We consider first on direct appellate review whether the evidence warranted a finding that the defendant, Stop & Shop, discharged the plaintiff Mello, an employee at will, in violation of a principle of public policy for which the law should impose liability for wrongful discharge. We conclude that the evidence did not warrant a finding that Mello was discharged in violation of such a public policy principle. Consequently, the trial judge, who has reported the propriety of his ruling for appellate consideration, erroneously denied Stop & Shop’s motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict on Mello’s claim of wrongful discharge.
We also consider Mello’s claim that Stop & Shop intentionally caused Mello emotional distress by its treatment of him following his discharge. We conclude that the judge, who has also reported the correctness of his ruling on this issue, committed no reversible error in ordering a directed verdict for Stop & Shop on Mello’s count alleging the intentional infliction of emotional distress.
1. Opinions around the country in recent years often have favored permitting at-will employees to recover for terminations made in violation of particular public policies. See
DeRose
v.
Putnam Management Co.,
A basis for a common law rule of liability can easily be found when the Legislature has expressed a policy position concerning the rights of employees and an employer discharges an at-will employee in violation of that established policy, unless no common law rule is needed because the Legislature has also prescribed a statutory remedy.
2
If the employer discharges an at-will employee for refusal to commit an unlawful
We turn to a consideration of the evidence most favorable to Mello. Mello started working for the Bradlees division of Stop & Shop in 1973 as a department manager in a store on Cape Cod. In 1974 he became assistant store manager of a Bradlees store in Brockton. Later he became assistant to the market manager for a district of ten stores. Mello was a good worker who put in long hours, received various raises, and was regarded as a valued employee.
In the latter part of 1979, Mello learned that buyers for Bradlees were receiving rebate checks, some payable to them personally. He told his superiors about the checks and was told to stay away from the subject. It would be speculative to infer that any unlawful conduct was involved in the practice Mello questioned.
3
About the same time, Mello learned that managers of several stores were making false damage and shortage claims against Bradlees’ warehouse and against manufacturers and suppliers. Such claims involved untruthful assertions that merchandise had been delivered to a store in a defective condition or had not been delivered at all. Mello told his
Shortly after these incidents, Mello was given certain samples of merchandise to deliver to Bradlees’ Fall River store. Mello delivered most of the samples but, as he testified, he kept certain items for himself and others. Stop & Shop investigated the incident, accused Mello of violating company policy, and, after several meetings with Bradlees personal, discharged Mello on December 20, 1979. Only after his discharge did Mello raise the charge that Stop & Shop was seeking to get rid of him to “cover up” the illegal activities he had discovered. We are not dealing here, therefore, with a case in which the employer discharged an employee because the employee threatened to report the employer’s criminal conduct to the authorities, nor are we concerned here with a case in which the employee was discharged because he agreed to testify against a fellow employee and to cooperate with law enforcement authorities (see
Palmateer
v.
International Harvester Co.,
Mello’s claim here is that the real reason for his discharge was that he complained to his superiors about false damage and false shortage claims made by store managers. We agree that the jury could properly have found that the reason Stop & Shop gave for Mello’s discharge was not the real reason for his discharge. Among the various possible “real” reasons for Mello’s discharge as to which there was evidence, only the claim on which he now relies (his “whistleblowing”) conceivably involved a violation of some public policy warranting Stop & Shop’s liability. 6
We need not decide whether a discharge for whistleblowing concerning false claims against manufacturers and suppliers violates a public policy warranting Stop & Shop’s liability, because the evidence would not permit a finding that Stop & Shop discharged Mello because of his complaints about false claims against manufacturers and suppliers. Some false claims about which Mello complained were made against Bradlees’ warehouse, not against manufacturers and outside suppliers. These claims within the company concern internal matters. No well defined public policy principle would have been violated
2. There remains for consideration Mello’s claim of intentional infliction of emotional distress based on Stop & Shop’s treatment of him after he had ceased to work for Stop & Shop and had moved to Virginia. The judge charged the jury that Mello had the burden of proving “that Stop & Shop intended to inflict emotional distress or that Stop & Shop knew or should have known that emotional distress was the likely result of its conduct.” This instruction was consistent with our cases. See
Nancy P.
v.
D’Amato,
In answer to a question, the jury stated that Stop & Shop did not intentionally inflict emotional distress on Mello. At the same time, however, they returned a verdict for Mello on his count for infliction of emotional distress. The judge announced that the answer to the question and the verdict were inconsistent. He polled the jury after he told them that their
The judge was correct, however, in ordering a directed verdict on the emotional distress count for another reason. The evidence did not warrant a finding that Stop & Shop’s conduct was extreme in degree and outrageous in character within the standard set by our cases. See
Foley
v.
Polaroid Corp.,
On the day he was discharged, a Stop & Shop representative told Mello that Stop & Shop would set him up in new employment. Mello ultimately accepted an offer from Stop & Shop to serve as a sales representative for various manufacturers who sold merchandise to Bradlees stores in Virginia. Stop & Shop buyers then arranged for Mello to be named sales representative for several companies. Mello sold his house in Massachusetts, moved to Virginia in late February, 1980, and started work as an independent sales representative on commission. Several months later Mello began to lose accounts because, as he testified, Bradlees employees were forcing the accounts away from him. By December, 1980, Mello had lost all accounts with Bradlees stores and had no income. Mello and his wife separated, and Mello was subsequently hospitalized for emotional problems.
Mello did not present a jury issue on his claim of the intentional infliction of emotional distress. There was no evidence that Stop & Shop engaged in extreme and outrageous conduct, conduct “so outrageous in character, and so extreme in degree, as to go beyond all possible bounds of decency, and to be regarded as atrocious, and utterly intolerable in a civilized
Although we do not agree with the reason for which the judge allowed Stop & Shop’s motion for a directed verdict on Mello’s emotional distress count, the motion was rightly allowed because there was no jury issue on the claim.
3. The case is remanded for the entry of judgment for the defendant on all counts.
So ordered.
Notes
In a separate line of cases, commencing with
Fortune
v.
National Cash Register Co.,
See, e.g., G. L. c. 149, § 19B (1986 ed.), making it unlawful for an employer to discharge an employee for not taking a lie detector test and also providing a civil remedy; G. L. c. 149, § 6D (1986 ed.), providing that no employer shall penalize an employee for filing a complaint or giving notice in regard to occupational health and safety of employees engaged in using asbestos; G. L. c. 149, § 52A (1986 ed.), providing job security to an employee who takes annual training in the military reserve and giving the employee the right to sue the employer for a violation of rights; G. L. c. 149, § 148A (1986 ed.), providing that no employee shall be penalized for seeking rights under the wage and hour provisions of G. L. c. 149; G. L. c. 152, § 75B (1986 ed.), providing that no employee shall be discharged for exercising a right afforded by the workers’ compensation statute and defining the remedy; G. L. c. 268, § 14A (1986 ed.), stating that no person shall be discharged for performing jury duty. See also
Federici
v.
Mansfield Credit Union,
Mello does not argue here that he was discharged for reporting-to his superiors that certain buyers were receiving rebate checks from suppliers. A discharge for reporting such activities would not violate public policy. Even if Mello’s claims were true in this respect, Mello did not assert that the buyers’ conduct was illegal. There is no evidence or claim that the buyers were keeping the rebated funds for themselves or that the rebates were unlawful. In fact, there is evidence that such funds were made available to various stores and that Mello sought the benefit of such funds for stores with which he was associated. Any wrong-doing by buyers with regard to rebate checks was internal to Stop & Shop as far as appears on the record.
Where the at-will employee himself would have been subject to the risk of criminal charges for the illegal conduct of the employer, courts have been particularly sympathetic to allowing an employee discharged for not going along with his employer to maintain an action for wrongful discharge. See, e.g.,
Tameny
v.
Atlantic Richfield Co.,
Further relations between Stop & Shop and Mello are not important to the issue of the adequacy of the evidence on the count claiming unlawful discharge of an at-will employee. Later events will be discussed in connection with our consideration of Mello’s separate claim of intentional infliction of emotional distress.
We assume in our analysis of this aspect of the case that an at-will employee who “blew the whistle” within his company on wrongdoing is entitled to protection (even though before discharge he did not complain to public authorities). We shall further assume that whistleblowing based on a reasonable, good faith (but erroneous) belief that the employer is violating the law should be protected in particular instances.
Michigan has a Whistleblowers’ Protection Act (Mich. Comp. Laws Ann. §§ 15.361 et seq. [1981]) which protects a whistleblowing employee who resports a violation or suspected violation of law “to a public body, unless the employee knows that the report is false.” Mich. Comp. Laws Ann. § 15.362 (1981). For a summary of other whistleblower legislation, see W.J. Holloway & M.J. Leech, Employment Termination Rights and Remedies 292-296 (1985).
It is not necessary for us to consider various matters which would become important if the case had properly been one for the jury. For guidance to trial judges, we do comment, however, on the judge’s jury instructions on the wrongful discharge count. There was no reason to instmct the jury about good faith and fair dealing (see n. 1 above) because Mello’s claim was based solely on an asserted violation of public policy. It is not for the jury to define the public policy. The judge must determine whether, on the evidence, there is a basis for finding that a well-defined, important public policy has been violated. If there is such a basis, the judge must advise the jury what that public policy is and that, if they find that the employer discharged the employee for particular conduct that is protected by that public policy, they would be warranted in returning a verdict for the employee.
He has only argued that the judge erred in treating as inconsistent the jury verdict on this count and the jury’s answer to a question, a point we have discussed earlier in this section of this opinion.
