Case Analysis _ John & Acme
ADA and Rehabilitation Act protection means that, generally, as long as the applicant or
employee is otherwise qualified for the position, with or without reasonable accommodation, the
employer is prohibited from making any adverse employment decision solely on the basis of the
disability. (Bennet-Alexander & Hartman, 2012, p.568)
To prove his Prima Facie case John must establish that 1) he is disabled, 2) he is qualified
for the position he works 3) His accommodations were reasonable; reduced work hours 4) he
suffered an adverse employment decision, in his case termination. In John’s case, he can
establish all of the above and sue ACME alleging wrongful termination under the ADA.
In their defense, ACME can quote Legal Non-Discriminatory Reason for John’s
termination. ACME must establish that the employment action was taken for a reason other than
disability discrimination. LNDRs might include the employee’s poor performance or economic
necessity. (Bennet 590) In the given scenario, both of these reasons are applicable. Due to
economic necessity, ACME was forced to reduce its workforce. They did performance appraisal
of all managerial employees and discharged only those with the lowest performance ratings. That
John fell in that category is a coincidence. It might have been because of his reduced hours, but
they surveyed all managerial employees and it’s possible there were others who had reduced
hours just like John. The company could also defend itself showing company guidelines which
state that they do not consider performance pro-rata based on hours worked during appraisals but
the performance in general. And hence, John was not singled out due to his performance.
It cannot be ruled out that were “mixed motives” to fire John, especially because his
supervisor might have already formed an attitude toward him after discovering the non-
prescribed prescription drugs in his cabinet. “In these so-called mixed-motives cases, employees
historically have been required only to establish that discrimination was one of the motivating
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factors. In the summer of 2009, however, the U.S. Supreme Court, in Gross v. FBL Financial
Servs., Inc., raised the ante on employees in age discrimination cases by ruling that they had to
prove that the employment action would not have taken place but for the discrimination.
In 2010, in Serwatka v. Rockwell Automation Inc., the Seventh Circuit ruled that the
language of the ADA and the ADEA (the Age Discrimination in Employment Act) were similar
enough to justify extending the Gross analysis to disability discrimination cases.” (Bennet-
Alexander & Hartman, 2012, p. 588) The Seventh Circuit court ordered judgment in favor of the
employer and held that on the grounds on the Gross decision, mixed motives case no longer
existed under the ADA. Based on the above precedents, John may not prevail in his lawsuit
against ACME.
With that said, if John can prove that the company has no published guidelines stating they won’t
pro-rating performance based on hours worked during appraisals, John may still have a chance
and sue ACME alleging wrongful termination under the ADA
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