Theresa Brooke v. Mian Extended Stay Inc.
Case Details
- Nature of Suit
- 446 Civil Rights: Americans with Disabilities - Other
- Status
- Unknown
- Procedural Posture
- Appeal; case remanded to district court
- State
- California
- Circuit
- 9th Circuit
Related Laws
No specific laws identified for this ruling.
Claim Types
Outcome
The 9th Circuit remanded the case for further proceedings, addressing disability discrimination claims under the Americans with Disabilities Act.
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<bold>1. Appeal and Error — appealability —</bold> <bold>interlocutory order — substantial right</bold> <block_quote> Although plaintiff's appeal from the trial court's order dismissing his claim under the North Carolina Persons with Disabilities Protection Act is an appeal from an interlocutory order<page_number>Page 816</page_number> based on the fact that two claims remain at the trial level, plaintiff is entitled to immediate appeal based on a substantial right, because: (1) plaintiff's North Carolina Disabilities Act claim and his claim for wrongful discharge in violation of public policy, which remains at the trial court level, unquestionably involve the same facts and circumstances; and (2) if the appeal is refused, two trials and possibly inconsistent verdicts could result.</block_quote> <bold>2. Disabilities — North Carolina Persons with</bold> <bold>Disabilities Protection Act — Americans with Disabilities</bold> <bold>Act — Equal Employment Opportunity Commission claim</bold> <bold>commenced — concurrent jurisdiction not allowed</bold> <block_quote> The trial court did not err by dismissing plaintiff's claim under the North Carolina Persons with Disabilities Protection Act (NC Disabilities Act) pursuant to N.C.G.S. § <cross_reference>168A-11</cross_reference>(c) after plaintiff commenced an Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) claim, because: (1) the General Assembly has disallowed concurrent jurisdiction over an NC Disabilities Act claim and an Americans with Disabilities Act claim that arises out of the same facts and circumstances; (2) plaintiff's claim was still being investigated at the EEOC at the time of his state court filing thus making it fall within the NC Disabilities Act's language of "commenced federal administrative proceedings" and thereby removing it from the subject matter jurisdiction of the state court; and (3) the fact that defendant's motion to dismiss was not heard until after the EEOC had issued plaintiff's righ
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