Back from the USSR: FMLA Retaliation, 4th Circuit Decision in Dotson v Pfizer

Retal­i­a­tion law is one of the most devel­op­ing (and dan­ger­ous) areas of employ­ment law. I recent­ly spoke at the West Vir­ginia Employ­ment Lawyers Association’s annu­al con­fer­ence on retal­i­a­tion law, and I want­ed to go back and dis­cuss an impor­tant Fourth Cir­cuit deci­sion on the Fam­i­ly and Med­ical Leave Act of 1993, 29 U.S.C. § 2601 et seq.

Dotson v. Pfizer: Adoption and the FMLA

The deci­sion is Dot­son v. Pfiz­er Inc., 558 F.3d 284 (2009), and involved alle­ga­tions of retal­i­a­tion stem­ming from leave tak­en for an inter­na­tion­al adop­tion from Russia.

The jury award­ed $1,876 in dam­ages on the FMLA inter­fer­ence claim and $331,429.25 on FMLA retal­i­a­tion claim. The judge then award­ed $333,305.25 in statu­to­ry liq­ui­dat­ed dam­ages, $375,000 in attor­neys’ fees, and $14,264.88 in court costs. Both sides appealed. The Fourth Cir­cuit reject­ed all aspects of the employer’s appeal, but found the tri­al court made a mis­take in refus­ing to award the plain­tiff pre-judg­ment interest.

Employees Don’t Have to Expressly Invoke the FMLA on Leave Requests

Part of the sig­nif­i­cance of the Dot­son case is that the Fourth Cir­cuit held that the employ­ee, to invoke rights under the FMLA, need only tell the employ­er of the need for leave that is cov­ered by the FMLA ‑the employ­ee need not express­ly invoke the FMLA as the basis or jus­ti­fi­ca­tion for the leave. The employ­er then has the duty to exam­ine the sit­u­a­tion and deter­mine whether the request­ed leave impli­cates the employee’s FMLA rights. Here is an illus­tra­tion of the 2 dif­fer­ent pos­si­ble require­ments that were in issue in Dot­son:

  • Employee’s posi­tion on notice: Employ­ee says: “Boss, I need some time off for the inter­na­tion­al adop­tion my wife and I are involved in. We have a meet­ing with the adop­tion agency tomor­row after­noon, and I’d like to take the after­noon off.” This is the only notice that the employ­ee con­tend­ed was nec­es­sary in order to invoke FMLA rights, and the Fourth Cir­cuit agreed, based on a review of the case law and the applic­a­ble reg­u­la­tions. After the employ­ee makes this request, the ball is in the employer’s court to fig­ure out whether the leave is cov­ered by the FMLA.
  • Employer’s posi­tion on notice: Employ­ee says: “Boss, I am request­ing FMLA leave. I need some time off for the inter­na­tion­al adop­tion my wife and I are involved in. We have a meet­ing with the adop­tion agency tomor­row after­noon, and I’d like use my FMLA leave to take the after­noon off.” This is the notice the employ­er con­tend­ed was nec­es­sary. The employ­er con­tend­ed that, at least in the set­ting of adop­tion leave, the employ­ee must specif­i­cal­ly tell the employ­er that the employ­ee wants to take FMLA leave. The Fourth Cir­cuit reject­ed this argu­ment, and reject­ed the need for the employ­ee to specif­i­cal­ly invoke the FMLA.

Part of the fur­ther sig­nif­i­cance of Dot­son is that the prin­ci­ples of notice dis­cussed above apply to a retal­i­a­tion claim under the FMLA. Dot­son asked for and was giv­en leave for his adop­tion, and he got fired short­ly after return­ing to the Unit­ed State from Rus­sia on his adop­tion. He filed suit and won on the con­tention that Pfiz­er fired him in retal­i­a­tion for him tak­ing FMLA leave. Pfiz­er con­tend­ed: “hey, we can’t be liable for FMLA retal­i­a­tion, because he nev­er told us he was tak­ing FMLA leave–he only said he want­ed time off for the adop­tion.” The log­ic of that argu­ment is, “we can’t be liable for retal­i­a­tion where he didn’t specif­i­cal­ly invoke the FMLA right”. The tri­al court and the Fourth Cir­cuit both dis­agreed with the employ­er, and held that a retal­i­a­tion claim may be viable even where the employ­ee only said he want­ed time off for the adoption–without specif­i­cal­ly invok­ing the FMLA.

Lessons from Dotson v. Pfizer

So the request from the employ­ee for cov­ered time off (such as for an adop­tion), with­out express­ly invok­ing the FMLA, rais­es two issues for employers:

  • The employ­er must assess the request for time off and deter­mine whether it invokes the rights under the FMLA.
  • The employ­er must be aware of the fact that, once it deter­mines that the request for time off is cov­ered by the FMLA, any adverse action tak­en against the employ­ee could give rise to a retal­i­a­tion claim, even where the employ­ee nev­er men­tioned the FMLA in con­nec­tion with request­ing the time off.
Drew M. Capuder
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