Affirmed by published opinion. Chief Judge WILKINSON wrote the opinion, in which Judge HAMILTON and Judge MICHAEL joined.
OPINION
Donn Milton’s wrongful discharge action against his former employer, IIT Research Institute (IITRI), raises two legal issues: the choice of law to govern Milton’s claim and the viability of his claim under that law. Under the applicable choice of law rule, Maryland law applies. And Maryland’s ¿ause of action for wrongful discharge is not available on these facts. We thus affirm the judgment of the district court dismissing Milton’s claim.
I.'
As the district court granted defendant’s Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6) motion, we shall treat the allegations in the complaint as true.
Martin Marietta Corp. v. International Telecomms. Satellite Org.,
IITRI is a not-for-profit scientific research organization that enjoys tax-exempt status under Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code. In 1993, IITRI hired Milton to supervise administration of a contract between the company and the federal govern *521 ment called the Tax Systems Modernization Institute (TSMI). In 1995, Milton became Vice President of IITRI’s Advanced Technology Group, which included TSMI and several other projects. Throughout his tenure at IITRI, Milton’s office was located at the IITRI facility, in Lanham, Maryland.
During the course of his employment, Milton became convinced that IITRI was abusing its tax-exempt status by failing to report to the Internal Revenue Service taxable income generated by the substantial portion of IITRI’s business that did not constitute scientific research in the public interest. Milton voiced his concerns to IITRI management, to no avail. In 1995, after similar allegations by a competitor, IITRI initiated an internal examination of the issue. In connection with this inquiry, IITRI received an outside opinion letter concluding that the IRS could well deem some of IITRI’s projects unrelated business activities and that the income from these activities was likely taxable. Milton urged the President of IIT-RI, John Scott, to take action in response to the letter, but Scott refused. Milton raised the issue with IITRI’s Treasurer, who agreed that IITRI was improperly claiming unrelated business income as exempt income and promised to remedy the problem after Scott’s then-imminent retirement. However, this retirement did not come to pass. Finally, in November 1996, when Scott falsely indicated to IITRI’s board of governors that IITRI had no problem with unrelated business income, Milton reported the falsity of these statements to Lew Collens, Chairman of the Board of IITRI, and informed Collens of the opinion letter.
On January 1, 1997, Scott called Milton at home and informed him that he had been relieved of his Group Vice President title and demoted to his previous position as supervisor of TSMI. On February-12, 1997, Milton’s attorney contacted IITRI about the demotion, alleging that it was unlawful retaliation for informing management of IITRI’s unlawful practices. Two days later, at his office in Lanham, Maryland, Milton received a letter from Collens terminating his employment with IITRI.
Milton filed suit against IITRI in Virginia state court for .wrongful, discharge and breach of contract. IITRI removed the case to federal court and successfully moved to dismiss pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6). The district court, applying Virginia choice of law principles, selected Maryland law to govern this dispute. The court found that Maryland law did not recognize a wrongful discharge claim on these facts, as Milton did not allege he was fired for refusing to engage in unlawful activities, and he could point to no statutory duty to disclose IITRI’s wrongdoing. The district court also dismissed Milton’s breach of contract action. Milton now appeals the dismissal of' his wrongful discharge claim.
H.
First, we must decide what law governs Milton’s wrongful discharge action. The district court, located in Virginia, properly applied Virginia’s choice of law rule to decide this issue.
See Klaxon Co. v. Stentor Elec. Mfg. Co.,
While appearing to accept these basic principles, Milton contends for a result that is directly eohtrary to them. He disputes the district court’s determination that Maryland is the “place of the wrong,” claiming instead that Virginia is that locale.' Milton relies on formulations of Virginia’s choice of law rule like that in
Diaz Vicente v. Obe-nauer:
“The rule of
lex loci delicti
is well-settled in Virginia; the place of the
injury
supplies the governing law in tort actions.”
*522
We disagree. “The word ‘tort’ has a settled meaning in Virginia. A tort is any civil wrong or injury; a wrongful act.”
Buchanan,
Likewise, when Virginia residents are victims of out-of-state torts, the Virginia courts routinely apply the law of other states, even though the physical pain or economic impact caused by the tort
injury may be
experienced by the Virginia plaintiffs within the boundr aries of the Commonwealth. For example, in
McMillan v. McMillan,
a wife sued her husband for injuries she sustained when the couple was involved in a car accident that occurred in Tennessee.
Milton’s challenge to the choice of Maryland law is thus unavailing. Virginia clearly selects the law of the place where the wrongful act occurred, even when that place differs from the place where the effects of injury are felt. The approach Milton advocates would effectively replace Virginia’s traditional rule for tort eases with default application of the law of plaintiff’s domicile. But the Virginia Supreme Court has declined the invitation to adopt “the so-called ‘modem trend’” that focuses on the parties’ domicile, choosing instead to “reaffirm ‘the place of the wrong’ rule.” Id. at 663. The wrong in this case, the injury of which Milton complains, is his termination. This injury unquestionably occurred in Maryland, where Milton had his office and where his dismissal was communicated to him. To select anything but Maryland law to govern this ease would disregard the directive of Virginia law, which we are bound to apply in this diversity action. *
III.
We now turn to the merits. Maryland has recognized a “narrow exception” to the general rale of at-will employment: “discharge may not contravene a clear mandate of public policy.”
Bagwell v. Peninsula Regional Med. Ctr.,
Milton makes no claim that he was asked to break the law. He had no role in preparing IITRI’s submissions to the IRS and no responsibility for their content. Instead, Milton claims he was fired for fulfilling his fiduciary duty as a corporate officer to inform IITRI’s Board of activities injurious to the corporation’s long-term interests. *523 While we must accept this allegation as trae, it does not support Milton’s wrongful discharge claim.
Maryland law does provide a wrongful discharge cause of action for employees who are terminated because they perform their “statutorily prescribed duty.”
Adler v. American Standard Corp.,
Milton argues that his fiduciary obligations as an officer of IITRI supply the legal duty that was missing in
Shapiro
and
Thompson
and that supported the cause of action :in
Bleich.
But in fact Milton labored-under no “specific legal duty,”
see Thompson,
This search for a specific legal duty is no mere formality. Rather it limits judicial forays into the wilderness of discerning “public policy” without clear direction from a legislative or regulatory source. “The truth is that the theory of public policy embodies a doctrine of vague and variable quality, and, unless deducible in the' given circumstances from constitutional or statutory provisions, should be accepted as the basis of a judicial determination, if at all, only with the utmost circumspection.”
Townsend v. L.W.M. Management, Inc.,
IV.
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the judgment of the district court.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
For the same reasons, Milton’s alternative suggestion that Illinois law should govern his claim is also without merit.
