The district court for the Northern District of Mississippi granted defendant Walgreen Co.’s motion for summary judgment against plaintiff Sandra Judith “Sandy” Si-mons Solomon (Solomon) in her action for the alleged breach of an employment contract. Finding that no genuine issue of material fact exists from which a jury could determine that Walgreens was in breach of contract with Solomon, we affirm.
I.
On August 26, 1985, Solomon applied for and accepted the job of liquor department manager at the Walgreens store located in Hoffman Estates, Illinois. In 1988 she learned of Walgreens’ plans to open a store in Antioch, Illinois, and requested a transfer to Antioch, which she received. In May of 1989, Solomon changed stores again, and went to work at the Walgreеns in Fox Lake, Illinois.
Sometime in February of 1990, Solomon approached Roy Grauer, her district manager, and informed him that she was in the process of obtaining a divorce and desired to move to Tupelo so she could be near her adult daughter. Upon learning that a Memphis Walgreens store had a liquor department but that the Tupelo location did not, Grauеr asked Solomon if she would consider working in Memphis instead. Solomon refused, stating that Memphis was too far away from her daughter. Grauer then contacted Mike Earnest, manager of the Tupelo Walgreens, who informed Grauer that hours were currently available at the Tupelo store. Grauer initiated no further steps regarding the possibility of Solomon’s employment in Tupelo. Solomon acknowledged that Tupelo was not within Grauer’s district, and that he had no authority to move Solomon to the Tupelo store himself.
In March of 1990, Solomon again approached Grauer, requesting him to prepare a letter which she could give to the judge presiding over her divorce action to verify that she would be able to retаin her health insurance on her minor children upon her move to Mississippi. As an accommodation to Solomon, Grauer prepared a letter addressed “To Whom It May Concern,” stating that “Sandy Simons has been guaranteed 30 hours of employment at the Walgreen Drug Store located at 423 S. Gloster Street, Tupelo, Mississippi. This will enable Sandy to maintain her health insurаnce with Walgreen.” Earnest wrote a similar letter stating that “We will be able to guarantee the employee 35 to 40 hours so she can keep her major medical.”
In mid-April, Solomon was in Tupelo for her daughter’s wedding and dropped in unexpectedly at the Walgreens store. She introduced herself to Earnest who told her to come and see him when she got down tо Mississippi. Solomon did not tell Earnest when she anticipated moving to Tupelo, and there was no discussion of any employment positions, hours, schedule, or rate of pay. Upon ascertaining the date of her move, she made no effort to contact Earnest to inform him of her anticipated arrival date. On June 28, 1990, Solomon requested three months personal leave to relocate to Mississippi. On July 2, 1990, she presented herself at the Tupelo store for employment. Solomon was not hired, as no job openings were available.
Sometime in March of the following year, Solomon filed a lawsuit against Walgreens alleging breach of contract of her “guaranteed job” in the Tupelo Mall Walgreens. On June 1, 1991, Wаlgreens hired Solomon to work at the Tupelo location. She continued to work at this location until August 31, 1991, when Walgreens closed its Tupelo store.
*1089 In April of 1992, the district court for the Northern District of Mississippi granted summary judgment in favor of Walgreens, holding that nothing in the record would lead a reasonable juror to believe that Wal-greens breached an employment сontract with Solomon.
II.
On appeal we review a summary judgment
de novo,
applying the same standards as the district court.
Waltman v. Int’l Paper Co.,
The substantive law of the case identifies which facts are material for the purposes of summary judgment.
Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc.,
III.
A. The Mississippi Employment at Will Doctrine
Mississippi has long adhered to the common law rule that “where there is no employment contract (or where there is a contract which does not specify the term of the worker’s employment), the relationship] may be terminated at will by either party.”
Perry v. Sears, Roebuck, & Co.,
The employee can quit at will; the employer can terminate at will. This means that either the employer or the employee may have a good reason, a wrong reason, or no reason for terminating the employment contract.
Id.
Mississippi has rigidly adhered to this rule since 1858.
See Butler v. Smith & Tharp,
Acknowledging this doctrine to bе controlling, Solomon nonetheless attempts to escape its application by arguing that she had a specific contract of employment with Walgreens evidenced by thé letters from Grauer and Earnest, and the Walgreens employment manual and handbook. Despite Solomon’s arguments, we find the facts clearly indicate that the relationship betwеen herself and Walgreens was at will.
Solomon’s original employment application from 1985, signed by Solomon herself, specifically states as follows:
3. I understand that my employment with Walgreen Co. is for no definite period and may be terminated at any time, with or without cause, and without any previous notice, at the option of either Walgreen Co. or me. I further understаnd that no employee, manager or other agent or representative of Walgreen *1090 Co., other than its Chief Executive Officer, has any authority to enter into any agreement for employment for any specified time, or to make any agreement or amendment contrary to the foregoing.
This clearly indicates that the relationship between the twо parties was at will. 2
Solomon argues that the letters supplied at her request by Grauer and Earnest modified her at-will status and gave her a specific contract of employment with Walgreens. Under Mississippi law, we fail to see how this can be so. As the facts state, the two Walgreens managers provided Solomon with letters stating that she would be guaranteed a specific number of hours. First of all, by the unambiguous terms of Solomon’s signed employment application, Solomon had express notice that no manager, such as Grauer or Earnest, had the authority to modify her at-will status by employing her for a definite term. Second, while a specific number of hours is given, no definite length of term of employment — nor any other details of her аllegedly “guaranteed” position — appear in either letter. Length of employment is a substantial term and must be included in a writing offered to show a contract of employment for a definite term in order for the statute of frauds to be satisfied.
Bowers Window & Door Co., Inc. v. Dearman,
Solomon tenuously attempts to argue that this critical missing element is supplied by Grauer’s and Earnest’s references to “30 hours” аnd “35 to 40 hours” of employment. We fail to see how this reference establishes a definite term of employment. In the brief she submitted to this court, Solomon contends that this statement of hours establishes a definite period of employment “[w]hether the term be one hour or one month,” and that “[wjhether the plaintiff’s employment were for one day or six months, the length of that еmployment is not relevant.” The argument Solomon is attempting to advance is far from definite; she herself cannot devine a definite term of employment from the nebulous writings of Grauer and Earnest.
3
Employment of an agent for an indefinite time is terminable at will under Mississippi law.
Butler,
35 Miss, at 464. Without a written confirmation of length of employment, Solomon remained an employeе at will subject to dismissal for a good reason, a wrong reason, or no reason at all.
See Robinson v. Coastal Family Health Center, Inc.,
Solomon additionally claims that Walgreens’ personnel policy and orientation manuals provide any missing terms of her guaranteed contract of 30 to 40 hours of employment in Tupelo, thereby satisfying the statute of frauds and establishing the existence of an employment contract. Under Mississippi law, an employee handbook may, under certain conditions, become part of an agreement between an employer and employee.
See Perry,
In sum, nothing in the record would lead a reasonable juror to conclude under Mississippi law that Solomon possessed secured or guarantеed employment with Walgreens upon her arrival in Mississippi. Prior to her arrival in Tupelo, there had been no discussion or confirmation of a start date, salary, position, nor any other aspect of employment — terms which would normally be considered of great importance to anyone attempting to secure a job and relocate her family. Bаsed on these facts, it was manifestly unrealistic of Solomon to assume that she had a guaranteed job upon her arrival in Mississippi. At best, she had an invitation to discuss the possibility of employment at the Tupelo Walgreens once she moved to Mississippi. Even if the Tupelo store did have a position available for her upon her arrival, it still would have been on аn at-will basis. What may be perceived as corporate callousness towards a loyal worker is no basis for a legal cause of action.
See Perry,
B. Equitable and Promissory Estoppel
Having decided that neither the manuals nor the letters give rise to the existence of an enforceable contract between the parties, we now consider whether an enforceable contract may be found on grounds of estoppel. Equitable estoppel is a well-estаblished exception to the statute of frauds.
PMZ Oil Co. v. Lucroy,
In the case at bar, Solomon has wholly failed to set forth a genuine issue of material fact as to whether a promise was made by Walgreens. The record is devoid of evidence to support Solomon’s allegation that Walgreens promised her guaranteed employment upon her arrival in Mississippi. Therefore, we conclude that no reasonable trier of fact could find that Walgreens, through the letters of its district managers, somehow made a promise to Solomon expecting to induce action on her part to her detriment. 4
Furthermore, even if Walgreens hyрothetically promised Solomon a job, we are unable to find any evidence that she relied on such a hypothetical promise to her detriment. Solomon’s decision to leave Illinois and move to Mississippi was admittedly motivated by her divorce rather than by the promise of a job with Walgreens. Even if Solomon’s move had been induced by a promise of а job, the Mississippi Supreme Court has followed the case law of New York, which “has held consistently that a change of job or residence, by itself, is insufficient to trigger invocation of the promissory estoppel doctrine.”
Bowers Window & Door Co. v. Dearman,
In order to recover under a breach of contract claim on a theory of equitable estoppel, a plaintiff must demonstrate a changed position and detrimental reliance.
PMZ Oil,
Accordingly, we find that Solomon hаs failed to raise any genuine issue of material fact regarding both the existence of a promise and her detrimental reliance. 6
IV.
We AFFIRM the district court’s granting of summary judgment in favor of Walgreen Co.
Notes
. The only exception to this rule appears to be that in certain extremely limited circumstances, contractual obligations may arise through an employee handbook which expressly intends to modify the terms of employment at will.
Perry,
. In the brief she submitted to this court, Solomon states that the letters supрlied by Grauer and Earnest would supersede the dictates of the employment application. She fails, however, to cite any authority for this proposition or explain why the letters would have this effect.
. We note that Solomon ultimately was employed at the Tupelo Walgreens from June 1, 1991 until the Tupelo store closed on August 31, 1991. This encompasses more than the 30-40 total hours of еmployment she asserts she was guaranteed.
. To the contrary, Solomon received express notice in her 1985 employment application that district managers do not have the authority to make such promises.
. Solomon also attempts to argue that the letters by Grauer and Earnest, prepared at her request, guaranteed her a definite term of employment for 30 to 40 hours in the Tupelo store. This even further undermines her estoppel argument. We find it manifestly unreasonable to assert, and nearly impossible to believe, that a person would relocate her entire family to Mississippi based solely on the "promise” of a mere 30 to 40 hours of employment.
. Additionally, the letters relied upon by Solomon to establish the existence of some sort of nebulous promise were not prepared by Wal-greens in order to induce her to relocate, but were prepared at her request to further her cause in a divorce proceeding. In light of this state of facts, which Solomon somehow views as "having no bearing on the issue [of estoppel],” justice certainly does not require the application of equitable nor promissory estoppel.
