114 A.D.2d 6 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1986
OPINION OF THE COURT
At issue is the sufficiency of a complaint alleging wrongful discharge, and for which recovery is sought both in tort and contract.
Hired by defendant Sterling Drug, Inc., in 1972 without a written contract of employment, plaintiff, a director of financial projects, was discharged effective December 31, 1984, in the aftermath of the June 1983 dissolution of Sterling’s Greek manufacturing facility, the liquidation of which plaintiff had been administering. He was recalled to New York in February 1984 and was notified of his discharge in July 1984 when no job within Sterling or any of its subsidiaries could be found for him. Plaintiff claims that Sterling’s reasons for discharging him are pretextual and that his employment was terminated solely because he refused to participate in "tax avoidance schemes” and the maintenance of "slush funds”, and "blew the whistle” on these illegal activities. His complaint alleges four contract and three tort causes of action, all based on his wrongful discharge.
Sterling did not answer, but moved instead, pursuant to CPLR 3211 (a) (7) to dismiss the complaint on the ground that none of the seven causes of action stated a cognizable claim. Special Term dismissed the tort actions but denied the
In his first cause of action, plaintiff alleges that a statement in Sterling’s corporate personnel policy manual constitutes a contractual commitment not to discharge him except for cause, unsatisfactory performance, permanent separation, i.e., elimination of a function or partial or full location closing, lack of work, resignation, retirement or death. Plaintiff claims that, as a manager, he "understood that those were the only reasons to terminate an employee”, and that in reliance "on this assurance of job security” he discouraged "inquiries from other prospective employers.” Citing Weiner v McGraw-Hill, Inc. (57 NY2d 458) and distinguishing Murphy v American Home Prods. Corp. (58 NY2d 293), Special Term held that "plaintiff can rest upon Sterling’s Corporate Policy handbook containing an express limitation” on its right to terminate an at-will employment.
In our view, Special Term erred in its reliance on Weiner (supra). It is still the law of this State that unless an employment is for a definite period of time the hiring is presumed to be at will. (Martin v New York Life Ins. Co., 148 NY 117, 121; Watson v Gugino, 204 NY 535; Edwards v Citibank, N. A., 100 Misc 2d 59, affd 74 AD2d 553, appeal dismissed 51 NY2d 875.) "[Ajbsent a constitutionally impermissible purpose, a statutory proscription, or an express limitation in the individual contract of employment, an employer’s right at any time to terminate an employment at will remains unimpaired.” (Murphy v American Home Prods. Corp., 58 NY2d, at p 305.) As the Court of Appeals made clear in Murphy, the Weiner exception to the general rule that termination of an at-will employment cannot give rise to a cause of action for breach of contract requires, inter alia, and at the very least, "an express limitation on the employer’s right of discharge” (supra, at p 305). The requirement that there be an express limitation on the employer’s right to terminate an at-will employment for the Weiner exception to apply has been recently restated in O’Con-nor v Eastman Kodak Co. (65 NY2d 724 [plaintiffs reliance upon the popular perception of Kodak as a "womb to tomb”
Here, it is clear that the personnel manual’s termination statement, a seven-page document categorizing the different kinds of terminations and reciting the severance benefits to which an employee so terminated is entitled, does not contain any express limitation on Sterling’s right to terminate an at-will employment. Nowhere does the manual limit the reasons for which an employee may be terminated to those listed in the termination section. Indeed, as Sterling’s corporate director of personnel noted, Sterling employees have been dismissed for many reasons not encompassed by the termination statement, including obsolescence of technical skills, personality conflicts and office politics. Notably, the statement includes numerous reasons for discharge other than just cause, and Sterling claims that plaintiff’s discharge was for one of the stated reasons. Nothing in Weiner (supra) supports the proposition that every statement in a personnel manual regarding termination constitutes a contractual commitment. Only an express commitment, not present here, that the employee will not be terminated in the absence of just cause is within its purview.
We also note that the record discloses uncontroverted evidence that the termination statement was set forth in a manual of highly restricted circulation; that plaintiff, who was neither a high company official nor a personnel administrator, was not among those to whom the manual was distributed; that the language relied upon was not in existence before 1979, and that the termination policy appears only in the Corporate Employee Relations Manual. Less than 50 copies of the manual were circulated prior to 1979. Of the 231 copies now in circulation, only nine have been distributed to plaintiff’s division, which has 12,000 employees worldwide. Thus, plaintiff cannot show inducement. In fact, it is not even alleged, although reliance is. This court has held, however, that not even an employee’s commitment to relocate and his subsequent move with his family from New York City to Connecticut constitutes a sufficient predicate upon which to base an agreement not to terminate an at-will employment. (See, Hager v Union Carbide Corp., 106 AD2d 348.) Since this important criterion of the Weiner rationale is not present and
The remaining contract causes of action allege that plaintiff was fired because he refused to violate corporate financial policies and foreign and domestic tax law (second); because, as required by applicable corporate policies, he reported the alleged violations to high-echelon Sterling officials (fourth); and, because he revealed, as required by Sterling policies, that certain officials were maintaining an illegal "slush fund” (sixth). Citing the provision in plaintiffs employment contract in which he agreed, if employed, to abide by Sterling’s rules and regulations, Special Term sustained all three causes of action with the comment, "[ujnder the principles of Murphy and Weiner, if the employee is bound by these rules, so is the employer, and allegations of breach will sustain a cause of action based upon mutuality of promise.” Aside from the fact that the Court of Appeals expressly rejected the lack of mutuality argument advanced in Weiner (57 NY2d, at pp 463-464), the claim asserted in the second, fourth and sixth causes of action is identical to that urged by the plaintiff in Murphy, who, alleging, inter alia, that he was dismissed in retaliation for his disclosure of illegal accounting manipulations, contended "that the company’s internal regulations required him to make the disclosure that he did” (58 NY2d, at p 298). Although styled "good faith and fair dealing”, the cause of action asserted there was identical to that alleged by plaintiff here, namely, that the retaliatory discharge of an employee for having disclosed accounting improprieties, as required by the employer’s own financial policies, constituted a breach of a contractual commitment not to discharge an employee for observing company policy. The Court of Appeals rejected this argument:
"[I]n the case now before us, plaintiffs employment was at will, a relationship in which the law accords the employer an unfettered right to terminate the employment at any time. In the context of such an employment it would be incongruous to say that an inference may be drawn that the employer impliedly agreed to a provision which would be destructive of his right of termination. The parties may by express agreement limit or restrict the employer’s right of discharge, but to imply such a limitation from the existence of an unrestricted right would be internally inconsistent * * *
Unfortunately for plaintiff, there is no express provision limiting Sterling’s right to discharge its employees, either in the corporate policies cited by plaintiff regarding ethical financial conduct and the reporting of infractions, or in the language of his employment application regarding the employee’s adherence to company rules and regulations. The absence of any express limitation on Sterling’s discharge rights in any of its company policies should thus have compelled dismissal of the second, fourth and sixth causes of action.
Special Term properly dismissed the tort causes of action alleging a common-law right not to be discharged in retaliation for refusing to violate domestic and foreign tax laws (third), for disclosing such violations by Sterling’s employees (fifth), or for reporting other employee misconduct of an unlawful nature (seventh). These allegations are virtually indistinguishable in substance from those in Murphy, where the plaintiff claimed "that his firing was in retaliation for his revelation to officers and directors of defendant corporation that he had uncovered at least $50 million in illegal account manipulations of secret pension reserves * * * as well as in retaliation for his own refusal to engage in the alleged accounting improprieties” (58 NY2d, at p 298). It was there held (at p 297): "This court has not and does not now recognize a cause of action in tort for abusive or wrongful discharge”.
Accordingly, the order, Supreme Court, New York County (Richard W. Wallach, J.), entered October 23, 1984, which, inter alia, denied defendant’s motion to dismiss the first, second, fourth and sixth causes of action, should be modified, on the law, to dismiss said causes of action, and, except as thus modified, affirmed, without costs and disbursements.
Sandler, J. P., Ross and Kassal, JJ., concur with Sullivan, J.; Ellerin, J., concurs on constraint of Murphy v American Home Prods. Corp. (58 NY2d 293).
Order, Supreme Court, New York County, entered on October 23, 1984, unanimously modified, on the law, to dismiss the first, second, fourth and sixth causes of action, and, except as thus modified, affirmed, without cost and without disbursements.