Placzek v. Mayo Clinic, No. 21-1678 (8th Cir. 2021)
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Dr. Placzek, a physician, entered into an employment agreement with MCHS In 2015, Placzek had a miscarriage, which required time off. MCHS provides Short-Term Disability (STD) benefits but Placzek did not submit an STD claim. MCHS later gave her five days of STD benefits. In 2016, Dr. Placzek took 12 weeks of maternity leave; she used STD benefits for the first six weeks. For the last six weeks of maternity leave, Placzek wanted to use vacation time. Placzek was eligible for an educational-loan reimbursement of $15,000 per year; if the physician terminates the agreement “except for a breach by the Medical Center,” the physician must repay two reimbursements. In 2017, Placzek resigned; her appointment at Mayo Clinic had been terminated unilaterally by Mayo in 2016.
Placzek brought a Minnesota Whistleblower Act (MWA) claim against Mayo, alleging retaliation for reporting a violation of law and a breach-of-contract claim against MCHS for failing to provide additional STD benefits for her miscarriage, improperly paying her STD benefits for her maternity leave, and not allowing her to use paid vacation for her maternity leave. She sought a declaratory judgment that she need not repay her educational-loan reimbursement. The Eighth Circuit affirmed the rejection of all of her claims. Although she worked some of her full-time hours at a Mayo Clinic site, Placzek was an independent contractor, not a Mayo employee for MWA purposes. MCHS did not breach the employment agreement in calculating her benefits or in denying her paid vacation time.
Court Description: [Gruender, Author, with Erickson and Stras, Circuit Judges] Civil case - Contracts. For the purposes of the Minnesota Whistleblower Act, plaintiff was an independent contractor for Mayo Clinic, rather than its employee, and she could not bring an action under the Act; with respect to plaintiff's breach of contract claims, her claim that failure to pay short-term disability benefits was a breach was barred by Minnesota's three-year statute of limitations; the district court did not err in granting defendants summary judgment on plaintiff's other two breach of contract claims for calculation of her benefits for a separate short-term disability and maternity leave; plaintiff's Minnesota Payment of Wages Act and declaratory judgment claims derived from her breach of contract claims, and the court did not err in granting summary judgment on those claims.
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