Harrison v. Children's National Medical Center

678 A.2d 572, 1996 D.C. App. LEXIS 128, 1996 WL 353791
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 28, 1996
Docket93-CV-231
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 678 A.2d 572 (Harrison v. Children's National Medical Center) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District of Columbia Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harrison v. Children's National Medical Center, 678 A.2d 572, 1996 D.C. App. LEXIS 128, 1996 WL 353791 (D.C. 1996).

Opinion

TERRY, Associate Judge:

This appeal marks the first time that we have been called upon to interpret the District of Columbia Family and Medical Leave Act (“FMLA” or “the Act”), D.C.Code §§ 36-1301 et seq. (1993). Appellee, Children’s National Medical Center (hereafter “Children’s Hospital” or “the hospital”), discharged appellant Harrison from her employment after she was absent from work for medical reasons for more than seventeen weeks. Ms. Harrison then brought suit under the FMLA, which guarantees an employee sixteen weeks of medical leave during any twenty-four-month period. The trial court granted summary judgment in favor of the hospital, and Ms. Harrison brought this appeal, contending that her use of four weeks of previously earned sick leave should not have been counted in calculating the Act’s sixteen-week protected period. We affirm.

I

Appellant Harrison, an employee of Children’s Hospital, called in sick on May 13, 1991, because she was experiencing pain from a prior back injury. As of that date, *573 she had accumulated a total of 186 hours of paid sick leave under the hospital’s personnel rules. Harrison used that paid sick leave through the pay period ending June 8; thereafter she took unpaid leave.

Ms. Harrison’s absence from work continued from May 13 through September 10, more than seventeen weeks. On September 10 she told the hospital that she was ready to return to work. However, on September 24 the hospital notified Ms. Harrison that, because she had “exhausted all of [her] leave protection under the D.C. Family [and] Medical Leave Act,” her employment was “terminated.”

Ms. Harrison filed this suit under D.C.Code § 36-1310, part of the FMLA, alleging that the hospital had violated the Act by firing her because she had been away on unpaid leave for just over thirteen weeks (but acknowledging that she had taken an additional four weeks of paid sick leave). The hospital moved for summary judgment, which the trial court granted. In its order the court stated that the sole issue before it was “whether the FMLA allows Plaintiff to ‘tack on’ accumulated paid sick leave to the 16 weeks of medical leave protected by the Act.” The court ruled that such tacking was not allowed:

The FMLA ... sets up a protected period of only 16 weeks. Depending on an employee’s existing benefit plan, she can choose to take this leave either paid or unpaid. In no event, however, is the FMLA’s protected period longer than 16 weeks.

II

After this case was argued, this court sua sponte questioned whether the trial court should have dismissed Ms. Harrison’s complaint because she had failed to exhaust the administrative remedies available to her under the FMLA. We asked the parties to file supplemental briefs on the exhaustion issue. Amicus also filed a brief with leave of court, and the hospital filed an additional brief in response to that of amicus. 1

The exhaustion issue is not an easy one because the FMLA is anything but a model of clarity, and its implementing regulations 2 are not particularly helpful. The FMLA has two sections governing relief. The first and more detailed provision, D.C.Code § 36-1309, establishes an administrative enforcement procedure and describes it with great specificity; the second and far briefer provision, D.C.Code § 36-1310, discusses only enforcement by civil action and makes no mention of administrative relief. Section 36-1309(a) states:

The Mayor shall provide an administrative procedure pursuant to which a person claimed [sic] to be aggrieved under this chapter may file a complaint against an employer alleged to have violated this chapter. A complaint shall be filed within one year of the occurrence or discovery of the alleged violation of this chapter.

Section 36-1309(b) goes on to prescribe in detail what the administrative procedure “shall include, but not be limited to....”

Under section 36-1309, there are two ways in which an aggrieved party may gain access to the courts. Subsection (e) permits any person who is “adversely affected or aggrieved by an [administrative] order or decision issued pursuant to subsection (b)” to seek direct review in this court under the District of Columbia Administrative Procedure Act, D.C.Code § 1-1510 (1992). But subsection (e) of section 36-1309 appears to provide an alternative remedy. It states:

The entire administrative enforcement procedure outlined in subsections (a) and (b) of this section, including the formal hearing, shall take no longer than 150 days to complete from the date the complaint is filed. If the Mayor fails to make a reasonable effort to comply with the deadline requirements of the administrative enforcement provisions prescribed by this subsection and the rales promulgated by the Mayor, the person who initiated the administrative enforcement procedure against the employer may file a civil ac *574 tion against the employer pursuant to § 36-1310. [Emphasis added.]

From the supplemental briefs we learned that Ms. Harrison filed an administrative complaint with the Department of Human Rights 3 on October 30, 1991, just over a month after she was fired. The allegations in that complaint were essentially the same as those contained in her complaint in the instant civil action. The Department advised her by letter dated January 15, 1992, that “due to budget constraints” the “processing” of her case would require approximately twelve to fifteen months. However, because the statute of limitations requires that a civil action on an FMLA claim be filed within one year “after the occurrence or discovery of the alleged violation,” 4 Ms. Harrison waited only a little more than eight months after receiving the Department’s letter and then sought alternative relief. She filed her complaint in the instant case on September 23, 1992, one day before the statute ran. 5 Exactly three months later, on December 23, the Department sent a letter to Children’s Hospital, enclosing interrogatories and a request for documents and directing the hospital to respond within thirty days. This appears to have been the first step in the Department’s “processing” of Ms. Harrison’s administrative complaint, which had been filed more than a year earlier.

Given this state of affairs, Ms. Harrison argues that she has sufficiently exhausted her administrative remedies and urges us to rule on the merits of her claim.

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Bluebook (online)
678 A.2d 572, 1996 D.C. App. LEXIS 128, 1996 WL 353791, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harrison-v-childrens-national-medical-center-dc-1996.