Stoughton Trailers (“Stoughton”) fired Evan Hull (“Hull”) shortly after he completed an approved one-week leave under the Family and Medical Leave Act (“FMLA”), 29 U.S.C. § 2601 et seq. (2000), and while he was requesting additional FMLA leave. Despite Hull’s claims that Stoughton impermissibly fired him because he requested FMLA leave, the district court granted summary judgment in favor of Stoughton. We affirm, not on the grounds relied on by the district court, but rather because Hull failed to establish his prima facie burden of showing that similarly situated employees who did not take FMLA leave were treated more favorably.
I. BACKGROUND
Hull worked as an assembly line supervisor at Stoughton, a Wisconsin manufacturing facility that fabricates and assembles trailers, containers, and chassis for use with large trucks. In Fall of 2003, Hull had a flare-up of a lower back condition and consulted his doctor, an orthopedic specialist. On October 8, 2003, Hull’s doctor prescribed diazepam (commonly known as Valium) and hydrocodone (an opiate) for pain relief. Both of these medications have side effects that include drowsiness and, at higher doses, confusion and even delirium. Hull regularly took these medications with his breakfast at approximately 4:30 a.m. and would then travel to Stoughton’s Brodhead, Wisconsin facility, where his shift routinely began at 6 a.m.
On November 3, 2003, Hull met with Barb Patterson (“Patterson”), Stoughton’s Human Resource Administrator, and reported that he had a ruptured disc in his back. Hull requested that Patterson begin paperwork for a possible FMLA leave. Hull also discussed his medication regimen with Linda Lewis, Stoughton’s company nurse, who purportedly told Hull that his plan of taking the medications at approximately 4:30 a.m. was medically sound. 1
On the morning of November 10, 2003, one of Hull’s co-workers noticed that he looked impaired: Hull’s speech was slurred and he appeared confused and drowsy. Contrary to standard company policy, Stoughton personnel did not administer a drug test. Instead, Stoughton requested that Hull leave work, which he promptly did. That same day, Hull’s physician placed Hull on a one-week medical leave. On November 12, 2003, Stoughton approved the one-week leave, effective November 11, 2003.
On November 17, Hull’s physician placed him on an additional two-week leave. That same day (or the day after— the parties, again, disagree), Hull notified Stoughton’s Human Resources department that his FMLA leave would need to be extended by two weeks. Unbeknownst to Hull, around this same time, his immediate supervisor, Robert Wahlin, and Stoughton’s General Manager, Bradford Alfery (“Alfery”), were conferring to discuss terminating Hull, purportedly for his violation of the company’s drug policy and ongoing performance problems. (Hull had received a new work assignment in August 2003, following prior unfavorable reviews in October 2002 and June 2003, but he *951 completed a 45-day initial review period in September 2003, with no indication of continuing performance issues.)
On November 20, 2003, Stoughton terminated Hull, with a retroactive effective date of November 18, 2003. The termination notice to Hull from Alfery, the company decision-maker, stated, in pertinent part:
The Company has determined that you failed to comply with [Stoughton’s Drug and Alcohol policy and the Code of Ethics]. By itself, this event is enough to terminate your employment and in light of your previous poor performance, decision making, and your failure to meet the performance improvement expectations as mutually agreed, your immediate termination of employment with the Company is necessary.
Hull filed a lawsuit in Wisconsin state court, alleging that Stoughton retaliated and discriminated against him for taking FMLA leave. Stoughton removed the case to federal court. After the parties conducted significant discovery, Stoughton filed a motion for summary judgment. The district court granted Stoughton’s motion for summary judgment, holding that Hull could not establish that Alfery, the decision-maker, knew that Hull had taken FMLA leave prior to the decision to terminate him. As a result, the district court concluded that Hull could not establish a “causal relationship” between the protected activity (taking FMLA leave) and his firing. The district court further held that even if Hull could establish a prima facie case, Hull could not establish that Stoughton’s proferred reasons for the termination were pretextual.
II. ANALYSIS
The district court’s principal reason for granting summary judgment was that Hull could not establish that Alfery, the decision-maker, was aware that Hull had requested FMLA leave, and therefore Hull could not establish a “causal relationship” between the protected activity and the adverse action. This court, however, no longer requires the type of causal link that the district court found to be lacking in this case.
See Stone v. City of Indianapolis Pub. Utils. Div.,
On appeal, Stoughton does not dispute that the district court’s basis for granting summary judgment was incorrect. Instead, Stoughton argues that Hull cannot meet his prima facie requirement of showing that similarly situated employees who did not take FLMA leave were treated more favorably than Hull. Because this court can affirm summary judgment on any ground found in the record, we consider this argument.
See Box v. A & P Tea Co.,
“To determine whether two employees are directly comparable, a court looks at all the relevant factors, which most often include whether the employees (i) held the same job description, (ii) were subject to the same standards, (iii) were subordinate to the same supervisor, and (iv) had comparable experience, education, and other qualifications — provided the employer considered these latter factors in making the personnel decision.”
Ajayi v. Aramark Bus. Servs., Inc.,
Hull argues that comparator data is unnecessary because, in his view, under “Stoughton’s consistent and unvarying enforcement of the Policy it doesn’t matter who your supervisor is; it doesn’t matter what position you hold; it doesn’t matter what your job qualifications are; it doesn’t matter whether your prior job performance has been good or bad.” (App. Br. at 2) (emphasis in original). Instead, all that matters is that Hull’s alleged drug violation was of comparable seriousness to other employee offenders.
This argument runs squarely against well-established case law in this circuit.
See, e.g., Stone,
Hull’s argument is contradictory because his only potential winning argument cannot depend on Stoughton’s “consistent and invarying enforcement of the Policy.” It depends on precisely the opposite. That is, Hull must show that Stoughton does not apply its drug and alcohol policy in a consistent or invariable fashion, blind to FMLA status, but rather, at least with respect to him, Stoughton selectively enforces its policy in accordance with its alleged disdain for workers who request or take FMLA leave. That, once again, leads back to the necessity of providing additional descriptive data about respective FMLA leaves, supervisors, job duties, performance histories, and so forth — none of which Hull presented to the district court.
As a final note, we observe that Hull’s complaint contains a bare allegation that “[i]n terminating Hull, Stoughton unlawfully interfered with Hull’s attempt to exercise rights protected by the Act.” These words might provide a claim of improper interference with FMLA rights, which is a claim that is not only more squarely in-line with the facts of this case, but would also evade the evidentiary hurdles that doomed Hull’s discrimination/ retaliation claim.
See Kauffman v. Federal Express Corp.,
III. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we Affirm the district court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of defendant.
Notes
. The parties disagree about the exact contours of this conversation, but the differences do not affect the outcome here.
