Griesbaum v. Aventis Pharmaceuticals

259 F. App'x 459
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedDecember 24, 2007
DocketNo. 06-4569
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 259 F. App'x 459 (Griesbaum v. Aventis Pharmaceuticals) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Griesbaum v. Aventis Pharmaceuticals, 259 F. App'x 459 (3d Cir. 2007).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

GREENBERG, Circuit Judge.

I. INTRODUCTION

This matter comes on before the court on an employee’s appeal from a summary judgment entered in favor of his employer in an employment termination action. The employer, Aventis Pharmaceuticals, employed appellant Gerard Griesbaum as a sales representative. In the course of his employment Griesbaum was in a serious automobile accident that caused him significant injuries which precluded him from working. Accordingly, he received statutory workers’ compensation benefits and contractual short-term and long-term disability benefits pursuant to an insurance policy that Aventis provided. After Griesbaum had been on medical leave for a full year, Aventis terminated his employment, an action that it asserts it took pursuant to its written medical leave policy requiring an employee’s termination “after 365 continuous calendar days of medical leave.” Suppl. app. at 107.

Notwithstanding the circumstance that his discharge was in accordance with the precise terms of Aventis’s medical leave policy, Griesbaum filed this suit alleging that it terminated his employment to retaliate against him by reason of his seeking and receiving the workers’ compensation benefits. Moreover, he filed this action even though he had no direct evidence that Aventis had this motive for discharging him, and, indeed, never has had any such direct evidence. With respect to circumstantial evidence he contends that Aventis’s proffered reason for terminating his employment, i.e., its application of its one-year medical leave policy, was pretextual because Aventis deviated from its procedures in applying the policy. Its most notable deviation was that it did not ensure that Griesbaum received a letter from it notifying him about his potential employment termination pursuant to the medical leave policy if he did not return to work. We unanimously conclude, however, that Griesbaum had prior notice of Aventis’s employment termination policy, and, more [461]*461significantly, did not show that its failure to give him specific notice of its medical leave termination policy following his injury suggests that it had a retaliatory animus for terminating his employment. Moreover, Judge Fisher and Judge Aldisert are of the view that Griesbaum did not show that there was a causal connection between the filing of his workers’ compensation claim and the termination of his employment and for this additional reason Griesbaum’s case fails. Therefore, we will affirm the District Court’s order of September 25, 2006, granting Aventis’s motion for summary judgment.

II. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

Aventis1 employed Griesbaum, who is about 60 years old, as an at-will sales representative in its Reading, Pennsylvania, territory. Prior to Aventis terminating his employment Griesbaum worked for it or for a predecessor for 28 years.

On August 14, 2001, in the course of his employment, Griesbaum was in an automobile accident causing him serious bodily injuries. Following the accident, he was unable to perform the essential functions of his position and, as a result, a workers’ compensation claim was filed on his behalf.2 In addition, Griesbaum received short-term and long-term disability benefits until February 2005 when Aventis’s long-term disability insurance carrier determined that he was no longer eligible for benefits. Griesbaum appealed from the termination of the long-term disability benefits and as of the time of the district court’s September 25, 2006 order, that appeal still was pending. We do not know whether the appeal since has been resolved but we do know that Griesbaum has continued to assert that he was not able to return to his position with Aventis during his entire 365-day medical leave and for at least sometime thereafter.3

Griesbaum testified at a deposition that shortly after the accident he spoke with Aventis’s Regional Director (John Coleman), National Vice President of Sales (Tim Shalbraek), and District Manager (Rose Rich), and that they all told him that his position with Aventis was secure. However, at Griesbaum’s deposition he clarified that he does not remember if any of these individuals promised to hold open his position for any specified time, nor does he believe that they broke any promises they made to him. Furthermore, at a deposition Rich denied stating that Griesbaum’s position was secure but testified that she told him that the most important thing was his health.

In any event, regardless of what Aventis’s management previously told Griesbaum, in February 2002 Rich informed him that Aventis was going to fill his position because it needed a representative in his territory and Aventis’s policy was to back [462]*462fill an employee’s position if he was unable to return to work after six months of medical leave. Griesbaum stated at his deposition that he did not believe that Aventis filled his position for any other reason.

Sometime following August 14, 2002, more than one year after the accident, Barbara Chalmers, an Aventis human resources services coordinator, conducted a routine periodical audit of its employees on medical leave. In accordance with Aventis’s Medical Leave of Absence Policy, which states that employees “will be terminated at the earlier of (1) the date medical leave is no longer approved by Health Services and he or she does not return to work or (2) after E65 continuous calendar days of medical leave,” suppl. app. at 106, she marked all employees on medical leave for longer than 365 days as “terminated.” Thus, Chalmers marked Griesbaum’s employment as terminated as of August 14, 2002. According to Chalmers’s affidavit of May 26, 2005, at the time she “recorded a termination of employment for Mr. Griesbaum, [she] did not know who he was, nor did [she] know that a worker’s compensation claim had been filed on his behalf,” and “[t]he only reason [she] recorded an employment termination for Mr. Griesbaum was because he had been on medical leave for longer than 365 days.” Id. at 109.

Griesbaum, however, stated in an uncontradicted allegation that no one notified him that Aventis had terminated his employment until October 2002 when T. Rowe Price, his section 401(k) plan administrator and life insurance provider, advised him of his post-termination options. This notification caused Griesbaum’s workers’ compensation attorney to make an inquiry with Aventis about what he believed to be the sudden and inexplicable termination of Griesbaum’s employment. Aventis then produced a letter dated January 16, 2002, approximately five months after the accident, from Maureen Flinton, a disability nurse specialist for Aventis, to Griesbaum notifying him that Aventis would terminate his employment if he had “not returned to work, or been released to return to work, by the end of 12 consecutive months of medical leave,” i.e., on August 14, 2002. App. at 24. Griesbaum claims that he did not receive the letter and there is evidence to support this assertion that we accept on this appeal. In this regard the record shows that the zip code for Griesbaum’s address in Pottsville, Pennsylvania, is 17901-3317, but that Aventis addressed the letter to him with the inaccurate zip code of 17909-3317. Moreover, the letter misspells “Pottsville” as “Pottsvill.” Even though there is no indication in the record that the post office returned the letter to Aventis as undelivered, we regard the letter as having been undelivered and decide this case on that basis.

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Bluebook (online)
259 F. App'x 459, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/griesbaum-v-aventis-pharmaceuticals-ca3-2007.