Holmes v. KE Gutridge, LLC

CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Ohio
DecidedMarch 26, 2025
Docket2:22-cv-01694
StatusUnknown

This text of Holmes v. KE Gutridge, LLC (Holmes v. KE Gutridge, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Holmes v. KE Gutridge, LLC, (S.D. Ohio 2025).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF OHIO EASTERN DIVISION

SHANE HOLMES,

: Plaintiff,

Case No. 2:22-cv-1694

v. Chief Judge Sarah D. Morrison

Magistrate Judge Elizabeth

Preston Deavers

KE GUTRIDGE, LLC, et al., :

Defendants.

OPINION AND ORDER Shane Holmes brings this action against KE Gutridge, LLC (“KEG”) and Nick McGovern alleging that they fired him for absences he took for his own injury and to care for his mother and daughter.1 Mr. Holmes and Defendants filed cross- motions for summary judgment (ECF Nos. 77, 80), both motions are fully briefed and ripe for consideration.2 For the reasons below, Defendants’ Motion for Partial Summary Judgment (ECF No. 80) is DENIED, and Holmes’s Motion for Partial Summary Judgment (ECF No. 77) is GRANTED in part and DENIED in part.

1 Mr. Holmes filed a Notice that he accepted Defendants’ offer of judgment pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 68(a) in the amount of $40,000 plus attorneys’ fees on Claims 6, 7, 8, 9, and 10 of his Second Amended Complaint for alleged violations of the FLSA and Ohio law. (Pl.’s Notice Accepting Offer of Judgment, ECF No. 65.) The Court ACCEPTS Plaintiff’s Notice (ECF No. 65) and hereby enters judgment against Defendants on Claims 6, 7, 8, 9, and 10. 2 Mr. Holmes’s Motion for Leave to File a Sur-Reply (ECF No. 88) and Motion to Consider Supplemental Authority (ECF No. 90) are GRANTED. I. BACKGROUND A. Mr. Holmes’s Employment with Defendants Mr. Holmes began his employment with KEG in April 2018 when it

purchased his former employer Fire Guard, LLC and kept him on as an employee in the Fire Division. (S. Holmes Decl., ECF No. 84-1, PAGEID # 3973.) Mr. Holmes typically worked 60 to 80 hours per week installing fire suppression systems. (Id. at PAGEID # 3974.) Mr. McGovern was Mr. Holmes’s supervisor. (Id. at PAGEID # 3973.) Mr. McGovern fired Mr. Holmes on May 15, 2020. (Id. at PAGEID # 3984.) B. KEG’s Leave of Absence Policies

KEG has different policies for requesting time off depending on whether the request was for a foreseeable or an unexpected absence. Approved foreseeable absences were “excused” and not subject to discipline. (KEG Dep., ECF No. 73, PAGEID #1464.) For unforeseeable absences, employees had to notify both their direct supervisor and an automated call-off line checked each day by Kyle Edwards (an employee in KEG’s human resources department). (Id. at PAGEID # 1454–56.)

There is conflicting evidence on when an employee’s unforeseeable absence could be considered excused. KEG’s 30(b)(6) representative Tarah Wilson says that the company had an unwritten policy that an employee needed to call off less than 24 hours before the absence for it be excused. (Id. at PAGEID # 1466.) However, KEG’s employee handbook “Attendance and Punctuality” policy instructs: “[i]f you are going to be late for work or absent, notify your immediate supervisor as far in advance as is feasible under the circumstances, but before the start of your workday.” (KEG Employee Handbook, ECF No. 69-2, PAGEID # 746.) Mr. McGovern says that an employee complied with the handbook policy even if he

notified KEG one minute before the start of his shift. (McGovern Dep. I, ECF No. 69, PAGEID # 514.) Defendants’ summary judgment briefing also says that an absence was excused even when the employee did not call off in advance if he provided a doctor’s note for the absence. (Defs.’ Mot., PAGEID # 2673.) Many of the former Fire Guard employees, including Mr. Holmes, continued to follow the Fire Guard practice of notifying Mr. McGovern and Ms. Mapes of

absences for medical reasons. (KEG Dep., PAGEID # 1480–82; S. Holmes Dec., PAGEID # 3975.) If Ms. Mapes thought documentation of the absence needed to be included in an employee’s file so that KEG could determine whether it was excused or unexcused, she would forward it to Mr. Edwards and Shelly Gutridge in KEG’s human resources department. (KEG Dep., PAGEID # 1482–83; Mapes Dep., ECF No. 70-13, PAGEID # 1228.) KEG had a policy providing for progressive discipline of employees incurring

unexcused absences and tardies: (1) for a first offense, a verbal reprimand; (2) for a second offense, written reprimand; (3) for a third offense, suspension; and (4) for a fourth offense, termination. (KEG Dep., PAGEID # 1452–54; KEG Employee Handbook, PAGEID # 716–7.) C. KEG’s FMLA Procedure When an employee submitted a request for a medical absence, Mr. Edwards and Ms. Gutridge evaluated the request to determine if it was FMLA-qualifying. (KEG Dep., PAGEID # 1457–63, 1483–84.) If they determined that the absence qualified as FMLA leave, they would so designate it and would provide medical

certification paperwork to the employee. (Id. at PAGEID # 1463.) If they needed more information to make a determination, they would follow up with the employee. (Id. at PAGEID # 1461–62.) D. Mr. Holmes’s Absences Between December 2019 and his termination date, Mr. Holmes called off work 24 times. Four of those absences were dates when he called off before the start

of his shift for his own illness (January 21, and April 1 through 3, 2020). (S. Holmes Decl., PAGEID # 3980, 3983–84.) He asserts that the remaining 20 absences were FMLA-protected because he suffered a work-related injury and he was helping his ill family members. But KEG neither designated his absences as FMLA-leave nor investigated to determine whether the absences were FMLA-qualifying. (KEG Dep., PAGEID # 1495–96.) 1. December 3, 2019

On the evening of December 2, Mr. Holmes took his daughter A.H. to the hospital because she was experiencing back, shoulder, neck, and joint pain and psoriasis. (A.H. Medical Records, ECF No. 77-5, PAGEID # 1867–69; S. Holmes Decl., PAGEID # 3975; A.H. Decl., ECF No. 84-2, PAGEID # 3989.) She was briefly admitted before she was evaluated and referred for a follow-up appointment with a rheumatology clinic for suspected rheumatoid arthritis. (A.H. Medical Records, ECF No. 77-5, PAGEID # 1867–1869; S. Holmes Decl., PAGEID # 3975; A.H. Decl., ECF No. 84-2, PAGEID # 3989.) Even after they went home, A.H. continued to experience pain throughout the night and the next day, so Mr. Holmes stayed home

to take care of her. (S. Holmes Decl., PAGEID # 3976; A.H. Decl., PAGEID # 3990.) Mr. Holmes texted Mr. McGovern and Ms. Mapes before his December 3 shift that he was not going to be in that day because he had been in the hospital with his daughter, then had been up most of the night with her. (ECF No. 77-9, PAGEID # 2339; ECF No. 77-10, PAGEID # 2341.) Mr. Holmes says that he spoke with Mr. McGovern and Ms. Mapes after he sent the texts and explained to them that he was

taking the day off to take care of his daughter who was in severe pain that the doctors believed was rheumatoid arthritis. (S. Holmes Decl., PAGEID # 3976.) 2. December 4 and 5, 2019 On December 4, 2019, Mr. Holmes’s mother Lucille Holmes was taken to the hospital for a suspected heart attack and was told she needed a stent to unblock one of her arteries. (See L. Holmes Medical Rec., ECF No. 77-11; L. Holmes Decl., ECF No. 84-3, PAGEID # 3996.) Mr. Holmes visited his mother at the hospital on

December 4 and 5, spoke with her doctors about her care, and helped her decide what treatment to accept. (L. Holmes Decl., PAGEID # 3996–97; S. Holmes Decl., PAGEID # 3976–77.) He provided her emotional comfort and support on the days he visited. (L. Holmes Decl., PAGEID # 3996–97; S. Holmes Decl., PAGEID # 3977.) Mr. Holmes texted Mr. McGovern and Ms. Mapes before his December 4 shift that he was not going to be in that day because his mom had a heart attack and was in the hospital. (ECF No. 77-9, PAGEID # 2339; ECF No.

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