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No. 9567111
United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
Nicholas Defries v. Union Pacific Railroad Company
No. 9567111 · Decided June 14, 2024
No. 9567111·Ninth Circuit · 2024·
FlawFinder last updated this page Apr. 2, 2026
Case Details
Court
United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
Decided
June 14, 2024
Citation
No. 9567111
Disposition
See opinion text.
Full Opinion
FOR PUBLICATION
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT
NICHOLAS DeFRIES, No. 23-35119
Plaintiff-Appellant, D.C. No.
3:21-cv-00205-SB
v.
UNION PACIFIC RAILROAD OPINION
COMPANY, a Delaware corporation,
Defendant-Appellee.
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the District of Oregon
Michael H. Simon, District Judge, Presiding
Argued and Submitted February 14, 2024
San Francisco, California
Filed June 14, 2024
Before: Sidney R. Thomas, David F. Hamilton,* and
Morgan Christen, Circuit Judges.
Opinion by Judge David F. Hamilton
*
The Honorable David F. Hamilton, United States Circuit Judge for the
Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals, sitting by designation.
2 DEFRIES V. UNION PAC. R.R.
SUMMARY**
Employment Discrimination / Statute of Limitations
The panel reversed the district court’s summary
judgment in favor of Union Pacific Railroad Co. in an
employment discrimination action brought under the
Americans with Disabilities Act by Nicholas DeFries.
DeFries was removed from duty as a conductor after he
failed color-vision testing and Union Pacific routed him into
its fitness-for-duty program. A putative class action had
already been filed by a group of Union Pacific employees,
referred to as the Harris class, in Nebraska district court,
alleging that Union Pacific administered its fitness-for-duty
program in ways that violated the Americans with
Disabilities Act. DeFries qualified as a putative Harris class
member under the class definition alleged in the original
Harris complaint, but the Harris district court certified a
narrowed class proposed by class counsel. The Eighth
Circuit reversed class certification, and Defries then filed an
individual lawsuit in the District of Oregon, raising claims
parallel to the class claims in Harris.
The Oregon district court concluded that the
commencement of the class action tolled the statute of
limitations under American Pipe & Construction Co. v.
Utah, 414 U.S. 538 (1974), but the American Pipe tolling
ended when plaintiffs’ counsel in Harris voluntarily
**
This summary constitutes no part of the opinion of the court. It has
been prepared by court staff for the convenience of the reader.
DEFRIES V. UNION PAC. R.R. 3
narrowed the class definition. Accordingly, DeFries’s claim
was untimely.
Reversing, the panel concluded that there was ambiguity
in whether the definition of the certified Harris class
included color-vision plaintiffs like DeFries, and this
ambiguity should be resolved in favor of allowing DeFries,
a bystander plaintiff, to rely on American Pipe tolling. Thus,
DeFries was entitled to tolling as a member of the Harris
class until the Eighth Circuit issued the mandate for its
decision reversing class certification, and his claim was
timely. The panel remanded the case for further proceedings.
COUNSEL
Matthew W.H. Wessler (argued), Gupta Wessler PLLC,
Washington, D.C.; Jessica Garland, Gupta Wessler PLLC,
San Francisco, California; James H. Caster, Lucas Kaster,
Nichols Kaster PLLP, Minneapolis, Minnesota; Anthony S.
Petru, Hildebrand, McLeod & Nelson LLP, Oakland,
California; for Plaintiffs-Appellants.
William Walsh (argued), Cozen O'Connor, Seattle,
Washington; Conor D. Rowinski, Cozen O’ Connor, New
York, New York; for Defendant-Appellee.
Nadia H. Dahab, Sugerman Dahab, Portland, Oregon; Leah
M. Nicholls, Public Justice, Washington, D.C.; for Amicus
Curiae Public Justice.
4 DEFRIES V. UNION PAC. R.R.
OPINION
HAMILTON, Circuit Judge:
This case raises a question of first impression for this
court for class-action practice: when does the narrowing of a
class definition end American Pipe tolling of the statute of
limitations for members of a putative or certified plaintiff
class? In American Pipe & Construction Co. v. Utah, 414
U.S. 538, 554 (1974), the Supreme Court established that
“commencement of a class action suspends the applicable
statute of limitations as to all asserted members of the class.”
The end of American Pipe tolling is less clearly defined than
its beginning. The question in this appeal is when the
narrowing of a class definition ends American Pipe tolling
for particular plaintiffs, especially when the scope of the
class definition is disputed and ambiguous as applied to
those plaintiffs. We conclude that ambiguity about the scope
of a putative or certified class should be resolved in favor of
tolling so that bystander members of the class need not rush
to file separate actions to protect their rights.
Plaintiff-appellant Nicholas DeFries worked as a
conductor for defendant-appellee Union Pacific Railroad
Company. After failing Union Pacific’s routine color-vision
testing, he was routed into Union Pacific’s employee health
screening system, the fitness-for-duty program. In 2018,
DeFries was removed from his job and struggled to obtain a
new position at the company. At the time DeFries was
removed from duty, a putative class action had already been
filed by a group of Union Pacific employees, not including
DeFries, alleging that Union Pacific administered its fitness-
for-duty program in ways that violated the Americans with
Disabilities Act (“ADA”), 42 U.S.C. § 12101 et seq. Harris
DEFRIES V. UNION PAC. R.R. 5
v. Union Pacific Railroad Co., No. 8:16-cv-381 (D. Neb.)
(“the Harris class”).
The parties agree that plaintiff DeFries qualified as a
putative class member under the class definition alleged in
the original Harris complaint. But in a later motion for class
certification, Harris class counsel narrowed the proposed
class definition. The revised definition covered “All
individuals who have been or will be subject to a fitness-for-
duty examination as a result of a reportable health event at
any time from September 18, 2014 until the final resolution
of this action,” incorporating by reference Union Pacific’s
Medical Rules and its “Reportable Health Events” policy.
The Harris district court (“the Nebraska court”) certified the
narrowed class in February 2019. Harris v. Union Pacific
Railroad Co., 329 F.R.D. 616, 628 (D. Neb. 2019). In March
2020, however, the Eighth Circuit reversed class
certification for lack of commonality. Harris v. Union
Pacific Railroad Co., 953 F.3d 1030, 1032 (8th Cir. 2020).
Shortly after the Eighth Circuit’s decision, DeFries filed
this individual lawsuit in the District of Oregon, raising
claims parallel to the class claims in Harris. Union Pacific
moved for summary judgment, arguing that DeFries’ claims
were barred by the statute of limitations. Anticipating the
American Pipe tolling issue, Union Pacific argued that the
narrowed class definition certified by the Nebraska court had
unambiguously excluded color-vision plaintiffs like
DeFries.1 DeFries had been placed in the fitness-for-duty
1
The term “color-vision plaintiff” refers to a plaintiff who “underwent a
fitness-for-duty evaluation solely because he failed the visual acuity test
required by the Federal Railroad Administration recertification process.”
DeFries v. Union Pacific Railroad Co., No. 3:21-cv-00205-SB, 2023
WL 1777635, at *2 (D. Or. Feb. 6, 2023).
6 DEFRIES V. UNION PAC. R.R.
program solely because he failed routine color-vision testing
required by the Federal Railroad Administration (“FRA”).
Union Pacific argued that failing a routine regulatory exam
did not satisfy its definition of a “reportable health event” on
the theory that those employees experienced no new
diagnosis or change in their color vision. Consequently,
Union Pacific argued, American Pipe tolling ended for
color-vision plaintiffs in August 2018, when Harris class
counsel moved to certify the class using the narrower
definition.
Whether the narrowed class definition included or
excluded color-vision plaintiffs like DeFries is the central
question of this appeal. The district court accepted Union
Pacific’s argument and granted summary judgment, finding
that color-vision plaintiffs’ American Pipe tolling ended
when the class definition was voluntarily narrowed by
plaintiffs’ counsel. The district judge in Oregon adopted a
magistrate judge’s recommendation that tolling ended on
August 17, 2018, the day class counsel moved for a narrower
definition. The magistrate judge also noted that even if
tolling had ended only when the Nebraska court accepted
this narrower definition by certifying the class on February
5, 2019, plaintiff DeFries’ claim would still be untimely.
DeFries v. Union Pacific Railroad Co., No. 3:21-cv-00205-
SB, 2022 WL 18936061, at *5 n.6 (D. Or. Nov. 23, 2022),
report and recommendation adopted, No. 3:21-CV-00205-
SB, 2023 WL 1777635 (D. Or. Feb. 6, 2023). DeFries has
appealed.
We proceed as follows. Because the end of American
Pipe tolling has received no attention from the Supreme
Court and little attention from the circuit courts, we first
explain in Part I the origins and equities of American Pipe
tolling. In light of both the purposes of American Pipe
DEFRIES V. UNION PAC. R.R. 7
tolling and the guidance available from other circuits, we
conclude that a relevant ambiguity in the scope of a class
definition should be resolved in favor of allowing a
bystander plaintiff to rely on American Pipe tolling. We
then turn in Part II to the factual and procedural details of
this case. We set out the standard of review in Part III, and
in Part IV, we apply the rule to this case. While we believe
the better reading of the definition of the certified Harris
class included color-vision plaintiffs like DeFries, we
recognize that there is room for reasonable argument to the
contrary. Because a relevant ambiguity in the scope of the
class should allow bystander plaintiffs to rely on American
Pipe tolling, DeFries was entitled to tolling as a member of
the Harris class until the Eighth Circuit issued the mandate
for its decision reversing class certification. DeFries’ case is
timely.
I. The Origins and Equities of American Pipe Tolling
American Pipe established that “commencement of a
class action suspends the applicable statute of limitations as
to all asserted members of the class who would have been
parties had the suit been permitted to continue as a class
action.” 414 U.S. at 554. “Once the statute of limitations
has been tolled, it remains tolled for all members of the
putative class until class certification is denied.” Crown,
Cork & Seal Co., Inc. v. Parker, 462 U.S. 345, 354 (1983).
“At that point, class members may choose to file their own
suits or to intervene as plaintiffs in the pending action.” Id.
American Pipe tolling is “a rule based on traditional
equitable powers, designed to modify a statutory time bar
where its rigid application would create injustice.”
California Public Employees’ Retirement System v. ANZ
Securities, Inc., 582 U.S. 497, 510 (2017). “The watchwords
8 DEFRIES V. UNION PAC. R.R.
of American Pipe are efficiency and economy of
litigation . . . .” China Agritech, Inc. v. Resh, 584 U.S. 732,
748 (2018). The doctrine is intended to further both “the
principal function of a class suit” and the “functional
operation of a statute of limitations.” American Pipe, 414
U.S. at 551, 554. A class action is intended to function as “a
truly representative suit designed to avoid, rather than
encourage, unnecessary filing of repetitious papers and
motions.” Id. at 550. To promote the purposes of class
actions, American Pipe tolling must enable class members to
rely on class counsel and the district court to represent their
interests without the need to seek to intervene or file
individual suits.
Meanwhile, the purposes of statutes of limitations are “to
put defendants on notice of adverse claims and to prevent
plaintiffs from sleeping on their rights.” Crown, Cork &
Seal, 462 U.S. at 352. American Pipe tolling begins upon
the filing of a putative class action complaint, which
“commences a suit and thereby notifies the defendants not
only of the substantive claims being brought against them,
but also of the number and generic identities of the potential
plaintiffs who may participate in the judgment.” American
Pipe, 414 U.S. at 555. Alerted by the complaint, a class-
action defendant has “the essential information necessary to
determine both the subject matter and size of the prospective
litigation,” id., and to become “aware of the need to preserve
evidence and witnesses respecting the claims of all the
members of the class,” Crown, Cork & Seal, 462 U.S. at 353.
Upon the filing of a class action complaint, the fair-
notice purpose of statutes of limitations is satisfied “as to all
those who might subsequently participate in the suit as well
as for the named plaintiffs.” American Pipe, 414 U.S. at
551; see also Crown, Cork & Seal, 462 U.S. at 355 (Powell,
DEFRIES V. UNION PAC. R.R. 9
J., concurring) (“When thus notified, the defendant normally
is not prejudiced by tolling of the statute of limitations.”).
Consequently, for purposes of American Pipe tolling, “the
claimed members of the class [stand] as parties to the suit
until and unless” they opt out or class certification is denied.
American Pipe, 414 U.S. at 551.
The end of American Pipe tolling is less clear-cut than
its beginning. The problem has split many district courts,
including those addressing the same Harris class action
against Union Pacific. See Zaragoza v. Union Pacific
Railroad Co., 606 F. Supp. 3d 427, 435 (W.D. Tex. 2022)
(“Broadly speaking, this is a difficult issue that has divided
courts for decades.”). One line of cases attempts to establish
a rule for determining when the voluntary abandonment of a
claim by class counsel ends tolling for all class members on
that particular claim. Id. at 434 (outlining two competing
approaches to issue). This appeal concerns a distinct
question: how should courts determine when the narrowing
of a class definition by class counsel or a district court ends
American Pipe tolling for particular members of the putative
or certified class. Only two federal circuits have expressly
considered these narrower issues in precedential opinions.
We review those two opinions next.
A. Other Circuits on Ending American Pipe Tolling
The Tenth and Fourth Circuits addressed how to
determine the end of American Pipe tolling when the scope
of a class definition is contested in Sawtell v. E.I. du Pont de
Nemours & Co., Inc., 22 F.3d 248, 252–54 (10th Cir. 1994),
and Smith v. Pennington, 352 F.3d 884, 892–96 (4th Cir.
2003).
In Sawtell, the Tenth Circuit held that a plaintiff in a
product liability action was not entitled to American Pipe
10 DEFRIES V. UNION PAC. R.R.
tolling and therefore affirmed dismissal of her claim as time-
barred. 22 F.3d at 254. The plaintiff was a New Mexico
resident and had filed her claim under New Mexico law. She
sought American Pipe tolling based on three putative class
actions filed in Minnesota, arguing that she was a putative
class member entitled to tolling under the broad class
definitions from both the initial complaints in Minnesota and
the motions for class certification filed a month later. Id. at
250, 253.
Disagreeing with the New Mexico plaintiff’s
interpretations of the class definitions, the Tenth Circuit
found that the evidence before it indicated the class “was
intended to be Minnesota residents only.” Id. at 253.
Specifically, the court noted that the suits “were initiated
within the Minnesota state court system and pursuant to the
Minnesota class action statute,” and “did not specify a
national class.” Id. The court added: “Although the
complaints filed in the Minnesota class actions were broad
in their descriptions of the class,” the plaintiffs’ motions for
class certification a month later made “the narrowness of the
class definitions . . . clear. The plaintiffs moved to certify
classes of ‘those who received the [allegedly defective
product] in Minnesota.’” Id.
Against this clear evidence of intent to exclude out-of-
state plaintiffs, including the unambiguous narrowing in the
motion for class certification, the New Mexico plaintiff
“presented no evidence supporting the inference she was a
putative member of the class.” Id. The Tenth Circuit
distinguished a district court decision concluding that the
same class definition was sufficiently ambiguous to extend
American Pipe tolling to an out-of-state plaintiff for the
month prior to clarifying class certification motions. Id. at
253 n.11. That conclusion, explained the Tenth Circuit, had
DEFRIES V. UNION PAC. R.R. 11
been based on “different evidence” that was not part of the
record in Sawtell. Id. (distinguishing Ganousis v. E.I. du
Pont de Nemours & Co., 803 F. Supp. 149 (N.D. Ill. 1992)).
The Tenth Circuit’s more limited evidentiary record showed
unambiguously that the New Mexico plaintiff had never
been included in the proposed class. Sawtell, 22 F.3d at 253.
The Tenth Circuit thus affirmed the denial of American Pipe
tolling for the New Mexico plaintiff. Id. at 254. The court
also noted that, even if the New Mexico plaintiff had been
arguably included in the Minnesota complaint’s class
definition before the clarifying class certification motion,
one additional month of tolling would not have made a
difference. Id. at 253 n.11.
In the Fourth Circuit case, Pennington, would-be
intervenors with securities-law claims invoked American
Pipe tolling based on their purported inclusion within a class
definition. 352 F.3d at 886. The Fourth Circuit had to
“decide whether, and to what extent, evidence outside of the
complaint can be used to construe a definition of a plaintiff’s
asserted class that is more narrow than what the complaint
alone would dictate for the purposes of determining a party’s
entitlement to tolling.” Id. at 891. The court decided that it
was not “confined to examine only the complaint in
determining the scope of the class [plaintiffs] sought to
certify.” Id. at 893 (emphasis in original). Instead, “[t]he
scope of a plaintiff’s asserted class for tolling purposes is
that class for which” the purpose of the statute of limitations
has been satisfied: the defendant had fair notice as to the
substantive claims, number, and generic identities of the
potential plaintiffs. Id. “In performing this analysis, we can
consider evidence outside of the complaint that demonstrates
the extent of the class the plaintiff represented to the district
court that he desired to have certified—especially when the
12 DEFRIES V. UNION PAC. R.R.
complaint itself is unclear.” Id. Looking to Sawtell, the
Pennington court wrote that, “when a plaintiff moves for
class certification by asserting an unambiguous definition of
his desired class that is more narrow than is arguably dictated
by his complaint, his asserted class for tolling purposes may
be limited to that more narrow definition.” Id. at 894.
Ultimately, the Fourth Circuit found that class counsel, on
behalf of the plaintiff, had “unequivocally” maintained a
narrow class definition for at least a year after filing the
original complaint. Id. at 894. Because the would-be
intervenors sought American Pipe tolling for a period that
postdated adoption of the unambiguously narrowed
definition, the court affirmed the district court’s denial of
tolling. Id. at 895–96.
The key lesson we draw from Pennington and Sawtell is
that to end American Pipe tolling, the exclusion of a plaintiff
from a revised class definition must be “unambiguous.” 352
F.3d at 894. Where the scope of the class definition in an
initial complaint “arguably” includes particular bystander
plaintiffs, they remain entitled to American Pipe tolling
unless and until a court accepts a new definition that
unambiguously excludes them.
B. Ambiguity and Ending American Pipe Tolling
American Pipe tolling strikes a balance among the
efficiency gains of class actions, the procedural due process
rights of class-action plaintiffs, and the fair-notice rights of
class-action defendants. To maintain this balance, we must
attend to the choices that confront bystander plaintiffs like
DeFries. Specifically, the tolling rule must clearly instruct
bystander plaintiffs that they need not intervene or file
independent actions and can instead wait and rely on class
counsel and the district court to protect their interests. To
DEFRIES V. UNION PAC. R.R. 13
accomplish the purpose of American Pipe tolling, bystander
plaintiffs should be able to take that passive approach unless
and until an unambiguous action removes them from the
putative or certified class.
Ending American Pipe tolling with anything short of
unambiguous narrowing would undermine the balance
contemplated by the Supreme Court. It would encourage
putative or certified class members to rush to intervene as
individuals or to file individual actions. To preserve their
right to pursue their individual claims after a potential
narrowing, bystander plaintiffs would have to follow the
class action closely, looking for any change in the class
definition and carefully parsing what it might mean.
That approach would, of course, often require individual
plaintiffs to consult attorneys to ensure that they understand
their rights as the class action litigation proceeds. In the
many class actions that offer only a small recovery to each
class member, such a requirement would quickly become
financially unreasonable. “[P]otential absent class members
will only be able to alert the court to their exclusion if they
have knowledge of the pendency of the action, access to
legal representation to present their claims, and claims
sufficient in size to justify the expense of such
representation.” Nancy Morawetz, Underinclusive Class
Actions, 71 N.Y.U. L. Rev. 402, 404–05 (1996). Finding
counsel to pursue individual claims after a class action is
narrowed may be difficult or impossible for many plaintiffs.
Id. at 422 (“Even when the excluded class members retain
the theoretical right to sue, it may be difficult for those who
were excluded to find counsel to pursue relief. . . . There
simply may not be another private attorney willing to take
on the case of those who were left out of the case.” (footnotes
omitted)).
14 DEFRIES V. UNION PAC. R.R.
If individual claims are large enough to justify counsel
for individual suits (as perhaps with many ADA claims over
lost jobs), the converse problem might arise: “excluded
potential class members may choose to litigate separately,
thereby leading to duplicative litigation.” Id. at 405. If
bystander plaintiffs’ inclusion in the class were even
potentially ambiguous, they would need to intervene or file
their own individual suits to assert timely claims. Such
duplicative filings would “frustrate the principal function”
of a class action by encouraging the “unnecessary filing of
repetitious papers and motions,” the very “multiplicity of
activity which Rule 23 was designed to avoid.” American
Pipe, 414 U.S. at 550–51. That is why Rule 23 “both permits
and encourages class members to rely on the named
plaintiffs to press their claims.” Crown, Cork & Seal, 462
U.S. at 352–53. Class members have no “duty to take note
of” a potential class suit, “or to exercise any responsibility
with respect to it in order to profit from the eventual outcome
of the case” before class notice has been sent. American
Pipe, 414 U.S. at 552. A sound approach to the end of
American Pipe tolling thus should allow putative class
members to rely passively on class counsel when confronted
with ambiguous class definitions so that a class action may
continue to function as a “truly representative suit.” See id.
at 550.
In sum, we conclude that to end American Pipe tolling
for a particular bystander plaintiff based on a revised class
definition, a court must adopt a new definition that
“unambiguously” excludes that bystander plaintiff. See
Pennington, 352 F.3d at 894. Ambiguity in the scope of the
class definition should be resolved in favor of continuing to
extend American Pipe tolling to members of the putative or
certified class. We now apply this approach to this case.
DEFRIES V. UNION PAC. R.R. 15
II. Factual and Procedural Background
A. DeFries’ Employment History & Color-Vision
Testing
Plaintiff DeFries worked for Union Pacific for fourteen
years as a railroad conductor. This is a safety-sensitive
position governed by FRA regulations. Conductors must
pass routine, periodic color-vision screening tests to be
recertified for their positions. These regulations are
important for safe and effective use of colored railroad
signals in directing trains.
In accordance with FRA regulations, Union Pacific uses
a two-stage color-vision screening protocol. First, it subjects
employees to a widely accepted color-vision acuity
examination known as the Ishihara test.2 Second, employees
who fail the Ishihara test are subject to an additional color-
vision “field test.” The regulations give the FRA or the
railroad discretion to further evaluate employees who fail the
initial Ishihara test using a secondary field test to determine
if they can satisfy the FRA’s color-vision standards.
In 2012, a locomotive engineer misidentified a signal
due to a color-vision deficiency and caused a fatal head-on
collision between two Union Pacific freight trains. After the
accident, the National Transportation Safety Board criticized
Union Pacific’s color-vision testing program and
recommended improvements. In 2014, Union Pacific began
making major changes to its internal “fitness-for-duty”
2
The Ishihara test relies on a series of numbers or other images
embedded in dot patterns, with the numbers or images distinguishable
from the surrounding dots only by color contrast. A person with normal
color vision should be able to identify the embedded numbers or images.
Failing to discern the number or image indicates color-vision problems.
16 DEFRIES V. UNION PAC. R.R.
program, modifying its Medical Rules so that employees in
safety-sensitive positions suspected of having certain
medical or physical conditions could be suspended from
work without pay, required to undergo further evaluation,
and, frequently, restricted altogether from work with the
company. These changes included an update to the “field
test” portion of Union Pacific’s color-vision testing protocol.
After 2014, Union Pacific adopted a new, proprietary “Light
Cannon” color-vision field test that the company had
developed in-house.
As an employee of Union Pacific in a safety-sensitive
position subject to FRA regulations, DeFries had been
subjected to repeated color-vision testing. He had failed the
Ishihara test at least three times during his employment with
Union Pacific. On prior occasions, he had passed the follow-
up field test designed by Union Pacific to match his everyday
working conditions, so he had been able to continue
working. DeFries had no safety incidents during his
employment at Union Pacific.
In 2018, after Union Pacific changed its fitness-for-duty
program, DeFries was again subject to an Ishihara test under
Union Pacific’s routine regulatory color-vision testing
requirements. He failed it again. Union Pacific then
required him to take the new “Light Cannon” field test.
DeFries failed that test. He was then routed into the fitness-
for-duty program. Union Pacific’s chief medical officer
diagnosed him with a “Color Vision Deficit” that the
company found could not be accommodated. As a result,
DeFries was removed from his job as a conductor, and Union
Pacific imposed permanent work restrictions that barred him
from working any position that required the identification of
traffic signals. DeFries tried to find other positions within
DEFRIES V. UNION PAC. R.R. 17
the company but was unsuccessful. Union Pacific’s
permanent work restrictions on him have remained in place.
B. ADA Challenges to the Fitness-for-Duty Program
Since 2014, when Union Pacific updated its fitness-for-
duty program, several thousand employees have suffered
adverse employment actions because of the program. In
2016, several of those employees (not including DeFries)
filed a class-action lawsuit against Union Pacific alleging
that the company discriminated against employees with
disabilities and perceived disabilities in violation of the
ADA. Harris v. Union Pacific Railroad Co., No. 8:16-cv-
381 (D. Neb.); see 42 U.S.C. § 12112(a), (b)(6). The Harris
plaintiffs argued that the fitness-for-duty policies screened
qualified individuals with disabilities out of Union Pacific’s
workforce “even though, they argue, they had no trouble
fulfilling the essential functions of their jobs.” Harris, 329
F.R.D. at 620.
The claims centered on the changes Union Pacific made
to its fitness-for-duty program in 2014. The company
decided that workers with a wide range of medical
conditions posed an unacceptable safety risk to the company.
Plaintiffs alleged that the company instructed a small team
of doctors and nurses to implement standardized policies to
screen those workers out of many jobs. Id. The company
required workers to disclose any “Reportable Health Event,”
defined as “any new diagnosis, recent events, and/or change”
in a specified list of conditions, which included “significant
vision . . . changes.” If a worker disclosed such an event or
condition, or if Union Pacific came to suspect one on its
own, the employee was suspended from work and routed
into a fitness-for-duty evaluation. During the evaluations,
the company’s medical team collected information about the
18 DEFRIES V. UNION PAC. R.R.
workers and relied on broad, population-based risk
assessments to make final judgments as to whether the
workers would be permitted to perform their roles. Id. at
623. The result, the Harris plaintiffs alleged, was that a large
group of Union Pacific employees who were “qualified and
performing their jobs with no problems” were nonetheless
“pulled from their jobs” and left with no recourse. Id. at
620–21, 623.
C. Harris Class Certification Granted and Reversed
The parties agree that the Harris class, as defined in the
operative amended complaint, included color-vision
plaintiffs like DeFries. The class was defined as:
Individuals who were removed from service
over their objection, and/or suffered another
adverse employment action, during their
employment with Union Pacific for reasons
related to a Fitness-for-Duty evaluation at
any time from 300 days before the earliest
date that a named Plaintiff filed an
administrative charge of discrimination to the
resolution of this action.
Plaintiffs alleged disparate treatment claims on behalf of the
class under the ADA, arguing that Union Pacific’s fitness-
for-duty program discriminated against people with
disabilities in violation of section 12112(a) and (b)(6) of the
ADA.
As discovery began, Union Pacific argued that this
proposed class definition was overbroad because it “could
arguably include anyone who was pulled from service
temporarily for a regulatory vision or hearing examination—
DEFRIES V. UNION PAC. R.R. 19
a total of more than 191,000 employees.” Union Pacific
argued that the class should include only “fitness-for-duty
evaluations related to Reportable Health Events,” also
phrased as “FFD evaluations initiated because of a
Reportable Health Event.”
When the named plaintiffs moved for class certification,
they proposed a narrower definition of the proposed class:
“All individuals who have been or will be subject to a
fitness-for-duty examination as a result of a reportable health
event at any time from September 18, 2014 until the final
resolution of this action.” The plaintiffs explained to the
court that their definition was intended to correspond to “the
list of over 7,000 individuals that [Union Pacific] identified
in discovery.”
The Nebraska court granted class certification on this
narrowed definition of the class. Harris v. Union Pacific
Railroad Co., 329 F.R.D. at 628. In granting class
certification, the court “approve[d]” sending notice to the
“class list” “given to plaintiffs by Union
Pacific . . . identif[ying] a total of 7,723 current and former
employees” that included individuals situated similarly to
DeFries. Id. at 627–28.3
3
On the same day that DeFries’ case was argued, this panel also heard
argument in two other color-vision plaintiffs’ cases. Donahue v. Union
Pacific Railroad Co., No. 22–16847 (9th Cir. argued Feb. 14, 2024);
Blankinship v. Union Pacific Railroad Co., No. 22–16849 (9th Cir.
argued Feb. 14, 2024). One of those plaintiffs, Justin Donahue, had
signed a sworn declaration in support of the motion for class certification
later considered by the Nebraska court in its decision to certify the class.
Harris, 329 F.R.D. at 624 n.3. The plaintiffs in both of those cases
appeared on the 7,723-person class list produced by Union Pacific in
discovery, which is part of the record in each case. As DeFries explains
in his briefs, he was not included on the class list only because it was
20 DEFRIES V. UNION PAC. R.R.
Union Pacific appealed the class certification to the
Eighth Circuit, arguing that the certified class totaled more
than 7,000 workers who had experienced a “broad[] universe
of conditions or events” ranging from those who “suffered a
stroke” to others who “experienced vision deficiencies.” In
its appeal, Union Pacific argued that the class was too broad,
in part, because it included employees who had a diverse
range of conditions including vision deficiencies, citing the
declaration of at least one color-vision plaintiff. On March
24, 2020, the Eighth Circuit reversed the district court,
decertifying the class. Harris, 953 F.3d at 1032. The Eighth
Circuit agreed with Union Pacific that, due in part to the
variety of disabilities and health conditions within the class
definition, the class should be decertified for a lack of both
cohesiveness among the class and predominance of common
questions of law or fact. Id. at 1036–38. Upon
decertification, American Pipe tolling ended for all putative
members of the Harris class, including color-vision
plaintiffs, when the Eighth Circuit issued its mandate for its
decertification decision. That started or restarted the statute-
of-limitations clocks for their individual claims against
Union Pacific.
D. DeFries’ Individual Suit
After the Eighth Circuit’s decision, DeFries promptly
filed an individual charge with the EEOC raising the same
claims as the Harris class. Within 90 days after the EEOC
completed its review of his case, he filed this individual
action in federal district court.
produced in discovery by Union Pacific on February 26, 2018, before
DeFries failed the company’s color-vision testing and was routed into a
fitness-for-duty evaluation. He is otherwise situated identically to
Donahue and Blankinship.
DEFRIES V. UNION PAC. R.R. 21
In its motion for summary judgment in DeFries’
individual case, Union Pacific argued that DeFries’ claims
were untimely on the theory that the narrowed Harris class
definition proposed by counsel and adopted by the district
court had unambiguously excluded color-vision plaintiffs.
As this theory went, DeFries had not experienced “any
change in his color vision (or even a new medical condition
that might have indirectly impacted his color vision).”
DeFries admitted that “he was aware of his color vision
deficiencies from a young age.” Union Pacific administered
color-vision testing not “because of any perceived change in
Plaintiff’s condition; instead, it did so to comply with the
FRA’s regulations regarding conductor certification.”
Union Pacific’s theory was that DeFries did not “experience
the necessary ‘reportable health event’ to fall within the
Harris class definition,” so “he was not a putative member.”
On that theory, Union Pacific argued, American Pipe tolling
ended for DeFries on August 17, 2018, when Harris class
counsel moved to certify the narrower class (or when the
Nebraska district court adopted that definition). DeFries did
not file his EEOC charge until April 2020, well outside the
ADA’s usual 300-day limit for filing an EEOC charge,
rendering it untimely.
The district court accepted Union Pacific’s argument on
this point. The court granted summary judgment to Union
Pacific, holding that DeFries’ American Pipe tolling ceased
when counsel voluntarily narrowed the class definition. To
resolve DeFries’ case, the district court looked to two earlier
decisions by other district courts that had already considered
American Pipe tolling with respect to color-vision plaintiffs,
appeals of which were argued before this panel along with
this case: Blankinship v. Union Pacific Railroad Co., No. 21-
cv-00072- RM, 2022 WL 4079425 (D. Ariz. Sept. 6, 2022),
22 DEFRIES V. UNION PAC. R.R.
appeal docketed, No. 22–16849 (9th Cir. argued Feb. 14,
2024), and Donahue v. Union Pacific Railroad Co., No. 21-
cv-00448-MMC, 2022 WL 4292963 (N.D. Cal. Sept. 16,
2022), appeal docketed, No. 22–16847 (9th Cir. argued Feb.
14, 2024).
All three district courts relied on the Tenth and Fourth
Circuit opinions discussed above, Sawtell and Pennington.
And all three courts looked primarily to the text of the
narrowed class definition and the definition of “reportable
health events” incorporated by reference from Union
Pacific’s Medical Rules. The court here accepted Union
Pacific’s argument that
DeFries was not a member of the class the
Harris plaintiffs sought to, and ultimately
did, certify, because he was not subject to a
Fitness-for-Duty examination ‘as a result of a
reportable health event.’ Rather, . . . he was
subject to the examination to ‘recertify as a
conductor.’ Further, the record demonstrates
that DeFries was aware he had color vision
deficiency at a young age, many years prior
to his employment with Union Pacific. Thus,
DeFries’s color vision acuity was not a new
diagnosis, recent event, or change in
condition, and therefore he did not
experience a ‘reportable health event’ as
defined by the Harris plaintiffs.
DeFries, 2022 WL 18936061, at *4 (internal citations
omitted). Relying on this textual analysis, the district court
agreed with the district courts in Blankinship and Donahue
that the narrowed class definition excluded color-vision
DEFRIES V. UNION PAC. R.R. 23
plaintiffs, meaning American Pipe tolling ended for DeFries
either upon class counsel’s certification motion or upon the
district court’s grant of class certification. Either way, all of
DeFries’ ADA claims were found to be time-barred.
The district court also rejected DeFries’ arguments,
supported by extratextual evidence, that neither class
counsel nor the Nebraska court understood or intended the
narrower class definition to exclude these color-vision
plaintiffs. In addition, the district court rejected DeFries’
argument that Union Pacific had admitted color-vision
plaintiffs were members of the certified Harris class during
its successful arguments to the Eighth Circuit that the class
should be decertified for a lack of commonality.4
III. Standard of Review
We review a district court’s grant of summary judgment
de novo. Simmons v. G. Arnett, 47 F.4th 927, 932 (9th Cir.
2022). We take the evidence in the light most favorable to
the non-moving party to determine whether there are any
4
After the Eighth Circuit’s decertification of the Harris class, several
federal courts have been presented with similar questions about the end
of American Pipe tolling based on voluntary actions of class counsel.
See Zaragoza v. Union Pacific Railroad Co., 657 F. Supp. 3d 905, 913
(W.D. Tex. 2023) (tolling ended for color-vision plaintiffs when class
definition was narrowed), appeal docketed, No. 23-50194 (5th Cir. Mar.
20, 2023); DeGeer v. Union Pacific Railroad Co., No. 8:23-cv-10, 2023
WL 4535197, at *6 (D. Neb. June 21, 2023) (same), appeal docketed,
No. 23-2625 (8th Cir. July 13, 2023); Bland v. Union Pacific Railroad
Co., No. 4:17-cv-705-SWW, 2019 WL 2710802, at *1 (E.D. Ark. June
27, 2019) (order denying a motion to stay pending resolution of the
Harris class, though case was later dismissed with prejudice by
stipulation; court accepted as undisputed that a color-vision plaintiff was
a member of the Harris class prior to opting out). We appear to be the
first court of appeals to decide this question.
24 DEFRIES V. UNION PAC. R.R.
genuine issues of material fact and whether the district court
correctly applied the relevant substantive law. L.F. v. Lake
Washington School District #414, 947 F.3d 621, 625 (9th
Cir. 2020). Appellate review is limited to the record
presented to the district court at the time of summary
judgment. National Steel Corp. v. Golden Eagle Insurance
Co., 121 F.3d 496, 500 (9th Cir. 1997).
IV. Discussion
For the reasons explained above, our task is to determine
whether color-vision plaintiffs like DeFries were
unambiguously excluded from the narrowed Harris class
definition certified by the Nebraska court. We look first to
the text of the revised definition. We conclude that the
definition was ambiguous, but that the better reading
included color-vision plaintiffs. Looking beyond the text of
the definition to documents from the Harris litigation
confirms our interpretation by demonstrating that neither the
Nebraska court nor the parties understood the revision to
have eliminated color-vision plaintiffs from the class. Only
once the class was decertified was DeFries unambiguously
excluded from class coverage.
Accordingly, DeFries was entitled to equitable tolling of
his claims from the period between the filing of the Harris
complaint on February 19, 2016, and the Eighth Circuit’s
decertification of the class when it issued its mandate after
its March 24, 2020 opinion.
We begin by looking to the text of the revised class
definition, which the district court interpreted to exclude
color-vision plaintiffs on the theory that they were subjected
to fitness-for-duty examinations as a result of FRA-required
routine color-vision testing rather than as a result of a
“reportable health event.” DeFries, 2023 WL 1777635, at
DEFRIES V. UNION PAC. R.R. 25
*1–3. We respectfully disagree and conclude that the
revised definition was, at best, ambiguous with respect to
plaintiffs like DeFries. Looking to Union Pacific’s Medical
Rules, which were incorporated by reference into the class
definition, we conclude that individuals who were subjected
to a fitness-for-duty examination as a result of failing FRA-
required color-vision testing probably were included in the
class definition as certified.
We begin by setting out the text of the relevant
definitions. The original class definition contained in the
Harris complaint defined the class as:
Individuals who were removed from service
over their objection, and/or suffered another
adverse employment action, during their
employment with Union Pacific for reasons
related to a Fitness-for-Duty evaluation at
any time from 300 days before the earliest
date that a named Plaintiff filed an
administrative charge of discrimination to the
resolution of this action.
Union Pacific agrees that color-vision plaintiffs like DeFries
were covered by this definition.
In the motion for class certification, however, Harris
class counsel narrowed the definition to the following: “All
individuals who have been or will be subject to a fitness-for-
duty examination as a result of a reportable health event at
any time from September 18, 2014 until the final resolution
of this action.” All parties agree that the term “reportable
health event” refers to Union Pacific’s “Medical Rules,” a
policy document incorporated by reference into the Harris
class plaintiffs’ and DeFries’ complaints. The Reportable
26 DEFRIES V. UNION PAC. R.R.
Health Events policy states that every employee in a safety-
sensitive position “must report to Health and Medical
Services any new diagnosis, recent events, and/or change in
the following conditions.” The list of conditions includes
“Significant Vision or Hearing Change including . . . Significant
vision change in one or both eyes affecting . . . color vision.”
The district court’s narrow reading of “reportable health
events” to exclude plaintiffs who failed Union Pacific’s
routine color-vision testing is not obviously consistent with
the text of Union Pacific’s Medical Rules. The court’s
analysis incorporated an implicit assumption that, to qualify
as a “reportable health event,” the required “vision change”
must be a deterioration or other physical change in the
employee’s color vision. On closer inspection, the definition
can also apply to an employee’s failure of a vision test as a
“recent event,” which qualifies as a reportable health event
whether or not the failure accompanies some deterioration or
other physical change in the employee’s vision.
First, limiting a reportable health event to a deterioration
or other physical “change” in a listed condition is not
consistent with the definition’s inclusion “of any new
diagnosis, recent events, and/or change,” since that limit
would render mere surplusage the categories of “new
diagnosis” and “recent events.” The listed condition
relevant here, “[s]ignificant vision change in one or both
eyes affecting . . . color vision,” embeds an additional
requirement that a change must have taken place. But
reading the Reportable Health Events policy as a whole, it
can indicate that Union Pacific seeks to obtain reports not
only of physical changes in health conditions, but also of
changes in a health care provider’s or patient’s knowledge
and awareness of health conditions. This, after all, is the
ordinary meaning of a “diagnosis,” one of the three
DEFRIES V. UNION PAC. R.R. 27
categories of events Union Pacific requires its employees to
report. Thus, the definition’s requirement of a “[s]ignificant
vision change” is better read to extend to health events that
affect only an employee’s or a medical provider’s awareness
of the employee’s physical status, without requiring a
concurrent physical change. Indeed, other “reportable health
events” expressly enumerated by Union Pacific in its
Medical Rules include “Diagnosis of epilepsy,” “Treatment
with anti-seizure medication,” and “Diagnosis or treatment
of severe obstructive sleep apnea.” None of these
“reportable health events” requires any deterioration or other
physical change in a pre-existing condition. Change in the
employee’s knowledge or awareness of a condition is
sufficient.
In addition, Union Pacific’s inclusion of the category of
“recent events” in its definition should be read to capture
events that were neither a “new diagnosis” nor a “change” in
one of the listed conditions. Common sense teaches that a
safety-sensitive employee’s failure of a color-vision test is
the archetype of a “recent event” covered by this category of
Union Pacific’s definition. The purpose of Union Pacific’s
FRA-required color-vision testing protocol is to detect either
previously unknown or unreported color blindness in
employees holding safety-sensitive positions. Detection of
a previously unknown or unreported medical condition is the
ordinary meaning of a “diagnosis.” Though Union Pacific’s
color-vision testing program does not itself result in a formal
diagnosis of color-blindness from a private medical doctor,
failure of these tests is an event sufficiently akin to a formal
diagnosis that Union Pacific automatically routes anyone
who fails this FRA-required testing into a fitness-for-duty
examination and labels them as having a “Diagnosis” of
“Color Vision Deficit.” Failure of an Ishihara test is exactly
28 DEFRIES V. UNION PAC. R.R.
the sort of “recent event” that the company would want to
know about under its “reportable health events” policy.
Suppose a Union Pacific conductor or engineer failed an
Ishihara test at a routine private doctor’s appointment
unrelated to any required regulatory testing, and then failed
to report this failure to Union Pacific. Suppose further that
this employee’s color-vision deficiency later resulted in a
railroad accident. When it came to light that the employee
in such a safety-sensitive position had failed an Ishihara test
but failed to report it, Union Pacific would surely contend
that the employee had violated its Reportable Health Events
policy requiring him to report any “recent event” in the
condition of a “Significant vision change . . . affecting . . . color
vision.” The failure of a test meant to detect color-blindness
is the kind of health-related event that the railroad would
want to know about. By trying to treat the failure of an
Ishihara test undertaken through its own internal color-
vision testing program as though it were not a “reportable
health event” for purposes of invoking the statute of
limitations here, Union Pacific seems to be trying to have its
cake and eat it, too.
Finally, nothing in Union Pacific’s definition excludes a
discovery of a medical condition from being a “reportable
health event” simply because the discovery is made
internally by the company itself. The district court here
addressed cases where a Union Pacific supervisor referred
an employee for a fitness-for-duty evaluation because the
supervisor observed behavior leading him or her to suspect
that that the employee had an unknown or unreported
medical condition. The district court said that an employee
routed into the fitness-per-duty program based on a
supervisor’s request would fall within the narrowed class
definition of having experienced a “reportable health event.”
DEFRIES V. UNION PAC. R.R. 29
DeFries, 2023 WL 1777635, at *2 (distinguishing Campbell
v. Union Pacific Railroad Co., No. 4:18-cv-00522-BLW,
2021 WL 1341037, at *5 (D. Idaho Apr. 9, 2021) and Munoz
v. Union Pacific Railroad Co., 2022 WL 4348605, at *9 (D.
Or. Aug. 9, 2022), report and recommendation adopted,
2022 WL 4329427 (D. Or. Sept. 16, 2022)). We are inclined
to agree. But if a supervisor’s suspicion that an employee
suffers from unknown or undisclosed color-vision issues
constitutes a “reportable health event,” it is difficult to read
the definition to exclude unknown or undisclosed color-
vision conditions discovered (or suspected) based on failure
of Union Pacific’s internal color-vision testing, whether
routine or triggered by a suspected problem.
For all of these reasons, we believe the better reading of
the definition is that an employee’s failure of Union Pacific’s
color-vision testing protocol is a “reportable health event.”
Under this interpretation of the text of the narrowed Harris
class definition, color-vision plaintiffs like DeFries were
included as members in the Harris class until it was
decertified by the Eighth Circuit.
Still, we appreciate that the district courts in this case and
in Blankinship and Donahue reached a different conclusion.
We believe the disagreement reflects genuine ambiguity in
the scope of the narrowed class definition as applied to the
color-vision plaintiffs. Under our interpretation of American
Pipe, that ambiguity requires reversal of summary judgment
for Union Pacific. As we explained above, a bystander
plaintiff like DeFries is entitled to continued American Pipe
tolling until he is unambiguously excluded from the class.
That happened here only when the Eighth Circuit reversed
30 DEFRIES V. UNION PAC. R.R.
class certification and issued its mandate. Measured from
that event, DeFries’ case is timely.5
In addition to the text of the revised definition, we may
also consider records from the class litigation to the extent
that they illuminate whether the parties and the certifying
court understood the class definition in a way that would
have unambiguously excluded a bystander plaintiff. In this
case, the record includes the following documents from the
Harris record: Union Pacific’s Eighth Circuit opening brief,
its petition to appeal from the order granting class
certification, plaintiffs’ motion for class certification, the
declarations of 44 putative class members submitted in
support of the motion for class certification, plaintiffs’ reply
in support of class certification, plaintiffs’ First Amended
Complaint, excerpts from the deposition testimony of Dr.
Holland (Union Pacific’s Chief Medical Officer) regarding
the definition of “reportable health event,” the 7,723-person
“class list,” and Union Pacific’s response to interrogatories
complaining that the class definition was overbroad.
Together, these documents provide strong evidence that the
revised definition was not understood by the Harris parties
5
We reject Union Pacific’s argument that DeFries waived his argument
that the failure of Union Pacific’s color-vision testing could itself be a
“reportable health event” by failing to raise it in his opposition to
summary judgment. In opposition to summary judgment, DeFries
argued that Union Pacific had admitted that the narrowed Harris class
still included “color-vision plaintiffs” like himself because they “were
subject to a Fitness for Duty evaluation following a reportable health
event.” That event in his case would have been the failure of Union
Pacific’s color-vision testing requirements, and he made the statement in
a section asserting: “The Term ‘Reportable Health Event’ Does not
Require a Change in Health Condition.”
DEFRIES V. UNION PAC. R.R. 31
or the Nebraska court to remove color-vision plaintiffs from
the class.
We begin by considering the evidence regarding the
Nebraska court’s understanding of the class at the time of
certification. When the Nebraska court adopted the
narrower definition, it did not order any special notice to be
sent to the putative class members who Union Pacific claims
were dropped when plaintiffs filed their motion for class
certification. Harris, 329 F.R.D. at 627, 628 (certifying
class under narrowed definition, ordering notice to the class
using 7,723-person class list including color-vision
plaintiffs). The Nebraska court referred to and relied on that
list, which included color-vision plaintiffs, and the court
referred to the declaration of at least one color-vision
plaintiff in its decision to certify the class. Id. at 624, 627 &
n.3.6
The extratextual evidence also indicates that class
counsel did not believe their revised class definition
excluded color-vision plaintiffs from their narrowed class.
Class counsel included Mr. Donahue’s declaration as an
6
Extratextual evidence shows that even Union Pacific itself understood
the class definition to include color-vision plaintiffs. In arguing for
decertification, Union Pacific’s brief to the Eighth Circuit pointed to
“7,000-plus absent class members,” including those who “experienced
vision deficiencies.” It argued that the incoherence of the class was
“illustrated” by the “personal stories” of 44 declarants, including some
who “experienced vision deficiencies.” The 44 declarants included six
color-vision plaintiffs, including the plaintiff in another of our cases,
Donahue. Though DeFries did not raise judicial estoppel expressly, “we
are not bound to accept a party’s waiver of a judicial estoppel argument
and may consider the issue at our discretion.” Kaiser v. Bowlen, 455
F.3d 1197, 1204 (10th Cir. 2006). Because we reverse on other grounds,
we need not address potential judicial estoppel based on Union Pacific’s
successful arguments to the Eighth Circuit.
32 DEFRIES V. UNION PAC. R.R.
exhibit alongside their motion for class certification. Their
motion for class certification referred to and relied on the
7,723-person “class list” that included color-vision
plaintiffs. This means that the plaintiffs in Blankinship and
Donahue would have received the class notice ordered by
the district court. Harris, 329 F.R.D. at 628 (ordering class
notice, though order was stayed upon appeal to the Eighth
Circuit). DeFries was similarly situated. He was not on that
“class list” only because he suffered adverse employment
action after the list was produced in discovery.
Accordingly, the extratextual evidence from the Harris
record shows that neither the Nebraska court, nor class
counsel, nor even Union Pacific understood the Harris class
definition to exclude color-vision plaintiffs. This extratextual
evidence reinforces our conclusion from the text of the class
definition that color-vision plaintiffs were not unambiguously
removed from the Harris class prior to decertification.7
Union Pacific argues that we should affirm the district
court’s grant of summary judgment on alternate, merits-
based grounds that the district court did not reach. We can
affirm on any ground supported by the record so long as the
issue was raised and the non-moving party had a fair
opportunity to contest the issue in the district court. See
Mansourian v. Regents of Univ. of California, 602 F.3d 957,
7
In addressing evidence beyond the text of the relevant class definitions
here, we do not mean to imply that a class-action defendant may rely on
such evidence to resolve ambiguities in the scope of a class definition
and thereby defeat American Pipe tolling. The focus of American Pipe
tolling is on the choices confronting a bystander plaintiff. We do not
mean to imply here that a defendant could show that such a bystander
plaintiff’s decision not to file a separate lawsuit turned out to have been
wrong based on evidence that would not have been readily available to
that bystander at the relevant time.
DEFRIES V. UNION PAC. R.R. 33
974 (9th Cir. 2010) (“Our discretion to affirm on grounds
other than those relied on by the district court extends to
issues raised in a manner providing the district court an
opportunity to rule on it.”); see also Dachauer v. NBTY, Inc.,
913 F.3d 844, 847 (9th Cir. 2019) (“Although the district
court did not reach [an] issue . . . , we may affirm on that
ground because Defendants raised the issue below . . . .”).
Union Pacific’s asserted grounds, which it raised in the
district court, are that DeFries’ ADA claims fail as a matter
of law because (1) DeFries was not a “qualified individual”
due to his color-vision deficiencies, (2) he offers no evidence
that the fitness-for-duty program was a pretext for
discrimination, and (3) Union Pacific acted under the
direction of binding federal regulations.
This court is one of “review, not first view.” Belaustegui
v. Int’l Longshore & Warehouse Union, 36 F.4th 919, 930
(9th Cir. 2022), quoting Shirk v. United States ex rel. Dep’t
of Interior, 773 F.3d 999, 1007 (9th Cir. 2014). The other
issues here require close parsing of a voluminous summary-
judgment record. “In general, an appellate court does not
decide issues that the trial court did not decide,” particularly
where the issue is not a “purely legal one.” Dep’t of Fish &
Game v. Federal Subsistence Board, 62 F.4th 1177, 1183
(9th Cir. 2023) (citations omitted). Union Pacific’s alternate
grounds for summary judgment are deeply fact-bound, and
we do not have the benefit of robust briefing on these issues
on appeal. The district court should consider these
arguments in the first instance.
The judgment of the district court is REVERSED and
REMANDED for further proceedings consistent with this
opinion.
Plain English Summary
FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT NICHOLAS DeFRIES, No.
Key Points
01FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT NICHOLAS DeFRIES, No.
02UNION PACIFIC RAILROAD OPINION COMPANY, a Delaware corporation, Defendant-Appellee.
03Simon, District Judge, Presiding Argued and Submitted February 14, 2024 San Francisco, California Filed June 14, 2024 Before: Sidney R.
04Hamilton, United States Circuit Judge for the Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals, sitting by designation.
Frequently Asked Questions
FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT NICHOLAS DeFRIES, No.
FlawCheck shows no negative treatment for Nicholas Defries v. Union Pacific Railroad Company in the current circuit citation data.
This case was decided on June 14, 2024.
Use the citation No. 9567111 and verify it against the official reporter before filing.