Richard Delloma was the Superintendent of Consolidation Coal Company’s Burning Star # 4 Mine in southern Illinois from 1982 until he was fired in January of 1985. Among his duties at the mine, Delloma determined whether an employee’s absence from work would be recorded as excused or unexcused. While acting as the Superintendent, Delloma engaged approximately one-third of the female employees he supervised at the mine in dating or other social relationships. One of those women, Sharon Snider, filed a lawsuit against Delloma and Consolidation Coal, alleging sexual harassment under Title VII and several tort claims including assault, battery, and intentional infliction of emotional distress. Among many allegations of un *170 wanted sexual advances, Snider claimed that Delloma conditioned approval of her absences as excused on her agreement to have sex with him. The jury found for the defendants on the common law claims, but the district court ruled in Snider’s favor on the Title VII claim against Consolidation Coal.
Meanwhile, Delloma attempted to find other employment in the mining industry. In the summer or fall of 1986, he spoke to Eugene Samples, the President and Chief Operating Officer for Arch Minerals and an old family friend. After a short interview, Delloma was convinced that he had a job. He met with Terry Sullivan, President of Arch Minerals of Illinois, as Samples directed. Within a week or two, Samples spoke on the telephone to Bobby Brown, President and Chief Operating Officer of Consolidation Coal. Samples asked why Delloma had been discharged and Brown responded to the effect that “[tjhere were some record-keeping irregularities that may have been involved.” On the basis of Brown’s statement, Samples lost his favorable impression of Delloma. Sullivan, who may or may not have 'heard Brown’s remark from Samples, did his own reference check on Delloma in the local coal mining community and, advised that Delloma was a “womanizer” and “boozehound,” decided not to hire him. Delloma did not contact or hear from Samples again until the Snider jury verdict in 1989. Then he wrote Samples a letter stating that he had been exonerated, and Samples wrote a pleasant but noncommittal letter back to him.
Disgruntled by the turn of events and perhaps buoyed by the jury verdict in his favor, Delloma sued Snider, Brown, and Consolidation Coal. Subsequently part of the complaint was dismissed, leaving only claims of intentional interference with a prospective contractual relationship against Brown and Consolidation. The district court granted both defendants’ motion for summary judgment. Delloma appeals.
We review de novo the district court’s grant of summary judgment, drawing all reasonable inferences for the nonmovant.
Russo v. Health, Welfare & Pension Fund,
The issue presented for review by Delloma is whether the trial court erred in requiring him to show actual malice by the defendants if the defendants’ actions were not privileged. Relying on an incorrect list of the elements of the tort provided and argued by both the plaintiff and the defendants, the district court granted summary judgment based on Delloma’s inability to show malice. In Illinois, a plaintiff claiming tortious interference with a prospective economic relationship must allege malice only if the defendants’ actions were privileged.
Fellhauer v. City of Geneva,
The elements of tortious interference with a prospective economic advantage or a prospective contractual relationship are:
*171
1) the plaintiffs reasonable expectation of entering into a valid business relationship; 2) the defendant’s knowledge of the plaintiffs expectancy; 3) purposeful interference by the defendant that prevents the plaintiffs legitimate expectancy from being fulfilled; and 4) damages to the plaintiff resulting from the defendant’s interference.
Fellhauer,
Privilege exists if the defendant acted in good faith to protect an interest or uphold a duty. Also the defendant’s statement must be limited in scope to that purpose, and must be made on a proper occasion, in a proper manner and to proper parties only.
Mittelman v. Witous,
An employer owes no apparent legal duty to any other employer. Brown had no legal obligation to respond to Samples. Illinois courts, however, have recognized some interest of former employers in disclosing limited information to prospective employers.
See, e.g., Roemer v. Zurich Insurance Co.,
The Illinois courts have not interpreted the existence of a duty or interest narrowly.
See Miller v. Danville Elks Lodge 332, B.P.O.E.,
Once a privilege is established, the plaintiff must prove that the defendant acted with malice. The defendant may abuse the privilege, by making unjustified statements, by excessive publication of statements, or by making statements in conflict with the interest which gave rise to the privilege. If the defendant knew the statements were false, he would be unjustified in making them. In a defamation context the plaintiff must prove that “the statement in question was made with knowledge of its falsity or in reckless disregard of whether it was false or not.”
Mittelman,
Neither the tort of intentional interference with a prospective contractual relation nor the conditional privilege explicitly address the relevance of truthfulness by the interferer. Frequently, the cases depend on statements alleged to be false or defamatory.
See, e.g., Fellhauer,
At oral argument, the plaintiff conceded that if Brown had made true statements in response to Samples’ inquiry, he would have no case. Delloma has never argued that true statements by a former employer to a prospective employer are actionable. From the filing of his complaint through the argument in this appeal, he has proceeded on the theo *173 ry that Brown made a false and slanderous statement. Certainly for a defendant with a conditional privilege, truthful statements in response to a direct inquiry are not an abuse of the privilege. Therefore, if Brown’s statement was true, we will affirm the summary judgment.
In the sexual harassment lawsuit by Snider, which led to Delloma’s termination, defendants prevailed on the common law claims, but the district court found Title VII violations. We recently affirmed.
Snider v. Consolidation Coal Co.,
The evidence Delloma did present on the subject is inconclusive as to record irregularities. In Delloma’s response to defendants’ motion for summary judgment, he attached a copy of the Consolidation Coal Company record terminating his employment. The reason for termination is described as “sexual harrassment and unacceptable relations with employees who worked directly for him.” R. 43. Also attached are excerpts from the deposition of a Consolidation employee, Philip Nicholson. He stated that his investigation “revealed no sex harassment.” R. 43, Nicholson Dep. p. 58. When questioned about the employee records, Nicholson said that he did not remember seeing any irregularities. R. 43, N.Dep. p. 58. Later, when pressed about “irregularities”, Nicholson added, “She had some excused days, as I recall it.” R. 43, N.Dep. p. 96. Nicholson never affirmatively stated that there were no record-keeping irregularities. He does, however, confirm Delloma’s use of his discretionary authority as a supervisor to grant excused absences to 1 Sharon Snider, who worked for him and with whom he was having a sexual relationship. R. 43, N.Dep. p. 95. Indeed, Delloma himself admits changing Snider’s records. R. 43, Delloma Dep. pp. 127, 129, 131. Delloma also presented evidence to the district court that supports Brown’s lack of knowledge of any investigation results. Nicholson specifically named the individuals with whom he communicated the results of his investigation, neither of whom was Bobby Brown. R. 43, N.Dep. p. 36. There is no evidence in the record that Brown heard or read that the company found no improper record changes.
Delloma’s alteration of records as part of his sexual harassment of Snider has been established, based upon the Snider trial court’s Title VII factual findings and our affirmance of them. For the purposes of related litigation, the issue is settled: Dello-ma granted excused absences on the basis of conduct determined by the trial court in Snider to be sexual harassment. We decline to revisit the matter. Brown’s statement to Samples is, therefore, not false, as the plaintiff argues. Brown allegedly said, in response to Samples’ question about Delloma’s discharge, “There were some record-keeping irregularities that may have been involved.” That statement is supported by Snider’s allegations of sex-related record keeping, Consolidation’s termination record listing sexual harassment and inappropriate sexual relationships as the reason for firing Delloma, the Snider trial judge’s factual finding that Delloma changed Snider’s records according to her compliance with his demands for sex, and our affirmance of the Title VII ruling. It is a fair statement that Delloma’s termination involved some record-keeping irregularities. Delloma was terminated for sexual harassment (or at least allegations of it) and improper relationships with female employees who worked directly for him. Part of the impropriety stems from Delloma’s discretion *174 ary authority over the female employees’ records. His relationships compromised his, and therefore the company’s, objectivity concerning appropriate reasons to grant excused absences. It follows that record-keeping irregularities were involved in the decision to fire him, even discounting Consolidation’s sexual harassment reason and solely relying on the improper relationships reason.
Because Brown gave a truthful response to Samples’ direct inquiry, he did not unjustifiably interfere with Delloma’s expectancy. Therefore, summary judgment was properly granted to the defendants.
Affirmed.
Notes
. On appeal, Delloma argues for the first time that the defendants should be precluded from asserting conditional privilege because they failed to offer it as an affirmative defense in their answer. In the district court, Delloma responded to the defendants’ claim of privilege and did not argue waiver. He has waived the claim that defendants cannot use privilege as an affirmative defense.
See Russo,
. We note that the plaintiff’s argument based on the Illinois statute restricting employers from divulging disciplinary actions to third parties was not raised in the district court and, thus, has been waived. We will consider it, however, in examining Illinois policy toward statements by former employers.
. There is evidence of a trend away from permitting employers to make negative statements to third parties about former employees. An Illinois statute that concerns an employer’s disclosure of disciplinary actions requires written notice to the employee at the time of the disclosure, unless the employee has specifically waived written notice or the disclosure is ordered by a court or government agency. Ill.Rev.Stat. ch. 48 ¶ 2007 (1991). In order to make sense, the statute must intend to prohibit disclosure of actual disciplinary actions, meaning true statements by employers. Unfortunately, no Illinois court has yet had an opportunity to apply this rule to a case. The statute does add credence to the view that former employers may not make even true unfavorable statements about employees, beyond expressing an opinion. See, e.g., Roemer, 323 N.E.2d at 587 (former supervisor may say "I would not want him working for me.”). Still, without guidance from the Illinois courts on the applicability of this statute to tortious interference claims, we will follow the generally accepted rule that employers may hold a limited privilege.
. The plaintiff noted in his brief that Consolidation appealed the district court’s ruling in the Snider suit and that it cannot have the case interpreted both ways. That is true as far as it goes. Our affirmance in Snider notified both parties which way Consolidation could have it, which hurt it in Snider and helps it in this case.
