ORDER
Plaintiff and defendants have both moved for partial summary judgment. For the reasons that follow, plaintiffs motion is denied, and defendant’s motion is granted in part, and denied in part. 1
I. Breach of Contract
Plaintiff claims that defendants violated express and implied contracts of employment between plaintiff and defendants when defendants terminated plaintiff. We disagree.
“It is [well] settled law in New York that, absent an agreement establishing a fixed duration, an employment relationship is presumed to be a hiring at-will, terminable at any time by either party.”
Sabetay v. Sterling Drug, Inc.,
In the case before us, the plaintiff asserts a number of bases for her claim that defendant’s expressly limited their right to fire plaintiff at-will. First, plaintiff points to the OTB Corporate Policy and Procedures Manual (“OTB Manual”). Second, plaintiff points to OTB’s Uniform Rules of Discipline. Third, plaintiff claims that certain statutes, rules, and regulations which, inter alia, limit the right of employers to fire their employees, have been incorporated into plaintiffs alleged employment contract. Fourth, plaintiff points to her employment application which states that OTB is an equal opportunity employer. Finally, plaintiff asserts that defendants induced plaintiff to leave her previous employment by making certain oral assurances to her.
Plaintiffs reliance on OTB’s Uniform Rules of Discipline is also misplaced. Even assuming that the Uniform Rules of Discipline were applicable to plaintiff, the rules are, on their face, silent about any limitation on OTB’s reasons for termination. However, citing the deposition testimony of former OTB President Howard Giordano, plaintiff asserts that a letter that Giordano inserted in the Uniform Rules of Discipline connotes that OTB employees can only be fired for cause. See Plaintiffs Memo Submitted with Exhibit 56 at 2. Even assuming that Giordano attempted to convey that message in the letter, we do not find that the letter stated with sufficient clarity and explicitness that OTB employees could only be terminated for cause. Therefore, we believe that that language, as a matter of law, cannot be construed as excluding other grounds for termination,
see Novinger v. Eden Park Health Services, Inc.,
Third, plaintiff claims that because “a contract [is] deemed to include in its terms all rights conferred upon the parties by the laws of the state [where the contract was made],”
N.C. Feed Co. v. Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System,
Plaintiffs assertion that the OTB bylaws limit the right of the defendants to terminate plaintiff is also meritless. The only written document that plaintiff appears to claim that she saw before accepting her job was the OTB’S Uniform Rules of Discipline.
See
Cucchi Aff. ¶ 26-¶ 33.
4
Plaintiff never alleges that she relied on the OTB bylaws before she decided to accept the Inspector General job with OTB, and plaintiffs failure to establish pre-hiring reliance on the by-laws is fatal to her contract claim based on the by-laws.
See Novinger v. Eden Park Health Services, Inc.,
Plaintiff also contends that because the top of the first page of her OTB employment application stated that OTB is an equal opportunity employer, plaintiff had a contractual right not to be fired because of her sex. We disagree. We do not believe that this statement is a sufficiently express limitation on defendants right to fire plaintiff so as to allow plaintiff to sue defendants under a breach of contract theory. Therefore, even if OTB did fire plaintiff for discriminatory reasons, that firing does not constitute a breach of contract. 5
Plaintiffs final contract argument is that defendants orally assured her that only the OTB Board of Directors could fire plaintiff, that no retaliation would be taken against plaintiff for plaintiffs investigatory work, that no retaliation would be taken against her for reporting wrongdoing, that OTB was an equal opportunity employer with maternity leave benefits, that the OTB Uniform Rules of Discipline were mandatory and binding, and that plaintiff would not be considered management. Plaintiff asserts that she left her previous employment and came to work for OTB based on these oral assurances.
First of all, it is important to note that none of the alleged oral promises state that plaintiff could only be fired for cause. In
Moreover, while an employer’s oral assurances only to fire an employee for just cause are a significant factor a court must take into consideration in determining whether the employer intended alter the employee’s at-will status, an employer’s oral assurances that induce a person to work for the employer are not by themselves sufficient evidence of an express agreement to alter the employees at-will status.
See Paolucci v. Adult Retardates Center, Inc.,
We do not believe that the Second Circuit’s decision in
Ohanian v. Avis Rent A Car System, Inc.,
We believe that the Second Circuit’s holding in Avis is distinguishable from the present case. First of all, the defendant in Avis essentially orally promised the plaintiff that the defendant would fire the plaintiff only for just cause. However, as noted above, none of defendants’ oral promises to plaintiff in the case before us guaranteed plaintiff that she could only be fired for just cause. See, supra.
Furthermore, even if the New York Court of Appeals had not decided
Sabetay,
we might be inclined to believe that the Second Circuit’s decision in
Avis
is inapposite to the case before us. It is well settled in this Circuit “that the decision of an intermediate state court on a question of state law is binding on us unless we find persuasive evidence that the highest state court would reach a different conclusion.”
Entron, Inc. v. Affiliated FM Insurance Co.,
In sum, we conclude that plaintiff was an at-will employee, and we therefore 'grant defendants’ motion for summary judgment on plaintiffs contract claims. 7
II. Due Process Claims
a. Property Interest
The Second Circuit has made clear that “[i]n the employment context, a property interest arises only where the state is barred, whether by statute or contract, from terminating (or not renewing) the employment relationship
without cause.” S & D Maintenance Co. v. Goldin,
Plaintiff further contends that defendants deprived plaintiff of property without due process of law because the defendants did not follow their own procedural regulations when they fired plaintiff.
9
Even assuming that defendants failed to follow there own procedures when they fired plaintiff, plaintiffs due process claim based on that failure is without merit. “[T]he mere fact that [OTB] has promulgated procedural rules by which to make retention decisions does not by itself create a constitutionally cognizable property interest in continued employment in [OTB].”
Navas v. Gonzalez Vales,
Citing
Vitarelli v. Seaton,
In sum, defendants’ motion for summary judgment on plaintiffs property interest claim is granted, and plaintiffs cross motion on this issue is denied.
b. Liberty Interest
Plaintiff contends that defendants deprived her of her liberty interest in her reputation when defendants fired her.
In the case before us, the record is uncontradicted that when defendants fired plaintiff, they did not tell her that she was being fired as a result of misconduct or any wrongdoing on her part. See Cucchi Dep. at 82, 134. Moreover, plaintiff has not alleged that defendants ever asserted at any other time that they fired plaintiff because of misconduct or wrongdoing on her part. The only reason defendants ever gave plaintiff for plaintiffs discharge was “ongoing changes within OTB.” Ex. A. to DeLeon Aff., Letter from Edward Lewis to Plaintiff.
Plaintiff contends that OTB employees were responsible for reporting to the New York Post stigmatizing information that became the basis of an October 15,1990 New York Post article. However, plaintiffs reliance on this article as a foundation for her liberty interest claim is misplaced. We find nothing in the article to be stigmatizing, let alone stigmatizing enough to implicate plaintiffs liberty interest in her reputation. None of plaintiffs other assertions of stigmatization have merit.
Because plaintiff has presented no evidence of stigmatization, other than the consequence that results from simply being fired, defendant’s motion for summary judgment on plaintiffs liberty interest claim is granted, and plaintiffs cross-motion on this issue is denied. 11
III. Plaintiffs Right to Privacy
Plaintiff claims that because the October 15, 1990 New York Post article reported that plaintiff was home on maternity leave when she was fired, and because OTB employees were responsible for the article, defendants violated her right to privacy. We disagree. One of the factors that a court must consider when determining whether the publication of certain information about a person violates that person’s right to privacy is the nature of the information divulged.
See Soucie v. County of Monroe,
IV. New York Civil Service Law 75-b
Cucchi claims that defendants violated New York State Civil Service Law 75-b (“the Whistleblower Statute”) when they fired her in retaliation for her reporting suspected wrongdoing by Hazel Dukes to the Department of Investigation and to the Inspector General of the Human Resources Administration.
Defendants contend that the Whistleblower Statute only protects public employees who report misconduct that has actually taken place. Defendants assert that because no misconduct occurred in this case, plaintiff is not protected under the Whistle-blower Statute. We disagree. We believe that even assuming that no misconduct took place in this ease, plaintiff may still fall under the Whistleblower Statute’s protections.
The New York Legislature passed the Whistleblower Statute to,
inter alia,
“mak[e] it easier for an employee to report
suspected
abuse.”
Hanley v. New York State Executive Dept. Division for Youth,
V. Intentional and Negligent Infliction of Emotional Distress
Plaintiffs tenth claim for relief alleges that OTB “has intentionally and negligently inflicted emotional distress upon plaintiff.” A cause of action for negligent infliction of emotional distress arises only in unique circumstances, when a defendant owes a special duty only to plaintiff,
see Kelly v. Chase Manhattan Bank,
In sum, reading the record in light most favorable to the plaintiff, we conclude that she has failed under New York Law to satisfy the requirements of a negligent infliction of emotional distress claim. Accordingly, defendants’ motion for summary judgment on plaintiffs negligent infliction of emotional distress claim is granted.
In the case before us, plaintiffs allegations of outrageous behavior amount to the following: 1) she was fired soon after having a child; 2) that an article about her intention to sue OTB appeared in a newspaper; and 3) that she was fired for retaliatory and discriminatory reasons in violation of various state and federal laws. Even assuming all of these allegations are true, they do not begin to approach the strict standard of outrageous behavior that is needed to prove an intentional infliction of emotional distress claim under New York law.
See Murphy, supra; Hoheb v. Pathology Associates,
VI. Defamation
Plaintiff has indicated that she does not oppose defendants’ motion for summary judgment on her defamation claim. See Plaintiffs Memorandum in Opposition to Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss at 2. Accordingly, defendants’ motion for summary judgment on this claim is granted.
VII. Ultra Vires Claim
In her twelfth claim for relief, plaintiff asserts that defendants acted ultra vires when they terminated plaintiffs employment without official board of directors’ action. Plaintiff claims that by firing plaintiff without Board action, defendants violated “the statutes of the State of New York relating to corporations.” 13 In her brief in opposition to defendants’ motion for partial summary judgment, plaintiff denominates her twelfth claim as one for promissory estoppel. Whether plaintiffs twelfth cause of action is making an ultra vires claim or a promissory estoppel claim, defendants’ motion for summary judgment on plaintiffs twelfth claim for relief must be granted.
Plaintiff has not stated in her complaint or in her briefs the New York Statutes upon which she is relying for her ultra vires claim. The most relevant New York statute seems to be N.Y. Bus. Corp. Law § 203 (McKinney 1986). However, any reliance on this statute by plaintiff must fail because the statute only permits a right of action by a shareholder of a corporation, “by or in the right of the corporation to procure a judgment in its favor against an incumbent or former officer director of the corporation for loss or damage due to his unauthorized act,” and by the attorney-general.
Id.
14
Because plaintiff is not a shareholder of OTB, is not suing on
Plaintiff asserts that she left her previous job and joined OTB in reliance upon Sarah Jo Hamilton’s promise that plaintiff could only be fired by the OTB Board of Directors. 15 Plaintiff therefore contends that OTB is promisorily estopped from firing plaintiff in a manner that violates Sarah Jo Hamilton’s promise. We disagree.
First of all, plaintiff never raised a promissory estoppel claim in her complaint. For this reason alone, defendants’ motion for summary judgment on this claim should be granted.
Moreover, under New York law, “the doctrine of promissory estoppel is properly reserved for that limited class of cases where ‘the circumstances are such as to render it
unconscionable
to deny’ the promise upon which the plaintiff has relied.”
Philo Smith & Co. v. Uslife Corp.,
Conclusion
Defendants’ motion for summary judgment on plaintiffs contract claim, due process claim, privacy claim, defamation claim, intentional and negligent infliction of emotional distress claims, ultra vires claim, and promissory estoppel claim is granted. Defendants’ motion for summary judgment on plaintiffs Whistleblower Statute claim is denied. Plaintiffs cross motion for partial summary judgment is denied in its entirety. 16
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. Plaintiff contends that defendants have failed to submit to this Court a rule 3(g) statement in response to plaintiff's cross-motion. For the purposes of plaintiff's cross-motion, we will refer to ■defendants’ 3(g) statement that defendants submitted with their motion for partial summary judgment.
. Wieder v. Skala,
[i]ntrinsic to this relationship, of course, was the unstated but essential compact that in conducting the firm's .legal practice both plaintiff and the firm would do so in compliance with the prevailing rules of conduct and ethical standards of the profession. Insisting that as an associate in their employ plaintiff must act unethically and in violation of one of the primary professional rules amounted to nothing less than a frustration of the only legitimate purpose of the employment relationship.
Id. In the case before us, no such pressure was placed on the plaintiff, and therefore no implied-in-law obligation was breached by the defendants when they fired plaintiff.
. Of course, plaintiff may still be able to sue defendants under those statutes that create independents right of action.
. Though Cucchi's deposition could be read to imply that Cucchi read the OTB manual before she accepted the job of Inspector general at OTB, see Cucichi Dep. at 14, later on in her deposition she states that she first saw the OTB manual “within a week or two of [her] taking the job.” See Cucchi Dep. at,29. In addition, in Plaintiffs Memorandum in Opposition to Defendants' Motion for Summary Judgment, plaintiff concedes that she did not rely on the OTB manual before accepting the Inspector General job at OTB. See Plaintiff's memorandum in Opposition, to Defendants' Motion for Summary Judgment at 14; Cucchi Aff. 1148.
. However, as noted previously, plaintiff may still be able to sue defendants under anti-discrimination statutes.
. We do not believe that even when considered along with the "equal opportunity employment” statement on plaintiffs employment application, defendants’ oral assurance that defendant was an equal opportunity employer is sufficient to limit defendants’ right to fire plaintiff at will.
.
Leonelli v. Pennwalt Corp.,
. We note that at his deposition, Howard Giordano, a former OTB president, testified that the only permissible basis for employment termination was for cause, i.e., misconduct. See Deposition of Howard Giordano at 107-08. However, even assuming that in practice OTB only fired its employees for cause, plaintiff has failed to establish that she was contractually entitled to the continuation of this policy. Thus, plaintiff’s reliance on this policy to create a property interest in her job must fail.
. For example, plaintiff complains that defendants violated OTB procedures because plaintiff was not permitted to appeal her termination.
. We have found no cases in which New York courts specifically have held that the New York State constitution’s due process clause mandates state or city agency’s to follow their own procedures when they fire their employees. However, the New York Court of Appeals seems to have indicated that as far as liberty and property interests are concerned, New York will follow the federal rule.
See generally Economico v. Village of Pelham,
. We have found no cases in which New York courts have held that the New York State constitution provides greater safeguards than does the federal constitution to protect a person’s liberty interest in his or her reputation. However, as we noted above, the New York Court of Appeals seems to have indicated that as far as liberty and property interests are concerned, New York will follow the federal rule.
See generally Economico v. Village of Pelham,
. Cucchi claims that the defendants violated her free speech rights when they fired her in retaliation for her reporting suspected wrongdoing to the Department of Investigation and the Inspector General of the Human Resources Administration. While plaintiff’s claim may state a cause of action,
see Vasbinder v. Ambach,
. In her twelfth claim for relief, plaintiff once again charges that defendants are guilty of breach of contract. That charge is meritless, as discussed supra.
. See also N.Y. Banking law § 9-a (McKinney 1990) (discussing the ultra vires defense in the banking context); N.Y. Not-For-Profit Corporation Law§ 203 (McKinney 1970) (discussing the defense of ultra-vires in the not-for-profit corporation context).
. Sarah Jo Hamilton was OTB’s General Counsel at the time OTB hired plaintiff.
. Citing
Austin v. Board of Higher Education,
Defendants' current motion for summary judgment only addresses some of the state law claims that plaintiff asserted in her complaint. Therefore, we will deem defendants' April 9, 1993 letter as only addressing those claims.
In our decision detailed above, the only portion of defendants’ summary judgment motion we denied was the portion that dealt with plaintiff's whistleblower claim. Because the New York State Legislature has created a special statutory scheme under which public employees can bring a cause of action when they believe that they are being fired for whistleblowing, we do not believe that Article 78 is the exclusive remedy for a discharged public employee in whistleblower cases. Accordingly, we do not believe that Austin is apposite to this case.
We observe that in her decision, Judge Cederbaum did not address the question of whether a
