Jennifer Cross Willis (“Willis”) appeals the district court’s grant of summary judgment to defendant, Coca Cola Enterprises, Inc. (“CCE”), on her claims of interference with her rights under the Family and Medical Leave Act (“FMLA”), 29 U.S.C. § 2601 et seq., and gender discrimination, in violation of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 (“Title VII”), 42 U.S.C § 2000e et seq.
I
Willis had been employed by CCE since 1994, holding several jobs within the company until she reached her final position as a Senior Account Manager. On a Monday in May of 2003, Willis called her supervisor to let him know that she was sick and would be unable to come to work that day. She also informed him that she was pregnant, but did not specifically articulate that she was sick because of the pregnancy. The next day, a Tuesday, she called her *416 supervisor to find out where she should report to work, and her supervisor informed her that she could not come back to work until she had secured a medical release from a doctor. She told him that she had a doctor’s appointment on “Wednesday.” While she evidently meant the following Wednesday — more than a week later — her supervisor took her to mean the next day. She did not -call in again, and had no contact with CCE until the Thursday of the following week, when two employees came to her home to reclaim her company car. At that point, she contacted CCE and was eventually brought in for a meeting where she was informed that she had violated the company’s “No Call/No Show” policy. Under this policy, “an employee absent from work for three consecutive days without notifying the supervisor during that period will be considered to have voluntarily resigned.” Her employment was then terminated.
Willis brought suit under the FMLA, Title VII, and various Louisiana state statutes. The district court granted summary judgment to CCE on the FMLA claim, holding that Willis had not introduced any evidence that she was requesting medical leave pursuant to the FMLA. Indeed, her desire to return to work indicated that she was not requesting medical leave. The district court dismissed as “post hoc reasoning” Willis’s argument that she was on FMLA leave because her supervisor did not permit her to return to work until she had secured a medical release. Additionally, the district court held that Willis had not established that CCE’s- stated reason for firing her was pretextual, and therefore, in violation of Title VII. Her discrimination claim -under Louisiana law was identical to her claims under Title VII and the court therefore granted summary judgment to CCE on the state claims as well.
II
We review a grant of summary judgment
dé novo,
applying the same standards as the district court.
Condrey v. SunTrust Bank of Ga.,
A
On appeal, Willis argues that the district court erred in granting, summary judgment to CCE on her FMLA claim. Specifically, she argues that CCE was aware that she had requested time off due to sickness, possibly related to her pregnancy, which therefore could be considered a “serious health condition” under the FMLA. 29 C.F.R. § 825.114(a)(2)(ii). She asserts that she was placed on “involuntary FMLA leave” because she was not permitted to return to work until she had secured a doctor’s certification. Because she was fired while on this involuntary leave, Willis argues that CCE interfered with her rights under the FMLA.
. The appellee asserts that Willis provided inadequate notice to CCE of her need to take F.MLA leave.
See
29 C.F.R. § 825.208(a)(1) (“An employee giving notice of the need for unpaid FMLA leave must explain the reasons for the needed leave so as to allow the employer to determine that the leave qualifies under the Act.”);
Satterfield v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.,
The FMLA allows eligible employees 12 weeks of unpaid leave each year for “a serious health condition that makes the employee unable to perform the functions of the position of such employee.” 29 U.S.C. § 2612(a)(1)(D). “In all circumstances, it is the employer’s responsibility to designate leave, paid or unpaid, as FMLA-qualifying, and to give notice of the designation to the employee.... ” 29 C.F.R. § 825.208(a). “An employee giving notice of the need for unpaid FMLA leave must explain the reasons for the needed leave so as to allow the employer to determine that the leave qualifies under the Act.”
Id.
at 825.208(a)(1). It is not necessary for the employee to “expressly assert rights under the Act or even mention the FMLA” in order to put the employer on notice of her need for leave.
Id.
at 825.208(a)(2). This circuit, while declining to issue any “categorical rules” for the type of notice given by an employee, has stated that: “[t]he critical question is whether the information imparted to the employer is sufficient to reasonably apprise it of the employee’s request to take time off for a serious health condition.”
Manuel v. Westlake Polymers Corp.,
This ease defies the conventional pattern for FMLA claims. Willis does not suggest that she requested FMLA leave and that CCE then interfered with, restrained, or denied her rights under the Act. See 29 U.S.C. § 2615(a). Rather, Willis asserts that she was placed on “involuntary leave” when her supervisor refused to permit her to return to work until she had gotten a medical release and then, while she was on this mandated FMLA leave, fired her for non-compliance with the leave policy of the company. To complicate matters, CCE denies that it ever placed Willis on involuntary FMLA leave, thereby forcing Willis to assert her FMLA rights from an unusual posture: at the time Willis stopped coming to work, she denied that she needed leave, but now, enmeshed in litigation, Willis asserts that she was on FMLA leave.
We therefore must consider a novel question for this circuit: what constitutes involuntary FMLA leave and what are the parties’ rights and obligations pursuant to this type of leave. As a threshold matter, it is not contrary to the FMLA for an employee to be placed on “involuntary FMLA leave.” See Megan E. Blomquist, Note, A Shield, Not a Sword: Involuntary Leave Under the Family and Medical Leave Act, 76 Wash. L.Rev. 509, 510 (2001). 1 In a 1995 advisory opinion, the Department of Labor stated:
an employer can count an absence for sickness or injury as an FMLA absence if the employee does not request that it be counted as such. So long as the employer is a covered employer, the employee is an eligible employee, and the reason for the absence meets one of the conditions described in the definitions of “serious health conditions” under *418 FMLA, the employer may designate (and so advise the employee) and count the absence against the employee’s 12-week FMLA entitlement even if the employee has not requested that it be counted as such.
99 Wage & Hour Manual (BNA) 3067, Op. FMLA-68 (July 21, 1995).
See also Tate v. Farmland Ind., Inc.,
In an unpublished opinion, the Sixth Circuit discussed what pre-requisites must be met before involuntary leave can be designated FMLA leave.
See Hicks v. Leroy’s Jewelers, Inc.,
In
Tate v. Farmland Ind.,
Pending its review of Plaintiffs health status, Defendant placed Plaintiff on involuntary sick leave. Thus, Defendant was clearly on notice that Plaintiff might qualify for FMLA benefits since Defendant triggered Plaintiffs leave. Given Plaintiffs allegation that Defendant placed him on sick leave, Plaintiff need not allege he provided Defendant with notice of his rights under the FMLA.
Id. at 998. Despite the fact that the FMLA was brought up only in litigation by the plaintiff-employee, the court allowed the claim to proceed.
We believe the statutory language of the FMLA and the relevant caselaw from our sister circuits require, even in the case of involuntary leave, that the employee provide sufficient notice to an em
*419
ployer of the need to take FMLA leave; in other words, that the employee provide notice to the employer of a “serious health condition.”
See
29 C.F.R. § 825.112(a)(4) (mandating that employers grant leave to employees “because of a serious health condition that makes the employee unable to perform the functions of the employee’s job”). Although the Tenth Circuit’s decision in
Tate
can be read not to require notice of a serious health condition by the employee when the employer mandates leave, in that case, that court was addressing a situation in which the employer knew that the employee suffered from seizures, which is self-evidently a serious health condition in an individual who drives commercial vehicles.
Tate,
We cannot assume that every time an employer chooses to place an individual on leave that the FMLA is triggered.
See Satterfield,
While it is true that Willis’s employer placed her on leave pending medical release, thereby suggesting that the employer had an awareness that Willis had a medical problem, Willis has not provided sufficient evidence that CCE did so because it was on notice that she had a
serious health condition,
such as sickness due to pregnancy. Willis stated explicitly in her deposition testimony that she did not tell her supervisor that she was sick due to complications in her pregnancy and did not assert that she clearly linked her sickness and her pregnancy. A complaint of sickness will not suffice as notice of a need to take FMLA leave.
See Satterfield,
B
Willis also contends the district court erred in granting summary judgment on her Title VII claim of gender discrimination. The district court held that Willis had not provided sufficient evidence that CCE’s stated reason for firing her was
*420
pretextual. Willis’s supervisor. ■ asserted that he believed Willis’s doctor’s appointment was the day after their conversation, rather than a week following, and that when she neither came to work nor called, she was in violation of well-understood company attendance policies. The district court observed that Willis had not provided evidence that CCE was being “disingenuous” in its explanation of its' understanding of. the timing of Willis’s doctor’s appointment. Willis argues on appeal that the stated reason for firing her the violation of the “No Call/No Show” policy is merely pretextual for CCE’s termination of her employment because she was pregnant.
See
42 U.S.C. § 2000e(k) (defining discrimination “because of sex” to include “because of or on the basis of pregnancy”). Specifically, she argues that the district court erred in applying a “pretext-plus” analysis in violation of
Reeves v. Sanderson Plumbing Prod.,
To analyze a discrimination claim under Title VII, we will engage in the familiar
McDonnell Douglas
three-step analysis.
See McDonnell Douglas Corp. v. Green,
Willis asserts, without citing record evidence, that non-pregnant employees who miss one day of work are not required to produce a medical release prior to returning to work. At the same time, however, Willis states that similarly-situated pregnant employees did not need to adhere to the “No Call/No Show” policy while on leave. She concludes from these facts that she was treated differently from both types of employees and that this is sufficient to indicate that the stated reason for firing her is pretextual. However, there is evidence in the record that while it might be typical to request a medical release after an employee misses two or more consecutive days, a worker who misses one day can be required to supply a medical release, particularly if CCE is aware that he or she is under a doctor’s care at the time. Furthermore, the affidavits presented to the district court indicate that the anecdotal evidence of pregnant women who did not need to call in every day were exempt from such a policy because they had already taken a formal leave of absence and had submitted a doctor’s note -indicating that they would be absent from work until a specified date.
Willis has failed to adduce evidence that the request for a medical release and her subsequent firing due to her violation of the “No Call/No Show” policy, were motivated by unlawful animus.
Reeves,
530
*421
U.S. at 146,
Therefore, we AFFIRM the district court’s grant of summary judgment.
Notes
. The district court erred when it stated, “The court, therefore, finds that, because Willis was not
requesting
FMLA leave, the FMLA is not implicated in this case, and her FMLA claim fails as a matter of law.’’ Such an explicit invocation of the FMLA is unnecessary.
Satterfield,
