Kristina Vonderhaar v. Amy Waymire

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 15, 2020
Docket19-5332
StatusUnpublished

This text of Kristina Vonderhaar v. Amy Waymire (Kristina Vonderhaar v. Amy Waymire) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kristina Vonderhaar v. Amy Waymire, (6th Cir. 2020).

Opinion

NOT RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION File Name: 20a0021n.06

No. 19-5332

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT FILED Jan 15, 2020 DEBORAH S. HUNT, Clerk KRISTINA VONDERHAAR, ) ) Plaintiff–Appellant, ) ON APPEAL FROM THE ) UNITED STATES DISTRICT v. ) COURT FOR THE EASTERN ) DISTRICT OF KENTUCKY AMY WAYMIRE and AT&T MOBILITY ) SERVICES, LLC, ) ) OPINION Defendant–Appellees. ) )

BEFORE: MOORE, CLAY, and SUTTON, Circuit Judges.

KAREN NELSON MOORE, Circuit Judge. Kristina Vonderhaar accuses her erstwhile

employer, AT&T Mobility Services, LLC (“AT&T”), of violating the Family and Medical Leave

Act (“FMLA”) and Kentucky wrongful-discharge law. Most significantly, Vonderhaar alleges

that, after she used a significant amount of her medical leave, and then complained to AT&T’s

“ethics hotline” about “fraudulent” activity occurring at the AT&T store where she worked, her

supervisors retaliated against her by making her working conditions so miserable that she had no

choice but to resign. The district court, however, granted AT&T summary judgment, finding that

Vonderhaar’s claims lacked evidentiary support or were otherwise improperly asserted.

Vonderhaar now appeals that judgment. We AFFIRM. No. 19-5332, Vonderhaar v. Waymire et al.

I. BACKGROUND1

A. Factual Background

1. September 15, 2013 to April 16, 2015: Vonderhaar Uses Her Medical Leave and Experiences Other Attendance Issues

On September 15, 2013, Vonderhaar began working as a “retail sales consultant” at an

AT&T store in Maysville, Kentucky. Nothing of note occurred during Vonderhaar’s first year of

employment. In November 2014, however, Vonderhaar underwent a partial hysterectomy surgery,

followed by a few related surgeries in the weeks thereafter. As a result of these surgeries,

Vonderhaar requested, and AT&T approved, an FMLA leave of absence lasting from November

24, 2014 to February 2, 2015. R.36-6 (Villarreal Dec. ¶ 13) (Page ID #358). Unfortunately, shortly

after returning from this leave of absence, Vonderhaar experienced heart palpitations. As a result,

Vonderhaar requested, and AT&T again approved, a series of “intermittent” FMLA absences,

ranging from February 19, 2015 to April 16, 2015. Id. ¶ 15.

Importantly, though, in addition to taking this (approved) time off for medical leave,

Vonderhaar missed at least the following six days of work, without requesting FMLA leave:

(1) November 15, 2014; (2) November 21, 2014; (3) February 4, 2015; (4) February 11, 2015;

(5) March 21, 2015; and (6) April 2, 2015. See R.38-10 (Vonderhaar Attendance Records) (Page

ID #687–90); R.36-2 (Vonderhaar FMLA Request Forms) (Page ID #285–301). As these absences

occurred, and in accordance with AT&T’s progressive disciplinary policy, Vonderhaar received a

series of letters warning her that, if she continued to accrue unexcused absences, she “could” be

1 Although Vonderhaar has technically brought suit against AT&T and Amy Waymire—one of her former supervisors—for ease of reference we refer to defendants as simply “AT&T” throughout this opinion.

2 No. 19-5332, Vonderhaar v. Waymire et al.

subject to “further discipline, up to and including dismissal.” R.38-6 (Feb. 16, 2015 Counseling

Notice) (Page ID #546); accord, e.g., R.38-9 (Mar. 6, 2015 Written Warning) (Page ID #682);

R.36-4 (Apr. 16, 2015 Final Written Warning) (Page ID #343–44).

The most prominent of these letters was the April 16, 2015 “final written warning.” This

letter listed the six unexcused absences noted above and essentially said that Vonderhaar could be

fired if she missed one more day of work without excuse (because company policy authorized

termination after seven unexcused absences). R.36-4 (Apr. 16, 2015 Final Written Warning) (Page

ID #343–44); see also R.36-5 (Hoskins Dec., Ex. 1) (Attendance Policy) (Page ID #354). There

is no record evidence suggesting this final warning was factually inaccurate, or was applied in a

manner inconsistent with AT&T policy.2

2. February 2, 2015 to April 16, 2015: During the Same Time Period, Vonderhaar Sees Her Co-Workers Committing Allegedly Fraudulent Acts, and Then Reports (some of) that Misconduct to Management

Attendance, however, was not the only issue on Vonderhaar’s mind after she returned from

her leave of absence. Rather, as Vonderhaar tells it, during this same time period—early to mid-

2 To be sure, as Vonderhaar emphasizes in her brief, the March 6 “written warning” listed “February 19, 2015” as an unexcused absence when, in fact, that absence was approved for FMLA leave. As AT&T correctly notes in response, however, the only reason February 19 was listed as “unexcused” in the March 6 letter was because Vonderhaar did not submit her medical certification for that date until March 6, and AT&T did not approve that certification until March 9. R.36-2 (Vonderhaar FMLA Request Forms) (Page ID #286); R.36-6 (Villarreal Dec. ¶ 14) (Page ID #358). After AT&T received Vonderhaar’s medical certification, though, the February 19 absence “was changed to an approved FMLA absence.” R.43-1 (Villarreal Reply Dec. ¶ 10) (Page ID #851); see also R.38-10 (Vonderhaar Attendance Records) (Page ID #690) (reflecting this change). It is accordingly not mentioned in the April 16 final warning. Moreover, although Vonderhaar intimates in her brief that two other dates included in the final written warning should have been covered by the FMLA—February 4 and February 11—she points to no evidence in support of that contention.

3 No. 19-5332, Vonderhaar v. Waymire et al.

2015—she repeatedly caught her colleagues engaging in “fraudulent behavior.” At her deposition,

she emphasized the following three incidents.

The Shane Hampton “Temporary Phone Number” Incident: Vonderhaar first testified that,

sometime in February 2015, one of her colleagues, Shane Hampton, began unnecessarily adding

temporary phone numbers to customer accounts. More specifically, Vonderhaar alleged, Hampton

gave customers “temporary numbers” when they transferred an existing phone line to AT&T,

instead of the new permanent number he should have been giving them. R.38-5 (Vonderhaar Dep.

at 62–63) (Page ID #478). As a result, to secure their permanent number, customers were forced

to interact with AT&T a second time, which then artificially boosted the sales commissions of

employees like Hampton (because the employee could count both the temporary number and the

permanent number as a sale). Although Vonderhaar acknowledges that nobody at AT&T

requested that she engage in this “temporary phone number” tactic, id. at 67–68 (Page ID #479),

because Vonderhaar (correctly) believed the tactic violated company policy, she raised the issue

with one of her store managers, Hannah Eaves. Eaves then “sat [the store employees] down . . .

and said, you know, no more temporary phone numbers.” Id. at 67 (Page ID #479). The record

does not indicate whether employees continued to use the “temporary phone number” tactic after

Eaves’s sit-down.

The Insurance Incident: Vonderhaar also testified that her colleagues would “add[]

insurance to [customer] accounts” without informing the customer they were doing so. Id. at 80–

81 (Page ID #482). Although Vonderhaar was not “pushed” to take this action either, she (with

good reason) thought her colleagues’ actions to be unethical. Id. at 83–84 (Page ID #483). Unlike

the temporary phone number incident, though, Vonderhaar did not report her specific concerns

4 No. 19-5332, Vonderhaar v.

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