OPINION OF THE COURT
This is an appeal from the denial of a motion to dismiss a complaint alleging breach of a concededly oral five-year contract of employment, on the ground that the action is barred by the Statute of Frauds.
Plaintiff Carol Gunnison was employed from 1979 until September 1982 in the Toronto office of Richardson Securities of Canada, the parent company of defendant Richardson Securities, Inc., a New York corporation engaged in the securities business. After extensive negotiations, she contends, defendant orally agreed to employ her as an institutional sales representative in its New York City office for a period of five years.
Defendant moved pursuant to CPLR 3211 (a) (5) and 3211 (c) to dismiss the complaint on the grounds that the contract, as alleged, was void and unenforceable under the Statute of Frаuds for want of a writing signed by defendant (General Obligations Law § 5-701 [a] [1]) and that, as a matter of law, plaintiff’s employment was terminable at will. Plaintiff, conceding the absence of a writing to substantiate the purported five-year commitment, argued that enforcement of the contract was nevertheless mandated by principles of estoppel and partial performance. In support of this argument she alleged that in reliance upon the oral promises of Mr. Lewis and other “members of management” of a five-year term of employment, she turned dоwn other employment opportunities and accepted defendant’s offer, gave up her Toronto residence and, at great personal sacrifice, moved to New York City. Although finding that plaintiff “has not established a fixed term of employment” Special Term, neverthеless, denied the motion on the ground that the trier of fact could consider “the course of conduct of the parties including their * * * antecedent negotiations.” We disagree, and accordingly reverse and dismiss the complaint.
Oral assurances of a five-year term of employment, even if established, are void and unenforceable under the Statute of Frauds.
“Every agreement, promise or undertaking is void, unless it or some note or memorandum thereof be in writing, and subscribed*52 by the party to be charged * * * if such agreement, promise or undertaking * * *
“[b]y its terms is not to be рerformed within one year from the making thereof”.
Thus, to be enforceable, a promise or agreement of employment for five years — which by its terms cannot be performed within one year — must be memorialized in a writing signed by the party to be charged. Plaintiff, as already noted, сoncedes that defendant’s letter to her of September 3, 1982, upon which she allegedly relied, does “not fix a term of employment”. Nor does the interoffice memorandum of January 7, 1983. Since no other writing exists to substantiate plaintiff’s claim of a five-year term, the Statute of Frauds is аn absolute bar to a recovery absent some legal impediment to its assertion.
This court’s decision in Chase v United Hosp. (
Recognizing that the absence of a writing renders void any agreement which by its terms cannot be performed within one year, plаintiff argues that the circumstances attending defendant’s oral promise of a five-year term of employment are such that it would be unconscionable to deny enforcement of the promise. She cites her move from Toronto to New York and her rejection of other employment offers as circumstances “sufficiently egregious” to estop defendant from invoking the Statute of Frauds. It is clear, however, that plaintiff, an American who acquired dual Canadian citizenship, did not suffer any cognizable legal harm, much less harm sufficiently egregious to remove the purported oral agreement from the bar of the Statute of Frauds. As the record demonstrates, defendant paid the entire cost of her move, including even the security deposit for a two-year apartment lease. Moreover, it is not at all clear that thе
In any event, it has been consistently held that a change of job or residence, by itself, is insufficient to trigger invocation of the promissory estoppel doctrine. (See, e.g., Ginsberg v Fairfield-Noble Corp.,
In Swerdloff (supra), the plaintiff, a manager of a service station under a written agreement providing for employment at will, claimed breach of an oral promise that if he continued as manager he would obtain the dealership when the station was сonverted to such status. Confronted with the defense of Statute of Frauds since the transaction would necessarily involve the purchase of more than $500 worth of gasoline (see, Uniform Commercial Code § 2-201), he invoked the doctrine of promissory estoppel, arguing, inter alia, that, in reliance on the promise of a dealership, he had passed up other job opportunities. The court rejected this argument, holding that a change of job or residence, or the failure to make such change, is by itself insufficient to invoke promissory estoppel, unless the plaintiff’s rights under the previous situation, or missed opportunity, were so valuable that injury of unconscionable proportions would flow from the failure to enforce the oral contract (
Thus, plaintiff cannot, on the basis of her move to New York and purported refusal of other job opportunities, invoke promissory estoppel to defeat the Statute of Frauds. As the court in
Plaintiff also cites her move to New York and defendant’s expenditures in relocating her as acts constituting partial performance of the oral five-year contract. In such circumstances, she argues, a court of equity may enforсe the oral agreement. Plaintiff clearly misapprehends the judicial standard for evaluating partial performance.
In an appropriate case, a court of equity may indeed give effect to an otherwise unenforceable oral contract whеre there has been part performance (see, General Obligations Law § 5-703 [4]) and the acts performed are “ ‘unequivocally referrable’ ” to the agreement (Geraci v Jenrette,
In New York, the part performance of an oral contract for employment, not to be performed within a year, does not remove the contract from the operation of the Statute of Frauds. (Tyler v Windels,
Plaintiff’s reliance on Weiner v McGraw-Hill, Inc. (
Here, in contrast, where the sole issue is the enforceability of an oral promise of a five-year term of employment, plaintiff cannot point to any signed writing regarding the term of employment, and she has made no showing whatsoever of any “express limitation on the employer’s right of discharge” (Murphy v American Home Prods. Corp.,
Asch, Milonas and Kassal, JJ., concur.
Order, Supreme Court, New York County, entered on April 16, 1984, unanimously reversed, on the law, without costs and without disbursements, and the motion to dismiss the complaint granted.
Notes
In its moving papers defendant did not deny the allegations of an oral promise of a five-year term of employment. After the denial of its motion to dismiss, defendant interposed an answer which, in an affirmative defense, alleged that it had not agreed to hire plaintiff for a five-year term.
