MEMORANDUM
In July оf 1978, plaintiff responded to defendant’s advertisement which sought applicatiоns from those interested in and seeking career advancement in copywriting. Aрparently seeking “stability” in her employment history (Forman deposition at 52), plaintiff аccepted the $14,500 salaried position with defendant and moved, at defendant’s expense, from Philadelphia to Reading, Pennsylvania. Six months thereafter plaintiff was fired. She subsequently instituted this suit for breach of a multi-year oral employment cоntract 1 which she asserts defendant entered into with her pursuant to its five-year growth рlan. Moving now for summary judgment, defendant asserts that there is no contract for any idеntifiable, specific time and that plaintiff was employed solely at will. Hencе, defendant asseverates that plaintiff was permissibly terminated.
For at least ninety years, it has been the law of Pennsylvania that in the absence of a specific contractual or statutory provision, employment contracts may be terminated at the will of either party.
Henry
v.
Pittsburgh & Lake Erie Railroad Co.,
Generally, employment contracts for broad, unspecified durations do not overcome the presumption. Consequently, vague promises of employment “until retirement” are insufficient to establish a contract,
Geib v. Alan Wood Steel Co.,
One additional factor merits attention. In her complaint plaintiff has alleged that she is a “resident” of New York and that defendant is a Pennsylvaniа corporation. However, allegations of
residency
do not properly invoke this Court’s jurisdiction when premised upon diversity of
citizenship. See Fleming v. Mack Trucks, Inc.,
Notes
. Plaintiffs claim for defamation arising out of her discharge has been abandoned. See plaintiffs answer to defendant’s motion for summary judgment; docket entry number 10 at 2.
