Lueck v. United Parcel Service

851 P.2d 1041, 258 Mont. 2, 50 State Rptr. 401, 1993 Mont. LEXIS 108, 144 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2858
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedApril 13, 1993
Docket92-418
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 851 P.2d 1041 (Lueck v. United Parcel Service) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lueck v. United Parcel Service, 851 P.2d 1041, 258 Mont. 2, 50 State Rptr. 401, 1993 Mont. LEXIS 108, 144 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2858 (Mo. 1993).

Opinions

JUSTICE HARRISON

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

This is an appeal from the Seventh Judicial District, Dawson County, the Honorable Dale Cox presiding. Appellant Craig Lueck (Lueck) appeals from an order granting summary judgment in favor of respondent United Parcel Service (UPS) and dismissing his retaliatory discharge complaint. We affirm.

UPS hired Lueck as a part time delivery driver on April 16, 1984. He joined the Teamsters Union shortly after he was hired. In June 1986, Lueck became a full time driver, driving a tractor-trailer combination on a “swing run” three nights and one day per week. After driving on this schedule for approximately twenty months, Lueck was given a new route in February 1988, from Glendive to Wolf Point on a regular schedule. Another driver, who had more seniority than Lueck, bid for and got Lueck’s swing run.

UPS discontinued the Glendive-Wolf Point run after only one week, and Lueck went back to part time driving. Around May 1,1988, the driver who had taken Lueck’s swing run took another position with UPS and Lueck took over the swing run again. By then, however, it had been changed.

The revised swing run followed a schedule Lueck describes as “bizarre.” It began at 1:00 p.m. on Sunday, when Lueck was scheduled to drive from Glendive to Billings, returning at approximately 2:00 a.m. on Monday morning. On Monday evening at 7:00 he was scheduled to drive to Bismarck, returning at approximately 8:00 on Tuesday morning. On Wednesday he was scheduled to begin driving at 6:45 a.m., returning at approximately 7:00 that evening, and on Thursday, he was scheduled to begin driving at 8:30 p.m., returning at 9:00 on Friday morning.

After his first week on this schedule Lueck complained about lack of sleep. He spoke to his supervisors on three separate occasions, indicating that he was having serious problems and was unable to sleep. On June 9,1988, Lueck reported to work at the UPS Center in [5]*5Glendive and put on his uniform in preparation for leaving on the evening’s run. At that point he “flipped out,” as he describes it, and went home without doing the run. His doctor prescribed anti-depressants and admitted him to Glendive Community Hospital for treatment over the weekend of June 11-12, 1988. He was then referred to the Eastern Montana Mental Health Center for outpatient counselling.

Don LaPlante, a counselor at the mental health center, described Lueck’s “presenting problem” as a “physical/psychological adverse stress reaction to working swing shifts as a truck driver for UPS” and recommended continuing anti-depressant medication as well as counselling. Lueck’s family physician, Dr. J.E. Harkness, a Glendive osteopath, saw him in June 1988 and again on July 13, 1988, when he reported that although Lueck appeared to be considerably improved, “it’s unlikely that he will be able to go back into such a swing shift as it was a direct causal effect of his acute hysterical depression episodes.” In fact, Lueck never returned to work for UPS.

On July 25, 1988, Lueck filed a claim for compensation with the Montana Division of Workers’ Compensation, stating that his “double swing” work schedule had disrupted his sleeping and eating patterns, leading to severe physical fatigue, loss of weight, ringing in the ears, dizziness, headaches, nervousness and insomnia. This claim was denied by UPS’s insurer on August 24, 1988, on the grounds that Lueck’s condition was not compensable under the 1987 Workers’ Compensation Act. Lueck never appealed the denial of his claim.

Lueck also filed a claim under his credit disability insurance policy in July 1988. Dr. Harkness completed the required attending physician’s statement on July 20, 1988, describing Lueck’s current condition as “acute anxiety — hysteria, stress reaction, depression” and adding as a “remark” that Lueck “cannot do that type of shift switch work again.”

Lueck occasionally played guitar with a band on weekend nights during the spring of 1988, until he became ill in June. In October 1988 he again began playing with a band. On October 6, 1988, he filed a claim for disability benefits under a Teamsters Union insurance policy, but he never received any benefits because he had begun working in the band before the payments began. In connection with Lueck’s Teamsters Union claim, Dr. Harkness completed a physician’s statement indicating that October 11, 1988, was the “date patient able to return to work.”

In November 1988, UPS learned that Lueck had started working again in a band, that he was not receiving benefits through the [6]*6Teamsters Union, and that Dr. Harkness had approved his return to work on October 11, 1988. Joe Kriskovich, a Billings UPS manager, called Lueck at home on December 8,1988, to verify this information and to ask why he had not returned to work for UPS. Lueck explained that Dr. Harkness had said that he could not return to the swing shift schedule. Kriskovich told Lueck that UPS had nothing in its files to document this statement. Later on the same day, Lueck took a copy of the statement Dr. Harkness signed as attending physician on July 20, 1988, indicating that Lueck “cannot do that type of shift switch work again,” to his supervisor in Glendive, for delivery to Kriskovich the next day.

In the meantime, Kriskovich wrote Lueck a letter, dated December 8, 1988, telling him that he was no longer on authorized leave, that he was scheduled to return to work on Sunday, December 11, 1988, and that his employment at UPS “could be terminated” if he did not return to work on December 11. Lueck did not communicate with UPS or return to work, and on December 12 he received a mailgram and a telegram from the UPS division manager in Billings, telling him that if he did not return to his regularly scheduled shift on Monday, December 12, his name would be removed from the employment records. Lueck again did not communicate with UPS or return to work, and on December 13 the division manager sent him an official separation letter terminating his UPS employment.

Asked during his deposition why he ignored these messages from UPS, Lueck said:

It was just inconceivable to me that they could have received this, that says I cannot return to the shift work and persist in calling me back to shift work without so much as checking with my doctor or having me checked out by a doctor to find out whether or not I am able to go back to work.

On December 8, 1989, Lueck filed a complaint in District Court alleging that UPS had discharged him because he had filed a workers’ compensation claim, in violation of the retaliatory discharge provision in the Workers’ Compensation Act, § 39-71-317(1), MCA, and that UPS had intentionally inflicted emotional distress by refusing to alter his work schedule in May 1988. In 1991 Lueck amended his complaint by adding a new cause of action under § 39-71-317(2), MCA, alleging that UPS had failed to give him preference for a position that became vacant within two years after the date of his injury, as the statute requires. The District Court granted summary [7]*7judgment on the amended complaint on May 14, 1992, after oral argument on January 14, 1992.

The issue on appeal is whether the District Court erred in granting summary judgment and dismissing Lueck’s retaliatory discharge, preference, and emotional distress claims. We will address each of Lueck’s claims separately.

The Retaliatory Discharge Claim

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Lueck v. United Parcel Service
851 P.2d 1041 (Montana Supreme Court, 1993)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
851 P.2d 1041, 258 Mont. 2, 50 State Rptr. 401, 1993 Mont. LEXIS 108, 144 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2858, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lueck-v-united-parcel-service-mont-1993.