PUBLISHED
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
No. 17-2335
EQUAL EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY COMMISSION,
Plaintiff – Appellant,
v.
MCLEOD HEALTH, INC.,
Defendant – Appellee.
Appeal from the United States District Court for the District of South Carolina, at Florence.
Bruce H. Hendricks, District Judge. (4:14-cv-03615-BHH)
Argued: November 15, 2018 Decided: January 31, 2019
Before GREGORY, Chief Judge, and KEENAN and FLOYD, Circuit Judges.
Reversed and remanded by published opinion. Judge Floyd wrote the opinion, in which
Chief Judge Gregory and Judge Keenan concurred.
ARGUED: Jeremy Daniel Horowitz, UNITED STATES EQUAL EMPLOYMENT
OPPORTUNITY COMMISSION, Washington, D.C., for Appellant. Michael
Montgomery Shetterly, I, OGLETREE, DEAKINS, NASH, SMOAK & STEWART, P.C.,
Greenville, South Carolina, for Appellee. ON BRIEF: James L. Lee, Deputy General
Counsel, Jennifer S. Goldstein, Associate General Counsel, Elizabeth E. Theran, Assistant
General Counsel, Office of General Counsel, UNITED STATES EQUAL
EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY COMMISSION, Washington, D.C., for Appellant.
Lucas J. Asper, OGLETREE, DEAKINS, NASH, SMOAK & STEWART, P.C.,
Greenville, South Carolina, for Appellee.
FLOYD, Circuit Judge:
The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) brought suit against
McLeod Health, Inc. for alleged violations of the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA).
The EEOC claimed that McLeod violated the ADA by requiring Cecilia Whitten, a
longtime employee with a disability, to undergo a work-related medical exam.
Additionally, the EEOC claimed that McLeod violated the ADA by wrongfully discharging
Whitten on the basis of her disability. The district court granted summary judgment to
McLeod on both claims, and the EEOC now appeals. For the reasons that follow, we
reverse the district court and remand for further proceedings.
I.
For 28 years, Whitten worked for McLeod, a corporation that operates various
hospitals and other healthcare facilities in South Carolina. 1 She was, in essence, the editor
of McLeod’s internal employee newsletter. One of her responsibilities was to develop
content for the newsletter by interviewing other employees and writing about company
events. To that end, Whitten typically traveled among McLeod’s various campuses.
Although it was not always so, McLeod now has five different campuses, spread
throughout an area of roughly 100 miles.
Whitten was born with a physical disability known as “postaxial hypoplasia of the
1
Because this is an appeal from a grant of summary judgment, we recount the facts in the
light most favorable to the non-movant—i.e., the EEOC. Jacobs v. N.C. Admin. Office of
the Courts, 780 F.3d 562, 568 (4th Cir. 2015).
1
lower extremity.” J.A. 284. Consequently, she lacks certain bones in her legs, feet, and
right hand. J.A. 282. Her lower legs are, in her words, “shorter than normal,” and her
“right arm is shorter than [her] left arm.” Id.
As a result of her disability, Whitten has always struggled with mobility. “Falling,”
she testified, “has been part of my life all my life and there’s no way around it.” J.A. 317.
Although she has had several surgeries to increase her stability, her limited “use of [her]
feet and legs” still causes her to “fall sometimes” and “stumble sometimes.” J.A. 287.
Additionally, her condition causes her to “get . . .tired more easily” and makes it difficult
for her to sit or stand “in one position for too long.” J.A. 287–88.
Despite her limited mobility, Whitten satisfactorily performed her duties as editor of
McLeod’s employee newsletter for almost three decades. In McLeod’s words, Whitten’s
condition “has not impacted her ability to perform the essential functions of her job during
her employment.” J.A. 142. Records indicate that Whitten fell at work multiple times
before the events that precipitated this appeal.
Over the course of several months preceding the events at issue here, Whitten’s
manager, Jumana Swindler, repeatedly expressed concerns about Whitten’s performance
to McLeod’s human resources department (HR). Swindler told HR that Whitten had been
missing deadlines, arriving late to work, and, in Swindler’s view, displaying a less-than-
enthusiastic attitude about McLeod’s internal messaging. In her discussions with HR,
Swindler raised the possibility that Whitten’s performance issues were due to problems
with her health. Swindler thought that Whitten looked “sluggish,” as if walking was more
difficult for her than usual. J.A. 390. According to Swindler, Whitten appeared flushed
2
and winded after moving very short distances; she also seemed to have trouble staying alert
during meetings.
At HR’s suggestion, Swindler attempted to address Whitten’s performance issues by
meeting with Whitten, clarifying her expectations, and reducing Whitten’s workload. She
did not raise any concerns about Whitten’s health with Whitten herself.
In 2012, Whitten fell three times in a four-month span. The first fall occurred outside
of work: Whitten tripped over a root while walking through the park and landed on a tree
stump. She needed stitches in her forehead, but suffered no other harm. The second fall
occurred at work: she tripped on a rug and experienced no significant harm. The third fall
occurred outside of work: she tripped as she was leaving a restaurant after lunch with a
friend. She had her arm x-rayed that afternoon; the bone was bruised, but it was not broken,
and she was back at work the next day.
Swindler reported Whitten’s third fall to HR shortly after it happened. HR advised
Swindler to bring her concerns to the company’s occupational health department
(hereinafter “Occupational Health”). Swindler did so right away. Based on Swindler’s
report, Whitten’s job description, and its own records of Whitten’s medical issues,
Occupational Health determined that Whitten needed to undergo a fitness-for-duty medical
exam. Notably, Occupational Health was not particularly concerned with Whitten’s
performance on the job. It ordered the fitness-for-duty exam to ensure that Whitten could
“safely get to different locations to do her stories.” J.A. 60.
The day after Whitten’s third fall, Swindler informed Whitten “that she was going to
take [her] to [Occupational Health].” J.A. 717. Swindler explained that “since [Whitten]
3
had had several falls, they wanted to examine [her] work space and make sure it was safe
for [her].” Id. Whitten “was confused about the necessity” of the exam, “especially since
only one of the falls had been at work,” but she “didn’t feel that [she] had a choice but to
comply.” Id. She told Swindler, “That would be nice.” J.A. 43.
At Occupational Health, a nurse practitioner gave Whitten a fitness-for-duty exam.
During the exam, Whitten told the nurse practitioner about her medical history and the
circumstances of her recent falls. Whitten also told the nurse practitioner that she had
difficulty stepping onto curbs and that she was supposed to—but generally did not—use a
cane at work. The nurse practitioner listened to Whitten’s heart and lungs; she also
examined Whitten’s joints.
The nurse practitioner concluded that Whitten needed further testing—specifically, a
functional-capacity exam. A functional-capacity exam is an exam in which a physician
evaluates whether an employee is physically capable of performing the duties of her job.
The nurse practitioner based her conclusion that further examination was necessary on
three things: (1) Whitten’s self-reported history of falls; (2) her decision not to use her
recommended assistive device; and (3) “her general lack of mobility and range of motion
in her knees, ankles, and feet.” J.A. 771.
McLeod placed Whitten on paid administrative leave pending the results of her
functional-capacity exam. Two weeks later, Whitten underwent a functional-capacity
exam with an occupational therapist named Todd Laliberte, an occupational therapist.
Laliberte acknowledged that he did not have access to Whitten to clarify her job duties
prior to the exam. Moreover, although McLeod informed Laliberte that Whitten’s work
4
required her to carry no more than 20 pounds at a time, Laliberte determined that Whitten
would likely need to be able to carry 38 pounds at a time to do her job, and he tested her
accordingly. Notes from his exam indicate that he believed that Whitten had only “recently
beg[u]n to fall at work and in her home.” J.A. 934.
Laliberte concluded that Whitten had a “[h]igh fall risk” in “75% of all work related
task[s].” 2 J.A. 840. He recommended that Whitten, among other things, (1) be restricted
to traveling no more than 10 miles from her main office; (2) use an assistive device, such
as a motorized scooter; and (3) be provided a parking space in an area without a curb.
Whitten, in turn, submitted a request for the following accommodations: (1) a parking
spot in an area without a curb, (2) help with selecting an appropriate assistive device, (3) a
new desk chair with adjustable-height arms, and (4) limitations on walking and standing
“as much as possible.” J.A. 737. She did not believe that she needed any accommodations
to continue doing her job, but she thought that she was required to submit the
accommodation form.
After reviewing Laliberte’s conclusions and Whitten’s request, McLeod informed
Whitten that she could not return to her job because her proposed accommodations would
prevent her from traveling to the company’s various campuses to collect stories and take
photographs, thereby nullifying the purpose of her position. Accordingly, the company
2
His explanation of that conclusion was—for lack of a better term—befuddling. When
asked how he arrived at Whitten’s 75% fall risk, he answered (paraphrasing Whitten’s self-
report): “[She’s] fallen at home. [She’s] fallen at restaurants, and [she’s] fallen at work.
One, two, three. 75 percent.” J.A. 822 (internal quotation marks removed).
5
placed Whitten on unpaid medical leave. Although she was told several times that she
could submit reports from her own doctors if she disagreed with Laliberte’s conclusions,
she was also told at least once that she could not have her old job back.
Whitten did not submit reports from her own doctors to refute Laliberte’s conclusions.
Nor did she apply for other jobs available within McLeod, even though the company
assigned her a recruiter to help her find suitable open positions. (Whitten found some open
positions for which she was marginally qualified, but they paid significantly less than what
she had made in her old job.)
After Whitten had been on medical leave for six months, McLeod terminated her
employment. Whitten filed a complaint with the EEOC, and the EEOC brought suit against
McLeod for violating the ADA by (1) requiring Whitten to undergo a medical exam despite
a lack of objective evidence that such an exam was necessary (the “illegal-exam claim”),
and (2) discharging Whitten on the basis of her disability (the “wrongful-discharge claim”).
See 42 U.S.C. §§ 12112(a), 12112(d)(4)(A). The district court granted summary judgment
to McLeod on both claims, and the EEOC timely appealed.
II.
We review the district court’s grant of summary judgment de novo. Jacobs v. N.C.
Admin. Office of the Courts, 780 F.3d 562, 565 n.1 (4th Cir. 2015). In doing so, we regard
the evidence in the light most favorable to the non-moving party. Id. Summary judgment
is appropriate only “if the movant shows that there is no genuine dispute as to any material
6
fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a). Thus,
if the evidence would permit a jury to find in the non-movant’s favor on a disputed question
of material fact, summary judgment is inappropriate. Jacobs, 780 F.3d at 568.
III.
A.
We begin with the EEOC’s claim that McLeod violated the ADA by requiring Whitten
to undergo a medical exam to ensure that she could still safely navigate to and within its
campuses. 3 The ADA prohibits covered employers from requiring an employee to undergo
a medical exam “unless such examination . . . is shown to be job-related and consistent
with business necessity.” 42 U.S.C. § 12112(d)(4)(A). The EEOC’s enforcement
guidelines state that for an employer-ordered medical exam to be job-related and consistent
with business necessity, the employer must reasonably believe, based on objective
evidence, that either (a) the employee’s ability to perform an essential job function is
impaired by a medical condition, or (b) the employee can perform all the essential functions
of the job, but because of his or her medical condition, doing so will pose a “direct threat”
3
The EEOC views Whitten’s examination by Occupational Health and her subsequent
examination by Laliberte as two separate medical exams. In contrast, the district court
treated Whitten’s examinations by Occupational Health and Laliberte as phases of a single
overarching exam. We too refer throughout this opinion to a single two-phase medical
exam. This is a stylistic choice and has no impact on our analysis. We express no opinion
on whether, in substance, Whitten was actually subject to two separate exams or a single
exam with two phases.
7
to his or her own safety or the safety of others. 4 ENFORCEMENT GUIDANCE: DISABILITY-
RELATED INQUIRIES AND MEDICAL EXAMINATIONS OF EMPLOYEES UNDER THE
AMERICANS WITH DISABILITIES ACT (ADA), 2000 WL 33407181, at *6. 5 McLeod argues
that it did not violate the ADA by requiring Whitten to undergo a work-related medical
exam because it reasonably believed, based on objective evidence, that Whitten could not
navigate to or within its medical campuses without posing a direct threat to herself. 6
The threshold question here is whether navigating to and within McLeod’s campuses
was an essential function of Whitten’s job. McLeod says it was; the EEOC says it was not.
4
A “direct threat” is “a significant risk of substantial harm to the health or safety of the
individual or others that cannot be eliminated or reduced by reasonable accommodation.”
29 C.F.R. § 1630.2(r). We do not address the “or others” portion of this definition because
McLeod has not argued—and there is no evidence—that Whitten’s medical condition
caused her to perform the essential functions of her job in a manner that posed a direct
threat to others.
5
The district court applied the EEOC’s enforcement guidance, and neither party challenges
its decision to do so. We note that although the EEOC’s enforcement guidance is not
binding, other courts of appeals have chosen to apply it when addressing the type of claim
at issue here. See, e.g., Wright v. Illinois Dep’t of Children & Family Servs., 798 F.3d 513,
522–24 (7th Cir. 2015); Owusu-Ansah v. Coca-Cola Co., 715 F.3d 1306, 1313 (11th Cir.
2013). Similarly, this Court has turned to the EEOC’s enforcement guidance when
analyzing other types of claims under the ADA. E.g., Porter v. U.S. Alumoweld Co., 125
F.3d 243, 246 (4th Cir. 1997). Accordingly, we think it appropriate in this case to use the
EEOC’s enforcement guidance as a framework for analyzing the parties’ arguments.
6
According to McLeod, one of the essential functions of Whitten’s job was to safely
navigate to and within the company’s campuses. The district court adopted that framing,
but we do not, because we think that adding the qualifier “safely” to the job function at
issue muddles the analysis. The correct way to apply the EEOC’s enforcement guidance
in a case like this is to begin by asking: does the relevant job function (here, navigating to
and within McLeod’s campuses) qualify as essential? If the answer is yes, we then ask
whether the employee is medically capable of performing the function without posing a
direct threat to herself or others—i.e., whether the employee can perform the function
safely.
8
This question has the potential to be dispositive: if a jury were to side with the EEOC, then
the EEOC would necessarily prevail on its illegal-exam claim. But the district court, in
granting summary judgment to McLeod, held that there was no need to send the question
to the jury. According to the district court, the EEOC did not produce enough evidence for
a reasonable jury to come down on its side. We disagree.
There is no doubt that the record contains evidence supporting McLeod’s position. For
instance, Swindler testified that Whitten’s job required her to navigate to and from
company events and conduct in-person interviews. Additionally, Whitten agreed in
deposition testimony that her job “require[d] the ability to safely navigate marketing
department functions to include, but not limited to, outside in parking lots, grassy areas and
walking in a wide variety of areas in order to obtain photographs and interviews.” J.A.
637.
On the other hand, the record also contains evidence supporting the EEOC’s position:
that although Whitten preferred to navigate McLeod’s various campuses to conduct in-
person interviews, take photographs, and attend company events, doing so was not actually
essential to her job. For instance, McLeod’s own written description of Whitten’s position
contains no mention of navigating to and from company events or conducting in-person
interviews. Additionally, Whitten testified that although she collected better content by
attending company events and conducting in-person interviews, she did not think that either
was “necessarily” a requirement of her job. J.A. 310. And the EEOC produced evidence
that Whitten was able to conduct interviews and collect other forms of content over the
phone.
9
Our job at this stage is not to decide which party’s evidence is stronger or more
persuasive. It is only to determine whether the EEOC has produced more than “a mere
scintilla of evidence” in support of its position that navigating to and within McLeod’s
campuses was not an essential function of Whitten’s job. Hodgin v. UTC Fire & Sec.
Americas Corp., 885 F.3d 243, 252 (4th Cir. 2018) (internal quotation marks omitted). We
conclude that it has. Accordingly, the question is one for the jury, and McLeod is not
entitled to summary judgment on the EEOC’s illegal-exam claim.
We note that even if it were beyond dispute that navigating to and within McLeod’s
campuses was an essential function of Whitten’s job, we would still hold that McLeod is
not entitled to summary judgment. A reasonable jury could conclude that when McLeod
required Whitten to take a medical exam, the company lacked a reasonable belief—based
on objective evidence—that Whitten’s medical condition had left her unable to navigate to
and within the company’s campuses without posing a direct threat to her own safety. This,
too, makes summary judgment inappropriate.
To explain, we begin by considering what McLeod knew before it required Whitten to
undergo a medical exam. ENFORCEMENT GUIDANCE, 2000 WL 33407181, at *7 (“An
employer’s reasonable belief” that an employee, due to a medical condition, cannot
perform an essential job function or cannot do so without posing a direct threat, “must be
based on objective evidence obtained, or reasonably available to the employer, prior to
making a disability-related inquiry or requiring a medical examination.” (second emphasis
supplied)). At the relevant point in time, McLeod knew that: (1) Whitten had been able to
perform the essential functions of her job—including traveling to and within McLeod’s
10
various medical campuses to collect stories—for 28 years, even though she suffered from
limited mobility and sometimes fell at work. (2) In the preceding four months, Whitten
had fallen once at work and twice outside of work. The fall at work caused virtually no
injury, and the falls outside of work did not cause severe injuries. (3) Whitten had recently
missed deadlines, shown up late, and struggled to handle her workload. (4) Whitten’s
manager thought that Whitten looked unusually winded after walking short distances and
that she appeared groggy during meetings.
Given that information, the question is: could a reasonable jury conclude that it was
unreasonable for McLeod to believe—based on the objective evidence available to it at the
time—that Whitten was medically unable to navigate its campuses without posing a direct
threat to her own safety? We believe the answer is yes. Specifically, a reasonable jury,
viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to Whitten, could conclude that in the
context of Whitten’s employment history, it was not reasonable for McLeod to believe that
she had become a direct threat to herself on the job simply because (a) she had fallen
multiple times recently and (b) her manager thought she looked groggy and out of breath.
This is especially so given that the only one of Whitten’s recent falls to occur at work
resulted in virtually no injury.
In sum, McLeod is not entitled to summary judgment on the EEOC’s illegal-exam
claim, and therefore, we reverse. 7
7
Because our analysis thus far gives us ample reason to reverse, we do not reach an
additional argument raised in the EEOC’s briefs: that summary judgment for McLeod was
inappropriate because a reasonable jury could find that Laliberte’s functional-capacity-
11
B.
The EEOC also claims that McLeod violated the ADA by discharging Whitten on the
basis of her disability. On this claim, too, the district court granted summary judgment to
McLeod. Again, we disagree.
When bringing a wrongful-discharge claim under the ADA, “a plaintiff must prove
(1) that she has a disability, (2) that she is a ‘qualified individual’ for the employment in
question, and (3) that [her employer] discharged her (or took other adverse employment
action) because of her disability.” Jacobs, 780 F.3d at 572 (quoting EEOC v. Stowe–Pharr
Mills, Inc., 216 F.3d 373, 377 (4th Cir. 2000) (alteration in source)).
No one doubts that the first element is satisfied. The second element—whether
Whitten was a qualified individual when she was removed from her position—is the crux
of the issue on appeal. A qualified individual is “an individual who, with or without
reasonable accommodation, can perform the essential functions of the employment
position that such individual holds or desires.” 42 U.S.C. § 12111(8). In relevant part, the
district court determined that McLeod was entitled to summary judgment because the
EEOC could not prove that Whitten was qualified to carry on her work with the company’s
internal newsletter.
The district court’s reasoning was premised on its analysis of the EEOC’s illegal-exam
claim. In essence, the district court reasoned that the EEOC could not prove that Whitten
exam was insufficiently tailored to Whitten’s actual job requirements and therefore
inconsistent with business necessity.
12
was qualified for her job at the time she was fired because navigating to and within
McLeod’s campuses was an essential function of the job, and Whitten’s medical exam—
particularly Laliberte’s report—indicated that no reasonable accommodation would permit
her to perform that function without posing a direct threat to her own safety. McLeod asks
us to affirm on the same basis.
As we have already discussed, it is not certain that navigating to and within McLeod’s
campuses was essential to Whitten’s job. By the same token, it is not certain that Whitten’s
medical exam was lawful. Since the district court’s grant of summary judgment assumed
that those points were not in dispute, we cannot affirm on the basis of the district court’s
reasoning. McLeod has provided us with no alternative basis on which to affirm.
Accordingly, we conclude that McLeod is not entitled to summary judgment on the
EEOC’s wrongful-discharge claim.
IV.
For the foregoing reasons, we reverse the district court’s order granting summary
judgment to McLeod and remand for further proceedings.
REVERSED AND REMANDED
13