Case: 15-50779 Document: 00513682234 Page: 1 Date Filed: 09/16/2016
IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT
United States Court of Appeals
Fifth Circuit
No. 15-50779 FILED
September 16, 2016
Lyle W. Cayce
DERRICK DILLARD, Clerk
Plaintiff - Appellant
v.
CITY OF AUSTIN, TEXAS,
Defendant - Appellee
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Western District of Texas
Before SOUTHWICK and COSTA, Circuit Judges, and OZERDEN ∗, District
Judge.
GREGG COSTA, Circuit Judge:
Derrick Dillard appeals the grant of summary judgment disposing of his
disability discrimination claims against his former employer, the City of
Austin. After a car accident left Dillard with lingering injuries that prevented
him from performing his former tasks as a manual laborer and field supervisor,
the City offered, and Dillard accepted, a new job as an administrative
assistant. As a result of performance and behavior in the administrative
position, the City eventually terminated Dillard. The questions on appeal are
∗
District Judge of the Southern District of Mississippi, sitting by designation
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No. 15-50779
whether the new position was a reasonable accommodation and whether the
City discriminated against Dillard when it terminated him. We conclude that
summary judgment in favor of the City was proper.
I
Dillard worked as a Street and Drainage Maintenance Senior for the
City. This was a blended position that included coordinating a work crew,
operating machinery, and performing manual labor such as constructing guard
rails. In March 2011, Dillard injured his back and shoulder in an on-the-job
car accident. His injuries rendered him unable to perform his previous position
and initially made him unable to work in any job. In late April 2011, the City
gave him time off in accord with the Family Medical Leave Act (FMLA).
When his FMLA leave expired in July 2011, the City placed Dillard in
its Return to Work Program, which helps injured employees find limited duty
work or placement in an alternate position for which the employee meets
minimum qualifications and can perform the job’s essential functions.
Typically, the program provides a maximum 180 days of assistance in a year;
90 days in which his department tries to find an internal position, and 90 days
in the “Citywide Alternate Placement Process,” during which time the
employee is considered for reassignment in other departments. Dillard exited
the Return to Work Program in January 2012. The City was unable to place
Dillard, as he remained on “no duty” status during the entire period he was
enrolled in the program. Although Dillard exhausted both FMLA leave and
his time limit in the Return to Work Program, the City allowed him to remain
on leave.
After exiting the Return to Work Program, Dillard was referred back to
his original department, Public Works. Between late January and late April
2012, Dillard was released by his doctors to perform “limited duty” or
“administrative duty” work. The City looked for positions within Public Works
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that Dillard could perform given the limitations imposed by his doctors. It
offered Dillard a temporary position as an administrative assistant. Dillard
testified that he was “stunned a little bit, because [he] didn’t know how to do
no administrative work.” Despite expressing reservations about whether he
could do the job, he accepted it. Dillard worked in this position from May
through October 2012.
Dillard did not meet the listed minimum qualification for an
administrative assistant position with the City, as he did not have the
minimum three years clerical or secretarial experience. In light of his lack of
experience, Dillard was given on-the-job typing and computer training, and
shadowed another administrative assistant. Dillard’s supervisor, Valerie
Dickens, testified that she repeatedly told Dillard to complete more training,
and showed him how to sign up for the City’s training programs, but he did not
do so. His computer and typing skills did not improve. Instead of working or
training, he was found playing computer games and surfing the internet,
sleeping, making personal calls, and applying for other positions within the
City. Dickens also testified that Dillard repeatedly missed work without
proper notice, came late and left early, and lied about his time. The City
produced evidence that Dillard attended work only 74% of the time over a 21-
week period. As a result of his performance and behavior issues, Dickens gave
Dillard an “unsatisfactory” year-end evaluation in September 2012. Dillard
does not dispute these assertions about his performance.
Dillard did testify, however, that he was given almost no work to do, and
that he could not finish the one assignment he was given in a timely manner
because of his lack of typing skills. Dillard told Dickens that he was unhappy
in the position and asked human resources to give him a different position.
Dickens also asked that he be removed because he did not have needed skills
and was “demonstrating no initiative, no desire to learn,” but she was told to
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keep trying and to document his deficiencies. Dillard also notes that during
the time he was working in the administrative position, his doctors provided
further releases and a functionality analysis—all of which expanded the list of
activities he was cleared to perform, including some lifting and other physical
activity.
Following his unsatisfactory review, Dillard was given a pretermination
meeting. The Public Works Department Director noted that during this
meeting, “Dillard was unapologetic for his inappropriate behavior and
admitted that Dickens’ comments about his performance were accurate.” He
reported that the City nonetheless looked for other options and
accommodations after the meeting, but was unable to find one. 1 The City fired
Dillard on October 26, 2012. His termination letter notes:
Though you were provided with both on-the-job and computer
training during the temporary assignment as an Administrative
Assistant, you were unsuccessful performing the duties in the
administrative role. . . . As you are currently at “no duty status”
and are unable to return to your position as a Street & Drainage
Maintenance Senior, and the placement opportunity was
unsuccessful, the Department has made the difficult decision to
separate you from employment with the City of Austin . . . .
Dillard brought suit in federal court claiming denial of reasonable
accommodation and discrimination based on disability in violation of the
Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) and the Texas Commission on Human
1 Dillard asserts that the City’s search was inappropriately restricted to the Public
Works Department and that he should have been considered for vacancies across all
departments once it became clear that he was not performing well as an administrative
assistant. The Director’s testimony does not specify the scope of the City’s search, but, in its
brief, the City acknowledged that it looked only within Public Works. We need express no
opinion on whether this restriction was consistent with the City’s obligation to accommodate
Dillard. Our analysis locates the breakdown of the interactive process at the point when
Dillard failed to make a good faith effort in the administrative position—a stage prior to when
the City purportedly should have continued the interactive process by considering him for
other jobs.
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Rights Act. The City moved for summary judgment, which the court granted
on both claims.
II
We review a summary judgment ruling de novo. Davis v. Fort Bend Cty.,
765 F.3d 480, 484 (5th Cir. 2014). We interpret all facts and draw all
reasonable inferences in favor of the nonmovant. Ion v. Chevron USA, Inc.,
731 F.3d 379, 389 (5th Cir. 2013). Summary judgment is appropriate only
when the record reveals “no genuine dispute as to any material fact and the
movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” FED.R.CIV.P. 56(a).
As Texas courts interpret their state’s disability legislation so as to
mirror the federal statute, our analysis of Dillard’s ADA claims will determine
the disposition of his state claims as well. See Rodriguez v. ConAgra Grocery
Prods. Co., 436 F.3d 468, 473–74 (5th Cir. 2006) (citing NME Hosps., Inc. v.
Rennels, 994 S.W.2d 142, 144 (Tex. 1999)).
Dillard alleges both that he was discharged because of his disability and
that the City failed to take reasonable measures to accommodate him. The
parties do not contest two of the elements these claims require: whether
Dillard was disabled within the meaning of the Act or whether the City was
aware of his disability and need for accommodation. See Feist v. La., Dep’t of
Justice, Office of the Att’y. Gen., 730 F.3d 450, 452 (5th Cir. 2013) (reviewing
these other elements).
A
We address first Dillard’s claim that the City terminated him based on
his disability. The City maintains that it fired Dillard because of his record of
misconduct and failure to perform his duties while working as an
administrative assistant. The evidence consistently supports the City’s
assertions that Dillard was frequently absent or late, that he lied about his
attendance, and that he used work time to play games or tend to personal
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business. In addition to this evidence of misconduct, it is uncontroverted that
Dillard failed to take advantage of training opportunities available to him,
failed to perform the duties of his assigned position, and in the words of his
supervisor, he “demonstrat[ed] no initiative, no desire to learn” in his new role.
As with other federal statutes proscribing workplace discrimination, the
ADA places the initial burden on a plaintiff trying to prove a violation through
circumstantial evidence to offer evidence that his termination was motivated
by an unlawful factor. EEOC v. LHC Grp., Inc., 773 F.3d 688, 694 (5th Cir.
2014). Once the defendant articulates a nondiscriminatory reason for its
decision, as the City has done here, the onus returns to the plaintiff, who must
then bear the ultimate burden of proving that his dismissal was motivated by
his disability. Id. at 702. Significantly, Dillard offered no evidence that the
City’s reliance on his history of misconduct and poor performance was
pretextual or blended with discriminatory motives. See id. (approving either
form of proof). As such, the district court correctly held that Dillard failed to
raise an issue of material fact as to whether the City terminated him because
of his disability. See id. at 701–02 (“Terminating an employee whose
performance is unsatisfactory according to management’s business judgment
is legitimate and nondiscriminatory as a matter of law.”).
B.
Apart from any claim that an adverse employment action was motivated
by the employee’s disability, an employer’s failure to reasonably accommodate
a disabled employee may constitute a distinct violation of the Act. Id. at 703
n.6. This comes from the ADA’s definition of discrimination, which includes
“not making reasonable accommodations to the known physical or mental
limitations of an otherwise qualified individual with a disability who is an
applicant or employee . . . .” 42 U.S.C. § 12112(b)(5)(A).
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When it entered summary judgment on this reasonable accommodation
claim, the trial court reasoned that the City could have fired Dillard once he
exhausted his leave under federal law and city policy in January of 2012—a
time when he had not been medically cleared for work of any kind. See Reed
v. Petroleum Helicopters, Inc., 218 F.3d 477, 481 (5th Cir. 2000) (holding that
an employer need not accommodate with indefinite leave an employee who is
unable to return to work in any role). The district court concluded that the
City’s obligation to reasonably accommodate Dillard ceased at that time.
We disagree. 2 Regardless of whether it could have discharged Dillard
when his leave ran out, the City chose not to do so. Rather, it kept him on staff
until it learned he was approved by his doctor for “limited duty” and placed
him in the administrative assistant position. Because it continued to employ
him, the City was obligated under the ADA to reasonably accommodate him
once he was capable of returning to work. This follows from the principle that
an employer’s obligation to accommodate is triggered when an employee
requests an accommodation. See Taylor v. Principal Fin. Grp., Inc., 93 F.3d
155, 165 (5th Cir. 1996). Nothing in the Act extinguishes that obligation
merely because an employer had a basis for getting rid of the employee in the
past.
What does the obligation to accommodate entail? Consistent with the
interpretive guidance of the EEOC, 29 C.F.R. pt. 1630, app. § 1630.9, we have
held that ADA compliance requires an employer to engage in an interactive
process with an employee who requests an accommodation for her disability to
ascertain what changes could allow her to continue working. LHC Grp., 773
2This of course does not decide the outcome of this appeal since we may affirm a
summary judgment on any ground supported by the record and advanced below, regardless
of whether the district court relied upon it. Ballard v. Devon Energy Prod. Co., 678 F.3d 360,
365 (5th Cir. 2012).
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F.3d at 700. In other words, employer and employee must work together in
good faith, back and forth, to find a reasonable accommodation. EEOC v.
Chevron Phillips Chem. Co., 570 F.3d 606, 621–22 (5th Cir. 2009). This should
be an ongoing, reciprocal process, not one that ends with “the first attempt at
accommodation,” but one that “continues when the employee asks for a
different accommodation or where the employer is aware that the initial
accommodation is failing and further accommodation is needed.” Humphrey v.
Memorial Hosps. Ass’n, 239 F.3d 1128, 1138 (9th Cir. 2001).
Dillard argues that the City failed to participate in the interactive
process after it became clear he was not succeeding in the administrative
position. Notably, he does not contend that his initial placement in that
position was itself a failure to reasonably accommodate. He thus directs our
attention to the record evidence showing that the City soon saw that the job
was a poor fit for him as he lacked the skills and qualifications to do the work
he was given. He also relies on evidence that his doctor steadily reported his
improved condition and restored capacities during the months he worked as an
assistant. In light of his improving condition, Dillard contends that the City
should have considered him for alternative placements (identifying several
vacancies he asserts he could have filled as his mobility improved) and that the
City’s failure to do so violated its duty to work with him in good faith to find a
reasonable accommodation.
Dillard’s position neglects that the interactive process is a two-way
street; it requires that employer and employee work together, in good faith, to
ascertain a reasonable accommodation. Chevron, 570 F.3d at 621–22. The City
offered Dillard the administrative assistant position, and while he doubted his
ability to do it, he accepted it. At this point, the ball was in his court: it was
up to him to make an honest effort to learn and carry out the duties of his new
job with the help of the training the City offered him. The same uncontroverted
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evidence of misconduct and poor performance that doomed Dillard’s
discriminatory termination claim is thus also decisive for his reasonable
accommodation claim. We stress the evidence of misconduct (making personal
calls, nonattendance, napping, lying, playing games) because even an
employee unable to perform office tasks needs no special skill to avoid misusing
company time, dishonesty, falling asleep, or absenteeism. As he did not
attempt to fill his new role in good faith, Dillard cannot rely on the fact that he
did not successfully adjust to that role to show that the City should have
continued the interactive process by offering him a further alternative
placement. See Loulseged v. Akzo Nobel Inc., 178 F.3d 731, 736 (5th Cir. 1999)
(“[A]n employer cannot be found to have violated the ADA when responsibility
for the breakdown of the ‘informal, interactive process’ is traceable to the
employee and not the employer.”).
We are mindful that an employer might elude its obligation to
accommodate a disabled employee by giving him a job that he was destined to
botch with or without training. Cf. id. at 737 n.6 (describing how an employer
might leave an employee needing accommodations in his current position,
enumerate his deficiencies, and use its list as a basis for terminating him).
Such predictable failure could be traceable to the worker’s want of skills or the
demoralizing effects of failure and appearing inept.
This case, however, does not present such a scenario. The City offered
to make Dillard an assistant and he accepted. Dillard does not contend that
the initial job assignment was an unreasonable accommodation. And once
Dillard started the new position, the City provided training to help him gain
necessary skills and gave him the opportunity of shadowing an experienced
assistant. We thus do not see a basis for concluding that the City failed to
engage in good faith by not finding him a new position after he had shown no
desire to try and succeed in the first position. See EEOC. v. Agro Distribution,
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LLC, 555 F.3d 462, 471 (5th Cir. 2009) (“The ADA provides a right to
reasonable accommodation, not to the employee's preferred accommodation.”).
Given the undisputed evidence that Dillard did not make an honest attempt to
succeed in the new position, he cannot make out a claim placing blame for the
breakdown in the accommodation process on the City.
***
The judgment is AFFIRMED.
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