Amy Ritenour v. State of Tennessee Dep't of Human Services

497 F. App'x 521
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedAugust 29, 2012
Docket10-6366
StatusUnpublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 497 F. App'x 521 (Amy Ritenour v. State of Tennessee Dep't of Human Services) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Amy Ritenour v. State of Tennessee Dep't of Human Services, 497 F. App'x 521 (6th Cir. 2012).

Opinion

*524 JULIA SMITH GIBBONS, Circuit Judge.

Plaintiff-appellant Amy Ritenour brought this action against the State of Tennessee Department of Human Services (“TDHS”) pursuant to the Family Medical Leave Act (“FMLA”), 29 U.S.C. § 2601 et seq. Ritenour alleged that TDHS violated the FMLA by interfering with her right to take intermittent FMLA leave and by retaliating against her for attempting to take FMLA leave. Ritenour appeals the district court’s grant of TDHS’s motion for summary judgment. For the reasons given below, we affirm.

I.

The record reveals the following facts. Ritenour was hired by TDHS on May 16, 2007, as a one year interim employee. On April 16, 2008, she became a full-time TDHS employee in a Clerk 2 position. In her new position, Ritenour’s direct supervisor was Tanesha Hooper. Hooper’s supervisor was Shar Amador, who reported to Kelvin Meeks. As an eligible full-time state employee, Ritenour earned one day (7.5 hours) of annual leave (vacation time) and one day of sick leave per month worked. By August 2008, Ritenour had used most of her accrued sick leave and annual leave.

Ritenour is a single mother of three children. Her eldest son has bipolar disorder, which is a chronic condition, and oppositional defiant disorder. He also has a history of suicide attempts and behavior problems. Ritenour had obtained therapy for him with Centerstone 1 in Nashville. In August of 2008, her son’s behavior had worsened, and Ritenour felt that she needed to stay with him for his own safety and to prepare for and participate in intensive in-home therapy services, which were also to be provided by Centerstone.

In order to facilitate her eldest son’s treatment, take her children to doctor’s appointments, and look for new housing, Ritenour sought to take leave between August 20, 2008 and the end of September 2008. However, because she knew that she did not have the necessary annual leave or sick leave time accrued, Ritenour sought information from Hooper about whether she could obtain unpaid leave. Hooper referred Ritenour to Gary Stockton, a TDHS human resources analyst.

Ritenour recalled meeting with Stockton in mid-August during her break. Stockton told Ritenour that she did not qualify for FMLA leave because she was an interim employee and that she should ask her supervisor about taking leave. Ritenour understood that she was not an interim employee at the time but was unable to clarify this with Stockton before she had to return to work. Following this meeting, Ritenour believed that August 20 would be her last day of work until she had the in-home services in place for James. Ritenour believed she would be on leave because “no one said I didn’t get leave” and “no one said that I wasn’t approved.”

Although Ritenour asserts that she believed that she was on leave after August 20, 2008, she reported to work on August 21, 2008, because her unit needed help at the front desk and she thought it would only be for half a day. After August 21, Ritenour was absent from work for the last week of August and the first week of September. The Employee Attendance and Leave Authorization Forms — completed by Hooper in Ritenour’s absence — indicate that Ritenour was on unapproved *525 leave from August 25 through August 29, 2008, and from September 2 through September 5, 2008.

Despite her assertion that she believed that she was on approved leave after August 20, Ritenour engaged in a series of communications with TDHS employees that focused on her continued efforts to obtain leave or that involved requests for time off in September. On September 2, Stockton spoke with Ritenour on the phone 2 about her options for leave. 3 Stockton explained that Ritenour only had seven hours of leave accrued as of August 15, and since Ritenour confirmed that she did not work between August 25 and 29, he concluded that Ritenour had already been out for “at least four days without pay.” Stockton instructed Ritenour to call Hooper, make her aware of the situation, ask for the needed time off, and request that Hooper write a memo to Meeks requesting that Ritenour receive the time off. Riten-our spoke with Hooper on September 3 and 5, regarding her absences and her leave status, and agreed that she would return to work on September 8. 4

As discussed with Hooper, Ritenour returned to work on Monday, September 8, 2008, and reported to work through September 10. On September 10, Ritenour printed out the TDHS employee handbook and brought it to Stockton. She told Stockton that she needed leave and that she believed that she was in fact qualified to take leave under the handbook’s terms. Stockton told Ritenour to put her request for leave in writing, to supply a start and end date, and to provide a reason for the leave in the written request. After being told that Hooper was out on vacation for the week, Stockton told Ritenour to provide him with a copy of the request.

Over her lunch hour, Ritenour typed up her leave request and testified that she left copies of it for Hooper and Stockton. Both Hooper and Stockton, however, failed to find their copies of the letter. Ritenour did not return to work at TDHS after September 10, 2008.

On September 19, Ritenour spoke to both Hooper and Stockton over the telephone. Stockton expressed his belief that Ritenour had been on unapproved leave since September 10 and emphasized that submitting a leave request does not guarantee leave. Hooper reminded Ritenour of their earlier conversation, in which Ri-tenour reassured Hooper that she would not miss work again after returning to work on September 8, and pointed out that upon returning from vacation she had learned that Ritenour had, in fact, missed more work. Although Stockton and Hooper emphasized the need for an official request for leave and approval of a leave *526 request, Ritenour did not provide another copy of her leave request to Stockton or Hooper.

Ritenour did not report to work on September 22, 23, 24, or 25, and her Employee Leave and Attendance form lists the absences as unapproved leave. 5 Hooper testified that Ritenour also failed to call in on those dates. Ritenour could not remember whether she called in on September 22, 23, 24, or 25. 6 After Ritenour had been absent from work without approval for leave and without calling in for more than three consecutive days (referred to as a no call/no show), Hooper recommended that Ritenour be discharged on the grounds of job abandonment.

Tennessee Department of Personnel Rule 1120-2-.14 is titled “Tenure, Suspension and Separation” and addresses job abandonment:

Job Abandonment.

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497 F. App'x 521, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/amy-ritenour-v-state-of-tennessee-dept-of-human-services-ca6-2012.