Samuel Stallings v. Hussmann Corporation Brian Groninger

447 F.3d 1041, 11 Wage & Hour Cas.2d (BNA) 777, 2006 U.S. App. LEXIS 11757, 2006 WL 1300593
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedMay 12, 2006
Docket05-1882
StatusPublished
Cited by290 cases

This text of 447 F.3d 1041 (Samuel Stallings v. Hussmann Corporation Brian Groninger) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Samuel Stallings v. Hussmann Corporation Brian Groninger, 447 F.3d 1041, 11 Wage & Hour Cas.2d (BNA) 777, 2006 U.S. App. LEXIS 11757, 2006 WL 1300593 (8th Cir. 2006).

Opinion

SMITH, Circuit Judge.

Samuel L. Stallings sued his employer, Hussmann Corporation (“Hussmann”) and Brian Groninger, for wrongful termination in violation of the Family and Medical Leave Act (“FMLA”). The district court granted summary judgment to Hussmann and Groninger. Stallings argues that the district court erred in applying the doctrine of judicial estoppel; erred in concluding that Hussmann and Groninger were entitled to summary judgment on Stall-ings’s FMLA claims; and erred in denying Stallings’s motion for partial summary judgment because Stallings established that Hussmann considered his FMLA leave as a reason to terminate his employment. We reverse the district court’s application of judicial estoppel and its entry of summary judgment in Hussmann’s favor.

I. Background

Stallings worked as a general laborer for Hussmann. The terms of Stallings’s employment, including the rate and method of his compensation, were determined by a collective bargaining agreement between the United States Steelworkers’ of America and Hussmann (“Bargaining Agreement”). The Bargaining Agreement provides that an employee shall be terminated if “the employee gives [a] false reason for a leave of absence.... ” Hussmann allows employees to take medical leave as required under the FMLA. In accordance with the FMLA, Hussmann allows “intermittent” FMLA leave for an employee to care for a family member when “medically necessary.” Hussman eventually termi *1044 nated Stallings for giving false reasons for use of leave time.

In December 2001, Stallings requested FMLA leave to care for his father. Stall-ings requested the leave through the Hussman Human Resources Office (“HRO”), which granted his request. Stallings subsequently submitted a request for an extension of the initial FMLA leave through June 2002, which the HRO also granted. Stallings took intermittent FMLA leave during both the initial period and the extended period. 1 In June 2002, Stallings applied to have his prior intermittent FMLA leave extended for another six-month period for “patient care.” Stall-ings submitted a Certificate of Health Care Provider in connection with this request. Hussmann’s FMLA policy, consistent with the FMLA, provides that “FMLA leave may be taken intermittently whenever medically necessary to care for a seriously ill family member.” The HRO granted his request for a third time.

At Hussmann, supervisors grant vacation time on a seniority basis and on the basis of company production needs. In February of each year, Hussmann policy and the Bargaining Agreement require employees to request vacation time for the entire year, if the employee is to exercise seniority rights for scheduling purposes. Senior workers receive priority when conflicts arise as to requested vacation. In February 2000 and February 2001, Stall-ings requested and was granted the first three weeks of August as vacation time.

In January or February 2002, Groninger became Stallings’s supervisor. In February 2002, Stallings, as in the two prior years, requested the first three weeks of August 2002 for his vacation. Because of Stallings’s seniority standing, however, Groninger could only schedule Stallings for one week of vacation in August. Groninger never approved Stallings to take vacation for the second and third weeks of August 2002. Groninger was never involved in deciding whether Stallings was entitled to FMLA leave.

Sometime prior to August 2002, Stall-ings met with Groninger to again request the second and third weeks of August as vacation time. Groninger denied his request because there were no available slots. Stallings then told Groninger that he intended to take off the second and third weeks of August 2002 anyway as FMLA leave. Stallings contends that he told Groninger that he would use the leave to provide care for his father who was unable to care for himself. Groninger contends that Stallings only told him he was using the leave to help his father move. Groninger reminded Stallings that he would have to call in each workday to an automated answering system to report his absence.

Stallings did not report to work for the first three weeks of August. The first week of work was scheduled vacation, and Stallings called the Hussmann automated answering system each day he was off work from August 12-26, 2002, and reported that he was using FMLA leave.

After Stallings returned to work, Louis Stralka, a Human Resources Generalist in the HRO, summoned Stallings to a meeting through Groninger. The parties dispute what transpired at this meeting. Stallings denies telling Stralka that he moved his father while off work from August 12-26, 2002. Stallings does admit that he “stated [his] reason why [he] was out on family medical leave” and that he *1045 told Stralka that he “was moving, providing for his [father’s] needs, painting, cutting the grass, et. cetera.” During the meeting, Stallings admitted that he did not help his father move because the move was cancelled in early August, only a few days before his vacation time began. When Stralka asked Stallings why he did not return to work when he learned that he was not going to help his father move, Stallings responded, “Because I was on vacation.”

Stallings told Stralka that he spent the two weeks he was on FMLA leave performing maintenance on his father’s home because the City of St. Louis had issued a citation to his father to get the house up to Code. The City, however, dismissed the citation against Stallings’s father in June 2002. In addition, the citation did not relate to painting or yard maintenance but to open storage containers on the property. Stallings admitted that he had siblings and his father’s wife in the area who could also help his father, that he could have performed these tasks on the weekends and at night, and that he did not need to take time off work to perform the tasks around his father’s house.

Stralka reported to Richard Kurt, the Director of the HRO, that he believed Stallings was lying about the reason he was absent for two weeks. Kurt made the decision to terminate Stallings for “calling in FMLA for non-FMLA reasons, fraudulent and [sic] misuse of the leave of absence policy, violation of company policies in connection therewith and causing falsification of the company’s records in this regard.” Stallings admitted that he had no evidence that Groninger decided to terminate him or that anyone other than Kurt made the decision to terminate him on October 1, 2002.

Following his termination, Stallings filed a grievance with the union, but the union eventually withdrew the grievance. Stall-ings then filed a complaint on December 18, 2002, with the United States Department of Labor, alleging that his termination violated the FMLA. The Department of Labor, however, found in favor of Hussmann, concluding that Stallings was properly terminated for fraudulently taking leave.

At the time of Stallings’s termination on October 1, 2002, he was a debtor in a Chapter 13 bankruptcy proceeding pending in the United States Bankruptcy Court for the Eastern District of Missouri. At no time during the pendency of Stallings’s bankruptcy case did he disclose his claims against Groninger or Hussmann to the bankruptcy court. On March 11, 2003, the bankruptcy court granted the bankruptcy trustee’s motion to dismiss the case.

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Bluebook (online)
447 F.3d 1041, 11 Wage & Hour Cas.2d (BNA) 777, 2006 U.S. App. LEXIS 11757, 2006 WL 1300593, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/samuel-stallings-v-hussmann-corporation-brian-groninger-ca8-2006.