Jottings By An Employer's Lawyer |
Tuesday, August 18, 2009
Ignorance of the FMLA Is No Excuse; In Fact, It Could Be Evidence
The opinion is also a good example of how employers can easily get trapped by their own policies and words. Here, although the claimed reason for termination was conduct uncovered while she was out on medical leave for 6 weeks, the Court found that:
Vince Lombardi said football is two things: blocking and tackling. The absence of written documentation of poor performance and not following your own procedures, might just be the HR equivalent. Labels: FMLA
Comments:
What I find surprising is that the district court thought to grant summary judgment on these facts. The timing of the termination just after the employee had disclosed that she would need medical leave -- that timing alone should've been sufficient circumstantial evidence to raise a triable issue of fact. I find it mind-boggling that district court judges continue to dismiss claims even where there is close proximity in time. Then again, that is exactly what the judge did to me in my last FMLA case.
Good points for employer and employees, alike. But, too many times summary judgment has been granted despite the presence of many of these same facts.
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