OPINION
{1} In this employment dispute involving a claim of constructive discharge, the Court of Appeals affirmed summary judgment in favor of the employer, Coca-Cola Enterprises (Defendant). On certiorari, we conclude, as a question of first impression in New Mexico, that Don Gormley (Plaintiff) has not shown that his working conditions rose to the level necessary to support a claim of constructive discharge. Accordingly, we affirm the grant of summary judgment regarding Plaintiffs constructive discharge claim.
BACKGROUND
{2} We take the following background from the allegations leveled by the parties on summary judgment. Starting in 1983, Plaintiff was employed by Southwest Coca-Cola (Southwest) as a driver and deliveryman. The job involved heavy manual labor, including the requirement that he lift substantial weight. In 1994, when Plaintiff was 58, management at Southwest moved Plaintiff to a warehouse position with lighter duties and less hourly pay. Plaintiffs warehouse duties included stacking containers, janitorial work, running errands, filling out paperwork, and cleaning truck trailers. The record indicates that Plaintiffs supervisors, Robert Bolin and Ronnie Hill, initiated the move from the route to the warehouse out of concern for Plaintiffs health and safety. They feared that the workload may have rendered Plaintiff more vulnerable to an accident or injury. Upon Plaintiffs reassignment to the warehouse, he was told that he would now work a fifty-five-hour work week to maintain the same income he had received as a route driver.
{3} In 1998, Defendant acquired Southwest by merger. Soon after the acquisition, Plaintiffs new supervisor, Ruben Cardona, cut Plaintiffs fifty-five-hour work week, first by five hours and then by another five hours, and his warehouse duties were changed to include heavy lifting. At the time of the cuts, management was implementing a policy to reduce overtime hours for all employees. Plaintiff was assigned some route duties involving heavy lifting. Former supervisor Bolin advised Cardona that Plaintiff had been promised a fifty-five-hour work week and lighter duties, and that Plaintiff was risking injury by performing the more physically demanding duties assigned by Cardona. Despite Bolin’s protest, Cardona expressed indifference, and Plaintiffs working conditions did not improve.
{4} Plaintiff never personally protested the changes in his schedule and duties, nor did he file a complaint with his employer. Plaintiff acknowledges that two younger workers did the heavy lifting in the warehouse for him. Plaintiff alleges Cardona would complain to Plaintiffs immediate supervisor about the quality of his work. However, Plaintiff was never reprimanded or otherwise disciplined for his job performance. In 1999, roughly fifteen months after Defendant’s acquisition of Southwest, Plaintiff tendered his resignation giving a month’s notice.
{5} In May 2000, Plaintiff initiated the present litigation, claiming breach of implied employment contract based on the promise of wages and hours, wrongful termination, age discrimination, constructive discharge, and in an amended complaint, disability discrimination. Defendant responded with a motion for summary judgment on all claims, which the district court ultimately granted.
{6} The Court of Appeals reversed the award of summary judgment on the breach of implied contract, from which Defendant has not appealed, and in a divided opinion, the court affirmed the district court on all other counts. Gormley v. Cocar-Cola Enters.,
{7} Regardless of what we decide today, Plaintiffs breach of implied contract claim, based on the alleged promise of a certain level of hours and wages, will proceed to trial. The question on certiorari is whether that trial will include Plaintiffs claim for constructive discharge, which, according to the parties’ explanation at oral argument, would allow Plaintiff to claim consequential damages for breach of implied contract beyond the time of his resignation.
DISCUSSION
Summary Judgment
{8} Summary judgment is proper when “there are no genuine issues of material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” Self v. United Parcel Serv., Inc.,
Constructive Discharge
{9} Constructive discharge is not an independent cause of action, such as a tort or a breach of contract. Instead, constructive discharge is a doctrine that permits an employee to recast a resignation as a de facto firing, depending on the circumstances surrounding the employment relationship and the employee’s departure. See Turner v. Anheuser-Busch, Inc.,
{10} Although no New Mexico opinion sets forth the elements necessary to prove constructive discharge, numerous federal opinions from the Tenth Circuit discuss that standard. An employee must allege facts sufficient to find that the employer made working conditions so intolerable, when viewed objectively, that a reasonable person would be compelled to resign. See Derr v. Gulf Oil Corp.,
{11} Examples of adverse employment actions that rise to the level of constructive discharge include “a humiliating demotion, extreme cut in pay, or transfer to a position in which [the employee] would face unbearable working conditions.” Pennsylvania State Police v. Suders,
{12} The specific facts of the employment condition, and the severity of its impact upon the employee, are pivotal in determining whether the claim rises to the level of constructive discharge. In many cases, the circumstances surrounding resignation are not egregious enough to support a claim. See Gioia v. Pinkerton’s, Inc.,
{13} Plaintiff bases his claim for constructive discharge on four factors: criticism of Plaintiffs job performance, the loss of his guaranteed fifty-five-hour work week, a reduction in pay, and the loss of assignment to lighter duties. In each case, the record on summary judgment does not demonstrate employment conditions so severe that a reasonable person in Plaintiffs situation would have felt compelled to resign.
{14} Clearly, the reduction in Plaintiffs fifty-five-hour work week to a forty-five-hour work week is not sufficient to amount to constructive discharge. The loss of overtime hours did not reduce Plaintiffs base pay. Though he was earning less than he had been before, the change in pay was not such a material change that, when viewed objectively, would force him to leave. See Gioia,
{15} Plaintiff also lost some overtime hours but did not suffer a substantial cut in pay. A cut in pay must be an extreme change in pay to support a constructive discharge claim. Pennsylvania State Police,
{16} Plaintiff argues he was subjected to a “barrage of criticism.” He alleges that he was exposed to continuous criticism such that he felt constant pressure and discomfort. However, during Plaintiffs deposition when asked about criticism from his new manager, he stated, “whenever he talked to me, to my face he was real nice and everything.” Plaintiff testified Cardona would then complain to Plaintiffs immediate supervisor, criticizing the quality of Plaintiffs work. Even assuming the truth of the allegations, they hardly rise to the level of conditions that would leave Plaintiff no choice but to quit. “An objectively reasonable person would expect one’s supervisor to criticize what he perceived as his employee’s poor performance.... ” Smith v. Aaron’s Inc.,
{17} Analytically, Plaintiffs claim that the loss of lighter duties jeopardized his safety is sound, but unfortunately the claim is not sufficiently supported in the record. Although Plaintiff was removed from the easier cashier and warehouse duties and assigned jobs involving some heavy lifting, two of the younger workers in the warehouse were available to help him. There was no evidence presented on summary judgment that Plaintiff actually had to perform heavy lifting, or that he was placed in a situation where that was likely to happen. Plaintiff did not suffer any injuries resulting from the change in duties, and he made no showing that his health was endangered. Mere speculation about what could possibly happen is not sufficient.
{18} Plaintiffs change in duties, though perhaps improvident or even insensitive on the part of his employer, do not rise to the level of constructive discharge. Yearous,
{19} Other factors may be considered to determine whether the worker’s resignation was voluntary or de facto compulsory. For example, some courts require that the employee notify the employer of the problem, and afford the employer a sufficient opportunity to resolve it before leaving. As an example, in Woodward v. City of Worland,
Here, [the employee] apparently was able to work under these circumstances for several years, and there was no showing either that the situation got substantially worse just before she quit or that requesting disciplinary action against [the employer] would have been ineffective. Hence, on this record, [the employee] failed to establish a genuine dispute as to whether a reasonable person would have believed that there was no reasonable alternative to resignation.
Id.
{20} Defendant also points to the fact that, even after these changes occurred, Plaintiff remained on the job for over a year. Plaintiff investigated his social security benefits for early retirement. When Plaintiff submitted his letter of resignation he did so by giving a full month’s notice. Plaintiff was asked by Cardona to reconsider and stay on the job, but refused and resigned.
{21} Defendant asks that we issue a bright-line rule requiring prior notice in all instances, and stipulating a time within which an employee must leave to complain of constructive discharge. We decline to do so. Notice is one factor out of many for the fact-finder to consider when looking at the specific circumstances of each case. The same is true with respect to the circumstances surrounding how long the employee remains on the job and continues to suffer from onerous conditions. In the case before us, we affirm summary judgment not because of any one factor, but because Plaintiff did not create a genuine issue of material fact to support his constructive discharge claim.
CONCLUSION
{22} As a matter of law, Plaintiff did not create a genuine issue of material fact to support his constructive discharge claim. Therefore, we affirm the opinion of the Court of Appeals affirming summary judgment for Defendant.
{23} IT IS SO ORDERED.
Notes
. It is the practice of this Court not to cite unpublished opinions. However, since this is a case of first impression in New Mexico, we are including two federal unpublished opinions to provide additional factual examples of what courts have determined to constitute or not to constitute constructive discharge. These opinions are cited for the limited purpose of illustration. It continues to be the practice of this Court to only rely on published cases as precedent.
