Showing posts with label bargaining agreement. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bargaining agreement. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 3, 2009

Sixth Circuit Dismisses FMLA Claim of Employee Hit By Car for Lack of Specific Medical Evidence Despite Employer’s Own FMLA Violation.

This morning, a divided federal Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed the dismissal of an FMLA claim, but on different grounds than the trial court. Stimpson v. UPS, 08-2263 (6th Cir. 11/3/09). The Court found that the employee did not qualify for FMLA leave because he failed to show that he suffered from a serious health condition even though he had been injured when his bicycle was hit by an automobile, visited an emergency room, was prescribed medication and produced statements from two different physicians that he was unable to work for several weeks. Rather, the Court was influenced by the plaintiff’s failure to fill the drug prescription given to him in the ER and the lack of specificity by his medical providers. Nonetheless, the Court also rejected the argument that the plaintiff failed to give sufficient notice of his need for FMLA leave and noted that the employer violated the FMLA when it only gave the employee 72 hours to produce a medical statement under the collective bargaining agreement because the FMLA gave the employee 15 days to produce such a statement. However, the employer’s violation did not save the employee’s FMLA claim because he failed to produce the requested medical statement within fifteen days.

As described by the Court, the plaintiff was riding his bicycle (while intoxicated) when it was struck by a car around 3:30 p.m. on April 29, 2006. The motorist was cited for following him too closely. He denied medical treatment at the scene, but later visited an ER where he was prescribed medication after complaining about lower back pain and the physicians noted extensive bruising where he had collided with the road pavement in the earlier accident. He was also diagnosed with an acute lumbar strain. He was discharged 2.5 hours after checking in. Even though he never filled the medical prescription, he returned to the ER the next day because of his back pain and was promptly discharged for failing to fill his earlier prescription. There was evidence that he also notified his supervisors at UPS about his accident, but he did not return to work for about three weeks, failed to call off daily under regular UPS procedures and failed to provide medical documentation of his inability to work before May 22. UPS claims that it verbally requested medical documentation and sent him a letter requesting medical documentation to be submitted within 72 hours (as required under the CBA). When the plaintiff failed to submit medical documentation before May 12 (because, as he claimed, he had moved and did not receive the UPS letter until May 22), he was terminated.

On May 23, the plaintiff filed a grievance with the union and submitted three medical statements that he could not work until May 20. When his grievance was denied, he filed an Unfair Labor Practice Charge with the NLRB on the grounds that he was being retaliated against for his prior union activities (in that he had previously been terminated by UPS for union activities and was reinstated by court order in September 2005 after an earlier ULP Charge he filed with the NLRB). However, unlike his prior ULP Charge, the NLRB dismissed this Charge. He then filed his FMLA lawsuit.

The District Court granted summary judgment to UPS because it concluded that the plaintiff was not eligible for FMLA leave in that -- even disregarding his earlier unlawful termination – he had not worked 1250 hours in the prior 12 months and had failed to give proper notice of his need for FMLA leave. In addition, the trial court questioned whether he suffered from a serious health condition under the circumstances.

The Court of Appeals agreed with the plaintiff that there was a material factual dispute about how many hours he would have worked in the prior 12 months if he had not previously been unlawfully terminated. Even though the NLRB only required payment of a certain amount of back pay (less than 1250 hours), it failed to address the plaintiff’s claim that he would have worked additional hours and such evidence had been submitted to the District Court. Accordingly, summary judgment on that issue was inappropriate.

The Court also found sufficient evidence that the plaintiff had properly notified UPS of his accident and potential need for FMLA leave. The Court also noted that UPS acted entirely properly by notifying the plaintiff in writing that it wanted more medical information before designating FMLA leave. The Court did not address the question of whether the plaintiff was required to call off each day as required by UPS internal procedures.

However, the Court found that UPS violated the FMLA by only giving the plaintiff 72 hours written notice of the need for medical documentation:

The regulations state that “[t]he employee must provide the requested certification to the employer within 15 calendar days after the employer’s request, unless it is not practicable under the particular circumstances to do so.” 29 C.F.R. § 825.305(b). While UPS argues that its labor agreement with the Teamsters allows it to provide a shorter time period of seventy-two hours, the FMLA expressly provides that no collective bargaining agreement, such as that UPS has with the Teamsters Union, may diminish any protection granted by the FMLA. 29 U.S.C. § 2652(b). The fifteen-day period expired on May 20, 2006, two days before [the plaintiff] submitted his medical information. However, UPS terminated [the plaintiff] on May 12, 2006, well before the expiration of the fifteen-day period. [The plaintiff] missed the deadline, but UPS had first terminated him under a mistaken understanding of the applicable deadline.


Section 2652(b) of the FMLA provides that: “The rights established for employees under this Act or any amendment made by this Act shall not be diminished by any collective bargaining agreement or any employment benefit program or plan.”

Ultimately, the Court majority concluded that UPS’s mistake was irrelevant because even if he had submitted the information within fifteen days, the plaintiff failed to show that he suffered from a serious health condition. The plaintiff had never been admitted as an inpatient. His failure to fill his ER prescription also meant that he could not show a regiment of continuing care. “For example, an outpatient procedure with a follow-up appointment is not a “regimen of continuing treatment.” See Morris v. Family Dollar Stores of Ohio, Inc., No. 07-3417, 2009 U.S. App. LEXIS 6852, at *17-18 (6th Cir. Mar. 31, 2009).”

Surprisingly, the Court also found the medical statements submitted by his physicians to be deficient:

While [the plaintiff] has produced three separate notes from physicians stating that he could not return to work, the most detailed notation given on the forms is that [the plaintiff] cannot work “for medical reasons.” These notes fall far short of the requirement that any doctor’s certification must contain at a minimum “(1) the date on which the serious health condition began, (2) the probable duration of the condition, (3) the appropriate medical facts within the health care provider’s knowledge, and (4) a statement that the employee is unable to perform [his] job duties” in order to be valid.


The Court was also influenced by the fact that the plaintiff failed to follow his physician’s treatment advice:

[The plaintiff] also has not provided any other medical evidence to counter the emergency treating physician’s final diagnosis of bruises and mild back pain. Importantly, none of the medical information [the plaintiff] has provided suggests that his back pain significantly limited his movement or lifting ability, particularly when treated with the prescription [the plaintiff] refused to take. Because [the plaintiff] cannot demonstrate that he suffered from a serious health condition, he is not eligible for FMLA leave.


In short, even though two different physicians indicated that the plaintiff should not return to work for three weeks and even though there was no contrary medical evidence offered by the employer, the Court disregarded their expert medical opinions of the treating physicians and focused, instead, on the particular diagnosis and the fact that the plaintiff failed to follow medical advice (which presumably lengthened his period of disability).

In contrast, the dissent concluded that UPS would be required to first notify the plaintiff why his medical certification was deficient before he could be terminated for failing to satisfy his burden of proof. The majority dismissed this concern on the grounds that the plaintiff failed to submit any medical documentation within fifteen days. Thus, only when medical certification has been timely submitted would an employer be required to permit an employee to cure a deficiency.

The dissent also noted that while bruises probably are not serious health conditions, an acute lumbar strain could be:

Symptoms vary depending on the severity of the strain, but “[t]ypically, the patient with a low back strain moves with care, particularly when sitting down or standing up.” Id. Treatment “includes patient reassurance, brief bed rest during the acute phase of low back pain, a firm mattress with a bed board, and the judicious use of analgesics or nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs).” Id. ¶ 15A.46. Additionally, “the patient should be instructed to avoid activities that intensify back pain.” Id. The recovery period depends upon the severity of the strain. Although “[t]he acute back strain patient generally experiences gradual improvement over a period lasting approximately two weeks,” patients with severe strains may not recover for up to three weeks. Id. ¶ 15A.47. Finally, there is a “significant likelihood of recurrence,” and “[w]hile the first episode of back pain is usually the briefest and least severe, the vast majority of such patients are at risk of developing another episode of back pain that will be more severe and longer lasting.” Id. Clearly, an acute lumbar strain can be a “serious health condition that makes the employee unable to perform the functions of [his] position.” 29 U.S.C. § 2612(a)(1)(D).


The majority dismissed this concern as merely hypothetical in light of the lack of evidence and specificity in the medical statements.

Insomniacs may read the full opinion at http://www.ca6.uscourts.gov/opinions.pdf/09a0712n-06.pdf.

NOTICE: This summary is designed merely to inform and alert you of recent legal developments. It does not constitute legal advice and does not apply to any particular situation because different facts could lead to different results. Information here can change or be amended without notice. Readers should not act upon this information without legal advice. If you have any questions about anything you have read, you should consult with or retain an employment attorney.