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Marcano-Rivera v. Pueblo International, Inc.

Court: Court of Appeals for the First Circuit
Date filed: 2000-10-25
Citations: 232 F.3d 245
Copy Citations
53 Citing Cases
Combined Opinion
            United States Court of Appeals
                       For the First Circuit
                       ____________________

Nos. 99-1702
     99-1703

               MARIE MARCANO-RIVERA; OSVALDO ROMAN,

            Plaintiffs, Appellees/Cross-Appellants,

                                 v.

                    PUEBLO INTERNATIONAL, INC.,

               Defendant, Appellant/Cross-Appellee.

                       ____________________

          APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

                  FOR THE DISTRICT OF PUERTO RICO

     [Hon. Raymond L. Acosta, Senior U.S. District Judge]

                       ____________________

                               Before

                      Torruella, Chief Judge,

                       Lipez, Circuit Judge,

               and Schwarzer,* Senior District Judge.

                       _____________________

     Etienne Totti-del Valle, with whom José R. González-Nogueras,
Manuel A. Quilichini-García, Jorge C. Pizarro-García and Totti &
Rodríguez Díaz were on brief, for appellants.
     Luis R. Mellado-González, with whom Law Offices Luis R. Mellado-
González was on brief, for appellee.



*    Of the Northern District of California, sitting by designation.
                        ____________________

                        October 25, 2000
                      ____________________
          TORRUELLA, Chief Judge. Marie Marcano-Rivera and her

husband, Osvaldo Román-Sánchez, filed this suit against Marcano's

former employer, Pueblo International, Inc., on September 2, 1997. The

complaint alleges that Pueblo discriminated against Marcano because of

her physical disability in violation of the Americans with Disabilities

Act ("ADA"), 42 U.S.C. §§ 12101 et seq., as well as its Puerto Rico

counterpart, Law 44 of July 2, 1995, as amended, 1 L.P.R.A. §§ 501 et

seq. The complaint also contains a claim for damages pursuant to

Article 1802 of the Puerto Rico Civil Code, 31 L.P.R.A. § 5141, which

provides a cause of action to relatives of a tort victim. The case

went to trial, where a jury determined that Pueblo had violated both

the ADA and Law 44 by discriminating against Marcano in her employment.

As a result of this finding, the jury awarded plaintiffs $275,000 in

compensatory damages. The district court subsequently doubled the

damages awarded to Marcano pursuant to the remedies provision of Law

44, see 29 L.P.R.A. § 146 (a)(1), and entered judgment accordingly.

Both parties filed timely appeals.

          For the reasons stated below, we affirm in part and vacate

in part the judgment of the district court.

                             BACKGROUND




                                 -2-
          Plaintiff Marie Marcano-Rivera was born on June 2, 1965 with

a congenital bone defect in her legs. As a result of this condition,

both of her legs were amputated early in her life. Since then, she has

used a wheelchair. Marcano is married to co-plaintiff Osvaldo Román-

Sánchez, and both plaintiffs reside together in San Juan, Puerto Rico.

Defendant, Pueblo International, Inc., is a Delaware corporation that

is in the business of owning and operating retail supermarkets.

          In April of 1989, Marcano began working for Pueblo as a part-

time cashier. Initially, she worked at the Altamira Supermarket, which

is located in San Juan, Puerto Rico. Marcano remained a part-time

employee until February, 1992, at which time her status changed to

full-time cashier.

          In July of 1993, Marcano requested and received a transfer

to X-TRA Las Américas Supermarket, which is also located in San Juan.

There, Marcano continued to work as a cashier until November 3, 1993,

when she was moved to the produce department to work as a weight

station clerk. As a weight station clerk, Marcano weighed fruits and

vegetables.   She continued, however, to work as a cashier during

periods of intense business activity, such as public holidays. In

October of 1996, the position of weight station clerk was eliminated

because the job of weighing produce was relocated to the cash register.

At that time, all employees classified as weight station clerks were

automatically reclassified as produce clerks regardless of their


                                 -3-
personal circumstances.      Marcano was then moved to the floral

department where she remained until January 24, 1997, when she was

dismissed as part of a reduction in work force that resulted in the

dismissal of 197 management employees and 294 regular employees.

          On February 4, 1997, Marcano filed a charge with the Equal

Employment Opportunity Commission ("EEOC") and the Anti-Discrimination

Unit of the Puerto Rico Department of Labor and Human Resources. She

received a right-to-sue letter from the EEOC on June 3, 1997, and

thereafter filed this action in the United States District Court for

the District of Puerto Rico on September 2, 1997.

          On the eve of trial, Pueblo filed several motions in limine.

Relevant to this appeal is Motion In Limine No. 3. In that motion,

Pueblo argued that the court should exclude all evidence of alleged

failures to accommodate that occurred prior to July 26, 1992. Pueblo

reasoned that prior to that date neither the ADA nor Law 44 provided a

private cause of action for failure to accommodate. Prior to opening

statements on February 23, 1999, the district court denied the motion.

As a result of that ruling, Marcano was allowed to testify regarding

events that allegedly occurred prior to July 26, 1992. These included:

(1) Marcano's inability to properly access the women's restroom with

her wheelchair; (2) Pueblo's failure to modify the cashier station so

that Marcano could comfortably work there; (3) Pueblo's failure to make

Marcano a full-time employee despite the fact that she worked over


                                 -4-
forty hours a week for over two and a half years; and (4) Pueblo's

failure to consider Marcano for an office position at the Altamira

store, allegedly because her wheelchair would not fit well into the

office space.

          Marcano's testimony also included several events that

occurred after July 26, 1992, that she believed were indicative of

Pueblo's alleged failure to accommodate her disability. First, Marcano

stated that at one point in time she was informed by Pueblo that she

could no longer use the handicapped parking space that was reserved for

customers. This lasted approximately one month, after which Marcano

once again began parking in the handicapped parking space. Second, she

testified that while assigned to the position of assistant florist she

was not able to use her wheelchair because the area where the florists

worked was not handicap accessible. As a result, Marcano was forced to

access the florists' area by walking on her amputated limbs, which she

indicated led to the development of cellulitis.        Third, Marcano

testified that immediately prior to her termination her manager,

Ceferino Torres, told her, "María, from the bottom of my heart, I don't

know what they're going to do with you because Mr. Pedro Díaz doesn't

know where to place you because of your physical disability." Finally,

Marcano stated that it was not until she was terminated that she

learned that the company had classified her as a produce clerk; until

that time, she believed that she was, and always had been, a cashier.


                                 -5-
          At the end of the first day of trial, and following the

direct examination of Marcano, the district court reexamined its ruling

regarding the applicability of Law 44 to events that occurred before

July 26, 1992.    The court stated:

                  Now, in going further into the matter
          after it was brought up today, because the Court
          was not given an opportunity to look into that
          because you haven't brought it up, finds that the
          initial Law 44 did apply to discrimination in
          public agencies or private agencies receiving
          public funding and that obviously did not create
          a private cause of action up until July of 1992,
          when it was amended and then did create a private
          cause of action along with the Federal ADA.

                  So I'm going to amend my ruling and state
          for the record that what I'm going to do is to
          give the jury a limiting or cautionary
          instruction at the time that I give the
          instructions stating in effect that the testimony
          that had been given from the time she started
          with Pueblo and is being allowed and was allowed
          to establish an animus pattern, attitude motive
          of the defendant as evidence of a pretext, but
          that any acts post July 1992, may be considered
          by the jury as violations of the ADA and Law 44;
          that is, failure to accommodate for purposes of
          any damages.

                 Now, that is the limiting instruction that
          I'm going to give to the jury.

Pueblo then argued that a curative instruction would not be sufficient

unless it clearly stated that "Pueblo had no legal obligations to

accommodate prior to 1992." The court indicated that it would consider

broadening its instruction accordingly.




                                 -6-
          After the presentation of plaintiffs' evidence, Pueblo moved

for judgment as a matter of law pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil

Procedure 50. The district court instructed counsel not to continue

with his arguments regarding reasonable accommodation because those

issues would be sent to the jury. Pueblo was, however, allowed to

proceed with its motion with regard to the alleged discriminatory

termination.   Nevertheless, the district court denied the motion.

          At the close of evidence, Pueblo renewed its motion for

judgment as a matter of law. This time, the district court granted the

motion in part, dismissing plaintiffs' claim for discriminatory

discharge on the ground that there was no evidence to support this

allegation. However, the court ruled that it would allow the remaining

claims to go to the jury.

          The case was submitted to the jury on February 26, 1999. As

part of its lengthy instructions to the jury, the court gave the

following limiting instruction regarding the applicability of the ADA

and Law 44 to events which occurred prior to July 26, 1992:

                 Now, the purpose of the Americans with
          Disabilities Act and Law 44, is to eliminate
          employment discrimination against individuals
          with disabilities.     These statutes make it
          unlawful for an employer to intentionally
          discriminate against an employee because of that
          person's disability. These statutes went into
          effect on July 26, 1992. Accordingly, the
          defendant may only be liable under these
          provisions if you find them so liable for conduct
          incurred after July 26, 1992.


                                 -7-
                  Therefore, I hereby instruct you that you
          should not consider in your deliberations in this
          case any discriminatory events prior to July 26,
          1992, the date when the Americans with
          Disabilities Act and Law 44 went into effect.
          Nor should you consider the validity of
          plaintiff's termination as a result of
          defendant's reduction in force plan.

          The jury returned a verdict in favor of the plaintiffs,

awarding compensatory damages in the amount of $225,000 to Marcano and

$50,000 to Román.    On March 8, 1999, the district court entered

judgment accordingly. Thereafter, Pueblo filed another motion for

judgment as a matter of law and, in the alternative, a motion for new

trial. In turn, plaintiffs Marcano and Román filed a motion to alter

or amend the judgment. On March 31, 1999, the district court issued a

ruling denying Pueblo's motions and granting in part plaintiffs' motion

to double the damages awarded to Marcano from $225,000 to $450,000,

pursuant to the provisions of Law 44.      The court then entered an

amended judgment.    This appeal and cross-appeal followed.

          Pueblo is the appellant/cross-appellee and appeals the jury's

verdict and the amended judgment. Pueblo argues that the district

court erred by allowing evidence to be presented to the jury regarding

alleged acts of failure to accommodate prior to July 26, 1992, and that

the damages awarded by the jury are not supported by the evidence

presented at trial. Marcano and Román are appellees/cross-appellants.

They appeal (1) the dismissal of Marcano's discriminatory discharge



                                 -8-
claim, (2) the district court's rulings regarding damages, and (3) the

district court's ruling regarding Pueblo's liability for alleged

discriminatory acts occurring prior to July 26, 1992. For the sake of

clarity, we refer to the parties by name or by their trial designations

as plaintiffs and defendant.

                              DISCUSSION

I.   The Plaintiffs' Claims

          On appeal, the plaintiffs argue that the district court erred

in four instances: (1) the dismissal for insufficient evidence of

Marcano's claim of unlawful termination; (2) the court's decision not

to award damages under the ADA separate from, or in addition to, the

award of double damages granted pursuant to Local Law 44; (3) the

court's decision not to give the jury an instruction regarding punitive

damages for a violation of the ADA; and (4) the court's jury

instruction that alleged acts of discrimination or non-accommodation

that occurred prior to July 26, 1992 should not be considered. We see

no merit in any of these arguments.

          A.      Unlawful Termination

          We begin with Marcano's claim for unlawful termination, which

the district court dismissed at the close of evidence following

Pueblo's motion for judgment as a matter of law. See Fed. R. Civ. P.

50(a). We review the grant of judgment as a matter of law de novo,

examining the facts and the evidence in the light most favorable to the


                                 -9-
nonmovant. See Andrade v. Jamestown Hous. Auth., 82 F.3d 1179, 1186

(1st Cir. 1996). Accordingly, we do not consider the credibility of

witnesses, resolve conflicts in testimony, or evaluate the weight of

the evidence. See Richmond Steel, Inc. v. Puerto Rican Am. Ins. Co.,

954 F.2d 19, 22 (1st Cir. 1992). "To affirm the withdrawal of any

claim from the jury, we must find that, as a matter of law, the record

would permit a reasonable jury to reach only one conclusion as to that

issue." Katz v. City Metal Co., Inc., 87 F.3d 26, 28 (1st Cir. 1996);

see also Gibson v. City of Cranston, 37 F.3d 731, 735 (1st Cir. 1994).

However, "[a] mere scintilla of evidence will not rise to a triable

issue of fact necessary to avoid dismissal under Rule 50." Irvine v.

Murad Skin Research Lab., 194 F.3d 313, 316 (1st Cir. 1999).

          Plaintiffs' unlawful termination claim is governed by the

burden-shifting analysis originally set forth in McDonnell Douglas

Corp. v. Green, 411 U.S. 792 (1973). See, e.g., Higgins v. New Balance

Athletic Shoe Inc., 194 F.3d 252, 264 (1st Cir. 1999) ("In order to

facilitate inquiries into whether an employer's adverse employment

decision was motivated by an employee's disability, courts generally

use the McDonnell Douglas burden-shifting scheme.").        The basic

framework of the McDonnell Douglas analysis is well known:

          [A] plaintiff who suffers from a disability makes
          out a prima facie case of employment
          discrimination by demonstrating that she is a
          member of a protected group who has been denied
          an employment opportunity for which she was


                                -10-
            otherwise qualified. Such a showing gives rise
            to an inference that the employer discriminated
            due to the plaintiff's disability and places upon
            the employer the burden of articulating a
            legitimate, nondiscriminatory reason for the
            adverse employment decision. This entails only a
            burden of production, not a burden of persuasion;
            the task of proving discrimination remains the
            plaintiff's at all times. Once such a reason
            emerges, the inference raised by the prima facie
            case dissolves and the plaintiff is required to
            show . . . that the employer's proffered reason
            is a pretext for discrimination.

Dichner v. Liberty Travel, 141 F.3d 24, 29-30 (1st Cir. 1998)

(citations and footnote omitted).        This analytical framework was

recently reaffirmed by the Supreme Court in Reeves v. Sanderson

Plumbing Prods., Inc., in which the Court clarified that once a

plaintiff has established a prima facie case and the employer has

offered a nondiscriminatory justification, "although the presumption of

discrimination 'drops out of the picture' once the defendant meets its

burden of production, the trier of fact may still consider the evidence

establishing plaintiff's prima facie case 'and inferences properly

drawn therefrom . . . on the issue of whether the defendant's

explanation is pretextual.'" 120 S. Ct. 2097, 2106 (2000) (citations

omitted).

            We first address whether Marcano made out a prima facie case

of discrimination. Pueblo argues that plaintiff cannot establish a

prima facie demonstrating because she cannot show that other similarly

situated persons, not in the protected class, were treated more


                                  -11-
favorably. See Ruiz v. Posadas de San Juan Assocs., 124 F.3d 243, 247-

48 (1st Cir. 1997).    In this regard, defendant stresses that the

reduction in force was implemented blindly, solely according to

seniority within each job classification and geographic area, and that

within that body of employees no individual with less seniority than

plaintiff was retained. Plaintiff's only response is that she was

improperly classified as a produce clerk in the first place, and her

suggestion that such classification was discriminatory. However,

plaintiff offers no evidence that other similarly situated employees

without physical disabilities were treated differently with regard to

their classification. To the contrary, the record shows that all

weight station clerks (plaintiff's prior position) were reclassified as

produce clerks in 1996. Defendant also notes that plaintiff's position

was not subsequently filled by a person without a disability and argues

that this is further indication that her termination was made on a

legitimate and nondiscriminatory basis.

          Even viewing the record in the light most favorable to

plaintiff, we conclude that plaintiff failed to make a prima facie

showing that discrimination was a motivating factor in her termination.

All evidence in the record supports the contrary conclusion--that her

termination was the result of a legitimate reduction in force by

Pueblo.   We therefore affirm the district court's dismissal of

plaintiff's unlawful termination claim on this ground alone.


                                 -12-
          However, even if Marcano had succeeded in making a prima

facie showing of discrimination, her claim would founder on the

remaining steps of the McDonnell Douglas inquiry for essentially the

same reasons that her prima facie case is deficient. Pueblo stated a

nondiscriminatory justification for terminating Marcano and she failed

to offer sufficient evidence for a reasonable jury to find that such

justification was pretextual. At trial, Pueblo presented a plethora of

evidence that Marcano was terminated on January 24, 1997, due to a

reduction-in-force implemented by the corporation for economic reasons.

This evidence included the following: In 1996, Pueblo retained the

services of Deloitte & Touche to evaluate Pueblo's operations.

Deloitte & Touche recommended that Pueblo reduce its managerial and

salaried full-time personnel. Pueblo made the decision to implement

that recommendation and reduce its workforce. The company informed the

Unión de Empleados de los Supermercados Pueblo, and a stipulation and

release was negotiated and executed with the union on January 17, 1997.

Pursuant to the terms of this stipulation, the RIF was implemented in

strict adherence to employee seniority within each job classification

and geographic area. The determination of which employees to dismiss

as part of the layoff was a mathematical and blind determination which

did not take into consideration any criteria other than seniority. The

individual stores had no input in the determination, and the entire

process was kept confidential. Including Marcano, the RIF affected 294


                                 -13-
regular employees and 197 management employees. Within Marcano's job

classification and geographical area, no employee with less seniority

than her remained employed by Pueblo after the RIF.1

          Given this evidence, there is no question that Pueblo met its

burden of articulating a legitimate, nondiscriminatory reason for

terminating Marcano. The burden shifts, therefore, back to Marcano to

show that Pueblo's justification--the reduction in force--was a pretext

for discrimination. In this regard, Marcano relies primarily on her

allegation that she was never properly transferred from the cashier

position and that, on January 24, 1997, her classification should have

been bagger/cashier. From the record, it appears that if Marcano had

been classified as a bagger/cashier on January 24th, she would not have

been terminated as part of the RIF. Nevertheless, we believe that this

allegation of a classification error, without more, is insufficient to

show pretext. There is no dispute that when the position of weight

station clerk was eliminated in 1996, all employees classified as

weight station clerks were automatically reclassified as produce clerks

regardless of their personal circumstances. Therefore, even if we

accept that Marcano was not properly classified as a produce clerk

pursuant to the terms of the collective bargaining agreement, Marcano

has still not shown that the erroneous classification -- let alone the

1 We note that the record also shows that co-plaintiff Román was a
cashier at the time of the RIF and was not dismissed, although he too
is a disabled person who assists himself with a wheelchair.

                                 -14-
company's reduction in force -- was a pretext for discrimination.

Because there is no evidence to indicate that Marcano's classification

as a produce clerk on January 24th was discriminatory or that it was

intended to result in her dismissal, Marcano's unlawful termination

claim     must     fail      as     a     matter      of     law.2

          B.      Damages under the ADA

          We turn next to plaintiff's contention that the district

court's decision erred in not awarding damages under the ADA separate

from, and in addition to, the award of double damages pursuant to Local

Law 44.3 This contention is meritless. The verdict form prepared by

the district court allowed the jury to determine defendant's liability

separately under the ADA and Law 44, but required that damages be

awarded jointly without any allocation between the two laws.

Plaintiffs did not object to this aspect of the jury form.4 Against

this background, the district court concluded:


2 Marcano also points to a comment allegedly made by her immediate
supervisor. This argument fails because her supervisor was not a
decisionmaker relevant to her dismissal as part of the corporation's
reduction in force. See, e.g., Ayala-Gerena v. Bristol Myers-Squibb
Co., 95 F.3d 96, 96-97 (1st Cir. 1996).
3 The district court correctly doubled the damages awarded to Marcano
under Local Law 44. See 29 L.P.R.A. § 146(a)(1).
4 Federal Rules of Civil Procedure 49(a) and 51 require that a party
must state its objections after the charge but before the jury retires.
In this Circuit, "[s]ilence after instructions, including instructions
on the form of the verdict to be returned by the jury, typically
constitutes a waiver of any objections." Putnam Resources v. Pateman,
958 F.2d 448, 456 (1st Cir. 1992).

                                  -15-
          The $225,000 verdict seeks to redress all damages
          sustained by Mrs. Marcano Rivera related to
          defendant's discriminatory conduct regardless of
          the legal source.      Therefore, even though
          plaintiff Marie Marcano Rivera is entitled to a
          duplication of the jury's damages award pursuant
          to the scheme established by Law No. 44, the
          mental anguish and suffering resulting from her
          discrimination in employment is one and the same
          for both Law No. 44 and ADA.

In our opinion, the jury's verdict is not susceptible to any other

interpretation.    Since the plaintiffs have provided us with no

authority that convinces us otherwise, we decline to examine this

argument further.5

          C.      Punitive Damages Instruction

          Next, we consider whether the district court correctly

declined to instruct the jury on punitive damages. Punitive damages

are available if a plaintiff demonstrates that her employer "engaged in

a discriminatory practice or discriminatory practices with malice or

with reckless indifference to the federally protected rights of an

aggrieved individual." 42 U.S.C. § 1981a (b)(1). In this case, the

district court ruled that "an instruction on punitive damages was not

warranted given the absence of evidence in the record that defendant

engaged in discriminatory practice or practices with malice or reckless



5 Likewise, we are unpersuaded by the "suggestion" in defendant's reply
brief that the district court should have doubled only half of the
jury's $225,000 damages award pursuant to Law 44. Defendant offers no
basis for such a reading of the jury's verdict, nor do we find any in
the record.

                                 -16-
indifference to the rights of plaintiffs to be free from intentional

discrimination."      Whether sufficient evidence exists to support

punitive damages is a question of law which we review de novo. See

EEOC v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc., 187 F.3d 1241, 1244 (10th Cir. 1999).

          In 1999, in Kolstad v. American Dental Association, 119 S.

Ct. 2118, 2124 (1999), the Supreme Court held that punitive damages are

only available for a subset of cases of intentional discrimination.

The Supreme Court reasoned that Congress intended to impose two

standards of liability: "one for establishing a right to compensatory

damages and another, higher standard that a plaintiff must satisfy to

qualify for a punitive award." Id. The Court directly addressed the

meaning of the terms "malice" and "reckless indifference" as they

relate to the standard for punitive damages under Title VII and the

ADA. In doing so, the Court declined to limit punitive damages to

cases involving intentional discrimination of an "'egregious' nature,"

id., clarifying that the "terms 'malice' or 'reckless indifference'

pertain to the employer's knowledge that it may be acting in violation

of   federal   law,   not   its   awareness   that   it   is   engaging   in

discrimination." Id. This means that "an employer must at least

discriminate in the face of a perceived risk that its actions will

violate federal law to be liable in punitive damages." Id. at 2125.

The Court went on to hold that an employer may not be held liable in

punitive damages for the acts of its employees or agents when those


                                    -17-
acts are contrary to the employer's good faith efforts to comply with

the law.   See id. at 2129.

           Here, the plaintiffs have not identified any facts that would

support an award of punitive damages under the principles announced in

Kolstad. The record is replete, on the other hand, with evidence that

Pueblo instituted policies prohibiting any type of discrimination,

trained its personnel to ensure equal treatment of employees with

disabilities, and took good faith efforts to comply with the ADA.

Accordingly, the district court correctly declined to instruct the jury

on punitive damages in this case.

           D.     Evidence of Pre-1992 Conduct

           Finally, we turn to the district court's jury instruction

that alleged acts of discrimination or non-accommodation occurring

prior to July 26, 1992 should not be considered. The district court

correctly determined that neither the ADA nor Law 44 provided a private

cause of action prior to July 26, 1992.       See, e.g., Morrison v.

Carleton Woolen Mills, Inc., 108 F.3d 429, 443 ("Ever since the ADA

became effective on July 26, 1992, the courts have consistently held

that the Act is not retroactive."); Rivera-Flores v. Puerto Rico

Telephone Co., 64 F.3d 742, 752 (1st Cir. 1985) (indicating that Law 44

"did not make handicap discrimination an injury redressable in a

private action for damages" prior to 1992). Plaintiffs nevertheless

contend that they have a viable cause of action pursuant to Article


                                 -18-
1802. See 31 L.P.R.A. § 5141. This argument is not well developed and

rather disingenuous given the fact that Article 1868(2) of the Puerto

Rico Civil Code, see 31 L.P.R.A. § 5298(2), establishes that tort

claims under Article 1802 are subject to a one-year statute of

limitations. Consequently, we need not determine whether plaintiffs

are correct that Article 1802 provides an independent cause of action

here because any such claim is clearly time-barred under the

circumstances presented by this case.

          For the reasons set forth above, we conclude that the

district court did not err as claimed by plaintiffs, and we affirm the

judgment accordingly.

II.   The Defendant's Claims

          On appeal, Pueblo argues (1) that the presentation of

evidence of conduct occurring before July 26, 1992 had a prejudicial

effect on the jury; (2) that the damages awarded to Marcano were not

supported by the evidence because some of the alleged incidents of

failure to accommodate presented at trial were barred by the statute of

limitations; (3) that the damages awarded to Marcano were not supported

by the evidence because her claim for damages during the course of

trial arose from her allegedly discriminatory termination--a claim that

was dismissed by the district court; (4) that the damages awarded to

Marcano were otherwise not supported by the evidence because

defendant's conduct was not demonstrated to be discriminatory; and (5)


                                 -19-
that the damages awarded to Marcano's husband were not supported by the

evidence because his claim for damages arose from Marcano's termination

and the termination claim was dismissed by the district court. We find

only the last of these arguments persuasive, and we affirm the district

court's disposition except to vacate the award of damages to Marcano's

husband, Román.

          A.      Evidence of Pre-1992 Conduct

          Pueblo first alleges that the district court erred in

allowing evidence of acts that occurred prior to July 26, 1992 to be

presented to the jury when neither the ADA nor Law 44 provided a

private right of action until that date. Specifically, Pueblo believes

that Marcano's testimony regarding pre-1992 events had a prejudicial

effect which "no curative instruction could erase."          We disagree.

          As indicated, prior to opening statements, the district court

denied Pueblo's motion in limine to exclude any acts of alleged failure

to accommodate that occurred prior to July 26, 1992.       The court,

however, subsequently reexamined this ruling and reversed itself. As

a result, the court offered a curative instruction as part of the jury

charge.   We repeat it here for the sake of clarity:

                 Now, the purpose of the Americans with
          Disabilities Act and Law 44, is to eliminate
          employment discrimination against individuals
          with disabilities.     These statutes make it
          unlawful for an employer to intentionally
          discriminate against an employee because of that
          person's disability. These statutes went into


                                 -20-
          effect on July 26, 1992. Accordingly, the
          defendant may only be liable under these
          provisions if you find them so liable for conduct
          incurred after July 26, 1992.

                  Therefore, I hereby instruct you that you
          should not consider in your deliberations in this
          case any discriminatory events prior to July 26,
          1992, the date when the Americans with
          Disabilities Act and Law 44 went into effect.
          Nor should you consider the validity of
          plaintiff's termination as a result of
          defendant's reduction in force plan.

This instruction was clear and emphatic, and we think that it was

sufficient to counteract the possibility of prejudice to Pueblo from

the presentation of pre-1992 conduct. Despite its general assertion of

prejudice from Marcano's testimony, the defendant has not suggested any

sufficient basis for its conjecture that the jury failed to follow the

specific curative instructions repeatedly given by the district court.

See United States v. Sepúlveda, 15 F.3d 1161, 1185 (1st Cir. 1993)

("[A]ppellate courts inquiring into the effectiveness of a trial

judge's curative instructions should start with a presumption that

jurors will follow a direct instruction to disregard matters

improvidently brought before them."). Consequently, we decline to

reverse on this issue.

          B.      Limitations Period and Sufficiency of the Evidence

          Defendant's first sufficiency-of-the-evidence challenge is

another incarnation of its prior argument that the jury was prejudiced

by the presentation of evidence of conduct for which Pueblo cannot, as


                                 -21-
a matter of law, be held liable.     Pueblo claims that many of the

discriminatory acts alleged by plaintiff occurred more than 300 days

before plaintiff first filed her complaint with the Anti-Discrimination

Unit of the Puerto Rico Department of Labor and was thus time-barred.

Without this evidence, defendant argues, the jury's verdict is

unsupported by the record.     We disagree.

          Although defendant recognizes that the alleged acts might

avoid the 300-day time limitation for filing a discrimination charge

under the "continuing violation theory," it argues that that theory is

not applicable in this case. In particular, defendant points us to our

decision in Lawton v. State Mutual Life Assurance Co., 101 F.3d 218

(1st Cir. 1996), for the proposition that a plaintiff must show a

series of violations, at least one of which falls within the

limitations period; defendant argues that Marcano failed to make such

a showing here. However, Lawton held that the failures to promote

alleged by plaintiff in that case were not similar enough to her

alleged termination to constitute serial violations, and also that the

termination in that case had not been shown to be discriminatory. See

id. at 221-22. Here, by contrast, the various incidents in the alleged

"series" of discrimination are all similar in nature. Each episode

alleged to have occurred outside the limitations period was a failure




                                 -22-
to accommodate comparable in nature6 to the discriminatory accommodation

failures occurring within the limitations period, up to plaintiff's

termination. Contrary to defendant's arguments, these failures to

accommodate are plainly similar enough to constitute serial violations.

Furthermore, unlike in Lawton, the conduct falling within the

limitations in period in this case was indeed established to be

discriminatory. We therefore conclude that the continuing violation

theory is applicable in this case, and we reject this aspect of

defendant's challenge to the jury's verdict.

           C.     Termination Claim and Sufficiency of the Evidence

           Defendant next claims that the jury's verdict was not

supported by the evidence because plaintiff's action was predicated on

her termination claim, which was dismissed by the district court.

Pueblo made this argument repeatedly before the district court, which

properly rejected it. As much as defendant would prefer that this case

be solely a termination case, plaintiff was absolutely explicit before

the district court and on appeal that her claims include numerous




6 Although we will not dwell on the graphic, and powerful, testimony
given by plaintiff at trial, we note here that Pueblo's failure to
accommodate plaintiff's disability forced her to, at times, locomote on
her amputated limbs. As early as 1993, plaintiff was forced to use a
noncompliant bathroom facility, and just prior to her termination in
1997, when she was temporarily assigned to the position of assistant
florist, she was forced to work in an area not large enough for her to
maneuver in her wheelchair.

                                 -23-
alleged failures to accommodate as well as her termination.         We

therefore reject defendant's contention without further discussion.

          D.       Remaining Sufficiency of the Evidence Arguments

          Defendant goes still further in encouraging us to overturn

the jury's verdict in this case, arguing that none of the alleged

conduct was shown at trial to be discriminatory. This argument also

misses the mark.

          As we have recognized before, "under the ADA, the term

'discriminate' includes . . . not making reasonable accommodations to

the known physical or mental limitations of an otherwise qualified

individual with a disability . . . , unless [the employer] can

demonstrate that the accommodation would impose an undue hardship on

the operation of the business of [the employer]." Higgins v. New

Balance Athletic Shoe, Inc., 194 F.3d 252, 264 (1st Cir. 1999) (quoting

42 U.S.C. § 12112(b)(5)(A)) (some quotation marks omitted).

          Unlike other enumerated constructions of
          "discriminate," this construction does not
          require that an employer's action be motivated by
          a discriminatory animus directed at the
          disability. Rather, any failure to provide
          reasonable accommodations for a disability is
          necessarily "because of a disability"--the
          accommodations are only deemed reasonable (and,
          thus, required) if they are needed because of the
          disability--and no proof of a particularized
          discriminatory animus is exigible.            See
          Bultemeyer v. Fort Wayne Community Schs., 100
          F.3d 1281, 1283-84 (7th Cir. 1996). Hence, an
          employer who knows of a disability yet fails to
          make reasonable accommodations violates the


                                 -24-
          statute, no matter what its intent, unless it can
          show that the proposed accommodations would
          create undue hardship for its business. See 42
          U.S.C. § 12112(b)(5)(A).

Id. Such failure to accommodate, of course, is precisely what the jury

determined occurred in this case, and just a few examples illustrate

why that conclusion is well founded in the evidence.

          For instance, defendant contends that requiring plaintiff to

"cover" the cash register during busy times was not shown to be

discriminatory, particularly because other employees were also asked to

cover the register during busy times. Defendant, of course, misses the

point entirely. For plaintiff to cover the cash register entailed a

laborious and, according to her, humiliating process in which she would

have to install a specially designed stool and move herself from her

wheelchair to the stool--all in a situation which, by defendant's own

characterization, must be presumed to have included numerous observers,

many of whom were likely to be impatient. Under these circumstances,

of which defendant was plainly aware, it was not enough to treat

plaintiff like other employees. In fact, to do so was an unlawful

failure to accommodate her disability in violation of the ADA.

          Even more egregious is the defendant's argument that it did

not act unlawfully when it ordered plaintiff not to park in the store's

handicapped parking spaces. In defense of its actions, Pueblo states

in its brief that "[a]t that time, as Ms. Marcano states, she was asked



                                 -25-
to park in the same area as all other employees, away from the Store.

In essence, she was treated as all other employees." Of course, here

again, it is not sufficient to treat plaintiff "as all other

employees." Plaintiff, due to her disability, must use parking spaces

specially set aside for handicapped individuals, because those parking

spaces are not only closer to the store but are also designed to

accommodate her transfer from vehicle to wheelchair. Her use of such

spaces is not a matter of preference or convenience, but a matter of

practicality--she simply cannot function in a crowded parking space.

For defendant to posit that treating her like everyone else--in other

words, like she had no disability--is practically a concession of its

failure to accommodate her.

          Based on the foregoing, we have no trouble in rejecting this

aspect of defendant's sufficiency of the evidence argument.




                                -26-
          E.      Damages Awarded to Plaintiff's Husband

          Defendant's last challenge to the jury verdict is its most

forceful one. Pueblo contends that the damages awarded to plaintiff's

husband, Osvaldo Román, were unsupported by and in fact contrary to Mr.

Román's trial testimony.

          We will overturn a jury verdict only if "the verdict was so

clearly against the weight of the evidence as to amount to a manifest

miscarriage of justice." PH Group Ltd. v. Birch, 985 F.2d 649, 653

(1st Cir. 1993). Although this a strict standard, our review of the

record compels the conclusion that the damages awarded to Román were

not reasonably based on the evidence presented at trial. Román's trial

testimony, which was the only evidence admitted in support of his

damages claim, unambiguously attributed the injury suffered by his and

Marcano's marriage to her termination rather than to defendant's

failures to accommodate her. He described their marriage prior to

January of 1997 as a "peaceful, normal" marriage and testified that

plaintiff was an "easy going person" who "got along with everyone,"

including with him and their two children. He further testified that

Marcano's personality changed and their relationship deteriorated

drastically following her dismissal in 1997. Conspicuously absent from

Román's testimony is any reference whatsoever to injuries resulting

from incidents other than plaintiff's termination.        However, as

discussed above, plaintiff's unlawful termination claim was properly


                                 -27-
dismissed by the district court and therefore cannot form the basis of

a derivative award to Román.7 Consequently, we have no choice but to

vacate the jury's award of $50,000 to Román.

                             CONCLUSION

          For the reasons set forth above, we vacate the award of

$50,000 in damages to plaintiff Osvaldo Román, and we affirm the

judgment in all other respects.

          Affirmed in part, vacated in part.




7 While recognizing a cause of action under Civil Code Article 1802 for
family members of individuals suffering employment discrimination, see
Santini-Rivera v. Service Air., Inc., 94 J.T.S. 121 (P.R. 1994), the
Puerto Rico Supreme Court has referred to that cause of action as
flowing from, or "contingent upon," the underlying discrimination claim
of the employee, although the cause of action is independently founded
in the general tort provision of the civil code (Article 1802) and not
in the anti-discrimination laws, see Campos v. Banco de Ponce, 138
D.P.R. 366, 370-71 (P.R. 1995). Plaintiff has offered us no argument
or authority suggesting that Román's claim could survive independent of
plaintiff's underlying discrimination claim.

                                 -28-