Recently, Total Quality Logistics (TQL), a logistics giant based in Ohio, was found liable for the death of its employee’s newborn after refusing a high-risk pregnant woman’s request to work remotely. TQL was ordered to pay up to $22.5 million in damages.
Chelsea Walsh, the woman in the TQL headquarters case, underwent emergency surgery in February 2021 due to a cervical problem when she was only four or five months pregnant, to prevent premature birth. Four days after the surgery, Walsh, following her doctor’s advice, applied to work from home to avoid workplace stress and physical exhaustion that could lead to premature labour. However, TQL’s attitude was very firm.
According to the lawsuit documents, the company presented Walsh with an “impossible choice”: either continue to work in the office, disregarding the risks to her foetus, or take unpaid leave, which would mean losing her livelihood and the medical insurance she desperately needed for childbirth. Under the pressure of high medical costs and financial hardship, Walsh was forced to return to the office on February 22, 2021. Tragedy struck two days later.
On February 24, 2021, Walsh went into premature labour while at work. Ironically, on the same day, her manager informed her that the company had “reconsidered its decision” and approved her work-from-home (WFH) application. However, this belated approval could not save her child. Walsh gave birth to a baby girl named Magnolia, who tragically died after only an hour and a half in her mother’s arms.
The lawsuit states that Walsh’s husband contacted a TQL executive through a personal connection, explaining his wife’s predicament. After learning of the situation and approving WFH, the executive reportedly told the intermediary, “Thank you, you just saved us a lawsuit.”
This statement became highly damaging evidence in court. It showed that the company was not unaware of the potential legal consequences of denying a reasonable request but clearly chose the latter when weighing employee benefits against its management policies.
Walsh’s lawyer, Matthew C. Metzger, pointed out that the evidence clearly showed Walsh strictly followed medical advice, and the jury determined that TQL’s denial of this reasonable request directly led to the infant’s death. Currently, TQL spokesperson Julia Daugherty, while expressing condolences to the Walsh family, clearly stated that the company does not accept the verdict or the characterization of facts during the trial and is evaluating legal options for an appeal.
The company emphasized its continued commitment to supporting employee health and well-being. For countless employees struggling to balance their health and work in the workplace, this is undoubtedly a landmark case.