Finn Mortensen (plaintiff) appeals an order granting summary judgment for Magneti Marelli U.S.A., Inc., f/d/b/a Weber U.S.A., Inc. (defendant).
In 1988 defendant advertised for a Product Manager in Remanufacturing in its Sanford, North Carolina plant. After an interview at defendant’s Sanford plant, plaintiff was offered the job by letter from defendant dated 17 January 1989. The letter stated in pertinent part: “I am very pleased to offer you the position of Project Manager-Remanufacturing .... This offer is contingent upon obtaining your visa. Your annual salary will be $56,000.” On or about 20 January 1989 plaintiff called defendant and accepted the offer and informed defendant that it would be “very easy” for him to get his labor certification and other necessary documents that would allow him to work permanently in the United States. On or about 27 January plaintiff notified his other employer, CAPCO, that he would be leaving that employment on 1 March 1989.
Although plaintiff was not able to secure his visa and other necessary documents by 1 March 1989, defendant employed plaintiff as a consultant pending plaintiff’s receipt of the required documents that would allow him to permanently work and live in the United States. Prior to obtaining the visa, plaintiff and his family, in 1989, bought a *488 house in Cary, North Carolina, and relocated to Cary. Although the permanent visa was obtained in October 1992, defendant informed the plaintiff that he would not be hired as a full-time employee until 1 January 1993. Defendant, however, later informed plaintiff that he would not be employed full time and his last day of part-time employment would be 31 May 1993.
Plaintiff’s complaint alleges that he has an “enforceable contract for employment” with the defendant and that defendant breached that contract. Defendant denied the allegations and moved for summary judgment on the grounds that the “relationship between the parties was terminable at will.”
The issue is whether the relationship between the plaintiff and the defendant was terminable-at-will.
The general rule is that an “employee without a definite term of employment is an employee at will and may be discharged without reason.”
Coman v. Thomas Mfg. Co.,
The plaintiff, while conceding that he was not terminated in violation of any statute or for an unlawful reason, argues that his at-will status was “converted into an enforceable . . . obligation” because he provided “consideration for the employment contract in addition to his mere rendering of the services contemplated by the employment agreement.” We disagree.
The providing of additional consideration by the employee does not convert every employment-at-will agreement into an enforceable contract. If, however, the employment agreement expressly or impliedly provides that the employment will be permanent, for life or terminable only for cause
and
the employee gives an independent valuable consideration other than his services for the position,
see Sides v. Duke University,
In this case we need not decide whether the plaintiffs relinquishment of his legal rights as a resident of Canada, his resignation from his former employment, and his relocation from Canada to North Carolina qualifies as additionál consideration.
See Humphrey v. Hill,
In so holding, we also reject plaintiffs argument that even if the defendant had the right to terminate the relationship after the employment began, it had no right to terminate that relationship prior to the first day of employment. The time of termination is immaterial when the relationship between the parties is within' the at-will doctrine. Thus the relationship was properly terminated prior to the day the plaintiff was to begin employment.
See Tatum v. Brown,
Affirmed.
