Dewitt v. Proctor Hospital
Full Opinion (html_with_citations)
After she was fired from her job as a registered nurse at Proctor Hospital, 47-year-old Phillis Dewitt sued, alleging âassociation discriminationâ under the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) as well as age and gender discrimination. The district court entered summary judgment in
In September 2001, Proctor, a hospital in Peoria, Illinois, hired Dewitt to work as a nurse on an âas-neededâ basis. Proctor apparently liked how Dewitt did her job because the following month she was promoted to the permanent position of second-shift clinical manager. In that role, Dewitt supervised nurses and other Proctor staff members.
Three years into the job, Dewitt switched to the first-shift clinical manager slot. In the summer of 2005, she switched to a part-time schedule, sharing the responsibilities of second-shift clinical manager with a coworker.
Dewitt, it appears (for we must assume the facts to be as she presents them at this stage of the proceedings), was a valuable employee. In her last evaluation, her supervisor, Mary Jane Davis, described her as an âoutstanding clinical manager [who] consistently goes the extra mile.â But things were not quite as rosy as they appeared.
Dewitt and her husband, Anthony, were covered under Proctorâs health insurance plan. Throughout Dewittâs tenure at Proctor, Anthony suffered from prostate cancer and received expensive medical care. His covered medical expenses were paid by Proctor, which was partially self-insured. It paid for membersâ covered medical costs up to $250,000 per year. Anything above this âstop-lossâ figure was covered by a policy issued by the Standard Security Life Insurance Company of New York.
Dewitt was able to maintain health insurance coverage for herself and Anthony even during her short part-time stint, since Proctor credited Dewitt with âhospital approved absenceâ (unpaid time), allowing her to reach the minimum number of hours necessary to qualify for benefits.
Since Proctor was self-insured, it took a keen interest in the medical claims submitted by its employees. Each quarter, in fact, Progressive Benefits Services, the administrator of Proctorâs medical plan, prepared a âstop-loss reportâ for Linda K. Buck, Proctorâs vice-president of human resources. The report identified all employees whose recent medical claims exceeded $25,000.
The stop-loss reports highlighted Dewittâs expenses. Although Dewitt was not listed on reports for 2001 and 2002 (indicating that her familyâs medical expenses, particularly those of her husband, were less than $25,000), during the next three years Anthony underwent costly medical procedures. In 2003, the Dewittsâ medical claims for Anthony were $71,684. In 2004, the figure jumped to $177,826. In the first eight months of 2005, the expenses were $67,281.50.
In September 2004, Davis confronted Dewitt about Anthonyâs high medical claims. Specifically, she asked what treatment Anthony was receiving, and Dewitt responded that he was undergoing chemotherapy and radiation. Davis asked Dewitt if she had considered hospice care for her husband; Dewitt responded that Anthonyâs doctor considered less expensive hospice care placement to be premature. Davis explained that a committee was reviewing Anthonyâs medical expenses, which she described as unusually high.
In February 2005, Davis again pulled Dewitt aside to ask about Anthonyâs treatment. Dewitt informed her that Anthonyâs situation had not changed.
In May 2005, Davis organized a meeting for Proctorâs clinical managers. She informed the employees that Proctor faced
Proctor fired Dewitt on August 3, 2005, and designated her as âineligible to be rehired in the future.â Proctor provided no explanation for its âineligible for rehireâ decision.
Dewittâs age and gender discrimination claims can be quickly resolved. On her age claim, she says she was replaced by a 25-year-old woman named Michelle Patton. But Dewittâs âevidenceâ on this point is nothing more than a statement in her affidavit which is not based on her personal knowledge. Proctor, on the other hand, offers personal knowledge from Ms. Buck to the effect that during the two months following Dewittâs discharge, several different employees (a total of eight is suggested) filled her spot before it was given, permanently, to Sarilee Glover, who was 57 years old. Dewittâs inability to satisfy the requirement, under the often-cited McDonnell Douglas test, that she was replaced by someone outside the protected group â someone under 40 years of age â dooms her age discrimination claim.
Ditto for her gender discrimination claim, where Dewitt alleges that a male employee with high medical expenses, a chap named Ray Lockhart, was not fired. But Lockhartâs medical expenses were actually quite modest as compared to Dewittâs. In 2004, his expenses were $4,114.05, a staggering $173,712.32 short of Dewittâs total. On top of that, Dewitt offers next to nothing about Lockhartâs job responsibilities other than to say he was a registered nurse and an emergency room manager. The district court, on this sparse record, correctly concluded that Dewittâs gender discrimination claim had to fail because she did not, again as required by the ubiquitous McDonnell Douglas test, identify a âsimilarly situatedâ member of the other sex who received more favorable treatment from the hospital.
Now we come to Dewittâs best claim as she invokes the infrequently litigated âassociation discriminationâ section of the ADA. Under 42 U.S.C. § 12112(b)(4), an employer is prohibited from discriminating against an employee as a result of âthe known disability of an individual with whom [the employee] is known to have a relationship or association.â Specifically, she alleges that Proctor fired her to avoid having to continue to pay for the substantial medical costs that were being incurred by her husband under Proctorâs self-insured health insurance plan.
In our seminal case on this issue, Larimer v. International Business Machines Corp., 370 F.3d 698, 700 (7th Cir.2004), we outlined three categories into which âassociation discriminationâ plaintiffs generally fall. We called them (1) expense; (2) disability by association; and (3) distraction. In the âexpenseâ scenario, we noted that an employee, fired because her spouse has a disability that is costly to the employer (i.e., he is covered by the companyâs health plan) is within the intended scope of the
The McDonnell Douglas test is not easily adaptable to claims under the section of the ADA that permits causes of action for association discrimination. Itâs a bit like a mean stepsister trying to push her big foot into one of Cinderellaâs tiny glass slippers. In Larimer, we struggled with the task of reformulating the McDonnell Douglas test, suggesting that a similar effort in Den Hartog v. Wasatch Academy, 129 F.3d 1076 (10th Cir.1997), while close to the mark, could be tweaked and improved. And so we suggested that a plaintiff, without direct evidence of discrimination, could prove her case by establishing that: (1) she was qualified for the job at the time of the adverse employment action; (2) she was subjected to an adverse employment action; (3) she was known by her employer at the time to have a relative or associate with a disability; and (4) her case falls into one of the three relevant categories of expense, distraction, or association. Lar-imer, 370 F.3d at 701-02.
While all this may be well and good, we think Dewittâs case, in the final analysis, does not have to be considered in light of the tweaked McDonnell Douglas test because she has fairly persuasive circumstantial evidence suggesting that her case is best viewed as one relying on direct evidence. And so, we think, a jury should consider her claim.
The uncontroverted evidence suggests that Proctor, which faced financial trouble, was very concerned about cutting costs. Because Proctorâs unusually high âstop-lossâ coverage didnât kick in until claims exceeded $250,000, it personally felt the heavy bite of Dewittâs expenses. Proctor wasnât discreet about its concerns: in the May 2005 meeting, Davis informed Proctorâs clinical managers that the hospital would have to be âcreativeâ in cutting costs.
That the powers-that-be at Proctor were interested specifically in the high cost of Anthonyâs medical treatment is obvious. Davis, Dewittâs supervisor (and the person who ultimately fired her), pulled Dewitt aside twice in five months to inquire about Anthonyâs condition. These conversations indicate that Davis was very interested in limiting Anthonyâs claims. During their first chat, Davis informed Dewitt that a Proctor committee was reviewing Anthonyâs unusually high medical expenses. She also asked Dewitt whether Anthonyâs doctor had considered hospice placementâ a far cheaper âalternativeâ to the costly chemotherapy and radiation Anthony was receiving.
Finally, the timing of Dewittâs termination suggests that the financial albatross of Anthonyâs continued cancer treatment was an important factor in Proctorâs decision. Dewitt was fired in August 2005â five months after her last chat with Davis and three months after Proctor warned employees about impending âcreativeâ cost-cutting measures. One could reasonably infer that Dewitt was terminated after Proctor conducted its latest periodic analysis of medical claim âoutliersâ and, this time around, decided that its âwait and seeâ strategy with the Dewitts was costing the hospital tens of thousands of dollars every year. A reasonable juror could conclude that Proctor, which faced a financial struggle of indeterminate length, was concerned that Anthonyâa multi-year cancer veteranâmight linger on indefinitely. This later fact distinguishes Dewittâs case from the situation in Larimer where the fired employeeâs twin daughters were âhealthy and normalâ and thus no longer disabled when the employment termination decision was made.
In support of its claim that it never sought to restrict the Dewittsâ access to health insurance, Proctor points to its decision to help Dewitt maintain her coverage when she switched to a part-time schedule in the summer of 2005. According to Dewitt, however, her switch to a part-time schedule was contingent on Proctor continuing her medical benefits. Since we must interpret the facts in Dewittâs favor, we therefore assume that Proctor was well-aware that regardless of how it responded to her request to maintain her health coverage, Dewitt would not have relinquished her benefits voluntarily.
Finally, Proctor argues that firing Dewitt would not have accomplished the goal Dewitt attributes to itâfreeing itself of Anthonyâs steep medical bills-âsince Dewitt was eligible for post-termination COBRA insurance. This argument, however, leaves out an important piece of the puzzle. Even if Proctor shared some financial responsibility for the continuation of benefits, it would nonetheless save money by terminating Dewitt, since it feared that Anthonyâs expensive treatment might continue indefinitely and the COBRA coverage would expire after 18 months.
Because Dewitt has established that direct evidence of âassociation discriminationâ may have motivated Proctor in its decision to fire her, a jury should be allowed to consider her claim.
Lastly, Dewitt contends that the court erred in refusing to allow her to amend her complaint to add a claim of ERISA retaliation. The district court denied Dewittâs motion on the basis of futility, since it determined that her claim would have ultimately failed. We review the district courtâs decision to deny a motion for leave to amend for an abuse of discretion. Cada ex rel. Randolph v. Norfolk & Western Ry. Co., 290 F.3d 914, 921 (7th Cir.2002).
Under § 510 of ERISA, an employer may not discharge âa participant or beneficiary for exercising any right to which he is entitled under the provisions of an employee benefit plan.â 29 U.S.C. § 1140. This provision is intended to discourage employers from discharging or harassing their employees in an attempt to prevent them from using their pension or medical benefits. Lindemann v. Mobil Oil Corp., 141 F.3d 290, 295 (7th Cir.1998).
To determine whether the district court properly rejected Dewittâs amendment as futile, we must determine whether her ERISA retaliation claim would survive a motion for summary judgment. See Sound of Music Co. v. Minnesota Min. & Mfg. Co., 477 F.3d 910, 923 (7th Cir.2007). If Proctor had a legitimate, nondiscriminatory reason for firing Dewitt, she would be out of luck. She would not then be able to show retaliation. Isbell v. Allstate Ins. Co., 418 F.3d 788, 796 (7th Cir.2005). Because, however, Proctor elected not to
A reasonable jury could conclude that Proctor retaliated against Dewitt, and thus committed an ERISA violation, when they showed her the door on August 3, 2005. But that said, we note that Dewittâs two claims, one under the ADA and the other under ERISA, overlap, perhaps completely. Both essentially present the same factual question â why did Proctor fire Dewitt? If a jury were to find that Dewitt was fired for insubordination, not because her husband was costing the hospital a ton of money under its self-insured medical plan, that would be the end of the case. If the insubordination defense is rejected and the jury concludes that Anthonyâs expenses were the real motivating factor, damages â whether based on a discrimination claim under the ADA or a retaliation claim under ERISA â would seem to be the same. With that being the situation, on remand, some thought should be given to whether having two claims here instead of one does anything other than unduly complicate the proceedings.
For these reasons, we AffiRm the district courtâs grant of summary judgment to Proctor on Dewittâs age and gender discrimination claims. We Reverse both the grant of summary judgment on the ADA association discrimination claim and the denial of Dewittâs motion to amend her complaint. The case is Remanded to the district court for further proceedings.
. In its brief, Proctor says, without elaboration, that Dewitt was fired for "insubordination.â That may well be Proctor's position as this case moves forward, but it is not something that has been developed so far.