Cindy BARRETT, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. ILLINOIS DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS, Defendant-Appellee.
No. 13-2833.
United States Court of Appeals, Seventh Circuit.
Argued Sept. 15, 2014. Decided Oct. 20, 2015.
803 F.3d 893
Before FLAUM, KANNE, and SYKES, Circuit Judges.
Carl J. Elitz, Attorney, Office of the Attorney General, Chicago, IL, for Defendant-Appellee.
SYKES, Circuit Judge.
Employees in the Illinois Department of Corrections (“IDOC“) can be fired if they accumulate 12 unauthorized absences from work. Under IDOC‘s absenteeism policy, unauthorized absences accrue on an employee‘s record but are automatically exрunged if the employee has a clean attendance history for a period of 24 consecutive months.
Cindy Barrett was fired from her job at IDOC in October 2010 after accumulating 12 unauthorized absences over a period of seven years. She claims that three of these absences—on December 15, 2003; December 22, 2004; and August 10, 2005—were for family or medical care and thus were protected by thе Family and Medical Leave Act (“FMLA” or “the Act“),
We affirm. An FMLA suit must be filed “not later than 2 years after the date of the last event constituting the alleged violation for which the action is brought.”
I. Background
In December 1995 Barrett began work at IDOC as an account technician. At that time IDOC maintained a system of progressive discipline for repeat unauthorized absences. Disciplinary measures ranged from an oral reprimand to suspensions of increasing duration, and after ten unauthorized absences, the employee could be fired. Unauthorized absences accrued on the employee‘s record until the employee went two years without receiving one; at that point the record was expunged.
Barrett‘s first unauthorized absence occurred on Dеcember 15, 2003. She contends that this absence was one of three that were FMLA protected and thus should not have been classified as unauthorized.
More specifically, Barrett alleges that on December 14, 2003, she was admitted to the emergency room with pneumonia. Following doctor‘s orders, she called in to work and asked to use sick leave for the following day. When she returned to work оn December 16, she gave her supervisor a copy of her diagnosis and her hospital wristband, but she was told that she lacked sufficient sick leave to cover her request. On January 13, 2004, she went before the Employee Review Board to challenge this absence. Barrett furnished a work-release form from her doctor recommending that she take off work on December 15. Nevertheless, she was found “guilty” of being absent without authorization and received a verbal reprimand.
Barrett does not contest her second, third, and fourth unauthorized absences. Her fifth unexcused absence occurred on December 22, 2004. The previous day, Barrett‘s daughter was hospitalized after experiencing pre-term labor, and that night Barrett notified her supervisor that she would miss work the following day to attend to her daughter. She was indeed
Barrett‘s sixth unauthorized absence occurred on August 10, 2005, when she left work for physical therapy. On September 28, 2005, the Employee Review Board found her “guilty” of an unauthorized absence and imposed another paper suspension, this time for five days. She lost no work time or wages.
Barrett does nоt contest her seventh and eighth unauthorized absences, but the latter bears mentioning for another reason. In October 2007 Barrett was suspended for three days after accumulating an eighth unauthorized absence on October 3. Under the attendance policy in place at the time, this suspension was not merely “on paper” but was actually enforced. Barrett suffered three days’ lost hours аnd wages.
In September 2008 IDOC and its employees’ union negotiated and adopted a more lenient attendance policy. Employees were now subject to termination after accumulating 12 (rather than 10) unauthorized absences, and all suspensions would be “on paper” until the employee‘s eleventh unexcused absence. The expungement feature of the policy—erasing аccrued unauthorized absences after a clean attendance record for 24 consecutive months—remained in place.
Barrett does not contest her ninth, tenth, eleventh, or twelfth unauthorized absences, the last of which occurred on May 14, 2010. On September 30, 2010, Barrett was suspended without pay pending termination for excessive absenteeism. She was fired on October 15, 2010.
Barrett sought rеview before the Illinois Civil Service Commission. She did not raise an FMLA argument at the hearing. (Indeed, she never raised the FMLA with her supervisors or before the Employee Review Board either.) An administrative law judge recommended that the termination be sustained. The Commission adopted that recommendation, and Barrett did not pursue further review in Illinois state court.
Instead, on January 27, 2012, she sued IDOC in federal court for violating her rights under the FMLA. At the summary-judgment stage, the district court concluded that the suit was barred by the FMLA‘s two-year statute of limitations.
In a thorough opinion, the district judge agreed with IDOC, found the suit untimely, and granted IDOC‘s motion for summary judgment. See Barrett v. Ill. Dep‘t of Corr. (”Barrett I“), 958 F.Supp.2d 984 (C.D.Ill.2013). This appeal followed.
II. Discussion
Resolving this appeal requires us to interpret and apply the FMLA‘s statute of limitations in the context of an absenteeism policy based on a systеm of progressive discipline. This is a legal question of
We begin with the statutory text. The FMLA provides that “an action may be brought under this section not later than 2 years after the date of the last event constituting the alleged violation for which the action is brought.”2
As relevant here, the FMLA makes it unlawful for an employer to “interfere with, restrain, or deny the exercise of or the attempt to exercise, any right provided under this subchapter.”3
Barrett alleges thаt IDOC improperly denied leave on three specific occasions.4 More particularly, she claims that three of her 12 unexcused absences—December 15, 2003; December 22, 2004; and August 10, 2005—were for qualifying family or medical leave, but IDOC mistakenly classified them as unauthorized. On each of these occasions, Barrett notified her supervisor of her impending absence, was absent without authorizatiоn, and later went before the Employee Review Board to challenge IDOC‘s decision to treat the absence as unexcused. Each time the Board rejected Barrett‘s request for leave, recorded the absence as unauthorized, and imposed some form of discipline (a reprimand, a three-day paper suspension, and a five-day paper suspension). Barrett main-
When an FMLA plaintiff alleges that his employer violated the Act by denying qualifying leave, the last event constituting the claim ordinarily will be the employer‘s rejection of the employee‘s request for leave. So it is here. Each time the Employee Review Board ruled against Barrett, an actionable FMLA claim accrued and the limitations clock started to run. With each ruling Barrett‘s FMLA rights were impaired and she suffered prejudice: her request for leave was wrongly denied (or so she alleges) and she was harmed by the classification of her absence as unauthorized, which increased the number of unexcused absences on her record.5
It‘s immaterial that the denial of leave came in the form of a retrospective hearing rather than a rejection of a prospective request for leave. If IDOC had denied a request for leave before she was absent, Barrett would have had a viable claim that IDOC denied her attempt to exercise a right guaranteed to her by the FMLA. The fact that the absences were classified as unauthorized in an after-the-fact hearing does not change the nature of the alleged FMLA violation. In both scenarios the employer‘s denial of the employee‘s request for leave is the “last event constituting the alleged violation” on which the action is based.
So the two-year limitations period began to run each time the Board ruled against Barrett‘s request for leave to cover the specific absences she challenges in this suit. Those rulings came at the conclusion of hearings held on January 13, 2004; January 14, 2005; and September 28, 2005. Her suit—filed in January 2012—was several years too late.
The district judge went beyond the text of
The FMLA uses different language. An aggrievеd employee must bring an FMLA claim “not later than 2 years after the date of the last event constituting the alleged violation for which the action is brought.”
But even assuming that the analogy to Title VII is appropriate in this context, Barrett could not prevail. The limitations period for a Title VII claim runs from the date the unlawful employment practice оccurred, and the Supreme Court has held that for claims based on “discrete acts” of retaliation or discrimination, the “discrete retaliatory or discriminatory act ‘occurred’ on the day that it ‘happened.‘” Nat‘l R.R. Passenger Corp. v. Morgan, 536 U.S. 101, 110 (2002). This rule applies even if an old, unchallenged discriminatory act has a present effect on an employee‘s status in a seniority system, a progressive discipline system, or some other dynamic employment scheme. “A discriminatory act which is not made the basis for a timely charge ... is merely an unfortunate event in history which has no present legal consequences.” United Air Lines, Inc. v. Evans, 431 U.S. 553, 558 (1977) (emphasis added). So the “discrete act” that starts the Title VII limitations clock is the discriminatory decision itself, not the “consequences of the act[]” that may materialize down the road. Del. State Coll. v. Ricks, 449 U.S. 250, 258 (1980) (citation omitted).
There is an exception to this general rule. Under the “continuing violation” doctrine, a Title VII plaintiff may recover for otherwise time-barred conduct that is part of a single, ongoing unlawful employment practice if at least one related act occurs during the limitations period. See Morgan, 536 U.S. at 116-18. As the Supreme Court clarified in Morgan, however, this doctrine is limited to claims of hostile work environment. “Hostile environment claims are different in kind from discretе acts. Their very nature involves repeated conduct.” Id. at 115. “[T]he theory is that ‘[a] hostile work environment claim is composed of a series of separate acts that collectively constitute one “unlawful employment practice.“‘” Swanson v. Village of Flossmoor, 794 F.3d 820, 826 (7th Cir.2015) (quoting Morgan, 536 U.S. at 117). As such, a Title VII claim for hostile work environment is timely “as long as ‘any act falls within the statutory time period,’ even if the [claim] encompasses events occurring prior to the statutory time period.” Adams v. City of Indianapolis, 742 F.3d 720, 730 (7th Cir.2014) (quoting Morgan, 536 U.S. at 120).
Barrett‘s claim is not analogous to a claim for hostile work environment. She alleges that she was wrongly denied family or medical leave on three specific occasions. On the rationale of Morgan, these are “discrete acts“—independently actionable violations of the FMLA—and each one triggered its own limitations clock.
Still, Barrett insists that although she could have filed suit at the moment she was denied leave, she wasn‘t required to file suit until several years later, when she was fired for accumulating too many unauthorized absences. The termination of her employment, she says, was the last event constituting the FMLA violation.
There are two problems with this argument. First, it assumes that there can be more than one last event under
Barrett objects that the result compelled by the statutory text leaves the FMLA toothless in a workplace that operates undеr a no-fault absenteeism policy and a system of progressive discipline. She says it‘s impractical to sue each time leave is wrongly denied, especially when the immediate consequence is nothing more than a reprimand or paper suspension and another unauthorized absence logged on the employee‘s absenteeism record. Maybe so.
But the FMLA contains both judicial and administrative remedies in its enforcement edifice. See
For the foregoing reasons, Barrett‘s FMLA suit was time-barred, and the district court properly granted summary judgment for IDOC.
AFFIRMED.
