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Stress Leave Under the FMLA - Greenberg Traurig LLP

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speaks to stress as it relates to <strong>the</strong> <strong>FMLA</strong>.<br />

Mental illness resulting from stress or<br />

allergies may be serious health conditions,<br />

but only if all o<strong>the</strong>r conditions are met. 29<br />

C.F.R. §825.114(c). Courts have accordingly<br />

noted that 29 C.F.R. §825.114(c) evinces <strong>the</strong><br />

DOL’s interpretation that stress in and of<br />

itself is not a serious health condition.<br />

<strong>Stress</strong> Alone Is Not a “Serious Health<br />

Condition” <strong>Under</strong> <strong>the</strong> <strong>FMLA</strong><br />

For instance, <strong>the</strong> U.S. District Court for<br />

<strong>the</strong> Nor<strong>the</strong>rn District of Ohio recently<br />

found that stress, without any evidence<br />

of mental illness cannot constitute a serious<br />

health condition. See Deleva v. Real<br />

Estate Mortgage Corp., No. 1:04cv1299,<br />

2007 U.S. Dist. Lexis 45136, at *39 (N.D.<br />

Ohio June 21, 2007). In <strong>the</strong> Deleva case,<br />

<strong>the</strong> plaintiff, Deleva, testified that he experienced<br />

“stress and uncertainty” over a<br />

failed business deal, not as a consequence<br />

of a diagnosed medical condition or working<br />

under a medical condition. Citing 29<br />

C.F.R. §824.114(c), <strong>the</strong> court held “[t]he<br />

mere incantation of <strong>the</strong> word ‘stress’—as<br />

presented in this case—does not create a<br />

federal case.” See id. The court fur<strong>the</strong>r indicated<br />

that because Deleva failed to come<br />

forward with any medical evidence that his<br />

claimed inability to work was because of a<br />

diagnosed medical condition, his <strong>FMLA</strong><br />

claim failed as a matter of law.<br />

Do Mental Health Conditions<br />

Resulting from <strong>Stress</strong> Constitute<br />

Serious Health Conditions?<br />

On <strong>the</strong> o<strong>the</strong>r hand, <strong>the</strong> U.S. District Court<br />

for <strong>the</strong> District of Minnesota held that<br />

stress that causes a mental health condition<br />

constitutes a “chronic serious health<br />

condition.” See Pierce v. Teachers Fed.<br />

Credit Union Foundation, No. 09-780 (JNE/<br />

FLN), 2010 WL 550998 (D. Minn. Feb.<br />

9, 2010). In <strong>the</strong> Pierce case, <strong>the</strong> plaintiff,<br />

Pierce, previously sought and was granted<br />

<strong>FMLA</strong> leave for cancer treatment. Within<br />

a year, her cancer went into remission,<br />

and she returned to work. However, when<br />

she returned, Teachers Federal hired a<br />

new chief executive officer who repeatedly<br />

informed Pierce that <strong>the</strong> company<br />

would experience a lot of changes and that<br />

her position might be eliminated. As a<br />

result, Pierce sought treatment from several<br />

health care professionals after suffering<br />

“anxiety and stress during <strong>the</strong> daytime,<br />

along with… symptoms [from <strong>the</strong> cancer<br />

medication, including] bone pain, muscle[]<br />

pain, [and] aches.”<br />

During <strong>the</strong> interactive process, Pierce<br />

discussed with Teachers Federal her fear of<br />

working reduced hours and losing her benefits.<br />

Pierce was <strong>the</strong>n informed that “stress<br />

resulting from not having enough work<br />

was not covered by <strong>FMLA</strong>,” which caused<br />

Pierce to have a panic attack. Teachers Federal<br />

asked Pierce to go home that day and<br />

<strong>the</strong> next day informed her that her position<br />

had been eliminated.<br />

Based upon those facts, <strong>the</strong> court found<br />

that Pierce had to see a doctor every six<br />

months to refill her anti- anxiety and antidepressant<br />

medications and that her mental<br />

health conditions may have resulted in<br />

episodic periods of incapacity, such as during<br />

panic attacks. Accordingly, <strong>the</strong> court<br />

found that a reasonable fact finder could<br />

determine that Pierce’s mental health conditions<br />

resulted from stress and could constitute<br />

“chronic serious health conditions”<br />

<strong>the</strong>reby precluding a summary judgment.<br />

<strong>Stress</strong>-Related Depression<br />

The U.S. District Court for <strong>the</strong> Middle<br />

District of Florida recently found that<br />

an employee’s stress- related depression<br />

raised a question of fact as to whe<strong>the</strong>r <strong>the</strong><br />

employee had a serious medical condition<br />

under <strong>the</strong> <strong>FMLA</strong>. See Hurley v. Kent of<br />

Naples, Inc., Nos. 2:10-cv-334FtM-29SPC;<br />

2:10-cv-752-FtM-29DNF, 2011 WL 2217770,<br />

at *7 (M.D. Fla. June 7, 2011). The plaintiff,<br />

Hurley, was medically diagnosed with,<br />

among o<strong>the</strong>r things, depression and anxiety<br />

related to his job. Hurley’s health care<br />

providers recommended that Hurley take<br />

time off work to manage his stress. The<br />

court found that while <strong>the</strong> evidence at<br />

least raised a question about whe<strong>the</strong>r Hurley’s<br />

stress- related depression was a serious<br />

health condition, Hurley did not present<br />

sufficient evidence showing that he was<br />

incapacitated due to his depression, which<br />

precluded a summary judgment for Hurley.<br />

<strong>Stress</strong>-Related Insomnia<br />

and Anxiety Attacks<br />

The U.S. District Court for <strong>the</strong> Middle District<br />

of Georgia also found that job- related<br />

stress causing insomnia, anxiety attacks,<br />

and depression raised a question of fact<br />

about whe<strong>the</strong>r <strong>the</strong> employee had a serious<br />

medical condition under <strong>the</strong> <strong>FMLA</strong>.<br />

See Snelling v. Stark Props., No. 5:05CV46<br />

DF, 2006 WL 2078562, at *9 (M.D. Ga. July<br />

24, 2006). After <strong>the</strong> plaintiff, Snelling, requested<br />

more responsibilities, her employer,<br />

JPC, granted additional job duties to Snelling.<br />

Due to issues with her supervisors,<br />

Snelling sought medical treatment for her<br />

While companies<br />

recognize that workplace<br />

stress exists among <strong>the</strong>ir<br />

employees, <strong>the</strong>y seem to<br />

struggle to balance empathy<br />

for employees genuinely<br />

affected by workplace<br />

stress while also seeking<br />

to prevent o<strong>the</strong>r employees<br />

from abusing <strong>the</strong> system.<br />

anxiety attacks, insomnia, and depression.<br />

Snelling proffered evidence that she was<br />

under a regimen of continuing treatment<br />

consisting of multiple prescription medications<br />

to combat <strong>the</strong>se symptoms. Accordingly,<br />

<strong>the</strong> court held that Snelling submitted<br />

enough information to notify her employer<br />

that she may have been suffering from a “serious<br />

health condition.”<br />

<strong>Stress</strong>-Related Conditions<br />

and Physical Symptoms<br />

The Seventh Circuit also found that jobrelated<br />

stress manifesting itself in physical<br />

symptoms may constitute a serious medical<br />

condition under <strong>the</strong> <strong>FMLA</strong>. Price v.<br />

City of Fort Wayne, 117 F.3d 1022 (7th Cir.<br />

1997). Price worked for <strong>the</strong> City of Fort<br />

Wayne for almost 10 years until she was<br />

terminated for excessive absences. Price<br />

submitted an affidavit from her doctor stating<br />

that she suffered from an assemblage of<br />

diagnoses including elevated blood pres-<br />

For The Defense ■ February 2013 ■ 41

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