Plaintiff brought this action seeking compensatory and punitive damages for breach of his employment contract, wrongful discharge, violation of public policy, and malicious interference with contractual relations. Plaintiff alleges that his dismissal from his employment following an altercation with another employee was improper in that plaintiffs conduct was limited to his .exercising self-defense. Following a hearing on the defendants’ motion for summary judgment, the trial court granted summary judgment in their favor. Plaintiff appeals, and we affirm.
I
Defendant Barclays American Corporation (“Barclays”), d/b/a Barclays American Financial, operates a branch office in Statesville, North Carolina. Plaintiff, Leon McLaughlin, served as the manager *303 of that office until Barclays terminated his employment on 21 April 1987. At the time of his termination, Mr. McLaughlin had been employed with Barclays for some 14 years. For purposes of this appeal, we adopt Mr. McLaughlin’s account of the events that led to his dismissal.
On 16 April 1987, Mr. McLaughlin attempted to counsel another Barclays’ employee (“the subordinate”) about the latter’s work performance. During the session, the subordinate became argumentative, so much so that Mr. McLaughlin requested that he leave the room. The subordinate refused and continued to argue. Mr. McLaughlin then attempted to end the encounter by leaving the room himself. As he neared the door, the subordinate punched him in the chest. To defend himself, Mr. McLaughlin threw up his right hand; in so doing, he struck the subordinate on the side of the face. No further contact occurred between the two men, and no customer or other employee witnessed the encounter.
Mr. McLaughlin immediately telephoned Barclays’ central office in Charlotte and told defendant Robert Ballard, a vice president with Barclays, about the incident. Later that day, another representative from the central office told Mr. McLaughlin that Barclays was sending a person to Statesville to relieve him of his duties. Barclays conducted no formal investigation of the altercation, although it did call Mr. McLaughlin to Charlotte the following day. There, Mr. McLaughlin recounted his version of the incident to Mr. Ballard, to defendant W. T. Tyler, a senior vice president with Barclays, and to another Barclays’ representative. None of these three people took down his statement. Five days after the altercation, Mr. McLaughlin’s immediate superior, offering “no explanation,” informed Mr. McLaughlin that Barclays had decided to terminate his employment.
Prior to the 16 April altercation, Mr. McLaughlin had discussed the subordinate’s attitude and behavior with his (Mr. McLaughlin’s) superiors. On several occasions, he informed them that the subordinate was a disruptive presence in the branch office. On 15 September 1986, Mr. McLaughlin sent Mr. Ballard a memorandum alleging that the subordinate had made “threats of retaliation” if Mr. McLaughlin “attempted] to do anything about this problem.” Mr. McLaughlin ended the memorandum with a request for assistance.
*304 In February 1987, during an attempt by Mr. McLaughlin to counsel him, the subordinate threw a cup of coffee at Mr. McLaughlin, splashing him in the chest, face and eyes. Mr. McLaughlin immediately informed Mr. Tyler and Mr. Ballard about the incident, and he again requested assistance in dealing with the subordinate. Neither Mr. Tyler nor Mr. Ballard offered any assistance or advice. Mr. McLaughlin attempted to receive assistance from the central office again in March, but again he received no help.
After his termination, Mr. McLaughlin filed a complaint against Barclays alleging breach of contract, wrongful discharge, malicious interference with contractual relations, and violation of public policy. Following discovery, the trial judge granted the defendants’ motion for summary judgment, and Mr. McLaughlin appealed.
II
Summary judgment is appropriate when the pleadings, discovery documents, and affidavits demonstrate that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that a party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.
E.g., Frendlich v. Vaughan’s Foods of Henderson, Inc.,
A
Mr. McLaughlin contends that his discharge for acting in his own defense violates public policy. Essentially, he urges this court to recognize, as a public-policy exception to the employee-at-will doctrine, a cause of action for wrongful discharge when the termination results from the employee’s use of self-defense.
We note at the outset that Mr. McLaughlin arguably alleges in his complaint that his employment with Barclays was for some definite duration and was not at will. His arguments on appeal, *305 however, are predicated on his status as an at-will employee of Barclays. We do not discuss, consequently, his employment status as an issue in this case; were it at issue, we would hold that his employment with Barclays was at will.
Typically, a person without a definite term of employment is employed “at will” and may be discharged without reason.
Still v. Lance,
“Public policy” is a “vague expression” but has been defined as the principle of law holding that no citizen can lawfully do that which has a tendency to be injurious to the public or against the public good.
Petermann v. Int’l Bhd. of Teamsters,
In
Coman,
a case in which a truck driver was allegedly threatened with a substantial pay reduction for refusing to exceed federally-mandated operating hours, our Supreme Court looked to Federal and State statutes regulating interstate and intrastate motor carriers and to our State statutes regulating the public highways.
The two North Carolina cases which have used public-policy grounds to find exceptions to the at-will doctrine have involved allegations of the employee’s being affirmatively instructed to violate the law. In each case, our courts focused on the potential harm to the public at large if those instructions were obeyed. Similar public-policy implications are not present in Mr. McLaughlin’s case. We do not perceive the kind of deleterious consequences for the general public, if we uphold Barclays’ action, as might have resulted from decisions favorable to the employers in Sides and Coman.
Along with the compelling public-policy concerns in those cases, moreover, the holdings in
Sides
and
Coman
are consistent with the principle that our courts do not give their imprimatur to employers who discharge employees in bad faith.
See id.; Haskins v. Royster,
We emphasize that our analysis of these facts does not close doors to plaintiffs who are able to show bad faith by the employer in situations similar to this one. Nor are we unmindful that the at-will doctrine may work to place employees in catch-22 dilemmas of choosing between their physical defense and their continued employment. It might be true, moreover, that defendants in this case could legally have discharged Mr. McLaughlin had he made
no
effort to defend himself during the altercation. Mr. McLaughlin’s argument, therefore, that our public policy favors encouraging employees to defend themselves is not convincing. As our Supreme Court stated in
Coman,
the employee-at-will doctrine is a judicially-adopted rule, leaving it the appropriate province of the courts to interpret.
Justice Martin ended the
Coman
opinion by stressing that the Court had not- “turned a deaf ear to the warning that [the decision] may have spawned a deluge of spurious claims.”
B
Mr. McLaughlin also argues that defendants Tyler and Ballard maliciously interfered with his contract and that genuine issues of material fact remain concerning this allegation. He contends that Mr. Tyler and Mr. Ballard, as representatives of Barclays, *308 had a duty properly to investigate the altercation. Further, he argues that Tyler and Ballard failed to follow the course of progressive disciplinary action advocated by Barclays’ own employee policies. On these grounds, Mr. McLaughlin maintains that defendants Tyler and Ballard maliciously interfered with his contractual relationship with Barclays when they recommended his dismissal.
North Carolina recognizes a cause of action for malicious interference with contract in an employment-at-will context.
Smith v. Ford Motor Co.,
Although non-outsiders to an employment contract may be liable for interference with it, liability must rest upon “a reason [for the interference] unrelated to that legitimate business interest which is the source of defendant’s non-outsider status.”
Id.
at 87,
For interference with a contract to be
malicious,
moreover, “[plaintiff’s evidence must show that defendant had no
legal
justification for his action. . . .”
Murphy v. McIntyre,
Ill
We hold that summary judgment in favor of defendants was correctly entered in this case, and the judgment of the trial court is
Affirmed.
