Lead Opinion
{1 The issue presented on certiorari review is whether an employer with less than fifteen employees can incur Burk tort liability for wrongful termination of an employee based on racial discrimination prohibited by the Oklahoma Anti-Discrimination Act.
12 The trial court ruled that the public policy embodied in the Oklahoma Anti-Discrimination Act does not apply to employers, like Pioneer, that have less than fifteen employees.
3 In Brown, this Court did find the public policy protection embodied in the Oklahoma Anti-Discrimination Act to be tied to the number of employees. This Court held that "Brown's common law claim would not be actionable as a discharge in breach of public policy [embodied in the Act] because her employer, who engaged fewer than fifteen employees, is outside the Act's purview." Brown,
114 However, the Brown case concerned a discrimination claim based on workplace sexual harassment that involved offensive touching. The Court in Brown avoided considering a public policy basis to remedy this wrong because it found a remedy was afforded by the existing common law remedy for assault and battery. Id. at ¶ 11,
15 With regard to public policy, Brown actually falls in the line of cases that place discriminatory acts outside the scope of the public policy Burk tort where the victim has another adequate remedy. See Clinton v. State ex rel. Logan County Election Bd.,
1 6 On the issue of public policy, Brown is also inconsistent with the teachings of Tate v. Browning-Ferris, Inc.,
T7 This Court answered this question in the negative, stating "[the Act] neither explicitly nor implicitly provides an exclusive remedy for employment-related discrimination." Id. The Court concluded the Act provided "cumulative" remedies. Id. at {[ 11,
8 After discussing the development of the public-policy tort exception to the termination at-will doctrine, the Tate Court turned its attention to deciding "whether racially discriminatory conduct that leads to retaliatory discharge ... is actionable under this exception." Id. at 19,
T9 The Court ultimately concluded the Oklahoma Anti-Discrimination Act posed "no obstacle [in] applying Burk's common-law tort to a racially motivated wrongful or retaliatory discharge." Id. at 119,
T 10 The Court explained that it was necessary to treat the Burk tort as cumulative to the remedies in the Act, because the Act did not afford a private right of action to all victims of discrimination. Id. at 118,
{11 Recently, this Court has reaffirmed the principles from Tate that vietims of employment discrimination comprise a single class and the Burk tort is available to all members of this class. Shirazi v. Childtime Learning Center, Inc.,
112 In conclusion, we hold that one of the primary purposes of Oklahoma's Anti-Discrimination Act is to prohibit racial discrimination in employment and to make such discrimination a legal wrong. This purpose constitutes a general declaration of public policy on this subject. To vindicate violations of this policy, the Act provides statutory remedies in cases where employers have more than fifteen employees, while the common law provides a Burk tort to all victims of racial discrimination regardless of the number of employees. The only limitation on pursuit of a Burk claim in conjunction with other remedies is that the plaintiff cannot receive a double recovery.
T 13 In view of this holding, Brown v. Ford is overruled to the extent it holds the public policy embodied in the Oklahoma Anti-Discrimination Act can only serve as the basis for a Burk tort pursued by an employee whose employer meets the fifteen employee threshold. In reaching this conclusion, we do not disturb Brown's holding that the Legislature may validly excuse "small shops" from statutory remedies. However, this exclusion does not affect the right of employees in "small shops" to pursue the common law remedy of a Burk tort for the discharge based on prohibited discrimination.
114 The trial court erred in dismissing Mr. Smith's suit for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted. The trial
CERTIORARI PREVIOUSLY GRANTED; OPINION OF THE COURT OF CIVIL APPEALS VACATED; THE DISMISSAL IS REVERSED AND THE CAUSE REMANDED FOR FURTHER PROCEEDINGS.
Notes
. Burk v. K-Mart Corp.,
. The trial court dismissed this case for failure to state a claim upon which relief could be granted. In reaching this conclusion, the trial court considered evidentiary materials showing Pioneer did not have fifieen employees during the time of Mr. Smith's employment. The dismissal was, in effect, a summary judgment. 12 O.S.2001 § 2012(B). On certiorari review, both Mr. Smith's allegations and the uncontroverted evi-dentiary materials are taken as true for this Court's de novo determination of whether the petition is legally sufficient. Indiana Nat'l Bank v. State Dept. of Human Services,
Dissenting Opinion
with whom HARGRAVE and WINCHESTER, JJ., join, dissenting in part
{1 This dissent is solely from today's overruling of Brown v. Ford
I
THE COURT GRATUITOUSLY AND NEEDLESSLY OVERRULES BROWN ON A POINT THAT DOES NOT EVEN APPLY TO THE CASE AT HAND
12 At-will employees who bring a lawsuit for wrongful discharge based on the state statutory or common law must show that the defendant-employer falls within the purview of the invoked liability by having the requisite number of employees.
13 Tate v. Browning-Ferris, Inc.
4 The case at hand is unmistakenly like that in Tate.
1 5 In Brown v. Ford the employee's state-law sexual harassment claim did not fall within the state statutory criteria of actiona-bility since plaintiff's workplace had less than fifteen employees. She was hence unshielded by any legislatively articulated public-policy protection. Because the main predicate for the lawsuit at hand is drawn from the l4th Amendment,
T6 Claims for employment discrimination based on common and statutory law rather than on federal protections must conform to the requirements of Oklahoma's anti-discrimination act. That act applies solely to employers with more than fifteen employees. On the other hand, those discrimination claims that are rested, in whole or in part, upon a federal constitutional foundation need not be subjected to the requirements of Oklahoma's minimum-employee limit. In short, Brown v. Ford need not be overruled in any of its parts by today's pronouncement. This is so because in the case at hand the primary legal predicate for the claim is the 14th Amendment's protection of racial equality. Today's gratuitous and needless overruling of Brown releases, sans any legal warrant, from compliance with statutory state law a category of claims which stands governed entirely by state law, written or unwritten.
T7 I would hold this claim to be exempt from compliance with the minimum-number-of-employee requirement and would not overrule Brown v. Ford because that pronouncement is not even applicable to today's quest for relief from racial discrimination.
.
. The legislative exclusion of employers engaging less than fifteen persons from liability under the administrative remedy created by 25 0.S.2001 § 1101 et seq. makes that statutory regime unavailable against small shops' employees. 25 ©.$.2001 § 1301(1).
. Tatev. Browning-Ferris, Inc.,
. Supra note 3. "The breach of public policy for which Tate allowed a Burk action was rested on a violation of: (1) the Oklahoma Anti-Discrimination Act (AODA) and of (2) the extant U.S. Supreme Court's XIVth Amendment jurisprudence. The latter legal source, part of this Nation's fundamental law since 1868, has served as a basis for articulated national public policy for all the States." Clinton v. State ex rel. Logan County Election Bd., supra note 3, at ¶ 6,
. Clinton v. State ex rel. Logan County Election Bd., supra note 3, at 16,
. In Tate, supra note 3, a discharged African-American employee sued a former employer for employment-related discrimination and retaliatory discharge.
. In Tate, supra note 3, the court held that where an employer discharges an employee in violation of a public policy that is clearly articulated in constitutional, statutory, or decisional law, the employer may be held liable for a tortious breach of a contractual obligation.
. See infra note 11.
. Oklahoma's anti-discrimination act,
. A Burk claim must be anchored in some statutory or constitutional expression of Oklahoma's own public policy. Tafe teaches that an "employee who brings a common-law tort action for damages occasioned by either a racially motivated discharge or by one in retaliation for bringing a racial discrimination complaint states a state-law claim for tortious employment termination under Burk." Tate, supra note 3,
. The Equal Protection Clause of the 14th Amend., § 1, U.S. Const., commands that no State shall deny due process of the law or "deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws." Oklahoma's due process clause, Art. 2, § 7, Okl. Const., has a definitional sweep that is coextensive with its federal counterpart. Black v. Ball Janitorial Serv., Inc.,
