This appeal arises out of an action seeking compensatory damages for wrongful discharge and breach of an employment contract. Plaintiff was employed at Trendline Furniture Company (Trendline) as a traffic manager for their truck fleet. Defendant Cochrane Furniture Company, Inc. (Cochrane) acquired Trendline on 13 October 1989. On 1 January 1990, Cochrane consolidated their own truck fleet with that of Trendline. Plaintiff apparently became concerned about his job security as a result of the consolidation and looked for other employment in anticipation of being discharged by Cochrane. Plaintiff allegedly was offered employment with Pem-Kay Furniture Company (Pem-Kay) as a traffic manager in March of 1990. He contends that he turned down the offer with Pem-Kay based on an oral promise from defendant that he would have continued employment with Cochrane. Plaintiff was discharged from employment by defendant on 18 May 1990 and thereafter, filed a suit alleging wrongful discharge and breach of an employment contract based on the alleged oral promise. Defendant answered and moved for summary judgment. The trial court granted defendant’s motion based upon a finding that the plaintiff “at most, [had] an employment agreement for an indefinite term and that his foregoing another job offer [did] not come within the public policy or special consideration exceptions to the employment at will doctrine.” Plaintiff appealed.
By plaintiff-appellant’s sole assignment of error, he contends that the trial court erred in granting the defendant’s motion for summary judgment.
On a motion for summary judgment, the movant must show that based upon the pleadings, discovery documents and affidavits, there are no genuine issues of triable fact and that he is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. N.C. Gen. Stat. § 1A-1, Rule
*54
56;
Bolick v. Townsend Co.,
Defendant contends that the plaintiff at most had an employment contract for an indefinite term and thus was terminable at will. Plaintiff argues however, that he falls within two exceptions to the terminable at will doctrine: 1) the public policy exception; and 2) the additional consideration exception.
The well-settled rule in this state is that “in the absence of an employment contract for a definite period, both employer and employee are generally free to terminate their association at any time and without any reason,”
Salt v. Applied Analytical, Inc.,
This general rule has become subject to two specific and strictly defined exceptions. Our Supreme Court, in
Coman,
carved out a public policy exception to the employment at will doctrine for employees who have been wrongfully discharged for an unlawful reason or for a reason which offends the public good.
Plaintiff’s allegations of a public policy violation in the subject case are essentially based on the premise that Cochrane made a promise in bad faith to continue plaintiff’s employment, in order to comply with federal plant closing regulations. To date, our courts have refused to recognize an independent “bad-faith” exception to the employment at will doctrine.
Salt,
Plaintiff contends that even if his case does not fall within the public policy exception to the employment at will doctrine, it does meet the requirements of the “additional consideration” exception. He argues specifically, that his act of turning down the offer of employment from Pem-Kay based on defendant’s promise of continued employment, constituted special consideration in *56 addition to the usual obligation of service and thereby created a binding contract of employment.
The “additional consideration” exception to the employment at-will doctrine was established by this Court in
Sides v. Duke University,
Generally, employment contracts that attempt to provide for permanent employment, or “employment for life,” are terminable at will by either party. Where the employee gives some special consideration in addition to his services, such as relinquishing a claim for personal injuries against the employer, removing his residence from one place to another in order to accept employment, or assisting in breaking a strike, such a contract may be enforced.
Id.
at 345,
Thus, while plaintiff may have received a contract for permanent employment, where there is no “additional expression as to duration, a contract for permanent employment implies an indefinite general hiring, terminable at will.”
Humphrey v. Hill,
55 N.C. App.
*57
359, 362,
[t]hough the giving up of present or future jobs may be a detriment to the employee, it is also an incident necessary to place him in a position to accept and perform the contract. The abandonment of other activities and interest is “a thing almost every desirable servant does upon entering a new service, but which, of course, cannot be regarded as constituting any additional consideration to the master.”
Humphrey,
In the subject case, plaintiff contends that upon seeking assurances of job security, he was told by a supervisor with defendant’s company that he would have a job with defendant for “as long as [he] want[ed] it and as long as [his] job performance [was] adequate.” Plaintiff admits however that he was not given a specific date of termination, but “assumed” that he could work for defendant “indefinitely.”
These assurances may provide an offer for permanent employment, but provide no specific terms or conditions. As in Buffaloe, this defendant provided nothing more than a gratuitous promise of continued employment. Moreover, as in Salt, plaintiff can show no more than an offer of employment for an undetermined time. Plaintiff’s failure to accept a tentative offer of employment elsewhere in return for defendant’s gratuitous offer of continued employment for an indefinite period was therefore not sufficient additional con *58 sideration to create an enforceable and binding contract and remove this case from the employment at will doctrine.
The trial court’s order of dismissal is therefore
Affirmed.
