Katz v. City Metal Co. ( 1996 )


Menu:
  • USCA1 Opinion











    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
    ____________________


    No. 95-2234

    ALEXANDER KATZ,

    Plaintiff, Appellant,

    v.

    CITY METAL CO.,INC.,
    VERDIG DEUTCHE NICKLE,
    AMERICA, INC., MILTON WILCOX,
    AND PETER BRUNO,

    Defendants, Appellees.

    ____________________

    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

    FOR THE DISTRICT OF RHODE ISLAND

    [Hon. Ronald R. Lagueux, U.S. District Judge] ___________________

    ____________________

    Before

    Boudin, Circuit Judge, _____________
    Bownes, Senior Circuit Judge, ____________________
    and Stahl, Circuit Judge. _____________

    ____________________

    Robert E. Savage for appellant. ________________
    Michael P. DeFanti, with whom Hinckley, Allen & Snyder was on ___________________ __________________________
    brief for appellees.

    ____________________

    July 2, 1996
    ____________________


















    BOWNES, Senior Circuit Judge. Plaintiff/Appellant BOWNES, Senior Circuit Judge. ____________________

    Alexander Katz ("Katz") sued his former employer,

    Defendant/Appellee City Metal Co. ("City Metal"), its

    President Milton Wilcox ("Wilcox") and its Chief Executive

    Officer Peter Bruno ("Bruno"), under the Americans with

    Disabilities Act, 42 U.S.C. 12101 et seq. (1995) ("ADA"), __ ____

    and the Rhode Island Fair Employment Practices Act, R.I. Gen.

    Laws 28-5-1 et seq. (1995), claiming that City Metal __ ____

    unlawfully discriminated against him by discharging him

    because of a disability. See 42 U.S.C. 12112(a); R.I. Gen. ___

    Laws 28-5-6, 5-7. At the close of Katz's case, the

    district court granted City Metal's motion for judgment as a

    matter of law pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P. 50(a)(1), finding

    that Katz had not presented evidence sufficient to show that

    he had a "disability" as defined under the ADA.1 Katz

    appeals. We reverse and remand for a new trial.

    I. I. __

    BACKGROUND BACKGROUND __________

    City Metal is a corporation that buys and sells

    scrap metal, employing more than fifteen employees. Katz was

    hired by City Metal on July 1, 1991. On September 27, 1992,

    he suffered a heart attack. Five weeks later, Wilcox

    ____________________

    1. Because the definition of "handicap" under the Rhode
    Island law is substantially identical to the ADA's definition
    of "disability," we will not separately address the state law
    claim. Compare 42 U.S.C. 12102(2) with R.I. Gen. Law 28- _______ ____
    5-6(9).

    -2- 2













    telephoned Katz and told him his employment was terminated.

    This lawsuit followed, and ended at the close of Katz's case

    in a judgment as a matter of law for City Metal.

    "We review the grant of a Rule 50(a) motion for

    judgment as a matter of law de novo, under the same standards __ ____

    as the district court." Andrade v. Jamestown Housing Auth., ___________________________________

    82 F.3d 1179, 1186 (1st Cir. 1996). Accordingly, we "examine

    the evidence and all fair inferences in the light most

    favorable to the plaintiff [and] may not consider the

    credibility of witnesses, resolve conflicts in testimony, or

    evaluate the weight of the evidence." Richmond Steel, Inc. _____________________

    v. Puerto Rican American Ins. Co., 954 F.2d 19, 22 (1st Cir. _________________________________

    1992) (internal quotation marks and citations omitted). To

    warrant submission of an issue to the jury, the plaintiff

    must present "more than a mere scintilla" of evidence and may

    not rely on conjecture or speculation. Id. "[T]he evidence ___

    offered must make the existence of the fact to be inferred

    more probable than its nonexistence." Resare v. Raytheon ___________________

    Co., 981 F.2d 32, 34 (1st Cir. 1992) (internal quotation ___

    marks and citations omitted). 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. Richmond Steel, 954 F.2d at ______________

    22.





    -3- 3













    With this standard in mind we rehearse the evidence

    adduced by Katz.

    The Trial Testimony The Trial Testimony ___________________

    Katz testified as follows. City Metal hired him in

    July of 1991 as a scrap metal salesman because of his prior

    experience in the field. He was assigned various territories

    which he serviced by traveling in a company car. At the end

    of 1991, Bruno asked Katz to take an inside position in

    customer relations as a liaison between the company and its

    customers. Katz accepted and continued in that position

    until July of 1992. During that time Katz also helped to

    train Wilcox, who was new to the business, and trained other

    salesmen. In July of 1992, Katz, at his request, returned to

    being a salesman. Up until the time he was discharged, Katz

    did not receive any negative reports or comments about the

    quality of his performance and was not informed that his job

    was in jeopardy.

    On Sunday, September 27, 1992, while Katz was in

    Cleveland visiting his family, he had a heart attack and was

    taken by ambulance to the Cleveland Clinic. During his

    seven-day stay there, Katz underwent two angioplasty

    procedures and some testing, and was kept in cardiac

    intensive care. He was discharged from the hospital on

    Saturday, October 3, 1991, and telephoned Wilcox on the

    following Monday to explain the situation. Wilcox then sent



    -4- 4













    Katz Rhode Island temporary disability application forms.

    Katz submitted them and received disability payments for six

    months, the maximum payable under Rhode Island law.

    After his discharge from the hospital, Katz had

    great difficulty breathing, even while sitting down, and was

    extremely limited in his ability to walk. After a few steps,

    he became short of breath and experienced chest pains, broke

    into sweats and became nauseous. It was necessary that he

    keep stress to a minimum.

    Katz went to the company office on the Thursday

    afternoon following his hospital discharge for the purpose of

    discussing his return to work. Due to the effects of his

    heart attack, Katz was unable to walk to the company's office

    on the second floor. Wilcox therefore came down to Katz's

    car, where the two had a conversation. Katz asked about his

    customers and told Wilcox he wanted to return to work as soon

    as possible, even if it was initially in a limited capacity.

    Wilcox told him not to worry about his customers, and that

    the main thing was for Katz to get well.

    Katz stayed in Rhode Island for about a week after

    his conversation with Wilcox. The cold weather, however,

    restricted his breathing which, in turn, made walking even

    more difficult. Since Wilcox had told him that his first

    objective should be to get well, Katz decided to recuperate

    at his family's apartment in Miami, Florida.



    -5- 5













    On Friday, the last working day of October, Wilcox

    telephoned Katz and told him that he was discharged. Katz

    called Wilcox the following Monday and offered to return to

    work on a part-time basis with a reduction in salary and to

    accept whatever accommodations the company would make.

    At the time of the trial in October of 1995, Katz

    still had some trouble breathing and walking. He was

    working, having obtained a job on February 17, 1995 (after a

    lengthy search beginning in January of 1993), selling bonds

    for the State of Israel.

    Katz also called Wilcox as a witness. He testified

    that Katz's brother called to tell him about the heart attack

    two days after it occurred, and that he never questioned that

    Katz had a heart attack. He testified that Katz looked tired

    when he met him in the parking lot, and that he told Katz

    that his main objective should be to recover. Wilcox

    testified, however, that he had decided to fire Katz on

    September 4, 1992 (prior to the heart attack), for failing to

    submit a weekly travel schedule as required, and that he had

    merely waited until the end of October to so inform Katz.

    Katz also called Bruno as a witness, who testified that he

    was instrumental in hiring Katz, but was not familiar with

    the circumstances of his termination.

    The Judgment As A Matter Of Law The Judgment As A Matter Of Law _______________________________





    -6- 6













    After Katz, Wilcox, and Bruno had testified, Katz's

    attorney informed the court that he had one more witness --

    Katz's treating physician in Rhode Island -- whom he had

    subpoenaed for the following day. The court recessed until

    the following day, when Katz's attorney informed the court

    that the doctor had declined to appear in court until Friday,

    three days hence, and requested that he be permitted to

    present the doctor's testimony in rebuttal after the

    defendants' case. The court stated that it would deal with

    the issue when it arose and was not sure the doctor's

    testimony was "vital to the essence of your claim."

    When asked to state its position on the matter,

    City Metal stated that it had received Katz's medical records

    and that it did not dispute that Katz suffered a heart attack

    or that it perceived that he suffered a heart attack, but

    that it did contest that Katz was actually disabled within

    the meaning of the ADA. At that point, the court stated that

    Katz could not prove that he was disabled without the

    testimony of his doctor, and Katz again requested either a

    continuance or that the doctor be permitted to testify in

    rebuttal. The court denied those requests and Katz rested.

    City Metal then moved for judgment as a matter of

    law, arguing that in order to prove a disability under the

    ADA and the Rhode Island Fair Employment Practices Act, Katz

    was required to show that the heart attack "severely



    -7- 7













    restricted a basic life activity on a permanent and

    continuing basis," and that he had failed to do so because

    there had been no medical testimony that Katz was permanently

    impaired in a major life activity. In response, Katz argued

    that his testimony established that the heart attack resulted

    in hospitalization, and impaired his ability to breathe,

    walk, perform manual tasks, care for himself and work, and

    that the evidence therefore met each of the three alternative

    definitions of the term "disability" under the ADA -- that he

    had a physical impairment that substantially limited one or

    more major life activities, that he had a record of such an

    impairment, and that City Metal regarded him as having such

    an impairment. See 42 U.S.C. 12102(2). ___

    The district court ruled as follows:

    The question is whether it produced a
    permanent disability that he can't
    perform his work. It's obvious he's a
    salesman, and he's still selling. . . .
    In order for the Plaintiff to recover in
    this case, the Plaintiff must make a
    showing that he has some type of
    permanent impairment, physical impairment
    in one or more of life's major
    activities. There's been no showing of
    that in this case.

    The only evidence is that he has a
    blocked artery that was opened up by
    balloon angioplasty. That does not show
    that he has a permanent disability or
    heart disease. I know. I've been there.
    I had a heart attack.

    People recover from heart attacks and go
    on with life's functions. I know, I've
    done it, and I had an artery that was


    -8- 8













    completely blocked and not reopened.
    Because I went through a rehab program
    where I developed the collateral arteries
    to take over the function of that artery,
    now I can perform. I'm playing tennis.
    I'm doing aerobic exercises every other
    day. I can perform fully in my life's
    functions as a Judge, where there's a lot
    more stress than some other vocations.
    So I have personal experience in this.
    Now a judge can't put aside his personal
    experiences in life in deciding cases.

    I have decided it as a matter of law. I
    have decided the Plaintiff failed to
    prove that he had a permanent disability
    resulting from his heart attack.

    II. II.

    DISCUSSION DISCUSSION __________

    The district court erred in ruling that there was

    insufficient evidence of disability within the meaning of the

    ADA. We start with the words of the statute. The Americans

    with Disabilities Act is a federal civil rights statute,

    enacted "to provide a clear and comprehensive national

    mandate for the elimination of discrimination against

    individuals with disabilities." 42 U.S.C. 12101(b)(1).

    See also Grenier v. Cyanamid Plastics, Inc., 70 F.3d 667, 671 ___ ____ __________________________________

    (1st Cir. 1995). In the employment context, the ADA

    prohibits a "covered entity" (defined as "a person engaged in

    an industry affecting commerce who has 15 or more employees")

    from "discriminat[ing] against a qualified individual with a

    disability because of the disability of such individual in

    regard to job application procedures, the hiring,



    -9- 9













    advancement, or discharge of employees, employee

    compensation, job training, and other terms, conditions, and

    privileges of employment." 42 U.S.C. 12112(a). To obtain

    relief under the Act, a plaintiff must prove three things.

    First, that he was disabled within the meaning of the Act.

    Second, that with or without reasonable accommodation he was

    able to perform the essential functions of his job. And

    third, that the employer discharged him in whole or in part

    because of his disability.2

    In light of the district court's ruling, we focus

    on the first element -- "disability" -- as defined in the

    ADA:

    The term "disability" means, with respect
    to an individual --

    (A) a physical or mental impairment that
    substantially limits one or more of the
    major life activities of such individual;


    (B) a record of such an impairment; or

    (C) being regarded as having such an
    impairment.


    ____________________

    2. A plaintiff may indirectly prove that he was
    discriminated against because of a disability by using the
    prima facie case and burden shifting methods that originated _____ _____
    in McDonnell Douglas Corp. v. Green, 411 U.S. 792 (1973), and ________________________________
    were refined and sharpened in Texas Dep't of Community ___________________________
    Affairs v. Burdine, 450 U.S. 248 (1981) and St. Mary's Honor ___________________ ________________
    Ctr. v. Hicks, 509 U.S. 502 (1993). See Benson v. Northeast _____________ ___ ___________________
    Airlines, Inc., 62 F.3d 1108, 1112 (8th Cir. 1995); DeLuca v. ______________ _________
    Winer Indus., Inc., 53 F.3d 793, 797-98 (7th Cir. 1995); ___________________
    White v. York Int'l Corp., 45 F.3d 357, 360-61 (10th Cir. __________________________
    1995).

    -10- 10













    42 U.S.C. 12102(2).

    A "physical impairment" is "[a]ny physiological

    disorder, or condition . . . or anatomical loss affecting,"

    inter alia, the "cardiovascular" system. 29 C.F.R. 1630.2 _____ ____

    (h)(1) (1995). "Major life activities" are defined as

    "functions such as caring for oneself, performing manual

    tasks, walking, seeing, hearing, speaking, breathing,

    learning, and working." 29 C.F.R. 1630.2(i).

    "Substantially limited" is defined as:

    (i) Unable to perform a major life
    activity that the average person in the
    general population can perform; or

    (ii) Significantly restricted as to
    the condition, manner or duration under
    which an individual can perform a
    particular major life activity as
    compared to the condition, manner or
    duration under which the average person
    in the general population can perform
    that same major life activity.

    29 C.F.R. 1630.2(j)(1). Factors to be considered in

    assessing whether an individual is substantially limited in a

    major life activity are:

    (i) The nature and severity of the
    impairment;

    (ii) The duration or expected
    duration of the impairment; and

    (iii) The permanent or long term
    impact, or the expected permanent or long
    term impact of or resulting from the
    impairment.





    -11- 11













    29 C.F.R. 1630.2(j)(2).3 According to the Equal

    Employment





































    ____________________

    3. The regulations set forth a more particularized
    definition of what it means to be "substantially limited in
    the major life activity of working." See 29 C.F.R. ___
    1630(j)(3). We need not consider the permutations of that
    definition, however, because if an individual is
    substantially limited in a major life activity other than
    working, or is so regarded, "no determination should be made
    as to whether the individual is substantially limited in
    working." 29 C.F.R. Pt. 1630, App., at 403.

    -12- 12













    Opportunity Commission's Compliance Manual:

    Although short-term, temporary
    restrictions generally are not
    substantially limiting, an impairment
    does not necessarily have to be permanent
    to rise to the level of a disability.
    Some conditions may be long-term or
    potentially long-term, in that their
    duration is indefinite and unknowable or
    is expected to be at least several
    months. Such conditions, if severe, may
    constitute disabilities.

    2 EEOC Compliance Manual, Interpretations (CCH) 902.4,

    6884, p. 5319 (1995). Examples of impairments that are

    "usually not disabilities" because they are "temporary,"

    "non-chronic," and "of short duration, with little or no long

    term or permanent impact," are "broken limbs, sprained

    joints, concussions, appendicitis, and influenza." 29 C.F.R.

    Pt. 1630, App. at 402.

    Especially given that City Metal has never disputed

    that Katz had a heart attack, we have no doubt that a

    rational jury could conclude, even without expert medical

    testimony, that Katz had a condition affecting the

    cardiovascular system and therefore that he had a physical

    impairment under the ADA.4 29 C.F.R. 1630.2 (h)(1). We

    ____________________

    4. In Cook v. State of Rhode Island, Department of Mental ______________________________________________________
    Health, Retardation, and Hospitals, 10 F.3d 17 (1st Cir. ____________________________________
    1993), a case under Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of
    1973 (which is interpreted substantially identically to the
    ADA, 42 U.S.C. 12117(b), 12201(a)), we upheld the jury
    verdict in favor of plaintiff, in part based on her
    presentation of expert medical testimony that "morbid
    obesity" was a physiological disorder that affected the
    musculoskeletal, respiratory, and cardiovascular systems.

    -13- 13













    think, however, that it is a very close question whether Katz

    offered sufficient evidence to prove that that impairment

    "substantially limited" his major life activities within the

    meaning of the ADA, his scheduled expert medical witness

    having proved unavailable.

    As might reasonably be expected after any major

    trauma and resultant medical procedure or surgery, Katz's

    ability to breathe, walk and work was substantially limited

    in the period immediately following the heart attack and

    angioplasty procedures. This does not, however, necessarily

    lead to the conclusion that Katz had a disability. See ___

    McDonald v. Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, 62 F.3d 92, 96 (3d ________________________________________

    Cir. 1995) (inability to work for two months following

    surgery not a disability). We think that it would be

    difficult for a lay jury to conclude, based solely on the

    immediate effects of a heart attack and angioplasty procedure

    on Katz, that those limitations were permanent or persisted

    on a long-term basis, or that their duration was indefinite

    and unknowable or expected to be at least several months.

    Katz was apparently prepared to present medical testimony to

    this effect but, as already noted, his medical expert was

    unavailable and the court declined to delay the trial.


    ____________________

    Id. at 23. In a case like Cook, where it is not obvious to a __ ____
    lay jury that the condition affects one of the bodily systems
    listed in the regulations, expert testimony that it does may
    well be necessary to avoid a judgment as a matter of law.

    -14- 14













    There is certainly no general rule that medical

    testimony is always necessary to establish disability. Some

    long-term impairments would be obvious to a lay jury (e.g., a ____

    missing arm) and it is certainly within the realm of

    possibility that a plaintiff himself in a disabilities case

    might offer a description of treatments and symptoms over a

    substantial period that would put the jury in a position

    where it could determine that he did suffer from a disability

    within the meaning of the ADA. On this record, we think it

    is a much closer case whether Katz put such evidence before

    the jury.

    The bulk of the evidence as to Katz's medical

    condition related primarily to his situation immediately

    after the operation, including his initial effort to return

    to work in which he was so stricken that he could not even

    leave the car and climb up a flight of stairs to the office.

    Katz did testify that even three years after the operation,

    he still felt in poor condition; but that testimony was far

    more general and far less specific than his testimony

    regarding the impact of the heart attack in the month or so

    immediately following its occurrence.

    We think it was unwise for the district court to

    invoke its own medical experience in explaining its

    determination that Katz's evidence was inadequate, since the





    -15- 15













    determination of whether an impairment substantially limits a



















































    -16- 16













    major activity must be made on an individual basis:

    The determination of whether an
    individual has a disability is . . .
    based . . . on the effect of that
    impairment on the life of the individual.
    Some impairments may be disabling for
    particular individuals but not for
    others.

    29 C.F.R. Pt. 1630, App. at 402. See also Chandler v. City ___ ____ ________________

    of Dallas, 2 F.3d 1385, 1396 (5th Cir. 1993) (recognizing _________

    that "the effect of a given type of impairment . . . can vary

    widely from individual to individual"), cert. denied, 114 S. ____ ______

    Ct 1386 (1994). Nonetheless, it is at least a debatable

    question whether, based on Katz's testimony, the jury could

    conclude that he suffered from a continuing medical

    condition, persisting beyond the period immediately after the

    operation, that substantially limited one or more of his

    major life activities.

    We need not definitively resolve the issue of

    whether expert medical testimony was necessary for the case

    to go forward on a theory of actual disability in this case,

    because we think that the evidence permitted Katz to reach

    the jury under one of the alternative definitions of

    disability, that City Metal "regarded [Katz] as having such

    an impairment." 41 U.S.C. 12102(2)(C). Under the

    regulations an individual who has an impairment that is not

    substantially limiting (or has no impairment at all) is

    nevertheless "disabled" if he is treated by the employer as



    -17- 17













    having an impairment that does substantially limit major life

    activities. 29 C.F.R. 1630.2(l)(1). An example given is

    an employee whose controlled high blood pressure is not a

    disability but is reassigned because the employer fears,

    wrongly, that the employee may have a heart attack. Id. Pt. ___

    1630, App. See also Cook, 10 F.3d at 20-21, 23, 25 (employer ___ ____ ____

    treated employee as handicapped by refusing to rehire her

    based on its belief that her morbid obesity would compromise

    her ability to do her job and put her at risk of developing

    serious ailments).

    In this case, Katz alleged in his complaint that he

    was not only actually disabled but also perceived by his

    employer to be disabled, and was fired because of it. The

    dramatic encounter at the office, in which Katz was unable to

    climb the stairs and Wilcox observed his fatigue, is only one

    piece of evidence; others included the employer's knowledge

    of the heart attack, angioplasty procedure and

    hospitalization, and yet another was Katz's own statements to

    his employer that when he returned to work it would at least

    initially have to be in a limited capacity. Cf. Hamm v. __ _______

    Runyon, 51 F.3d 721, 724-26 (7th Cir. 1995) (employer did not ______

    "regard" employee as disabled where there was no evidence

    that the person who made the decision to fire him was even

    told about the employee's arthritis; employee told his direct

    supervisor that it was "nothing" and "would pass" and



    -18- 18













    continued to do all of the functions of his job). Even if

    medical expert testimony were required here to permit the

    jury to find that Katz was suffering from a continuing

    serious heart condition, the jury certainly did not need

    medical testimony in making its own judgment as to what the

    employer may have perceived, rightly or wrongly, about Katz's

    condition.

    When the district court proposed to withdraw the

    case from the jury and direct a verdict, Katz argued to the

    court that regardless of actual medical condition, he had

    provided a basis for the jury to conclude that the employer

    perceived him to be disabled. The judge did not directly

    respond to this assertion. Katz has renewed it on appeal,

    but City Metal's brief also fails to respond in any depth to

    the perception argument. At least on this record, we have to

    conclude that Katz did provide enough evidence to reach the

    jury on the issue of perception which, as already noted, does

    constitute disability within the meaning of the Act.

    Congress, when it provided for perception to be the

    basis of disability status, probably had principally in mind

    the more usual case in which a plaintiff has a long-term

    medical condition of some kind, and the employer exaggerates

    its significance by failing to make a reasonable

    accommodation. But both the language and policy of the

    statute seem to us to offer protection as well to one who is



    -19- 19













    not substantially disabled or even disabled at all but is

    wrongly perceived to be so. And, of course, it may well be

    that Katz was both actually disabled and perceived to be so.

    The second element of proof is ability to perform

    the essential functions of the job with or without reasonable

    accommodation. See 42 U.S.C. 12111(8). Katz testified ___

    that five days after his discharge from the hospital and

    again two days after he was fired, he asked Wilcox to

    accommodate him by allowing him to return to work on a part-

    time basis. On the latter occasion, Katz suggested a

    reduction in salary and said he would accept whatever

    accommodations the company would make in order to keep his

    job. Reasonable accommodations include, inter alia, "job _____ ____

    restructuring [and] part-time or modified work schedules."

    42 U.S.C. 12111(9). As we noted in Grenier v. Cyanamid ____________________

    Plastics, Inc.: ______________

    With respect to known disabilities,
    however, the emphasis is on encouraging
    the employer to "engage in an interactive
    process with the individual to determine
    an effective reasonable accommodation."
    Guidance IV.B.6b (citing H.R. Rep. No. ________
    485 (Pt. 2), supra, at 65-66, _____
    U.S.C.C.A.N. at 347-48).

    70 F.3d at 677. Katz's suggestions were rejected out of

    hand. The district judge did not say that Katz had failed to

    show that he could perform his job with reasonable






    -20- 20













    accommodations, nor does City Metal offer any argument as to

    this element on appeal.5

    The third element of plaintiff's case, that Katz

    was fired because of a disability, or that his disability was

    a motivating factor in City Metal's decision to fire him,

    Pedigo v. P.A.M. Transport, Inc., 60 F.3d 1300, 1301 (8th ________________________________

    Cir. 1995), also was a question of fact for the jury. The

    timing of Katz's firing, one month after his heart attack,

    was circumstantial evidence from which the jury could find

    that Katz's disability triggered, in whole or in part, his

    firing by City Metal.

    We rule that the court erred in granting judgment

    as a matter of law for City Metal, because the evidence would

    permit the conclusion that Katz established that City Metal

    regarded him as having an impairment constituting a

    disability under section 12102(2)(C) of the Act. Thus, he

    proved a prima facie case of discrimination under the ADA and _____ _____

    the Rhode Island Fair Employment Practices Act.

    Where there must be a remand for a new trial, we

    have broad authority to draft a remand order that is fair and

    just. 28 U.S.C. 2106. In this instance, given that Katz

    was deprived of his medical testimony more or less by

    accident, we see no reason why on retrial he should not be

    ____________________

    5. City Metal was free, of course, to attempt to show that
    accommodating Katz would have imposed on it an "undue
    hardship." 42 U.S.C. 12111(10).

    -21- 21













    allowed to present expert testimony in a timely fashion in

    order to show an actual disability under the statute.

    Accordingly, we reverse and remand for a new trial, _______ ______

    leaving it open to Katz to retry the case under any or all of

    the three theories of disability available under the statute.

    Costs on appeal awarded to appellant.









































    -22- 22