This hard-fought appeal presents one overarching question of Massachusetts law: could a reasonable jury, viewing the facts in the light most hospitable to the plaintiff, find that the defendant’s personnel manual constituted a contract with its employees such that the defendant was bound to rehire the plaintiff, a former at-will employee, following the plaintiff’s completion of a leave of absence? Because Massachusetts law requires a negative answer to this inquiry, we reverse the judgment below. Consequently, we need not reach the other issues briefed by the appellant.
I.
Background
From 1966 until 1987, plaintiff-appellee Harold F. Pearson, III, worked in the Agri *255 cultural Investments Department at John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance Company (Hancock). In late 1986, Pearson made arrangements to take an unpaid six-month leave of absence from the firm. At that time, and before, Hancock maintained a personnel manual for the guidance of administrators and employees. Pearson testified that Hancock held out this manual as authoritative regarding company rules and employee benefits. Pearson also said that, when he arranged for his leave of absence, the Hancock personnel assistant with whom he spoke referred to the manual while explaining the mechanics of the leave. Read most generously to plaintiff, certain language in the manual suggests that Hancock, subject to the discretion of the corporate hierarchs, would try assiduously to place an employee seeking to return from a leave of absence in the job most nearly comparable to his last previous job. Pearson said that, before taking his leave, he told several Hancock officials that he expected to be rehired pursuant to the terms of the manual. Pearson has not argued that remarks made during these conversations — including his initial conversation with the Hancock personnel assistant — themselves constitute a contract. 1
“Optimism,” Voltaire wrote, “is a mania for maintaining that all is well when things are going badly.” F.M.A. Voltaire, Candide (1759). So it was here. Approximately one month before Pearson’s leave was due to expire, he contacted Hancock about resuming his employment. After ordering an investigation to ascertain if appropriate positions were available, and concluding that none were open, one of Hancock’s vice-presidents directed that a termination letter be sent to Pearson. He never returned.
In July of 1989, Pearson brought suit in the United States District Court for the District of Massachusetts. . He claimed that Hancock had violated his rights under the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (ERISA), 29 U.S.C. §§ 1001-1461 (1988), and sought to recover severance pay allegedly due him. The ERISA count was tried to the bench. The judge found that the plaintiff was not eligible to receive severance benefits and exonerated Hancock of any ERISA violation. That ruling has not been appealed.
In addition to the alleged ERISA violation, the complaint included several pendent state-law claims. The ■ district court jettisoned the majority of the pendent claims. 2 However, Pearson’s breach of contract claim survived and went to the jury over the defendant’s objection. Apparently believing that Hancock’s search for a suitable opening was perfunctory, the jury awarded him damages of $345,000. The jury explicitly found, on special questions, that the personnel manual constituted a contract between the parties and that Hancock breached its contract by failing to rehire Pearson. When the district court denied Hancock’s renewed motion for judgment as a matter of law, this appeal ensued.
II.
Standard of Review
In reviewing a district court’s denial of a motion for judgment as a matter of law, we must examine the evidence and the inferences reasonably to be drawn from it in the light most flattering to the verdict-winner.
See Veranda Beach Club Ltd. Partnership v. Western Surety Co.,
IIL
Analysis
The parties agree that Massachusetts law governs the breach-of-contract claim. Pearson argues that, applying Massachusetts law, the personnel manual formed the basis of an enforceable agreement between himself and Hancock and that, pursuant to the terms thereof, Hancock had an obligation to rehire him following his leave of absence. In contrast, the centerpiece of Hancock’s appeal is the proposition that the personnel manual did not constitute a binding contract. On the facts of this case, we find Hancock’s proposition to be compelling.
A
The cornerstone of our analysis is the decision of the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court (SJC) in
Jackson v. Action for Boston Community Development, Inc.,
We recently discussed the correspondence between the
Jackson
factors and basic principles of contract law in
Biggins v. Hazen Paper Co.,
We think that these decisions carry the day for Hancock. For one thing, although the
Jackson
court took great pains to stress that its decision was circumstance-specific,
First, the personnel manual upon which Pearson relies explicitly states that Hancock “retains the right to revise, suspend, or cancel in whole or in part any of the policies appearing, in this manual without advance notice.” What is more, the uncon-tradicted, unimpeached evidence establishes beyond peradventure that Hancock unilaterally exercised this right several times during Pearson’s tenure. Second, the manual is not couched in language traditionally associated with firm commitments. Rather, it says that it “provides a description” of “personnel policies and procedures.” Third, there is no evidence in the record suggesting that Pearson and Hancock negotiated concerning the contents of the manual — or, indeed, that any employee was consulted in that regard. Fourth, the manual sets forth no term of employment.
B
Realizing that the facts of this case are a carrion call to the vulturous flock of fac: tors enunciated in
Jackson
and echoed in
Biggins,
the plaintiff gamely asserts that
Jackson
is an avocet of a different, plume. He theorizes that, in
Jackson,
the employee was attempting to establish that the manual formed the basis of an employment contract for some term greater than “at will.” Thus, Pearson’s thesis runs, the employee had to overcome many obstacles, including the “general rule [that], where an employment contract ... contains no definite period of employment, it establishes employment at will.”
Jackson,
Pearson’s argument is far from epigonic; to our knowledge, it remains unaddressed in the relevant case law. Nevertheless, the district court endorsed it. We do not. No less an authority on state law than the Massachusetts Appeals Court has recently rejected this argument
sub silentio,
citing
Jackson
as the mainstay of its conclusion that the equal opportunity policy announced in an employee handbook “did not establish contractual rights which would support an action for breach of contract.”
Cherella v. Phoenix Technologies, Ltd.,
There is, moreover, a fundamental flaw in plaintiff’s approach. The definitional
*258
hallmark of employment at will is its ter-minability by “either the employee or the employer without notice, for almost any reason or for no reason at all.”
Jackson,
Such proof is utterly lacking here. Pearson has not suggested, let alone proved, that Hancock possessed an improper reason for not rehiring him. The undisputed fact is that Hancock did no more than terminate (or, in a sense, refuse to reinsti-tute) an at-will employment relationship. So viewed, the instant case reduces to a prototypical employment case in which one party has exercised its legal right to end a relationship with no stated term. There is simply no evidence upon which a reasonable jury could find that Hancock’s actions were in derogation of a contractual obligation owed to Pearson.
c
It is important to emphasize that this is not a situation in which the plaintiff produced evidence that the defendant terminated an at-will employment relationship in order to deprive an employee of some other right independently due him.
See, e.g., Fortune,
The situation which would have obtained if Pearson’s rationale were adopted illustrates the legal impracticality of the distinction that he advocates. To skirt the term-of-employment obstacle, Pearson would have us hold that Hancock promised only that it would rehire him — not that it would retain him. But, if his employment remained at will, Hancock would remain free to fire him simultaneous with, or perhaps milliseconds after, the act of reinstating him. We think this scenario forcefully
*259
indicates that the employer’s putative “promise” to rehire was at best illusory and, in any event, lacked the mutuality required to constitute a binding contract.
See, e.g., Jackson,
IV.
Conclusion
In the last analysis, the plaintiff invites us to build a legal wall separating suits alleging that grievance procedure provisions in a personnel manual constitute a contract from suits alleging that rehire provisions constitute a contract. Accepting this invitation would require us to erect an eclectic structure without the benefit of either state-law blueprints- or even the slightest intimation by the SJC that Massachusetts jurisprudence might be receptive to so unprecedented a design. We are unwilling, however, to tinker with seemingly settled state law. Nor is our renitency unfair to the plaintiff: after all, Pearson deliberately chose to bring this action in federal court when the state courts were equally available to him.
6
A litigant who seeks out a federal forum when a state-court forum is equally available to him cannot justifiably complain if the federal court manifests great caution in blazing new state-law trails.
See Ryan v. Royal Ins. Co.,
We need go no further. On the record before us, the plaintiff has failed sufficiently to differentiate his case from those of the unsuccessful plaintiffs in Jackson and Biggins. Thus, these precedents apply to determine whether the employment manual at issue here elevated Pearson’s status above that of an at-will employee. If that potential did not exist, Pearson’s case evaporates. Because, as we have already explained, the record is devoid of evidence that would enable Pearson to vault this hurdle, the district judge erred in denying Hancock’s motion for judgment as a matter of law.
Reversed.
Notes
. In the same vein, we note that, before Pearson departed, the parties signed a memorandum' concerning his leave of absence. The memorandum states unequivocally that Pearson was "advised of the difficulties involved in offering an individual with a highly specialized job at [Pearson's] grade level a comparable position" following completion of a leave of absence. The memorandum also memorialized Pearson’s understanding that he would "not be reinstated to [his] current position" and that his employment might possibly “be terminated at the expiration of the leave of absence." . Not surprisingly, Pearson has not suggested that this memorandum constitutes a source of rights arising in his favor, and we do not consider either that possibility or theories alien to Pearson’s basic breach of contract claim. See infra note 5.
. Pearson has not appealed from the dismissal of these claims.-
. We do not read
Jackson
as suggesting that this list of factors is necessarily exclusive. Rather,
Jackson
envisions focusing the lens of inquiry on "the conduct of the parties, and their relation,” under the totality of the circumstances in a given case.
Jackson,
. Pearson also tries to distinguish
Jackson
as a case in which the plaintiff relied only upon the employer's dissemination of the manual and not, as here, upon additional factors such as the conduct of the employer in conformity with the manual. This effort will not withstand the mildest scrutiny. In
Jackson,
the SJC expressly noted "the defendant’s adherence to the grievance procedures,” but found evidence of such a practice insufficient to overcome the inadequacies in the plaintiffs case.
Jackson,
. It is important to note that this appeal is limited to Pearson's suit for breach of contract. In suits based on other theories, the effect of
Jackson's
holding regarding terms contained in employee manuals may be somewhat diluted.
See, e.g., Sinkevich v. School Committee of Raynham,
. Plaintiffs counsel suggested at oral argument that Pearson’s suit was brought in federal court because it included an ERISA count along with the salmagundi of state-law claims. But, the state courts have concurrent original jurisdiction over ERISA claims which are brought by participants to recover benefits due under employee welfare benefit plans. See 29 U.S.C. § 1132(e)(1). Pearson’s suit is of this genre.
