Lead Opinion
Plaintiff Sherrill Johnson brought an action for wrongful discharge against defendant McDonnell Douglas Corporation in the Circuit Court of the City of St. Louis. She appeals from an order of that court granting summary judgment to the defendant. The Missouri Court of Appeals, Eastern District, reversed. Transfer was granted to decide whether there is a “handbook exception” to the employment at will doctrine in Missouri. This Court declines to adopt such an exception and recognizes
The facts in this case were stipulated by the parties. Sherill Johnson began her employment as a clerk with McDonnell Douglas on April 14, 1970. On July 18, 1979, she received a written reprimand known as an Employee Incident Report. The report, among other things, cited the plaintiff for chronic tardiness and absenteeism in violation of Rule 13 of the company’s employee handbook. This handbook, distributed to McDonnell employees including the plaintiff, listed 42 rules and regulations, the violation of which constituted cause for discipline or discharge.
On August 16, 1979, another report was issued to Johnson denoted as a Notice of Probation. It stated, in part, that any absences during a four-month probationary period would result in termination, although the company would consider “extenuating circumstances”. Plaintiff refused to sign this notice. On December 5, 1979, plaintiff was absent from work to attend a deposition in a civil suit in which she was a party. She was discharged on December 6 for violating the terms of her probation and for violating Rule 13 of the company handbook proscribing repeated absences and tardiness.
Plaintiff filed a two-count complaint in July 1982 alleging that her discharge (1) breached an employment contract between herself and McDonnell Douglas, and (2) gave rise to a prima facie tort. The circuit court granted defendant’s motion for summary judgment on both counts. Johnson only appeals on count I.
Summary judgment is inappropriate unless the prevailing party has shown by unassailable proof that he is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Gast v. Ebert,
“Under Missouri's employment at-will doctrine an employer can discharge — for cause or without cause — an at will employee who does not otherwise fall within the protective reach of a contrary statutory provision and still not be subject to liability for wrongful discharge.” Dake v. Tuell,
The essential elements of a valid contract include offer, acceptance, and bargained for consideration. Thacker v. Massman Construction Co.,
This Court concludes that no contract was formed betweeii the plaintiff and the defendant on the basis of the employee handbook. Absent a valid contract of employment between the parties, plaintiff as an at will employee could be discharged for cause or without cause. Dake v. Tuell,
Plaintiff also contends that a valid contract, altering her at will status, was created by McDonnell’s August 16 probation notice. Once again, however, the elements of contract formation are lacking. The probation notice was an unilateral expression of McDonnell’s intention to discharge plaintiff if she failed to meet certain conditions. This Court concludes that the probation notice issued by McDonnell Douglas failed to create a valid contract of employment and plaintiff remained an at will employee.
Plaintiff asserts for the first time on appeal that she was wrongfully discharged in violation of public policy. The Court does not deem it necessary to. en-graft a so-called “public policy” exception onto the employment at will doctrine. In the cases cited by plaintiff the employee had the benefit of a constitutional provision, a statute, or a regulation based on a statute. See Smith v. Arthur C. Baue Funeral Home,
Judgment is affirmed.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
I agree that the broad holding of Dake v. Tuell,
I do not agree with the Court’s disposition of the contract issue. The principal opinion gets off on the wrong foot by characterizing the issue as whether a “handbook” exception to Dake v. Tuell should be recognized. This is not the question. The question is whether the respondent has shown by unassailable proof that the plaintiff-appellant has no contract rights. Dake v. Tuell states a rule that applies only in the absence of contract rights.
We may take judicial notice of the vast McDonnell-Douglas complex. There are many thousands of employees in Missouri. A substantial number are represented by various unions which have negotiated collective bargaining agreements with the employer. The remainder, including the plaintiff, are euphemistically known as “Free Enterprise Personnel.” The question is whether employees in this latter classification have any contractual rights to continued employment.
The handbook begins by describing company policy. Among the listed policies are the following:
To provide security of employment, the means for security after retirement.
* * * * * *
To provide experienced counseling which can provide confidential advice regarding work or personal problems.
Under JOB ADVANCEMENT, the handbook provides:
Opportunities for promotion at McDonnell Douglas are excellent, because we fill as many jobs as possible from our ranks....
Pay reviews for free enterprise personnel (salaried new-supervisory, supervisory, and hourly personnel not affiliated with collective bargaining units) are held periodically....
The handbook then deals with PROBATIONARY WORK PERIOD, in the following terms:
All new employees work on a probationary basis before becoming permanent employees. The probationary period for FEP hourly personnel [the plaintiffs category] is ninety calendar days. For employees covered by union contract, the probationary work period is set forth in the contract....
Then follows a lengthy discussion of “employee benefits.” Significant are the following:
VACATIONS
You will receive vacation with pay at your applicable rate at the time the vacation is taken. If you are a member of a Collective Bargaining Unit your vacation is governed by the applicable union agreement.
Free Enterprise Personnel earn one week vacation for each six months of continuous service. After nine years, this is extended to one week vacation for each four months’ of continuous employment. ...
******
The handbook, finally, lists 42 “Rules and Regulations,” violation of which “will be cause for discipline, up to and including discharge.” The section concludes as follows:
These rules are subject to change at any time. Any management bulletins or directives issued after the date hereon which alter this list will take precedence.
An examination of the handbook as a whole gives the sense that the company holds out to the employees an employment relationship of permanence and durability. The specification of a “probationary period” would be meaningless if the employer were free to discharge any employee at any time for any reason. The provisions for vacations and holidays are inconsistent with the holding that the language of the handbook confers no contractual benefits. The principal opinion observes that the employer has reserved the right to change the disciplinary rules at any time. This circumstance supports the contractual nature of the handbook, rather than shoring the principal opinion. The reservation would not be necessary if the handbook had no legal significance.
The handbook, then, may be properly regarded as a continuing offer of employment, on the terms there stated. Employees accept the employer’s offer as they show up for work each day. Continued employment may provide cumulative benefits. After 90 days the employee’s status changes. He is no longer probationary. By keeping at work, the employee may accrue vacation time. Surely it would not be argued that the employer could cancel its entire vacation entitlements for all except union employees.
It is perfectly possible for an employer to enter into a contract with his employees, in which the employer promises continued em
It makes no difference that the handbook does not expressly restrict discharge to “good cause.” The specification of grounds for discipline, the reservation of the right to modify there, and the provision for probationary period, all are consistent with the employer’s having voluntarily limited its absolute right of discharge.
The claim of contractual right is fortified by the probationary letter. By the holding of the principal opinion, the letter is without meaning. But in the letter the employer specified the conditions under which it would allow the plaintiff to continue in its employ. The specification of the probationary period, standing alone, might be viewed simply as a reinstitution of the 90-day period specified in the handbook. The employer, however, expressly undertook to consider “extenuating circumstances.” The plaintiff was entitled to rely on the letter, and to assume that she had some protection against the employer’s unfettered right to discharge. Contractual rights are seldom left to the unbridled discretion of one party.
Maddock v. Lewis,
Dake v. Tuell, supra, does not deal with contract issues at all. Several appeals cases since Dake v. Tuell support the plaintiff’s position.
The prevailing theory is well stated in Thompson v. American Motor Inns Inc.,
[employer] through its employee handbook is seeking performance of duties in accordance with its stated goals. To induce the employees to carry out their duties in the manner desired by AMI, AMI has spelled out terms and conditions of employment and promised fair treatment and additional benefits. From the tenor of the language in the employee handbook, AMI has created an implied unilateral contract to govern the working relationship between it and its employees.2
The employer, of course, could have avoided any problem by including language such as, “anything in this handbook to the contrary notwithstanding, the employer reserves the right to terminate the service of any employee at any time and for any reason satisfactory to the employer, except to the extent that a union collective bargaining agreement provides otherwise.” The employer argues that the effect of this language should be read into the handbook, when it did not put it there. I rather suspect that the omission was advised rather than inadvertent. Most employers want to avoid unionization of their employees. One of the benefits of organization is protection against arbitrary discharge. This employer wants its unorganized employees to think that they enjoy the substantial benefits of unionization. It wants to emphasize the permanence of the employment relationship, rather than the possibility of discharge. The employees should be protected in relying on the expectations the employer sought to induce.
So the Court should not turn the plaintiff out of court on a summary judgment. The judgment of dismissal should be reversed and the case remanded for further proceedings, in which the plaintiff may attempt to establish contract rights under the handbook. Because the Court simply affirms the summary judgment there is no need for me to write in detail as to the nature of the plaintiff’s remedy, or what she must establish to have any remedy at all. It cannot be said that the defendant has shown by unassailable proof that the plaintiff has no remedy, and that is enough to require' reversal of a summary judgment;'
Notes
. In Matthews v. Federal Land Bank of St. Louis,
. See also, Smith v. Kerryville Bus Co.,
