731 N.E.2d 190 | Ohio Ct. App. | 1999
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *339 Appellant Ruben Mayo, a maitre d' formerly employed by appellee Kenwood Country Club, Inc. ("Kenwood"), raises three assignments of error in this appeal, all challenging the summary judgment granted by the trial court in favor of Kenwood on his claims of retaliatory constructive discharge, wrongful discharge in violation of public policy, and intentional infliction of emotional distress. The gravamen of Mayo's first two claims is that Kenwood constructively discharged him because he had provided deposition testimony favorable to three Kenwood *340 waitresses in their age-discrimination case against Kenwood. We address Mayo's first two assignments together.
In reviewing Mayo's claim, we must undertake a case-specific analysis that includes ""an inquiry into the intent of the employer and the reasonably foreseeable impact of the employer's conduct on the employee, '" to determine whether a reasonable person would have felt compelled to resign.14 In other words, a constructive discharge occurs when "a reasonable person in [the employee's] shoes would feel compelled to resign given the intolerable conditions and that the reasonable employer would foresee such a response."15 The subjective intent of the employer is not relevant.16 (The employer usually denies a conscious design to force termination.) Instead, an employer is held to have intended the consequences it could have reasonably foreseen.17 Further, to show constructive discharge, an employee must demonstrate that "the cumulative effect of the employer's actions would make a reasonable person believe that termination was imminent."18
Because Mayo is the nonmoving party, we consider the evidence most favorably toward him. This means that "[e]ven the inferences to be drawn from the underlying facts contained in the affidavits and depositions must be construed in [Mayo's] favor."19
The evidence demonstrates that once he decided to testify, Mayo feared retaliation by Kenwood for doing so. This fear continued immediately after his deposition, in spite of Kenwood's assurances that Mayo should tell the truth and *343 that there would be no retaliation. At some point after the deposition, Mayo began keeping notes of what he perceived to be unfavorable treatment of him, and he tape-recorded at least two staff meetings. He also contacted the attorney who represented the plaintiffs in the age-discrimination suit a few months after the suit settled. Mayo claims that that contact was made in June 1993.
The attorney telephoned Kenwood's attorney in July or August 1993. A followup letter was sent expressing Mayo's concerns about his position. At the time the letter was written, Mayo stated that he was concerned because his authority was being undermined by Rentschler's reversal of his termination decisions; because his schedule was changed for the first time in seven years in that he had to work six days a week with longer hours, while other employees' schedules did not increase to the extent that his did; and because the responsibility for scheduling waiters, waitresses, and servers was taken away from him, allegedly because he did not honor employees' requests for days off. (Mayo testified that he informed Rentschler that that was untrue, but he did not ask for the scheduling responsibility to be returned.) The letter explained Mayo's concerns about retaliation and offered to settle in order to avoid litigation. Mayo was assured in a letter delivered by Kenwood's president of the board that retaliation would not occur and that Kenwood would investigate his concerns.
Specifically as to Mayo, the record demonstrates that Rentschler yelled at him on two or three occasions, criticized him personally in five or six out of sixty staff meetings, informed the staff that he was using Valium, took away scheduling duties after receiving complaints, and wrongly accused him of leaving early once and of giving away a birthday cake. Mayo also claims that he was excluded from two meetings. Further, Rentschler, who had the ultimate responsibility for *344 employment decisions, questioned Mayo about three of his termination decisions and two of his hiring decisions. Rentschler overruled one of Mayo's termination decisions based on the belief that the evidence would not be sufficient to uphold the decision in the union grievance process.
Rentschler also informed Mayo over a period of several years that he needed improvement in the areas of administration, organization, and staff training and communication. Rentschler testified that Mayo needed to expand his abilities to search out new tasks, to save the club money, and to improve service, and that Mayo's deficiencies in staff training and communication contributed to the losses of the food and beverage operations. Mayo also set as personal goals improvement in those areas.
The evidence also demonstrates that Phillip Wheeler, chairperson of the committee that oversaw the clubhouse operations, met with Mayo. Wheeler called the meeting because he had heard that Mayo was unhappy and he wanted Mayo's input as to the operation of the club. (Wheeler wanted to stop the food and beverages operations of the clubhouse from showing a loss.) Mayo complained about Rentschler's conduct toward him but did not mention his deposition testimony or his attorney's letter in the context of his complaints. Wheeler told Mayo he would look into his complaints and told Mayo to contact him about future problems. Mayo chose not to do so even though he claims that Rentschler's conduct grew worse. Mayo believed that Wheeler became less friendly toward him and met with his employees behind his back. The employees' testimony failed to support this belief.
Mayo claims that his decision to leave was based on the cumulative effect of the above incidents, which, Mayo claims, spanned a seventeen-month period. His physician told him that he was suffering from stress. He has experienced insomnia, prolonged indigestion, and hives brought on by stress. *345
Mayo claims that the trial court erred in not considering what the trial court defined as rumors and hearsay. In this case, the trial court was unclear exactly what testimony it considered to be rumors and hearsay. From our review of the record, we conclude that the trial court correctly did not consider rumors that Mayo should "watch his back" and that Wheeler and Rentschler were out to get him, spread by employees and based upon assumptions, as many of the comments were, because such rumors were inadmissible hearsay. Furthermore, the statements, allegedly made by Penwell and Kenwood's office manager, respectively, that Mayo would be gone and that he was on probation were also inadmissible hearsay. The statements were not vicarious admissions under Evid.R. 801(D)(2)(d), because they did not concern matters within the scope of the employment of the declarants. Idle speculation is not admissible evidence.
Contrary to the decision of the trial court, however, we conclude that Ronald Latchford's testimony of what he overheard Rentschler say is admissible as an admission by Kenwood under Evid.R. 801(D)(2)(d). Latchford, an exemployee of Kenwood's, testified that after Mayo's deposition testimony in the age-discrimination case, he overheard Rentschler, on several occasions while speaking to the bar manager, say that he wanted to get rid of Mayo by "stressing him out," overworking him, and getting him to resign. He heard Rentschler say that he wanted Mayo gone, but that it would be hard to fire him. He told Mayo of these conversations only after Mayo had resigned.
Rentschler was an agent of Kenwood and his statement concerned a matter within the scope of his agency and was made during the existence of his relationship with Kenwood.20 Rentschler was Mayo's supervisor and evaluated *346 his job performance. Rentschler made the statement to another manager in the club while employed as Kenwood's manager. Thus, this statement was admissible.
Considering Mayo's allegations in a light most favorable to him, we conclude that Kenwood did not create conditions so intolerable that a reasonable person under the circumstances would have felt compelled to quit or that termination was imminent. Many jobs are stressful. Day-to-day rumor and innuendo in the workplace are common. When a manager is on the "hot seat" because of losses, those under him or her often feel the transferred heat. But in this case, though Mayo has presented a genuine issue of fact about whether he was treated as we would all wish to be treated, the knocks and jolts of his workplace did not rise to the level of constructive termination.
Because Mayo has failed to demonstrate a genuine issue of material fact about whether he was constructively discharged, he is precluded from proving his claims of either constructive retaliatory discharge or dismissal in violation public policy.
In order to recover on a claim of emotional distress, a plaintiff must demonstrate that "(1) the defendant intended to cause emotional distress or knew or should have known that its conduct would result in serious emotional distress to the plaintiff; (2) defendant's conduct was outrageous and extreme and beyond *347 all possible bounds of decency and was such that it can be considered as utterly intolerable in a civilized community; (3) defendant's conduct was the proximate cause of plaintiffs psychic injury; and (4) plaintiffs emotional distress was serious and of such a nature that no reasonable person could be expected to endure it."21 Based on our review of the record as set forth above, we believe that Mayo has failed to raise a genuine issue of material fact as to whether Kenwood's conduct was outrageous, extreme, or intolerable.
Therefore, we overrule Mayo's third assignment of error, and, accordingly, we affirm the trial court's judgment in favor of Kenwood.
Judgment affirmed.
GORMAN, P.J., and SUNDERMANN, J., concur.