Although thermosets (like epoxy) above their Tg are often described as "rubbery," they do not spring back to shape. They deform permanently rather easily.
The properties drop off rapidly within a few degrees of the nominal dry Tg; 10 or 20 deg C (depends on how the Tg is measured) sees the modulus well below 10%, and heading for 1%, and any significant deformation is likely to be permanent. A laminate whose matrix is above its Tg is quite likely to deform under its own weight, as MikeHalloran describes, and its deformation is time dependent as Demon3 says.
If you must try to predict its behaviour then you need to do some fairly serious material-nonlinear work, and you're quite likely to get it wrong anyway.
If it's a one-time thing as part of manufacture, then try to arrange for tooling to support the part. If it's a rare service case then that's tricky... What will it cost/break if it's bad?
You can, of course, suck it and see with a test. That might be cheaper than analysis. If it's a service case than the laminate will probably need to be wet, which lowers the Tg a lot, and complicates testing even more.