David Below, an employee of a baking company, was injured while making a delivery to a grocery store. He sued both the store, on a theory of premises liability, and his employer on the theory that the employer interfered with Below’s rights to pursue a claim for workers’ compensation. The district court dismissed the suit against the employer, and we affirm.
While working as a deliveryman for Continental Baking Company (now known as Interstate Baking Company) [hereinafter Continental], David Below was injured when he slipped and fell on an icy walkway at the store. Below initially sued only the store, but in an amended petition, he added his claim against Continental. He claimed that Continental threatened to terminate his employment “with the intent, or knowing that the effect would be, to prevent or discourage Plaintiff David L. Below from exercising his rights under the Workers’ Compensation Laws of the State of Iowa, a tortious act in violation of the public policy of the State of Iowa.” Below applied for and received workers’ compensation. He now claims damages from his employer at common law for medical expenses, loss of function of mind and body, pain and suffering, and loss of wages. His wife claimed a loss of consortium. Continental’s motion to dismiss these claims was granted on the ground that Iowa does not recognize a claim for threatened termination for an employee’s exercise of his workers’ compensation rights.
*511 I. Scope of Review.
On an appeal from a dismissal for failure to state a claim under Iowa Rule of Civil Procedure 104(b), our review is closely circumscribed. We assess the petition in the light most favorable to the plaintiffs and resolve all doubts and ambiguities in their favor. To sustain such a motion, the movant must show that no state of facts is conceivable under which the plaintiffs might show a right of recovery.
Holsapple v. McGrath,
II. Analysis.
Below is an employee at will, and we have frequently discussed the employee-at-will doctrine, its exceptions, and the policy behind the exceptions:
Employment relationships in Iowa are presumed to be at-will. Anderson v. Douglas & Lomason Co.,540 N.W.2d 277 , 281 (Iowa 1995). In the absence of a valid employment contract, an employer may discharge an employee at any time, for any reason, or no reason at all. Huegerich v. IBP, Inc.,547 N.W.2d 216 , 219 (Iowa 1996); Anderson,540 N.W.2d at 281 . We have recognized only two narrow exceptions to this general rule: (1) where the discharge clearly violates a “well-recognized and defined public policy of the state”; and (2) where a unilateral contract is created by an employer’s handbook or policy manual. Huegerich,547 N.W.2d at 220 (quoting Springer v. Weeks & Leo Co.,429 N.W.2d 558 , 560 (Iowa 1988)).
The public policy exception is based on the theory that employers should not be allowed to fire employees for reasons that violate public policy. Borschel v. City of Perry,512 N.W.2d 565 , 567 (Iowa 1994). Such policies may be expressed in the constitution and the statutes of Iowa. Id. An employer may be subject to tort liability for the retaliatory discharge of an employee when the discharge violates a “well-recognized and defined public policy” of Iowa. Lara v. Thomas,512 N.W.2d 777 , 782 (Iowa 1994).
Phipps v. IASD Health Servs. Corp.,
We have held that one of the “well-recognized and defined public policies” in employment relationships is violated when an employer discharges an employee for exercising his rights under the workers’ compensation statute.
Springer v. Weeks & Leo Co.,
The policy on which Below relies stems from Iowa Code section 85.18 (1995), which provides:
No contract, rule, or device whatsoever shall operate to reHeve the employer, in whole or in part, from any Habihty created by [the workers’ compensation] chapter except as herein provided.
In
Springer
we held this statute “to be a clear expression that it is the pubhc poHcy of this state that an employee’s right to seek the compensation which is granted by law for work-related injuries should not be interfered with regardless of the terms of the contract of hire.”
Springer,
In
Johnson
an employee alleged that he failed to file a timely workers’ compensation claim because of impfied threats of termination. The Washington court recognized a claim for threatened discharge, but only under Hmited circumstances. One requirement is that the employee is so intimidated that he
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does not file a workers’ compensation claim. Id.,
Johnson denied recovery to the plaintiff because he failed to establish the “necessary direct threat of retaliation, even if we view all reasonable inferences in favor of [the plaintiff].” Id. at 390. The court, moreover, noted the practical problems in recognizing such a claim:
There is some danger that the cause of action which we recognize [but did not apply] in this case may be asserted any time an employee misses the deadline for a filing of a workers’ compensation claim.... Therefore, when an employee claims that his or her failure to file the claim is a direct result of threats and intimidation by the employer, some specificity should be required. If the evidence set forth above which amounts to nothing more than a general impression that his employer might be unhappy if a claim were filed, were deemed to be sufficient to establish a prima facie cause of action, then the cause of action might become a vehicle for wholesale avoidance of the time limit for filing such claim.
Id.
If we were to recognize the claim advanced by Below in this ease, we would go beyond the dictum of Johnson. Below does not even claim, as Johnson did, that he lost his workers’ compensation benefits because of the threatened termination. Moreover, we would encourage a rash of common-law claims by any potential workers’ compensation recipients who claim to have been threatened with termination or subjected to any other form of harassment in the workplace by simply asserting that it was retaliatory in nature.
In first recognizing a claim for tortious interference with employment in
Springer,
we relied in part on
Kelsay v. Motorola, Inc.,
Below has not been deprived of continued employment; as far as we know, he is still employed. Nor has he been deprived of workers’ compensation benefits; he has applied for and received workers’ compensation for his injuries. Thus, the dilemma noted in Springer and its cited cases (having to choose between workers’ compensation and continued employment) does not exist.
For the reasons discussed, particularly the specter of a proliferation of common-law suits in an area largely preempted, through statutes, by workers’ compensation procedures, we hold that claimed harassment of a worker, including threatened termination, does not give rise to a claim at common law. Below has not claimed that the conduct of his employer was so egregious as to amount to a constructive termination, and we express no view as to the validity of a policy-based suit under such circumstances.
We conclude that the district court properly dismissed the suit.
AFFIRMED.
