Anthony Brown, V Golden State Foods Corp. ( 2015 )


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  •                                                                                                FILED
    COURT OF
    APPEALS
    DIVISION II
    2015 FEB 24
    M?1 9: 27
    STATE   OF
    WASHINGTON
    BY
    DE _. Ty
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
    DIVISION II
    ANTHONY BROWN,                                                                     No. 45097 -6 -II
    Appellant,
    v.
    GOLDEN STATE FOODS CORP. and                                              UNPUBLISHED OPINION
    QUALITY CUSTOM DISTRIBUTION
    SERVICES, INC.,
    Respondents.
    JOHANSON, C. J. —         Anthony Brown appeals from the trial court' s order granting summary
    judgment       to   Golden     State   Foods    Corporation ( GSF)         on Brown' s claims of disability
    discrimination, retaliatory discharge,         and   failure to   provide   rest   or meal    breaks.    Brown also
    appeals from the trial court' s order denying Brown' s summary judgment motion on the same
    claims,   Brown'    s motion   to   compel   discovery,   and   Brown' s   motion   to   strike evidence.   We agree
    with Brown in part. Because Brown establishes a genuine issue of material fact to warrant a trial
    on his failure to accommodate claim to survive summary judgment, we reverse the trial court on
    that   ground   only. In   all other respects, we affirm    the trial   court.
    No. 45097 -6 -II
    FACTS
    I. BACKGROUND AND BROWN' S EMPLOYMENT
    Brown suffered a back injury in 1980 and has had two support rods in his spine ever since.
    Nevertheless, Brown has "             always   been   able   to   keep up with the various jobs [ he has]            had." Clerk' s
    Papers ( CP) at 287.
    In 2009, Brown applied for a delivery truck driver position with GSF. 1 The application
    process included a physical examination, which included physical tests such as lifting weights.
    Brown passed these tests without issue. Brown' s examining physician noted Brown' s injury but
    medically          cleared   him to   work as a    driver    without      any   modifications         to his job duties.      During
    Brown' s road test, he told a supervisor that he " had no medical restrictions, as such, and that [he]
    did    not   think this would be        a problem     but that [ he] may      not   be   as   fast   as other   drivers."   CP at 36.
    On May 20, 2009, GSF hired Brown as a probationary employee for a period of 90 days.
    Brown' s job was to deliver                  coffee -related      products    to Starbucks           stores.    Shortly thereafter,
    Brown' s supervisors began complaining about Brown' s slow work. Brown admitted that he was
    a little bit slower bending and moving around" as a result of his injury, CP at 37, 139, and it made
    him unable to "jump in and out of the trucks and off load heavy products, often times at shoulder
    level,    without     producing       pain and   discomfort."       CP at 288.
    Brown told his supervisors about the injury and asked for a mechanical lift for his truck,
    which        he   asserted would      help   him to   work   faster     and " prevent [ his]     back from acting up."          CP at
    1
    GSF'   s                  Quality Custom Distribution
    affiliated corporation,                                                Services, Inc., is also joined as a
    respondent, and we refer to both collectively as GSF.
    2
    No. 45097 -6 -II
    36. A majority          of   GSF'     s   trucks   were equipped with such mechanical                            lifts. Brown also asked to
    be transferred to a warehouse job. Both of his requests were ignored.
    Unbeknownst to his supervisors, while working for GSF, Brown worked through his lunch
    and rest   breaks. GSF'           s   drivers   were    told to " just         keep .working and           get   the   shift   done."   CP at 135.
    GSF did not pay Brown for his lunch or rest breaks.
    II. TERMINATION AND INJURY
    Brown had been working for approximately two months when, on August 1, GSF manager
    Eric Lard directed the supervisors to " terminate Anthony Brown' s employment due to his poor
    performance before the 90 day probationary period under the collective bargaining agreement had
    passed."        CP   at    188.       In a series of internal e- mails, the supervisors commented on Brown' s
    performance,         noting that "[ w] e have had to                send       help      to him every      night....       I don' t really know
    what options we           have    since we are short             drivers[ sic] but U. Village his[ sic]                 kicking his     butt." CP
    at   509. The     supervisors agreed              to   keep   Brown           on   the   schedule    for   another week, " and we can get
    rid of   him    after   8/ 8,   unless     Eric    wants    to   get rid of        him    earlier   than that."        CP at 509.
    Brown received a call to drive on the night of August 9 and the early morning of August
    10 when another driver called in sick. On that night, he had more stops and more items to deliver
    than   usual.     Sometime between 1 and 2 AM, Brown injured his back while transferring crates of
    milk from the bed of the truck to the dolly. Brown called his night supervisor, Chuck Brewer, to
    help   him     complete         his   route.    Brewer told Brown that he had to continue working and complete
    the   route "   because      they     could not        have   a `` late.   '    CP at 36. Brewer also told Brown to come in the
    morning        after      completing the            route     to   receive          Department        of    Labor       and     Industries ( L &I)
    paperwork        for the     injury.
    No. 45097 -6 -II
    When Brown came in on the morning of August 10, the L &I paperwork was not ready.
    Brown went home to rest and did not return until the evening of August 11, when a supervisor
    informed Brown that he was being terminated.2 Brown again asked for a warehouse job, but the
    supervisor refused to grant the request.
    Brown    went   directly   to the hospital      and   filed   a claim   for   workers'   compensation.     As of
    the date of the summary judgment, Brown had not been medically released to work since his on-
    the-job injury and remained on workers' compensation.
    PROCEDURAL HISTORY
    Brown sued GSF asserting six causes of action: disability -based hostile work environment,
    negligent infliction of emotional distress, failure to accommodate a disability, age discrimination,
    retaliatory discharge,     and   failure to     provide meal and rest         breaks.      In the course of discovery,
    Brown made an interrogatory requesting that GSF identify
    each cellular telephone or other mobile communications device and account that
    you have used at any time between August 10, 2009 and the present day by
    telephone number or address, together with each email address and/ or account that
    you have used between August 10, 2009 and the present day as well as each land
    line telephone number or account that you have used in this same time frame.
    CP   at   4.   Brown intended to have these devices examined by an electronics expert, subject to a
    protective order. Brown also requested production of "all emails, text messages or other electronic
    communications made ...          between August 10, 2009 and the present day that relate to the Plaintiff' s
    Complaint       or your   Answer     or   any   related   issue in this litigation."         CP    at   4.   Finally, Brown
    requested his own trip records from his work for GSF, as well as the trip records and personnel
    2 This was the 83rd day of Brown' s 90 -day probationary period.
    4
    No. 45097 -6 -II
    files   of     several    other       drivers.     GSF responded that it had already produced e- mails
    contemporaneous with and                relating to Mr. Brown'        s   termination,"        as well as all of Brown' s trip
    records   that " could be located         after a reasonable search."            CP at 5 - 6. GSF refused to comply with
    Brown' s other discovery requests, arguing that they were overbroad, unduly burdensome, and
    sought information that was not relevant nor reasonably calculated to lead to the discovery of
    admissible evidence.
    3
    Brown     moved        to   compel     discovery.        Brown argued that he needed access to GSF' s
    communications devices in order to discover evidence that Brown' s supervisors knew about his
    on-the-job injury. Brown also argued that he needed the information of his former co- workers to
    prove   that his performance was no               worse   than that        of   the   other   drivers.   The trial court denied
    Brown' s motion to compel, except as to the trip records of Brown' s fellow drivers and the contact
    information of Brown' s co- workers.
    Subsequently,         the    parties   cross moved       for summary judgment.                 Brown also brought a
    motion    to   strike   his   supervisors'   internal   e -mails as " self-serving,           hearsay documents."    CP at 423.
    All three      motions were argued and            decided     on   June 21, 2013.         Brown' s counsel argued that his
    motion to strike should be granted because the e -mails were allegedly falsified:
    MR. DEJEAN: They can testify to these things but it' s just as if they were
    write -out, you know. E -mail is no different, just write these things out. I mean, it' s
    you know, it' s just a hearsay document that --
    THE COURT: Anything else evidentiary -wise on that issue?
    MR. DEJEAN: No, other than the plaintiff wasn' t given an opportunity to
    contest them, Judge. If we could have gotten into that E -mail system, I' m confident
    3 Brown' s motion to compel also concerned several other discovery requests that GSF contested.
    Because Brown does not raise these requests on appeal, we do not address them.
    5
    No. 45097 -6 -II
    that these things   were --        I mean, this is Golden State Foods, this is McDonalds.
    That HR department is probably the Harvard and Yale of HR departments.
    Report   of   Proceedings ( RP)   at   5.   Citing CR 56( f),the trial court offered Brown a continuance so
    he could discover more e- mails. Brown declined. The court denied Brown' s motion to strike and
    heard argument on the cross motions for summary judgment. The court denied summary judgment
    to Brown and granted summary judgment to GSF on all claims, ruling that
    f]irst, I don' t believe that you do have a duty to accommodate a disability after
    termination, that' s number one. I believe that the undisputed evidence is that there
    was no notice ofa disability as required by law, medically, prior to the termination.
    And the undisputed evidence is that the decision to terminate came on August 1,
    and a week or more, about ten days before the actual communication of termination
    to the plaintiff.. For those reasons, I think that dismissal of this case is appropriate,
    denying plaintiff' s motion for summary judgment, granting defendants' motion for
    summary judgment.
    RP at 17 -18. Brown timely appealed the trial court' s grant of summary judgment in GSF' s favor,
    its denial of summary judgment in Brown' s favor, its denial of Brown' s motion to strike, and its
    denial of Brown' s motion to compel.
    ANALYSIS
    We address Brown' s procedural claims first because our review of the trial court' s
    evidentiary decisions will define the scope of the record. Sunbreaker Condo. Ass' n v. Travelers
    Ins. Co., 79 Wn.     App.   368, 373, 
    901 P.2d 1079
    ( 1995), review denied, 
    129 Wash. 2d 1020
    ( 1996).
    Following that, we address Brown' s substantive claims as to failure to accommodate, hostile work
    environment, retaliatory discharge, and failure to provide rest and meal breaks.
    I. STANDARD OF REVIEW
    We review trial court evidentiary rulings, including discovery rulings made in the course
    of summary judgment proceedings, for an abuse of discretion. 
    Sunbreaker, 79 Wash. App. at 372
    .
    6
    No 45097 -6 -II
    The    court   abuses   its discretion only if its decision is "        manifestly unreasonable or based on
    untenable grounds or untenable reasons."            In re Marriage ofLittlefield, 
    133 Wash. 2d 39
    , 46 -47, 
    940 P.2d 1362
    ( 1997).     In other words, the court abuses its discretion if no reasonable person would
    have   ruled as   the court   did. In   re   P 'ship of Rhone &    Butcher, 
    140 Wash. App. 600
    , 606, 
    166 P.3d 1230
    ( 2007), review denied, 
    163 Wash. 2d 1057
    ( 2008).
    After reviewing the trial court' s evidentiary rulings and defining the scope of the record,
    we review the summary judgment order de novo. 
    Sunbreaker, 79 Wash. App. at 373
    . We will affirm
    the summary judgment only if there is no genuine issue of material fact and the moving party is
    entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Qwest Corp v. City ofBellevue, 
    161 Wash. 2d 353
    , 358, 
    166 P.3d 667
    ( 2007).      On review of a summary judgment, the evidence is viewed in the light most
    favorable to the nonmoving party, and all reasonable inferences from that evidence are drawn in
    favor of the nonmoving party. 
    Qwest, 161 Wash. 2d at 358
    . However, the party opposing summary
    judgment " may      not rest upon   the   mere allegations or     denials   of his   pleading, but ...   must set forth
    specific   facts showing that there is        a genuine   issue for trial." CR 56( e).
    II. MOTION TO COMPEL
    Brown argues that his requested discovery was necessary in order to discover evidence that
    his supervisors' e -mails were falsified, to discover trip records that GSF had been unable to locate,
    and    to demonstrate that Brown'         s performance was as good as         that   of   any   other employee.   GSF
    argues that Brown failed to plead facts to support his discovery requests and that Brown waived
    the issue by failing to request a continuance. We agree with GSF and affirm the trial court.
    A party may obtain discovery on any nonprivileged matter that is relevant to the subject
    matter of the pending action regardless of whether it relates to the claim or defense of the party
    7
    No. 45097 -6 -II
    seeking       discovery    or   to the    claim or      defense      of    any   other     party.   CR 26( b)( 1).     The requested
    discovery       must    be reasonably          calculated      to lead to the         discovery     of admissible evidence.      CR
    26( b)( 1).     The trial court shall limit discovery requests that the court finds to be " unreasonably
    cumulative or          duplicative,   or ...    obtainable from some other source that is more convenient, less
    burdensome, or less expensive" or that is " unduly burdensome or expensive, taking into account
    the needs of the case, the amount in controversy, limitations on the parties' resources, and the
    importance        of   the issues   at stake    in the litigation." CR 26( b)( 1)( A), (C).
    A. COMMUNICATIONS DEVICES
    Brown'      s request    for far- reaching " access to the Defendant' s computer system" was an
    unduly burdensome              request.    Br.    of   Appellant      at   17.    Brown proposed to search every " mobile
    communications device and account" that GSF had used between August 10, 2009, and the date
    of   the   motion —April          26, 2013.        CP     at   4.    For GSF to fulfill this request would be highly
    burdensome and intrusive. The requested discovery would expose all of GSF' s internal dealings
    over an extended period of               time   without regard         to its    relevance       in Brown' s   case.   Brown argues
    this extensive discovery request is justified because he asserts that e- mails not yet produced by
    GSF would have established that " Plaintiff had notified at least -one of his supervisors that he had
    been injured       on    the   night of   his last     delivery     route."      CP   at   4.   He further asserts that the e -mails
    that GSF produced, which established that the decision to terminate Brown was made on August
    1, were falsified.
    Brown' s first rationale fails because even if Brown' s supervisors knew he was injured on
    the night of Brown' s injury, he still cannot establish a genuine issue of material fact, as explained
    below.        Therefore, his supervisors' knowledge of his injury was not relevant as a matter of law.
    8
    No. 45097 -6 -II
    Brown' s second rationale fails because he offered no explanation of what evidence he hoped to
    find that   would    show   that GSF had       either   falsified   or   hidden   e- mails.   Brown' s reliance on
    Mechling v. City     of Monroe, 152 Wn.        App.   830, 
    222 P.3d 808
    ( 2009), review denied, 
    169 Wash. 2d 1007
    ( 2010),   and O' Neill v. City ofShoreline, 
    170 Wash. 2d 138
    , 
    240 P.3d 1149
    ( 2010), is misplaced.
    These cases involved the disclosure of electronic records and e -mail metadata under the Public
    Records Act, ch. 42. 56 RCW. GSF is not a government entity and its electronic communications
    are not public records. Neither Mechling or O' Neill stands for the proposition that the discovery
    Brown seeks is available under ordinary civil discovery standards.
    A court does not err when it denies a request for a CR 56( f) continuance that is based on
    mere speculation and a     fishing   expedition.'"     In re Estate ofFitzgerald, 
    172 Wash. App. 437
    , 449,
    
    294 P.3d 720
    ( 2012),    review   denied, 
    177 Wash. 2d 1014
    ( 2013).            Here, Brown' s motion to compel
    was based on speculation, and the discovery he requested would constitute a highly general fishing
    expedition. The trial court did not abuse its discretion by denying the motion to compel.
    B. GSF INTERNAL E -MAILS
    Brown    requested production of " all ...           electronic communications made ...         between
    August 10, 2009 and the present day that relate to the Plaintiff' s Complaint or your Answer or any
    related   issue in this litigation." CP   at   4.   GSF had already searched for and produced all e- mails
    that Brown' s supervisors had exchanged relating to Brown. Brown' s theory that GSF had further
    e -mails that it had withheld is, again, mere speculation. The trial court did not abuse its discretion
    by denying a motion to compel discovery that GSF had already produced.
    9
    No. 45097 -6 -II
    C. BROWN' S TRIP RECORDS
    Prior to Brown'        s motion    to    compel,    GSF had already " searched for and produced the
    requested    Trip     Records to the       extent    they   could   be located   after a reasonable search."        CP at 6.
    Brown' s dissatisfaction with this response resulted in the motion to compel GSF' s production of
    all of Brown' s trip records or, in the alternative, for an order allowing Brown to search GSF' s
    records himself. Brown believed that GSF was hiding the trip record for the night of August 9 and
    morning of August 10, the route during which Brown was injured, and that his discovery request
    would      disgorge the missing        record.       GSF had produced all of the records it could find after a
    reasonable search, and the trial court did not abuse its discretion by denying the motion to compel.
    D. PERSONNEL RECORDS
    Finally, Brown attempted to discover the trip records of other drivers, as well as the
    personnel     files   of   the drivers'    helpers   and    Brown' s   supervisors.    The trial court granted Brown' s
    motion to compel as to the trip records of Brown' s fellow drivers, as well as the contact information
    of   the   helpers    and    supervisors.       Brown used the trip records to support his theory that his
    performance equaled that of other drivers employed by GSF. Brown also contacted his co- workers
    and supervisors and obtained statements and                     depositions that    were   helpful to his   case.    Brown
    received most of           the   discovery he      requested.    Brown fails to articulate what the full personnel
    records of     Brown' s helpers           and supervisors would         have   added   to the litigation.   Any relevant
    information contained in these personnel records was obtainable from other sourcesthat is, the
    named parties         themselves —and        was not a proper subject of         discovery   under   CR 26( b).     The trial
    court did not abuse its discretion in denying in part the motion to compel.
    10
    No. 45097 -6 -II
    Brown fails to show any abuse of discretion in the trial court' s ruling on his motion to
    compel. Accordingly, we affirm the trial court' s ruling on Brown' s motion to compel.
    III. MOTION TO STRIKE
    Brown argues that the internal e -mails GSF produced were " self-serving statements" that
    the trial    court should   have    excluded.    Br.     of   Appellant     at   16. GSF argues that Brown waived the
    issue by failing to request a continuance and that the e -mails were hearsay admissible under the
    state -of m
    - ind and business records exceptions. We agree with GSF and affirm the trial court.
    There is no evidentiary rule excluding " self-serving" statements. State v. Pavlik, 165 Wn.
    App.      645, 651 - 54, 
    268 P.3d 986
    ( 2011) ( exploring the                   history   of   ER 801), review denied, 
    174 Wash. 2d 1009
    ( 2012).        Rather, the term " self-serving" has been used as " a shorthand way of saying
    that it   was   hearsay and   did   not   fit into any   of the recognized exceptions              to the   hearsay   rule."   State
    v.   King, 
    71 Wash. 2d 573
    , 577, 
    429 P.2d 914
    ( 1967).                 Accordingly, we employ a hearsay analysis.
    A statement is hearsay if it is made outside of the trial or hearing and offered in evidence
    to   prove   the truth of the matter asserted.           ER 801(      c).   A statement is not excluded by the hearsay
    rule if it is offered for a reason other than to prove the truth of the matter asserted, such as intent,
    plan, motive, or     design. ER 803( a)( 3).       GSF did not offer its internal e- mails in order to prove that
    we can      get rid of [Brown] after        8/ 8" — that is precisely           what   GSF did. CP         at   509. Rather, GSF
    offered its internal e -mails to show a then- existing plan to terminate Brown' s employment. This
    falls squarely within the ER 803( a)( 3) exception, and the trial court did not abuse its discretion by
    denying Brown' s motion to strike.
    11
    No. 45097 -6 -II
    IV. FAILURE TO ACCOMMODATE
    Brown argues that GSF failed to accommodate his prior back injury by failing to provide
    him with a mechanical lift and failed to accommodate his on-the-job injury by failing to offer him
    a warehouse job. GSF argues that it owed Brown no duty to accommodate because Brown did not
    have   a   qualifying     disability   that substantially limited his ability to             perform      the   job.       We reject
    GSF' s arguments, agree with Brown in part, and reverse the trial court on Brown' s failure to
    accommodate claim based on his past injury.
    Summary judgment is appropriate where the plaintiff fails to raise a genuine issue of fact
    on one or more of the statutory elements of a failure to accommodate claim. Johnson v. Chevron
    U.S.A., Inc., 159 Wn.          App. 18, 27 -29,           
    244 P. 3d
    . 438 ( 2010), review denied, 
    171 Wash. 2d 1020
    2011).
    A. PRIOR BACK INJURY
    GSF' s argument is that Brown failed to establish a qualifying disability that had a
    substantially limiting effect. First, Brown must establish that his disability is a " sensory, mental,
    or physical    impairment"      and     that      it "(i) [i] s medically    cognizable or   diagnosable;       or ( ii)   [e] xists   as
    a   record   or   history;   or (   iii) [ i] s    perceived    to   exist   whether   or   not   it   exists   in fact."       RCW
    49. 60. 040( 7)(   a).    Brown may then demonstrate the existence of a qualifying disability in one of
    two ways:
    i)The impairment must have a substantially limiting effect upon the
    individual' s ability to perform his or her job, the individual' s ability to apply or be
    considered for a job, or the individual' s access to equal benefits, privileges, or terms
    or conditions of employment; or
    ii) The employee must have put the employer on notice of the existence of
    an impairment, and medical documentation must establish a reasonable likelihood
    that engaging in job functions without an accommodation would aggravate the
    impairment to the extent that it would create a substantially limiting effect.
    12
    No. 45097 -6 -II
    RCW 49. 60. 040( 7)( d).       A limitation that only has a " trivial effect" is not a substantial limitation
    that entitles an employee to a reasonable accommodation. RCW 49. 60. 040( 7)( e).
    Brown suffered a back injury in 1980 and has had two support rods in his spine ever since.
    In 2009, Brown       applied   for    a   delivery   truck    driver   position with          GSF.       The application process
    included      a physical examination, which            included      physical      tests     such as     lifting   weights.   Brown
    passed      these tests    without    issue.     Brown' s examining physician noted Brown' s injury but
    medically      cleared   him to   work as a      driver     without    any   modifications           to his job duties.       During
    Brown' s road test, he told a supervisor that he " had no medical restrictions, as such, and that [ he]
    did   not   think this   would be    a problem    but that [ he] may         not   be   as   fast   as other   drivers."   CP at 36.
    But, after he performed the work for some time, Brown experienced problems with his
    back. Brown declared that he was " a little bit slower bending and moving around" as a result of
    his injury, CP at 37, 139, and it made him unable to " jump in and out of the trucks and off load
    heavy products,      often   times   at shoulder     level,   without   producing          pain and      discomfort." CP at 288.
    It is clear that both Brown and GSF could have perceived that he had a disability that was affecting
    his performance. Brown informed GSF of these issues, requested a mechanical lift, and was slow
    enough that his supervisors were so dissatisfied with the slowness of his work that he was fired.
    We hold that this        evidence    is   sufficient   to   raise a genuine        dispute     as   to   a material   fact— whether
    Brown suffered a qualifying disability that had a substantially limiting effect on his ability to
    perform his job.
    Although it is true that many of GSF' s drivers would finish their routes late, this
    observation serves to raise a question of fact as to whether it was Brown' s disability that caused
    the substantially limiting effect on his work or if his subpar performance was related to something
    13
    No. 45097 -6 -II
    else. And even though there were occasions when Brown would complete his routes in less time
    than other drivers, there were other nights ( like the night he was injured on the job) when he had
    more items to deliver and more stops to make and he was unable to finish on time. This evidence
    creates at least a genuine issue of material fact as to whether his disability substantially limited his
    ability to perform his job.
    Because Brown presents a material issue of fact, we reject GSF' s arguments and hold that
    the trial court erred in granting summary judgment to GSF on the issue of GSF' s failure to
    accommodate Brown' s pre- existing injury.
    B. ON- THE -JOB INJURY
    The parties do not dispute that Brown became disabled when he injured his back during
    his final   delivery   route.   The issue is whether Brown could work for GSF following his injury.
    The undisputed evidence establishes that he could not: Brown has not been medically released to
    perform "    any kind     of work."     CP   at   143.   No evidence establishes that with appropriate
    accommodation      Brown could have      worked     for GSF   as a   driver   or a warehouse worker.   Brown
    fails to create a genuine issue of material fact as to the failure to accommodate his on-the-job
    injury, and the trial court did not err in granting summary judgment to GSF on Brown' s reasonable
    accommodation claim or by denying summary judgment to Brown.
    V. HOSTILE WORK ENVIRONMENT
    Brown argues that GSF created a disability -based hostile work environment by ignoring
    his requests for a mechanical lift, telling him to work faster, and assigning him additional
    deliveries. GSF argues that Brown was not harassed about any actual or perceived disability. We
    agree with GSF and affirm the trial court.
    14
    No. 45097 -6 -II
    A hostile work environment exists when the plaintiff can prove the following elements:
    1) that he or she was disabled within the meaning of the antidiscrimination statute,
    2) that the harassment          was unwelcome, (    3) that it was because of the disability, (4)
    that it affected the terms or conditions of employment, and ( 5) that it was imputable
    to the employer.
    Robel   v.   Roundup Corp.,              
    148 Wash. 2d 35
    , 45, 
    59 P.3d 611
    ( 2002).           Harassment affects the terms
    and conditions of employment                  only if it is both objectively       and   subjectively   abusive.   Davis v.
    Fred' s Appliance, Inc., 171 Wn.                App.   348, 362, 
    287 P.3d 51
    ( 2012) (        citing Adams v. Able Bldg.
    Supply,      Inc.,    114 Wn.        App.     291,   297, 
    57 P.3d 280
    ( 2002)). "             Casual, isolated or trivial
    manifestations of a discriminatory environment do not affect the terms or conditions of
    employment           to   a   sufficiently   significant   degree to   violate   the   law."   Washington v. Boeing Co.,
    
    105 Wash. App. 1
    , 10, 
    19 P.3d 1041
    ( 2000).
    In order to determine whether the employer' s conduct affected the terms and conditions of
    employment,          the      courts "   look at the totality of the circumstances, including the frequency and
    severity of harassing conduct, whether it was physically threatening or humiliating or merely an
    offensive       utterance,         and whether it unreasonably interfered with the employee' s work
    performance."             
    Davis, 171 Wash. App. at 362
    ( citing 
    Boeing, 105 Wash. App. at 10
    ).
    Assuming            without     deciding   that Brown    was "   disabled" at the time of the conduct he
    complains of,4 none of GSF' s acts created a genuine issue of material fact as to whether or not a
    hostile work environment exists. First, Brown fails to show that GSF denied him the mechanical
    lift because of his back injury. GSF could have refused to provide Brown with a lift for a number
    The   statute      disability" differently outside the context of qualifying for a reasonable
    defines "
    accommodation.               RCW 49. 60. 040( 7)(
    a). Accordingly, the above analysis of whether Brown was
    disabled under RCW 49.60. 040( 7)( d) does not apply.
    15
    No. 45097 -6 -II
    of other reasons       including financial       ones or    Brown'   s status as a   probationary   employee.   Second,
    Brown fails to show that his supervisors' admonishments to work faster were objectively or
    subjectively       abusive.      To the contrary, he admitted during his deposition that his supervisors'
    requests     to   speed   up   were not unusual and constituted a "       legitimate    request."   CP at 130. Finally,
    Brown fails to show that GSF assigned him additional deliveries because of his injury or that
    receiving additional work constituted abuse. Brown failed to establish a genuine issue of material
    fact, and the trial court did not err in granting summary judgment on Brown' s hostile work
    environment claim or by denying summary judgment to Brown.
    VI. RETALIATION
    Brown argues that GSF unlawfully terminated him in retaliation for his decision to pursue
    L &I benefits       following     his   on- the- job   injury. GSF argues that it decided to terminate Brown for
    his poor job performance before his injury even occurred. We agree with GSF and affirm the trial
    court regarding the retaliation claim.
    An employer may not terminate an employee in retaliation for pursuing workers'
    compensation benefits. In order to make a prima facie case of retaliatory discharge, Brown must
    show that
    1) [   he] exercised the statutory right to pursue workers' benefits under Title 51 RCW
    or communicated to the employer an intent to do so or exercised any other right
    under       RCW Title 51; 2) [ he] was discharged; and 3) there is a causal connection
    between the exercise of the legal right and the discharge.
    Anica   v.    Wal -Mart Stores, Inc., 120 Wn.            App.   481, 490 -91, 
    84 P.3d 1231
    ( 2004).     Here, only the
    causal connection is at issue.
    The requisite causal connection cannot exist where the termination precedes the exercise
    of the legal right. Here, the undisputed evidence establishes that GSF decided to terminate Brown
    16
    No. 45097 -6 -II
    on   August 1.      Lard' s uncontroverted evidence was that on August 1, he instructed the supervisors
    to   work   together " to terminate     Anthony Brown' s          employment    due to his    poor performance."   CP
    at 188. Brown' s supervisors took this precise action as reflected in e- mails. Brown' s termination
    preceded      his   claim   for   workers'   compensation—         indeed,   preceded   his   injury —by more than a
    week.
    Brown fails to establish a genuine issue of material fact as to the date of his termination.
    Rather than pleading specific facts that cast the above facts into doubt, he relies on mere
    speculation that the e -mails were falsified. Brown also asserts that his termination must have been
    pretextual because his performance was no worse than that of other drivers. But even if Brown is
    correct in his assertions that he was not terminated for doing poor work, he cannot show that he
    was terminated because of his workers' compensation claim when he was terminated before he
    made that claim. The trial court did not err in granting summary judgment to GSF or by denying
    summary judgment to Brown on his retaliation claim.
    VII. REST AND MEAL BREAKS
    Brown argues that GSF improperly denied him his statutorily mandated rest and meal
    breaks.      GSF argues that it fulfilled its statutory obligations by making the breaks available if
    Brown wished to take advantage of them. We agree with GSF and affirm the trial court.
    Employees must be allowed a meal period of at least 30 minutes, as well as a rest period
    of not   less than 10       minutes   for   each   4 hours   of   working time.   WAC 296 -126 -092( 1), (   4).   Rest
    periods must be on the employer' s time and so must meal periods " when the employee is required
    by the employer to remain on duty on the premises or at a prescribed work site in the interest of
    the   employer."       WAC 296 -126- 092( 1).         No employee shall be required to work more than five
    17
    No. 45097 -6 -II
    consecutive hours without a meal period nor more than three hours without a rest period. WAC
    296- 126 -092( 2), ( 4).        L &I treats meal and rest periods substantially the same and so do the courts.
    White     v.   Salvation     Army,   118 Wn.       App.   272, 283, 
    75 P.3d 990
    ( 2003), review denied, 
    151 Wash. 2d 1028
    ( 2004).
    By       Brown' s   own admission,        he   was " allowed         lunch   and    breaks   out   in the field."   CP at
    134.     Brown worked through his lunch and breaks apparently of his own accord and did not tell
    his supervisors of his failure to take breaks. Brown points to his manager' s admission that " there
    isn' t   a specific     lunch break     written     into that    schedule."      CP     at   271.    But that is not what the law
    requires. "[        T] here is no affirmative duty on the employer to schedule meal periods for a specific
    time. The lack          of   any   scheduled meal period         is   not a violation of       WAC 296- 126 -092( 1)."         
    White, 118 Wash. App. at 279
    .
    Brown argues that the work demands of his scheduled routes did not leave him time to take
    a rest or meal         break. He     points   to Pellino    v.   Brink' s Inc.,    
    164 Wash. App. 668
    , 691, 
    267 P.3d 383
    2011),        where the court held that armored truck drivers were unlawfully denied breaks because
    they were " always engaged in work activities" during their routes. 
    Pellino, 164 Wash. App. at 678
    .
    But Pellino is distinguishable. In that case, the drivers had specific instructions to remain on guard
    at all times when they are out on their routes, including whenever they are using the bathroom,
    purchasing food,          or   eating. "'   
    Pellino, 164 Wash. App. at 677
    . The drivers had specific instructions
    not    to stop the truck for breaks, but to `` eat         on    the   go.'"   
    Pellino, 164 Wash. App. at 678
    . The drivers
    were      specifically "       prohibited    from using ``        distracting     materials'         or engaging in any personal
    activities."         Pellino, 164 Wn.       App.    at   694.    In contrast, Brown did not even know if GSF had a
    policy       on   taking breaks."     CP    at   136. Brown fails to submit facts to support his claim that GSF
    18
    No. 45097 -6 -II
    specifically   prevented   him   or other   drivers from taking their breaks. Therefore, Brown failed to
    raise a genuine issue of material fact, and the trial court did not err in granting summary judgment
    to GSF on his meal and rest break claim or by denying summary judgment to Brown. We affirm
    the trial court regarding his meal and lunch break claim.
    Affirmed in part and reversed in part.
    A majority of the panel having determined that this opinion will not be printed in the
    Washington Appellate Reports, but will be filed for public record in accordance with RCW
    2. 06. 040, it is so ordered.
    19
    No. 45097 -6 -II
    BJORGEN, J. ( concurring in               part,   dissenting     in   part) —   I join in Chief Judge Johanson' s
    majority opinion reversing the grant of summary judgment to Golden State Foods Corporation
    GSF) on the issue of its failure to accommodate Anthony Brown' s prior injury. With one
    exception, I also join in the other elements of the majority opinion. I dissent on the issue of rest
    and meal breaks and would reverse the grant of summary judgment to GSF and the denial of
    Brown' s summary judgment motion on his claim of failure to provide rest or meal breaks.
    Brown argues that the scheduling demands of his job effectively deprived him of mandatory rest and meal
    breaks. GSF argues that it met its obligations by allowing Brown required breaks while working out in the field,
    which Brown worked through without telling his supervisors.
    The legislature has declared that "[ t]he welfare of the state of Washington demands that all employees be
    protected   from   conditions of   labor   which   have    a pernicious effect on    their health."   RCW 49. 12. 010. To implement
    this statute and the provisions of chapter 49. 12 RCW, the Department of Labor and Industries ( Department) has
    adopted rules governing rest and meal breaks. Those rules, found at WAC 296 - 126 -092, state in pertinent part that
    1) Employees      shall   be    allowed a meal period of at               least thirty     minutes....        Meal
    periods shall be on the employer' s time when the employee is required by the
    employer to remain on duty on the premises or at a prescribed work site in the
    interest of the employer.
    2) No employee shall be required to work more than five consecutive hours
    without a meal period.
    4) Employees shall be allowed a rest period of not less than ten minutes, on the employer' s time,
    for each four hours of working time. Rest periods shall be scheduled as near as possible to the
    midpoint of the work period. No employee shall be required to work more than three hours without
    a rest period.
    These   rules    impose mandatory             obligations on       the   employer.        Pellino   v.   Brink' s Inc., 164
    Wn.   App.      668, 688, 
    267 P.3d 383
    ( 2011).                As our Supreme Court held, WAC 246 -126 -092
    clearly and unambiguously prohibits working employees for longer than three consecutive
    hours   without a rest period. "'            Wingert       v.   Yellow Freight Sys., Inc., 
    146 Wash. 2d 841
    , 848, 
    50 P.3d 256
    ( 2002) ( quoting         Wingert v. Yellow Freight Sys., Inc., 
    104 Wash. App. 583
    , 588, 
    13 P.3d 677
    20
    No. 45097 -6 -II
    2000)).      Wingert applies with equal force to the requirement that on -duty employees " shall be
    allowed" a total of 30 minutes for a meal period without engaging in work activities. 
    Pellino, 164 Wash. App. at 690
    .
    Remedial statutes protecting employee rights must be liberally construed. Int' l Ass 'n of
    Fire Fighters, Local 46         v.   City   of Everett, 
    146 Wash. 2d 29
    , 35, 
    42 P.3d 1265
    ( 2002). In this
    context, a    liberal   construction requires      that the   coverage of     the   statute' s provisions "'   be liberally
    construed [ in    favor   of   the   employee] and    that its   exceptions   be narrowly      confined.'"     Peninsula
    Sch. Dist. No. 401 v. Pub. Sch. Emps. ofPeninsula, 
    130 Wash. 2d 401
    , 407, 
    924 P.2d 13
    ( 1996)
    quoting Nucleonics Alliance, Local Union No. 1 -369 v. Washington Pub. Power Supply Sys.,
    
    101 Wash. 2d 24
    , 29, 
    677 P.2d 108
    ( 1994))
    The decision in Pellino strongly counsels a decision in Brown' s favor here. The Pellino
    court held that armored truck drivers were unlawfully deprived of breaks under WAC 296 -126-
    092, because they were always engaged in work duties during their routes. Pellino, 164 Wn.
    App.   at   690 -91.    The drivers had instructions to remain on guard " at all times when they are out
    on their routes, including whenever they are using the bathroom, purchasing food, or eating,"
    
    Pellino, 164 Wash. App. at 677
    , to " not to stop the trucks for breaks, but to `` eat on the go, "'
    Pellino, 164 Wn App. at 678, and to not use " distracting materials" or engage in any personal
    activities. 
    Pellino, 164 Wash. App. at 694
    .
    The majority would distinguish Pellino by pointing out that GSF did not issue " specific"
    instructions requiring Brown to carry out work duties throughout his shift. Majority at 21.
    Pellino, however, did not rest its analysis on the specificity of the instructions. Instead, it held
    that WAC 296- 126 -092 was violated because " Brink' s drivers and messengers were always
    21
    No. 45097 -6 -II
    engaged in work activities and even if the crews had the opportunity to take breaks, there was
    insufficient time."        
    Pellino, 164 Wash. App. at 694
    . In reaching its conclusion that this violated
    WAC 296 -126 -092, the court drew on department administrative policy ES. C. 6, section 7, which
    stated in pertinent part that if an employee is required to remain on duty during meal periods,
    the employer must make every effort to provide employees with an uninterrupted meal period."
    Washington        Dep' t   of Labor & Industries, Administrative           Policy,   ES. C. 6, § 7, at 3 -4 ( rev. June
    24, 2005);   
    Pellino, 164 Wash. App. at 688
    . The court also relied on administrative policy ES. C. 6,
    section 10, which defined " rest period" as a break that allows the employee to stop work duties
    or   activities   for " personal    rest and relaxation."      
    Pellino, 164 Wash. App. at 689
    .
    Pellino, in sum, found a violation not because of the specificity of the employer' s
    instructions, but because the employees were always engaged in work activities and even if they
    had the opportunity to take breaks, there was insufficient time. Pellino,_164 Wn. App. at 694.
    These, also, were the trappings of Brown' s employment. Soon after he was hired, Brown' s
    supervisors began to complain that he was not working fast enough. According to Brown' s
    testimony, he was " a little bit slower bending and moving around" as a result of his injury.
    Clerk' s Papers ( CP) at 37, 139. Specifically, his injury made him unable to " jump in and out of
    the trucks and off load heavy products, often times at shoulder level, without producing pain and
    discomfort."       CP at 288. Brown told his supervisors about the injury and asked for a mechanical
    lift for his truck, which he asserted would help him to work faster. Although a majority of GSF' s
    trucks were equipped with such mechanical lifts, Brown' s request was ignored. GSF' s drivers
    were    told to " just     keep   working   and get   the   shift   done," CP at 134, and Brown worked through
    his lunch and rest breaks to do so. In fact, on the night Brown injured his back on the job, his
    22
    No. 45097 -6 -II
    night supervisor, Chuck Brewer, told him to continue working and complete the route " because
    we] could not     have   a `` late   [ delivery].   "'   CP at 36.
    These uncontroverted facts show that, as in Pellino, the employer may have offered
    required breaks as a matter of policy, but as a matter of fact denied them through its demands for
    work. GSF in effect gave Brown the Hobson' s choice of either sacrificing required breaks or
    risking termination. In fact, Brown was denied even this choice, because he ultimately was fired
    even though he sacrificed his breaks. Washington State has a " long and proud history of being a
    pioneer   in the   protection of employee rights."            Drinkwitz   v.   Alliant Techsystems, Inc., 
    140 Wash. 2d 291
    , 300, 
    996 P.2d 582
    ( 2000). To tolerate employer conduct such as this is to forfeit that
    tradition. Under the uncontroverted facts, GSF denied Brown his rest and meal breaks in
    violation of WAC 296 -126 -092. Accordingly, I would reverse the trial court' s grant of
    summary judgment denying his claim of failure to provide rest or meal breaks, and I would
    reverse the trial court' s denial of Brown' s own summary judgment motion on the same claim.
    23
    No. 45097 -6 -II
    MELNICK, J. ( Concur in            part,   Dissent in      part) —   I agree with the lead opinion' s reasoning
    and decision, except on the issue of a duty to accommodate Anthony Brown based on his surgically
    corrected       1980    injury. While the lead opinion correctly states the applicable law, I cannot agree
    that the record before us gives rise to a genuine issue of material fact on the duty to accommodate.
    Rather, the undisputed facts show that Brown did not have a qualifying injury that had a substantial
    limiting effect on his ability to perform his job as a delivery truck driver. Therefore, Golden State
    Foods Corporation ( GSF) did not owe Brown a duty to accommodate, and I would affirm the trial
    court' s granting of summary judgment to GSF on this issue. I respectfully dissent.
    The    record    demonstrates the          following       undisputed      facts.   Approximately. 30 years ago,
    Brown had successful surgery to correct a back injury. He has had two support rods in his spine
    since the surgery. Even with these rods, Brown has " always been able to keep up with the various
    jobs [ he has] had." Clerk' s Papers ( CP) at 287.
    In 2009, Brown           applied    to be       a   delivery    truck driver   with ,GSF.   He passed all of the
    physical tests and medical examinations required for this employment, including a weight -lifting
    test.      The examining physician medically cleared Brown to work as a driver without any
    modifications          to his job duties. During his road test, Brown told a supervisor that he " had no
    medical restrictions, as such, and that [ he] did not think this would be a problem but that [he] may
    not   be   as   fast   as other   drivers."     CP    at   36.   Brown was hired as a probationary employee for 90
    days.
    Brown        was not as    fast   as other      drivers.    Shortly after being hired, but within his 90 -day
    probationary           period,   Brown' s    slow     work     concerned     his   supervisors.   Brown admitted he was " a
    little bit slower bending and moving around" as a result of his prior back injury and surgery, and
    24
    No. 45097 -6 -II
    he was unable to "jump in and out of the trucks and off load heavy products, often times at shoulder
    level,      without     producing    pain and   discomfort."      CP   at   37, 139, 288. But there is no evidence in
    the record to demonstrate any change to Brown' s physical well -being from the time he was hired
    until he suffered an on-the-job injury.
    About two weeks prior to his termination, Brown asked his supervisors for a mechanical
    lift for his truck. He said this lift would help him work faster and " prevent [ his] back from acting
    5
    up. "       CP   at   36. Brown also asked to be transferred to a warehouse job. Neither of his requests
    was granted.
    Shortly thereafter, Brown injured his back while transferring crates of milk from the bed
    of the truck to the dolly. He has not returned to work.6
    Both parties moved for summary judgment on the accommodation claim;, each argued that
    there were no issues of material fact in dispute and that the accommodation claim could be resolved
    as a matter of          law.     The trial court denied Brown' s partial summary judgment motion, granted
    GSF' s summary judgment motion, and dismissed all of Brown' s claims.
    No ISSUE OF FACT ON ACCOMMODATION
    Brown argues that GSF failed to accommodate his prior back injury by failing to provide
    him with a mechanical lift or by not giving him a warehouse job. GSF argues that it owed Brown
    no duty to accommodate because Brown did not have a qualifying disability until his on-the-job
    5 Even this statement by Brown demonstrates he did not have either a disability or an impairment.
    It is   not   the     case   that Brown' s   back   was   presently acting up    when   he   made   the   statement —rather,
    he speculated that his back would act up in the future..
    6 I agree with the lead opinion' s analysis of Brown' s on-the-job injury.
    25
    No. 45097 -6 -II
    injury,   at which point          Brown became         unable    to   work even with a reasonable accommodation.           I
    agree with GSF and would affirm the trial court.
    As a threshold matter, we must determine whether Brown had a disability that would entitle
    him to a reasonable accommodation. I do not believe he did. This term is defined by statute:
    a) "   Disability" means the presence of a sensory, mental, or physical impairment
    that:
    i) Is medically cognizable or diagnosable; or
    ii) Exists as a record or history; or
    iii) Is perceived to exist whether or not it exists in fact.
    b)   disability exists whether it is temporary or permanent, common or
    A
    uncommon, mitigated or unmitigated, or whether or not it limits the ability to work
    generally or work at a particular job or whether or not it limits any other activity
    within the scope of this chapter.
    RCW 49. 60. 040( 7). None of these three conditions is met.
    impairment7
    First,   no record or          history   shows   that Brown      had   an                 during the time prior to
    his on-the-job injury. To the contrary, he had " always been able to keep up with the various jobs
    he has] had."          CP   at   287.      Second, the undisputed facts fail to show that Brown had a physical
    impairment that was medically cognizable or diagnosable. Brown passed all of the physical tests
    and medical           examinations required           for this   employment.          The examining physician medically
    cleared    Brown to          work as a       driver   without any      modifications,      to his job duties.   Third, Brown
    himself did not perceive that he had an impairment. Brown told a supervisor during his road test
    that he " had no medical restrictions, as such, and that [ he] did not think this would be a problem
    but that [ he] may        not     be   as   fast   as other   drivers."    CP   at   36.   He also stated that he wanted the
    7 The term " impairment" is defined in RCW 49. 60. 040( 7)( c).
    26
    No. 45097 -6 -II
    mechanical      lift for his truck to     help   him work faster   and " prevent [ his]   back from acting up,"   not
    to address current problems with his back. CP at 36. For me, these admissions end the inquiry.
    To survive summary judgment, Brown was not permitted to " rest upon the mere allegations
    or   denials   of his   pleading, but ...   must set forth specific facts showing that there is a genuine issue
    for trial."     CR 56( e).         In my view, he has not set forth specific facts concerning his alleged
    impairment, and I would affirm the trial court in granting summary judgment dismissal of Brown' s
    accommodation claim.               However, because the lead opinion has gone beyond this point, I find it
    necessary to continue the analysis.
    Even if Brown has a disability, as the lead opinion concludes, the employer has no duty to
    accommodate unless:
    A]n impairment [ is] known or shown through an interactive process to exist in fact and:
    i) The impairment must have a substantially limiting effect upon the individual's ability to
    perform his or her job, the individual's ability to apply or be considered for a job, or the
    individual's access to equal benefits, privileges, or terms or conditions of employment; or
    ii) The employee must have put the employer on notice of the existence of an impairment,
    and medical documentation must establish a reasonable likelihood that engaging in job
    functions without an accommodation would aggravate the impairment to the extent that it
    would create a substantially limiting effect.
    RCW 49. 60. 040( 7)( d).           Importantly, " a limitation is not substantial if it has only a trivial effect."
    RCW 49. 60. 040( 7)(         e).    The lead opinion ignores this language and concludes that there is a
    genuine issue of material fact as to whether Brown' s alleged impairment substantially limited his
    ability to perform his job. Again, I disagree.
    27
    No. 45097 -6 -II
    As    a     threshold      matter,        Brown was not entitled to an accommodation because the
    impairment       was never "        known          or shown   through       an    interactive     process   to   exist   in fact."   RCW
    49. 60. 040( 7)( d).     It is the employee' s burden to start the interactive process by giving the employer
    notice of   the     asserted    disability.        Goodman     v.   Boeing        Co., 
    127 Wash. 2d 401
    , 408 -09, 
    899 P.2d 1265
    1995).    It is      not enough         for the   employee    to state that        he   or she   is   feeling badly     in   general —the
    employee' s notice must reference                    the   specific   disability     asserted.         Carr v. Boeing Co., 
    2014 WL 3056807
    ,       at *   5 ( W.D. Wash. 2014) (           court order). "        An employee cannot alert the employer to a
    disability months or years earlier, make a request without referencing the disability, and then argue
    that the employer         had   a   duty to    engage      in the interactive       process   due to the     previous notice."       Carr,
    
    2014 WL 3056807
    ,            at *    5.    Even if Brown' s prior injury constituted a disability, his request for an
    accommodation did not specifically reference the injury. Brown complained of back pain without
    specifying that it        was related         to his   old   injury   or    the   rods   in his   spine.    Without these specifics,
    GSF had no duty to second guess the expert medical determination that Brown was able to work
    as a delivery driver without accommodation.
    Nothing in the record indicates that an interactive process of the sort contemplated by RCW
    49. 60. 040( 7)( d) ever occurred. That should end the analysis.
    Even if GSF could be charged with having knowledge of Brown' s impairment, Brown has
    not shown that his impairment qualifies for accommodation under either prong of RCW
    49. 60. 040( 7)( d). In     order         to trigger   an employer' s        duty   to   accommodate, (       i) the impairment must
    have a substantially limiting effect on the employee' s ability to perform his job, or ( ii) medical
    documentation must establish a reasonable likelihood that engaging in job functions without an
    28
    No. 45097 -6 -II
    accommodation would aggravate the impairment to the extent that it would create a substantially
    limiting effect. RCW 49.60. 040( 7)( d).
    Starting    with      the    second      prong     first, Brown produced no medical                   documentation
    establishing that engaging in job functions without an accommodation would be reasonably likely
    to   aggravate     his surgically           repaired   1980 back        injury, an injury which Brown' s physical
    examination       and     his   own     words     established    would      not    prevent   him from working.           RCW
    49. 60. 040( 7)( d)( ii).   Therefore, the second prong is not applicable. See RCW 49. 60. 040( 7)( d)( ii).
    In the absence of medical documentation, Brown must show that his impairment meets the
    first prong, i. e., that it had       a "   substantially   limiting   effect."   RCW 49. 60. 040( 7)( d)( i). Brown fails
    to do   so.     His   own   declaration indicates that he              was "   a little bit slower bending and moving
    around."       CP at 37. Without more, this bare assertion does not measure up to Brown' s burden to
    set   forth   specific   facts showing that there is          a genuine       issue for trial."   CR 56( e).    It is true that
    Brown was slow enough that his supervisors were dissatisfied with his work. But many of GSF' s
    drivers, not only Brown, would finish their routes late. There were occasions when Brown would
    complete his routes in less time than other drivers. Brown fails to show that his job performance
    was substantially limited, let alone that his injury was the cause of any limitation. Brown fails to
    create a genuine issue of material fact as to whether his prior injury had a substantially limiting
    effect.
    29
    No. 45097 -6 -II
    Because he fails to        meet either     prong   of   RCW 49. 60. 040( 7)( d), Brown cannot show that
    his   prior   back   injury   entitled   him to   a reasonable accommodation.      The trial court did not err by
    granting summary judgment to GSF or by denying summary judgment to Brown. Accordingly, I
    respectfully dissent.
    30