Court of Appeal clarifies evidentiary requirements for FEHA disability plaintiffs: Miller v. California Dept. of Corrections and Rehabilitation

In Miller v. California Dept. of Corrections and Rehabilitation,           Cal.App.5th           (Sep. 25, 2024), the Court of Appeal (Fourth Appellate District, Division Two) clarified the evidence needed for FEHA disability discrimination claims to survive summary adjudication.

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Plaintiff became disabled due to a work injury. After her wage replacement benefits ended, Defendant placed her on unpaid leave. Plaintiff’s doctor determined she had permanent limitations preventing her from performing essential job duties. Defendant refused her request to file for disability retirement pending exhaustion of return-to-work options. Plaintiff accepted a demotion but later informed Defendant she could not work due to mental health treatment. She sued, alleging FEHA disability discrimination and retaliation. The trial court granted summary adjudication for Defendant on all claims, and Plaintiff appealed. 

On appeal, the Court of Appeal affirmed. It upheld summary adjudication of Plaintiff’s disability discrimination claim because Plaintiff could not perform her job duties, even with the offered accommodation. Regarding Plaintiff’s failure-to-accommodate claim, the court held that Defendant’s refusal to file for disability retirement was not a failure to accommodate under Gov. Code § 12940(m)(1). Even if improper, Plaintiff would need to file a writ of mandate to compel compliance under Gov. Code § 21153. The court upheld summary adjudication of Plaintiff’s interactive process claim because Plaintiff did not identify an objectively available accommodation that Defendant failed to offer. It upheld summary adjudication of Plaintiff’s failure-to-prevent-discrimination claim because Plaintiff lacked a viable underlying discrimination claim. Finally, the court upheld summary adjudication of Plaintiff’s retaliation claim, as Plaintiff incorrectly asserted that “becoming disabled” was a protected activity.

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