OPINION
I. Introduction
Appellant Paul Brown, individually and on behalf of all other persons similarly situated (“Brown”), appeals the trial court’s grant of Defendants’ Second Motion for Summary Judgment and in a single issue globally asserts that the trial court erred by granting summary judgment. We affirm.
II. Background
Brown was an employee of Sabre, Inc. when his employer sold part of its operations to Electronic Data Systems Corporation (“EDS”) in 2001. It is undisputed that Brown was an at-will employee. All 4,200 Sabre employees whose jobs were to *583 be eliminated were offered positions with EDS. Brown and the others affected were given the option to accept a position with EDS, which was referred to as being “transitioned” to EDS, or to find other employment. On March 29, 2001, Brown accepted a position to begin work for EDS in July 2001, but he continued to work at Sabre in the interim.
Sabre’s vacation policy was that vacation that was earned during a year could be taken only in the following year. For the year* 2000, Brown was credited with twenty-five vacation days to be taken in 2001. Generally, the company expected employees to use their entire vacation and could not carry over days to the next year. Employees were not entitled to payment for unused vacation days. Another vacation policy stated that “[i]f you leave the company, you will be paid for any earned but unused vacation days, as long as you provide two weeks[’] resignation notice.” Brown was aware of the policy but did not resign or give two weeks’ resignation notice. In response to confusion on the part of some employees regarding how their accrued vacation to be taken in the year 2001 would be treated as a result of the EDS transition, on May 23, 2001 Sabre stated in a memo to “All Employees Transitioning to EDS” that “[t]he purpose of this memorandum is to assure you that Sabre is keeping you whole in respect to your Sabre vacation — that is part of the contract between Sabre and EDS.”
On that same day, two months after Brown had accepted employment with EDS but while he was still working at Sabre, Sabre allegedly changed the vacation policy by stating that employees would not be paid for any vacation that would be honored or assumed by a “Successor or Affiliate,” that is, EDS, “except as required by law.” Shortly thereafter, he received his final paycheck from Sabre, which included payment for two and one-half weeks of vacation that had accrued in 2001 for use in 2002. However, he discovered that he did not get paid for the sixteen days that represented the amount of accrued vacation that he had earned in 2000 to be taken in 2001 but which he had not yet taken prior to his transition to EDS.
Although disputed by Sabre, Brown asserts that when he left Sabre and began working for EDS, EDS did not offer him his Sabre accrued vacation time or pay him for the time equivalent of the earned vacation time, as had been represented by Sabre to be a part of the Sabre/EDS contract. As a result, he filed suit against Sabre under a breach of contract theory. Prior to filing suit, Brown contacted the U.S. Department of Labor to inquire about his right to receive vacation pay for accrued but unused vacation but was told that the Department does not get involved in such matters. He also filed a complaint with the Texas Workforce Commission, seeking payment for accrued vacation time, but did not appeal from its determination that
[t]he law provides that claims for [vacation] can be enforced as unpaid wages only when the amounts are owed under a written agreement with the employer or under a written policy of the employer. The employer’s written policy or written agreement did not provide for cash payments for unused leave upon separation from employment.
After initiation of the lawsuit and relevant discovery, Sabre filed a traditional motion for summary judgment, styled “Defendant’s Second Motion for Summary Judgment and Supporting Brief,” on the basis that as an at-will employee, Brown had no contract with Sabre as a matter of law, and thus there could be no breach of *584 contract. Simply put, no contract — no breach. This appeal resulted.
III. Standard of Review
In a summary judgment case, the issue on appeal is whether the movant met his summary judgment burden by establishing that no genuine issue of material fact exists and that the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Tex.R. Civ. P. 166a(c);
Southwestern Elec. Power Co. v. Grant,
In deciding whether there is a material fact issue precluding summary judgment, all conflicts in the evidence are disregarded and the evidence favorable to the non-movant is accepted as true.
Harwell v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co.,
IV. At-Will Employment
A. Historical Development
A version of the employment at-will doctrine can be traced back at least as far as fifteenth century England and the Statute of Laborers Act, which provided that if any employee was hired for an indefinite period of time, he was presumed to be hired for one year and could not be terminated during that year except for reasonable cause. RichaRD R. CaRson, Texas Employment Law § 201 (1993). The doctrine emerged in the United States in
Hathaway v. Bennett,
When the continuance of the term of service by the contract of hiring is in any manner left discretionary with either party, either may put an end thereto at any time.... With us the rule is inflexible that a general or indefinite hiring is prima facie a hiring at will, and if the servant seeks to make it out a yearly hiring, the burden is upon him to establish it by proof.
H.G. Wood, Theatise on the Law of MasteR & Servant § 272 (1877).
*585
The genesis of the doctrine in Texas can be traced to the Texas Supreme Court ruling in
East Line and Red River Railroad Company v. Scott,
wherein the court, relying on various authorities including Wood’s Rule, stated that “[i]t is very generally, if not uniformly held, when the term of service is left to the discretion of either party, or the term left indefinite, or determinable by either party, that either may put an end to it at will, and so without cause.”
B. Employee Handbooks/Policy Manuals and Disclaimers
The long-standing rule in Texas is that an employee without a written employment contract is an employee-at-will, and the employment relationship is terminable at any time by either party, with or without cause.... In numerous cases, discharged employees have attempted to recover for breach of contract by alleging that their employers’ personnel manuals contained enforceable promises altering the at-will relationship .... Texas courts have generally rejected this theory, particularly where a specific disclaimer in the employee handbook warns the employee that the manual is intended to provide guidelines only, and does not create contractual rights.
Vida v. El Paso Employees’ Fed. Credit Union,
This is particularly true if the handbook contains a disclaimer. “A disclaimer in an employee handbook ... negates any implication that a personnel procedures manual places a restriction on the employment-at-will relationship.”
Dutschmann,
Nevertheless, one sister court has held that an employee handbook can become part of an oral employee contract and limit the employer’s right to discharge an employee.
Wilhite v. H.E. Butt Co.,
Nevertheless, under very limited circumstances, employee handbooks or policy manuals have been held by some courts to contractually modify the at-will employment relationship or form otherwise enforceable promises.
See Paniagua v. City of Galveston, Tex.,
In
E-Z Mart,
the court found an implied-in-fact contract existed through the posting of a notice stating in part “all E-Z Mart employees are covered by Workmen’s Compensation Ins. through EZ Mart, Inc. Self Insurance Program. The Company has assumed the role of your Workmen’s Comp. Insurance Company.”
V. Vacation Pay
Not surprisingly, the issue of vacation pay has been litigated previously, apparently originating in 1968 in the case of
Interstate Hosts, Inc. v. Thompson,
While the question presented appears to be one of first impression in Texas, its resolution seems quite simple. Any vested interest or right acquired concerning vacation pay must be determined from the terms of the contract of employment, either expressed or implied. [Here] there was no written contract of employment ... [and we find] no basis in law or in fact for the recovery of the vacation rights.
Id.
at 958. One sister court has determined that an alleged contract to pay for unused vacation time which stated that the plan was voluntary and “may be terminated or modified at any time” did not create a contractual obligation to pay for unused vacation, noting cases holding that no contract was formed where an employer retained the right to amend the handbook, and a handbook that could be unilaterally amended or withdrawn did not constitute a contract.
Ryan v. Superior Oil Co.,
VI. Brown’s Theory of Recovery
In Plaintiffs Original Petition, the live pleading at the time of filing of Defendant’s Second Motion for Summary Judgment, plaintiffs sole cause of action was for breach of contract. Specifically, Brown asserted that “[wjhen Plaintiff and Class Members were transitioned from Sabre to EDS pursuant to the EDS/Sabre acquisition, Sabre refused to pay them [in 2001] for the accrued unused vacation they earned in 2000 and such refusal constitutes a breach of contract.” Brown’s argument is succinctly articulated in its briefing to this court: “Sabre, in its employee handbook, had promised Brown that he had earned the vacation and would be paid for it upon his leaving the company. Sabre breached that promise and did not pay Brown for the vacation hours that he had earned prior to the year 2001.” In order for Brown to prevail on his claim for breach of contract, he must demonstrate that a binding contract existed, that it was breached by Sabre, and that he suffered damages caused by the breach,
Ryan,
The elements required for the formation of a valid contract are well known. They include an offer, an acceptance, a meeting of the minds, each party’s conceding to the terms, and an execution and delivery of the contract with the intent that it be mutual and binding.
Prime Prods. Inc. v. S.S.I. Plastics, Inc.,
VII. Analysis
Lest we lose sight of the mountain while traversing the forest of history and legal development, the macroscopic view of this case is that of an employee who does not have a written employment agreement; who relies on an employee manual that Texas law disfavors as forming contractual obligations, particularly when, as here, a specific disclaimer is involved; and who relies on a single memorandum which he says changed a policy — a policy that could be amended by the very manual on which he relies.
Looking to the facts of this case, Sabre’s employee handbook contained the following disclaimer:
These policies apply to all employees of Sabre. The company reserves the right to alter, amend, modify!,] or terminate these policies at any time in its sole discretion. This Guide does not guarantee continued employment, nor does it represent an employment contract, express or implied.
Employment at Sabre is considered to be “employment-at-will.” This means that either party may terminate the relationship at any time, with or without notice. Only the Chief Executive Offi *589 cer (CEO) of Sabre has any authority to enter any agreement for any specified period of time, or to make any agreement contrary to this policy.
This disclaimer demonstrates Sabre’s clear intent not to create any binding contractual rights through its employee handbook.
Werden,
VIII. Conclusion
Having overruled Brown’s single issue, we affirm the judgment of the trial court.
DAUPHINOT, J. concurs without opinion.
