Court sides with employee over termination after FMLA leave request
A court case reminds employers to be careful when firing an employee shortly after the employee asks for leave under the federal Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA).
The story
In 2023, to explore reasons for low morale, Christopher, a police officer, voluntarily conducted a wage survey of area law enforcement agencies. The survey showed that members of the city’s police department were paid less than those of other local law enforcement agencies. He presented the findings to Chief Kuth on October 31, 2023.
On November 17, Chief Kuth reassigned Christopher from his day-shift position as a detective to a night-shift position as a patrol officer.
On an unrelated note, on November 29, Christopher emailed his supervisor, with the HR director copied, to tell them that “in the next couple of months” he would need to receive treatment for a recurrence of cancer. In that email, Christopher recalled that when he went through a similar treatment several years earlier, he “didn’t miss much work then” and that he was “hoping for something similar” this time as well.
The HR director responded with FMLA paperwork attached, explaining, “I understand you don’t anticipate missing much work, but this is still an FMLA qualifying event.”
Chief Kuth fired Christopher 14 days later, on December 13.
Christopher sued, and the employer asked the court to dismiss the case.
The case and the findings
In court, the employer put forth two arguments:
- Christopher never provided proper notice of his need for FMLA benefits.
- It fired Christopher for legitimate reasons unrelated to his health issues.
Christopher had provided adequate notice of the need for leave. Chief Kuth argued that when he fired Christopher, he wasn’t aware of Christopher’s potential need for medical leave, so the leave had nothing to do with the termination.
Christopher’s supervisor, however, testified that he was “sure” that he told Chief Kuth that Christopher was planning to take medical leave, though he couldn’t recall when.
The employer also gave shifting explanations of why it fired Christopher.
Chief Kuth said that he fired Christopher for “insubordination” because Christopher “was saying that I was lying about not supporting [line officers] or helping them with wages.”
The police department, however, told the Arkansas Division on Law Enforcement Standards and Training that Christopher was “terminated for non-disciplinary reasons.”
Also, the employer policy required investigations into allegations of employee misconduct before taking disciplinary measures, and had investigative procedures that leaders had to follow.
But Chief Kuth never had any discussion with Christopher about the reason for his firing, and the chief never conducted any investigation into the allegations that Christopher called him a “liar” before firing him.
Therefore, the court did not dismiss the case as the employer had wanted. Instead, the court allowed it to proceed to a trial.
Collins v. City of Lowell, Arkansas, Western District of Arkansas, No. 5:24-CV-5122, May 1, 2025.
Key to remember: Employers may fire employees for legitimate reasons that don’t have to do with a request or taking of FMLA leave, but they need to be able to show what those reasons are. Otherwise, a termination can look like retaliation.