Linda S. Collins, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. NTN-Bower Corporation, et al., Defendants-Appellees.
No. 01-1930
United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit
December 5, 2001
Appeal from the United States District Court for the Central District of Illinois. No. 00-1053--Joe Billy McDade, Chief Judge. Submitted November 19, 2001
Easterbrook, Circuit Judge. After receiving twelve informal and four formal warnings for deficient attendance, Linda Collins was fired when she called in sick for two days in March 1998. That was all she said: that she was “sick.” Her employer deemed this inadequate in light of Collins‘s spotty attendance record. But in this litigation under the Family and Medical Leave Act,
The fmla requires health-related leave only for employees who suffer from “a serious health condition“.
On appeal Collins observes that
Sometimes absence is required by an event that could not be predicted: for example, a family member who dies unexpectedly. That is not Collins‘s situation. Depression did not come on her overnight. In this suit she contends that it had been developing for years and that she had mentioned the problem to supervisors early in 1997, a year before the absence that led to her discharge. Once Collins knew that she had a problem, she could predict that this would lead her to miss work on occasion, and she could have given the notice contemplated by
Affirmed
FOOTNOTE
/* Appellant waived any entitlement to oral argument in this case, and the court agreed that the case was appropriate for decision on the briefs and record.*
