This appeal comes to us from a judgment involuntarily dismissing a suit for wrongful termination of employment. The employee, J.P. Staggie, was discharged for falsification of records. He contends that his activities had been authorized by a supervisor and that the discharge was motivated by bad faith. We affirm the judgment.
Staggie was employed as a maintenance engineer by Idaho Falls Consolidated Hospitals, Inc. His training and supervision were furnished by a separate entity, Ser-vicemaster Industries, Inc., under contract with the hospital. When Staggie reported for work on December 16, 1983, he was asked whether he planned to attend a Christmas party for maintenance employees later that day. Staggie replied that his shift hours would not allow him to do so. Another employee offered to “swap” time. Staggie asked his supervisor whether this would be “okay.” The supervisor responded to the effect, “Well, I don’t know what you are doing,” or “I don’t know nothing about it.” Staggie interpreted this to mean that the time swapping was approved and he left work early. However, he wrote in his time records that he had worked a full shift.
Several days later, the head of the hospital’s maintenance department discovered the discrepancy in work hours recorded. He had attended the Christmas party and had seen Staggie there. Although the department head merely reprimanded Stag-gie, the hospital subsequently decided to fire him. Staggie sought review of this decision through grievance procedures outlined in a hospital manual, but received no response. Staggie then sued the hospital, alleging breach of his employment contract, defamation, and intentional or negligent infliction of emotional distress. The hospital denied these allegations and filed a third-party complaint against Servicemas-ter, seeking indemnification if liability was found to exist. The district court entered summary judgment against the claims for defamation and emotional distress. That ruling has not been challenged in this appeal. The court held a bench trial on the claim for wrongful termination. After Staggie presented his case in chief, the hospital moved for involuntary dismissal under I.R.C.P. 41(b). The motion was *351 granted and judgment was entered accordingly. This appeal followed. 1
Our standard of appellate review, when a judgment is based upon involuntary dismissal under I.R.C.P. 41(b), requires clarification. In
Allen v. Burggraf Construction Co.,
[Rule 41(b)] allows a defendant to move for involuntary dismissal after the plaintiffs presentation of evidence “in action tried by the court without a jury ... on the ground that upon the facts and the law the plaintiff has shown no right to relief.” The judge, as sole trier of the facts, is not required to construe evidence favorably to the plaintiff. Sorenson v. Adams,98 Idaho 708 ,571 P.2d 769 (1977). Rather, he may evaluate the evidence and choose the inferences tc be drawn. The court must determine whether the evidence, as so evaluated, is sufficient to show a right to the relief sought. We will not disturb that determination unless it is shown to be clearly erroneous.
The last quoted sentence suggests that the "clearly erroneous" standard, applicable to findings of fact, also will be applied to a mixed question of law and fact-i.e., whether the facts as found are sufficient to invoke a legal right to relief.
Articulating the proper review standard for mixed questions of law and fact has proved to be a vexing task for state and federal appellate courts.
See
cases cited in Burnett,
Standards of Appellate Review,
IDAHO APPELLATE HANDBOOK § 3.2.2 (Idaho Law Foundation, Inc. 1985). There is support for a broadly deferential standard of the kind suggested in
Allen.
However, we think it better to differentiate among the fact-finding, law-stating and law-applying functions of the trial courts. Appellate judges should defer to findings of fact based upon substantial evidence, but they ought to review freely the conclusions of law reached by stating legal rules or principles and applying them to the facts found.
See, e.g., City of Burley v. McCaslin Lumber Co.,
We first consider Staggie’s contention that falsification of time records was authorized by his supervisor. This contention presents a question of fact. The district court found that Staggie’s conduct “was in violation of the [hospital’s] rules and was not condoned, authorized or consented to by the [hospital].” The evidence at trial disclosed that a practice of time-swapping had evolved in the maintenance department with the supervisor’s knowledge. However, Staggie conceded knowing that the practice was against hospital policy. There was no evidence that the supervisor had authority to authorize the practice. Moreover, the evidence failed to show that falsification of records, concealing a time swap, had been approved. Consequently, the court’s finding that Staggie engaged in unauthorized conduct is supported by the record. It is not “clearly erroneous” and it will not be disturbed.
We now turn to the contention that Staggie was discharged in bad faith. Whether bad faith would entitle an employee to relief is a question of law. Whether bad faith actually existed in this case is a question of fact.
Staggie was an employee at will. His employment agreement was for an indefinite duration and it imposed no limitation upon potential reasons for discharge. Our Supreme Court has held that either the employer or the employee may terminate
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such an employment agreement at any time without liability, except that the employer may not discharge the employee for a reason contravening public policy.
MacNeil v. Minidoka Memorial Hospital,
Staggie urges that we broaden the public policy analysis to focus not merely upon the employee’s activities but also upon the employer’s motivation for discharge. Indeed, our Supreme Court in
Jackson
cited
Monge v. Beebe Rubber Co.,
The thrust of Staggie’s argument is that the public policy exception should be so extended. But this ease affords no factual predicate for reaching that far. The district court made no finding of bad faith. Staggie’s sole claim of bad faith was that the hospital failed to follow a grievance review procedure and thus breached an implied duty to discharge only in good faith. However, Staggie failed to introduce the manual into evidence. Neither did he undertake to show that his discharge actually was the product of an improper motive. We conclude that the district court did not err by failing to find that the hospital had acted in bad faith. 2
The judgment entered upon involuntary dismissal of Staggie’s complaint is affirmed. Costs to the respondent hospital. No attorney fees on appeal.
Notes
. As a defensive measure, the hospital cross-appealed from that part of the judgment dismissing the third-party complaint against Service-master. Because the third-party complaint is moot in the absence of hospital liability, we need not address the cross-appeal in this opinion.
. The court made a "finding" that the hospital had assumed no contractual duty to act in good . faith. The court did not consider whether such a duty is implied as a matter of law. However, even if there were an implied duty, it would not affect our conclusion that the district court was furnished insufficient evidence to find bad faith in fact.
