ORDER
This matter is before the court on defendant Lincoln National Corporation’s motion to dismiss Count III of plaintiff’s com *984 plaint, filed on June 16, 1986. Count III is a pendent state law claim for retaliatory discharge. Plaintiff filed a response to the motion on July 17, 1986. A reply brief was filed on August 22, 1986. For the reasons set forth below defendant’s motion is granted.
Facts
Plaintiff Juanita E. Reeder-Baker (plaintiff) filed a complaint on January 10, 1986, seeking declaratory, injunctive, compensatory, and other relief for alleged violations of Title VII, 42 U.S.C. § 2000e, et seq.; 42 U.S.C. § 1981; and Indiana common law. Plaintiff is a former employee of Lincoln National Corporation. On February 12, 1985 plaintiff filed a charge with the Fort Wayne Metropolitan Human Relations Commission and the United States Equal Employment Opportunity Commission alleging race and color discrimination. Plaintiff was fired on August 22, 1985. Count III alleges that this firing was in retaliation for the charges she filed. Defendant argues that a recent clarification of Indiana law, regarding retaliatory discharge claims brought by at will employees, mandates dismissal of Count III.
Decision
In deciding a motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim, this court must take the well pleaded factual allegations of plaintiff’s complaint as true.
Ashbrook v. Hoffman,
In Indiana an at will employee may be terminated at any time for any reason.
Hamblen v. Danners, Inc.,
In
Frampton,
the plaintiff brought a damage action against her employer alleging that she was retaliatorily discharged for asserting a claim for workmen’s compensation benefits.
Id.
We agree with the Court of Appeals that, under ordinary circumstances, an employee at-will may be discharged without cause. However, when an employee is discharged for exercising a statutorily conferred right an exception to the general rule must be recognized.
Id. (emphasis added). Plaintiff argues that she was discharged for filing a discrimination claim (a statutorily conferred right — 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-5(b)), thus invoking the Frampton exception.
In a recent Indiana Supreme Court case the
Frampton
exception was examined in the context of a claim of retaliatory discharge brought by a serviceman, whose services were terminated after he filed a small claims action demanding payment for
*985
past work.
Morgan Drive Away, Inc. v. Brant,
The employment at will doctrine has steadfastly been recognized and enforced as the public policy of this state. See, discussion in Campbell, [v. Eli Lilly and Co.,], supra, 413 N.E.2d [1054] at 1060 [1980]. Revision or' rejection of the doctrine is better left to the legislature. We therefore decline this opportunity to extend Frampton to the facts of the instant case.
Id.
The court’s only apparent reason for its refusal to “extend
Frampton
” was the reluctance on the part of Indiana’s appellate courts (see
Martin v. Platt,
Plaintiff argues, however, that Brant is distinguishable from this case because Brant’s claim for retaliatory discharge was not supported by a statutory provision specifically prohibiting retaliatory discharge. But Brant cannot be distinguished on that basis alone. To distinguish it solely on that basis would completely ignore the court’s recognition that retaliation discharge actions have not been recognized in cases that do not involve workmen’s compensation. If the Indiana Supreme Court had denied Brant’s claim solely because the statute he sued under, I.C. 22-2-4-4, did not prohibit retaliatory discharge, there would have been no reason to recognize the reluctance of appellate courts to extend the Frampton exception to cases not involving workmen’s compensation. Furthermore, extending the Frampton exception to this case simply because the plaintiff was allegedly fired for exercising a statutorily conferred right would ignore the focus of the Indiana Supreme Court’s holding in Frampton.
The focus in
Frampton
was the difficult position employees were put in by the threat of being fired for filing a claim for workmen’s compensation. The court noted that because of the fear of discharge employees “ ... will not file claims for justly deserved compensation — opting, instead, to continue their employment without incident.”
Frampton,
In
Lamb v. Briggs Mfg., A Div. of Celotex Corp.,
Throughout her brief plaintiff quotes extensively from
Moffett v. Gene B. Glick Co., Inc.,
It is well settled that federal courts exercising pendent jurisdiction over a state claim must apply the law as that law would be applied by the state’s highest court.
United Mine Workers v. Gibbs,
It is not entirely clear whether the Brant case limits the Frampton exception to cases involving workmen’s compensation, or whether it merely recognizes that the exception may not be recognized in some cases, even when the plaintiff is allegedly fired for exercising a statutorily conferred right. Either way Count III must fail. This case does not involve workmen’s compensation. Beyond that the plaintiff has remedies to challenge her discharge apart from her pendent state claim, thus obviating the need for the Frampton exception.
Accordingly, Count III of plaintiff’s complaint is hereby DISMISSED.
