Graziadio v. Culinary Institute of America

817 F.3d 415, 2016 WL 1055742
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedMarch 17, 2016
Docket15-888-cv
StatusPublished
Cited by229 cases

This text of 817 F.3d 415 (Graziadio v. Culinary Institute of America) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Graziadio v. Culinary Institute of America, 817 F.3d 415, 2016 WL 1055742 (2d Cir. 2016).

Opinion

CALABRESI, Circuit Judge:

Cathleen Graziadio was fired from her position at the Culinary Institute of America shortly after she took leave to provide medical care for her sons and engaged in a protracted dispute about the validity of that leave. She subsequently brought suit under the Family and Medical' Leave Act and the Americans with Disabilities Act, alleging that she had been wrongfully denied leave, retaliated against for taking leave, and discriminated against on the basis of her association with a disabled individual. The district court granted summary judgment to defendants on all claims. We sustain the court’s rejection of Graziadio’s discrimination claim, but we find that Graziadio has presented sufficient evidence to withstand summary judgment on her claims under the Family and Medical Leave Act. We therefore affirm in part, *419 vacate in part, and remand for further proceedings.

BACKGROUND

From 2007 until the events -described below, Cathleen Graziadio worked as a Payroll Administrator at-the Culinary Institute of America (“CIA”), processing student payroll and helping with students’ administrative needs. On June 6, 2012, Graziadio’s seventeen-year-old son, Vincent, was hospitalized as a result of previously undiagnosed Type I'diabetes; and Graziadio promptly informed her supervisor, Loreen Gardella, that she would need to leave work to take care of him. Seeking to have her absence designated as-leave under the Family and Medical Leave Act (“FMLA”), 29 U.S.C. §§ 2601 et seq., she 'asked Mary Maffia, the payroll employee who processed FMLA documentation, to provide her with any necessary FMLA paperwork, which Maffia forwarded later that day. Graziadio returned to work on June 18, 2012, and, on or about June 27, 2012, submitted a medical certification supporting her need for leave to care for Vincent.

- That same day, June 27, Graziadio’s twelve-year-old son, T.J., fractured, his leg playing basketball and underwent surgery for the injury. Again, Graziadio promptly notified Gardella that she would need immediate leave to care for her son and that she expected to return the. week of July 9, “at least part time.” J. App’x 239. When July 9 arrived, Gardella asked for an update on Graziadio’s return, to which Gra-ziadio responded that she would need to work a reduced, three-day week schedule until mid-to-late August and could return on Thursday, July 12, if that schedule was approved. She also asked, as she had in prior emails to Gardella, if there was “any further documentation that [CIA] may need from me.” J. App’x 250.. At this point, Gardella. reached out to Shaynan Garrioeh, CIA’s Director .of Human Resources, - concerning Graziadio’s request and the appropriate response to. it.

Despite numerous calls and emails by Graziadio seeking to' find out when she could resume work, neither Gardella nor Garrioeh responded to Graziadio until July 17. Garrioeh then sent Graziadio a letter stating that Graziadio’s FMLA paperwork did not justify her absences'from the workplace and that Graziadio must “provide updated paperwork to this office which addresses this deficiency.” J. App’x 258. Garrioeh also noted that Graziadio “ha[d] continued' to ’be absent from the workplace due to the health condition of another one of [her] children” and that she would “also heed to submit paperwork for this time off from work as well.” Id. Garrioeh added that this paperwork had to be submitted within seven days for Grazia-dio’s absences to be approved.

On getting this, letter, Graziadio sent Garrioeh a series of emails attempting to explain her situation and to determine what “paperwork” CIA wanted. She noted that she had repeatedly “asked if the Culinary would, need further paperwork regarding [T. J.’s] accident to take the time off’ but had “not received any reply to any ■ of these emails and phone calls,” and that she was “not clear on what paperwork you would like me to obtain,” as she had not received, any FMLA forms from CIA to be given to T.J.’s doctor. J. App’x 260. She also stated her intention .to contact TJ.’s doctor “to obtain a note for the three days a week reduced schedule,” “under the assumption that this will be enough paperwork” because she “ha[d] not heard from the CIA regarding what paperwork they specifically want.” J. App’x 264. Lastly, Graziadio made clear that she planned to return to work the following week on that reduced schedule.

*420 Garrioch responded on July 20 by emailing Graziadio “an informational brochure from the department of labor to assist you in understanding the FMLA statute and the CIA’s position with respect to your leave.” J. App’x 266. Garrioch then reiterated the asserted deficiencies in the certification submitted for Vincent, stating that the “certification that you did submit stated [only that] there would be doctor’s appointments every three months,” but “you have been absent from the workplace since early June, save for a few partial days near the end of June.” Id. She also noted that “[i]f there is other documentation pertaining to your other son and absences required from the office for his care, you must provide that documentation as well, as we have no paperwork on any medical need pertaining to your absence for his care to date.” Id.

Graziadio replied later that day, reaffirming her need to work a reduced schedule, promising that T.J.’s doctor would “provide ... a note to this effect,” and requesting “for I believe at least the sixth time now FMLA paperwork for him,” if Garrioch wanted specific FMLA forms completed. J. App’x 276. She also restated her intention to return to work the next week. Garrioch wrote back three days later, insisting that CIA continued not to have paperwork justifying Grazia-dio’s return to work and that she would not approve any schedule until new paperwork had been submitted. Garrioch also rejected the note from T.J.’s doctor, which Graziadio had sent in that morning, as failing to establish a “medical necessity for you to provide full time medical care.” J. App’x 278. Finally, she announced that she would “no longer be able to discuss this matter over email,” and asked Grazia-dio to “[pjlease provide ... three dates/ times for this week that you are available to come into work and meet with me” in person. Id.

In an excruciating exchange, Graziadio and Garrioch then proceeded, over any number of days, to email back and forth about scheduling a meeting without actually arranging it: Garrioch would ask for dates and times, Graziadio would respond that she was “available whenever,” Gar-rioch would again ask for specific times, Graziadio would insist that she was “available any time or day,” and so on. Early on in this exchange, Graziadio also forwarded Garrioch an updated FMLA certification for Vincent, but Garrioch did not acknowledge receipt of the certification or otherwise respond to that .email. At another point, Graziadio attempted to circumvent the circular exchange by simply “requesting to return to work” on a “full time regular schedule.” J. App’x 284. Garrioch rejected this request and again insisted that Graziadio appear for a meeting before she could return to work.

Ultimately, no one set a time for a meeting, and Graziadio, facing persistent involuntary leave, retained an attorney.

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817 F.3d 415, 2016 WL 1055742, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/graziadio-v-culinary-institute-of-america-ca2-2016.