
    Susan HEATON, Plaintiff—Appellant, v. PRUDENTIAL INSURANCE COMPANY OF AMERICA; et al., Defendants—Appellees.
    No. 08-55874.
    United States Court of Appeals, Ninth Circuit.
    Argued and Submitted Oct. 5, 2009.
    Filed Dec. 21, 2009.
    Daniel S. Gruber, Esquire, Law Offices Ofgruber & Gruber, Sherman Oaks, CA, James B. Kropff, Esquire, Law Offices of James B. Kropff, Pasadena, CA, for Plaintiff-Appellant.
    Stanley A. Calvert, Wilson, Elser, Mos-kowitz, Edelman & Dicker LLP, San Diego, CA, for Defendants-Appellees.
    Before: HALL, W. FLETCHER and CLIFTON, Circuit Judges.
   ORDER

The memorandum disposition filed on November 23, 2009, is amended. An amended memorandum disposition will be filed concurrently with this order. With these amendments, the panel has voted to deny the petition for rehearing as moot. No further petitions for rehearing or rehearing en banc may be filed.

AMENDED MEMORANDUM

Susan Heaton appeals the district court’s order granting defendants’ motion for summary judgment. Because the record manifests a genuine factual dispute about whether Heaton became totally disabled while she was a full-time Isis employee, summary judgment was improper. We vacate the judgment below and remand for further proceedings.

Heaton’s eligibility for benefits turns on whether she met her long-term disability plan’s definition of “total disability” while she was a full-time Isis employee covered by the plan.

A factual dispute over the extent of Hea-ton’s disability arose before Heaton’s last day of full-time employment at Isis on April 27, 2000, when she was indisputably a “Covered Person” under the plan. Prudential and Isis do not dispute that Heaton continued to work at her own occupation through April 27, 2000.

Whether Heaton met the plan’s definition of “total disability” before April 27, 2000 depends on whether, before that date, she was “not able to perform, for wage or profit, the material and substantial duties of [her] occupation” because of her disability. Heaton submitted evidence that the usual requirements of her position included ten to twelve hours of work per day, with computer and handwriting tasks for more than eight hours per day; that her doctors imposed substantial restrictions on her activities that left her well short of being able to meet these requirements; and that two doctors believed that she was disabled or otherwise unable to perform her “regular work” while she was a full-time employee at Isis. That was more than enough to establish a genuine issue of material fact.

Defendants would, in effect, require a negative productivity report, a poor job performance evaluation, or a memo regarding the quality of Heaton’s work to establish total disability. They argue that Isis provided accommodations to allow Heaton to remain in her job and did not evaluate her poorly because of her physical limitations. But that does not conclusively establish that she was not “totally disabled.” That a sympathetic employer might make such accommodations or tolerate an individual’s limitations for at least some period of time does not prove that the employee was in fact able to perform “the material and substantial duties of [her] occupation.” A reasonable factfinder could find, through its own comparison of medical restrictions and the usual requirements of the employee’s job, that the employee was simply not physically capable of performing the tasks her job required at the relevant time. An employer’s failure to come to that same conclusion — or to bother to register its dissatisfaction in the form of a negative performance review— would not conclusively undermine such a reasonable determination.

VACATED and REMANDED. 
      
       This disposition is not appropriate for publication and is not precedent except as provided by 9di Cir. R. 36-3.
     