488 A.2d 1295 | Conn. Super. Ct. | 1985
The plaintiff's complaint, as amended, alleges the following: The plaintiff was employed by the defendant from January, 1981, to November, 1983. He was told by the defendant when hired that the defendant utilized a Management by Objective (MBO) approach under which the plaintiff was entitled to earn additional compensation through bonuses based on individual bonus production. The plaintiff was additionally advised of his eligibility for the defendant's employee benefit program, including a thrift plan in which the plaintiff would be
As of 1983, the plaintiff began achieving marked increased production levels, exceeding MBO goals set by the defendant for bonuses within the first three *247
quarters of 1983. Further, as of January 19, 1984, the plaintiff would have a vested
The defendant discharged the plaintiff on November 1, 1983, for "unsatisfactory work performance." The plaintiff alleges on information and belief that the defendant terminated him with only two months remaining of that year to avoid paying the plaintiff substantial bonuses and to prevent the plaintiff from attaining his vested thrift plan rights. The defendant further failed and refused to pay the plaintiff's interim bonuses.
The plaintiff's complaint is in seven counts, the first two of which are the subject of the defendant's motion to strike. A motion to strike is the proper way to challenge the legal sufficiency of one or more counts of a complaint. Practice Book § 152.
Count one alleges that the plaintiff's discharge was wrongful in that it violated the public policy against the withholding of wages. Connecticut adheres to the rule that an employee hired for an indefinite period is dischargeable at the will of his employer. Somers v.Cooley Chevrolet,
General Statutes §§
In considering a motion to strike, the facts alleged in the complaint must be construed in the manner most favorable to the pleader. Amodio v. Cunningham,
These statutes represent a public policy against the withholding of wages by employers. By alleging that the plaintiff was discharged in order to avoid payment of bonuses and the vesting of thrift plan benefits, the plaintiff has sufficiently alleged a wrongful discharge within the contemplation of Sheets. The defendant's motion to strike count one is denied.
In Sheets, the employee was discharged because of his conduct in calling to his employer's attention repeated violations of the Connecticut Uniform Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act §§ 19-213 and 19-222. In denying the defendant-employer's motion to strike, the court determined that an employee should not be "put to an election whether to risk criminal sanction or to jeopardize his continued employment." Id., 480. Sheets, *249 however, does not limit recovery under this tort to cases in which the statutory violation at issue potentially subjects the employee to criminal liability. SeeSheets v. Teddy's Frosted Foods, Inc., supra, 480.
Count two alleges that the plaintiff's discharge violated the defendant's implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing. The Connecticut Supreme Court, inMagnan v. Anaconda Industries, Inc.,
The Connecticut Supreme Court has thus expressed a willingness to allow an action for the breach of good faith and fair dealing when the challenged discharge is allegedly related to the withholding of wages. Count two alleges such a discharge. The defendant's motion to strike counts one and two is denied.