs is affirmed.

                                                                           So ordered.