Blohm v. Dillard's Inc.

95 F. Supp. 2d 473, 2000 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 9362, 2000 WL 508838
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. North Carolina
DecidedApril 6, 2000
Docket5:99-cv-00475
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 95 F. Supp. 2d 473 (Blohm v. Dillard's Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Blohm v. Dillard's Inc., 95 F. Supp. 2d 473, 2000 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 9362, 2000 WL 508838 (E.D.N.C. 2000).

Opinion

ORDER

BRITT, Senior District Judge.

Defendants’ motion for summary judgment is before the court.

Plaintiff Michael J. Blohm filed this action against defendants Dillard’s Inc. (Dillard’s), Walter Grammer, Robert Kayda, and Vicki Brown on 27 July 1999 alleging various violations of the Family Medical Leave Act (FMLA), 29 U.S.C. §§ 2601-2654. On 16 August 1999, defendants filed *475 an answer. Defendants filed this motion for summary judgment, a supporting memorandum, and numerous affidavits and depositions on 18 February 2000. On 13 March 2000, plaintiff filed a response, an affidavit and several exhibits. Defendants filed a reply on 24 March 2000. The motion is ripe for review.

I. Facts

Plaintiff began working for Dillard’s as an Area Sales Manager in the Men’s Department at the Cary Towne Center on 26 February 1996. (Comply 7.) He was promoted to Operations Manager, also known as Assistant Store Manager, in October 1996 and held that position during the time period relevant to this case. (Id.) When plaintiff began working as Operations Manager in October 1996, Dale Bishop was his immediate supervisor, and Burt Squires was the Vice President and District Manager to whom Bishop reported. Approximately one year later, in September 1997, Robert Kayda became the Store Manager for the Cary Dillard’s and, consequently, plaintiffs immediate supervisor. In July 1998, defendant Walter Grammer replaced Squires as the Division Vice President and District Manager with responsibility for all Dillard’s stores in North Carolina, South Carolina, and Augusta, Georgia.

At the end of April 1998, Squires, the District Manager over the Dillard’s stores in the region, offered plaintiff a promotion to Store Manager of the Columbia, South Carolina Dillard’s. Plaintiff had just learned that his wife was pregnant. Because she had had several miscarriages, the pregnancy was high-risk, and plaintiff, based on his wife’s doctor’s advice, felt he could not subject his wife to the stress of a move until she had delivered in January 1999. Plaintiff offered to transfer to stores located in Chapel Hill, Durham or Raleigh at any time and said he would be available for any promotion after the birth of his child. (Blohm. Dep. at 110.)

Prior to October 1998, plaintiff informed Kayda that his wife was pregnant and that he intended to take time off after the birth of his child. (Comply 8.) Specifically, he stated that he wished to use his accrued 1998 vacation time in January 1999 when his child was born. Although Dillard’s did not have a roll-over policy allowing employees to use accrued vacation in the subsequent year, Kayda agreed that plaintiff could save his vacation time for that purpose. (Kayda Dep. at 94, 96, 97.) Plaintiffs wife was due on 5 or 6 January 1999, but he did not schedule his vacation with Kayda at the time of their initial conversation because it was unclear when, exactly, plaintiffs wife would give birth.

In accordance with federal law, Dillard’s has an FMLA policy permitting employees to take 12 weeks of unpaid, job-protected leave in the event that, among other reasons, an employee has a child. The Dillard’s “Request for Leave Form” provides as follows:

I understand that Dillard’s is entitled under the law to credit various types of paid leave against FMLA leave or any other leave granted, and the MAXIMUM FMLA leave is 12 weeks in any rolling 12-month period measured backwards from the date any FMLA leave is used. I further understand that although leave starts, immediately, Dillard’s requires that associates exhaust accrued Sick Leave (where applicable) and/or accrued Vacation before any unpaid leave. In all instances such leave is counted toward the maximum available.

(Kayda Dep., Ex. 2; Grammer Dep. 115-116, Ex. 6.) According to Dillard’s policy, then, as expressed in the “Leave Form,” if an employee who is taking leave for one of the events covered by the FMLA has any accrued vacation time, the employee’s leave is counted as vacation time until that vacation time is exhausted and that period of time is then deducted from, or counted against, the maximum available FMLA *476 leave period of 12 weeks. 1 (Kayda Dep. at 25.) While plaintiff was aware of his rights pursuant to the FMLA, plaintiff was not aware that there was a form an employee would use to request FMLA leave. (Blohm Dep. at 146.) 2 Plaintiff testified that he requested such a form and never received a copy. (Id.) Plaintiff also testified that he discussed with Kayda on at least two occasions whether he needed to fill out any paperwork, and alleged in his complaint that Kayda told him he did not need to complete any paperwork. (Id. at 148; Compl. ¶ 8.)

In mid-December 1998, Kayda informed plaintiff that he needed to schedule his January vacation. Apparently frustrated by Kayda’s insistence that he schedule his leave when his wife’s delivery date was uncertain, plaintiff responded that he knew his rights under the FMLA. (Kayda Dep. 84, 99.) After this brief interchange, plaintiff and Kayda had no further discussion about scheduling plaintiffs leave or about the FMLA as it applied to plaintiff.

Plaintiff learned on 11 January 1999 that the doctor would induce his wife’s labor the following morning. He arrived at work at approximately 1 pm, accompanied by his wife, after their doctor’s appointment. Plaintiff completed some final tasks related to an upcoming inventory of the store’s merchandise, scheduled for 16-18 January 1999, while his wife waited for him in his office. Subsequently, plaintiff informed Kayda of the scheduled induction, and he and his wife left the store at about 3:45 pm. He did not discuss his leave with Kayda. As he was leaving the store, he told Kathy West, the Operations Secretary, that he would see her in a week. (Kayda Dep. at 108-109.)

Plaintiffs son was born on 13 January 1999 after an eighteen-hour labor. Plaintiff called the store to inform Kayda that the baby had been born, but Kayda was not available to take his call. (Kayda Dep. at 108.) Plaintiffs wife suffered complications during the delivery and remained in the hospital with the child until 15 January 1999. Plaintiffs wife’s mobility was severely limited when she returned home, and plaintiff continued to care for her and the child at home.

Meanwhile, inventory proceeded as scheduled at Dillard’s from 16-18 January 1999. Inventory is performed twice a year and is an extremely important task for the store. Dillard’s expects all employees to be present for inventory. As Operations Manager, plaintiff had specific preparatory duties regarding inventory and, had he been working, would have played a pivotal organizational and directory role in conducting the inventory. Because plaintiff was on leave with his wife and new-born child, plaintiff did not return to the store to participate in inventory on 16, 17 or 18 January 1999.

Meanwhile, on Friday, 15 January 1999, when plaintiff had not returned to the store after his child’s birth, Kayda wrote the following e-mail to Grammer.

WG,

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Xin Liu v. Amway Corporation Does 1-50 Inclusive
347 F.3d 1125 (Ninth Circuit, 2003)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
95 F. Supp. 2d 473, 2000 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 9362, 2000 WL 508838, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blohm-v-dillards-inc-nced-2000.