¶ 1. The School District of Brown Deer (the District) seeks review of an unpublished decision of the court of appeals. 1 The court of appeals reversed a decision of the Circuit Court for Milwaukee County, John F. Foley, Judge. The circuit court granted summary judgment to the District, holding that the wrongful discharge claim of Cathy Strozinsky (Strozinsky) was not actionable because Strozinsky did not satisfy the public policy exception to the employment-at-will doctrine. The circuit court, however, urged Strozinsky to proceed on an alternative theory, constructive discharge.
¶ 2. Strozinsky resigned from her position as payroll clerk in the District's central office after she and her supervisors disagreed about the tax withhold-ings from a bonus check. Strozinsky filed a wrongful *26 discharge claim, contending that the District had forced her to resign because of her efforts to comply with the public policy reflected in Wis. Stat. § 943.39 2 and federal tax laws.
¶ 3. After the circuit court granted summary judgment to the District, Strozinsky submitted a motion for reconsideration. The circuit court, Christopher R. Foley, Judge, denied the motion for the wrongful discharge claim. The court also found that Strozinsky could not pursue a constructive discharge claim because constructive discharge is not actionable as a distinct cause of action and offers relief only when raised in conjunction with an underlying theory of recovery. The court therefore granted the District's motion to dismiss the case.
¶ 4. The court of appeals reversed. The court did not expressly address whether the constructive discharge doctrine applies to common-law claims filed under the narrow public policy exception to the rule of employment-at-will established in
Brockmeyer v. Dun & Bradstreet,
*27
¶ 5. We frame two issues in this case. First, we address whether Strozinsky identified a fundamental and well defined public policy sufficient to meet the narrow cause of action for wrongful discharge under the public policy exception to the general rule of employment-at-will first recognized by this court in
Brockmeyer,
¶ 6. We hold that the wrongful discharge claim is actionable under the narrow public policy exception to the employment-at-will doctrine because Strozinsky identified a fundamental and well defined public policy in the provisions of Wis. Stat. § 943.39(1) and 26 U.S.C. §§ 3101, 3102, and 6672(a). The granting of the District's summary judgment motion was therefore inappropriate. Our approach to this first issue differs from that of the court of appeals because we conclude that whether a plaintiff identifies a public policy is a question of law to be decided by the court, not a jury. For the second issue, we agree with the circuit court inasmuch as the constructive discharge doctrine does not present an independent cause of action. We hold, however, that the doctrine of constructive discharge can be applied as a defense in a common-law claim under the public policy exception because some resignations are, in fact, involuntary. In this case a question of fact exists under the constructive discharge standard, namely whether Strozinsky's working conditions were so intolerable that a reasonable person in her position would have been compelled to resign. We agree with the court of appeals that this question requires resolution by a jury, and hence, we conclude that the District's motion to dismiss the case should not have *28 been granted. Accordingly, we affirm the decision of the court of appeals and remand the cause to the circuit court for trial for determination whether Strozinsky's resignation was a constructive discharge and, if so, whether the discharge violated public policy.
FACTS
¶ 7. Strozinsky presented the following facts. 3 The District employed Strozinsky as a payroll clerk from approximately January 11,1988, until September 30, 1995. Strozinsky was responsible for bookkeeping and payroll duties, and she determined the federal and state tax withholdings for all payroll checks issued to District employees. Among the employees for whom Strozinsky computed withholding tax was the District Superintendent, Kenneth Moe (Moe). Strozinsky reported directly to the District's Business Manager, Donald Amundson (Amundson), an immediate subordinate of Moe.
¶ 8. Under his employment contract with the District, Moe received an annual bonus equal to 10 percent of his salary. The check was issued directly into a tax-sheltered annuity account that Moe selected. Before 1993, the District had paid the bonus to the annuity account without withholding any Social Security or Medicare taxes from the gross amount. Strozinsky did not recall whether she or someone else *29 prepared those checks; issuance of the bonuses had not always been within her area of responsibility.
¶ 9. Strozinsky did remember the bonus check paid to Moe in July 1994. No taxes were withheld from that check, and Amundson instructed Strozinsky not to make any adjustments to offset the difference in the two regular paychecks issued to Moe subsequently that month. Strozinsky recalled Amundson telling her "not [to] tax Mr. Moe that high." Although Strozinsky was not comfortable, she prepared the paycheck as Amund-son directed and did nothing to verify whether her actions were legal or not. Id.
¶ 10. Strozinsky described an atmosphere at the District's business office in which the payroll staff was ill at ease with procedures that were not "legally correct." A previous bookkeeper, for instance, refused to sign off on federal tax forms she issued because they were not truthful. The bookkeeper feared she might be held personally liable for falsified information. Id. Another employee also refused to sign tax documents, testifying that the materials accompanying Moe's tax-sheltered annuity were fraudulent. Strozinsky herself had learned from her membership in the American Payroll Association that she could be held liable for errors in payroll checks.
¶ 11. The following year, Strozinsky issued Moe's annual bonus check on July 7, 1995. She drew the $9,149 bonus from the District's accounts payable checking account and submitted it to Moe's annuity account. Since issuing the 1994 paycheck without the withholdings, Strozinsky had become more informed about taxation procedures from the American Payroll Association and seminars she attended. She therefore believed tax should be withheld from the bonus check, but she was unable to deduct the amount because the *30 District's computer software was not equipped to execute the withholding from the accounts payable account. Strozinsky therefore made an adjustment to offset the necessary withholding in Moe's next regular payroll check. She did not give Moe any advanced explanation that he would be receiving a reduced net amount on the paycheck. After Strozinsky deducted this additional amount, Moe's payroll check was about $500 less than he expected.
¶ 12. Moe received this reduced paycheck on July 20, 1995, and that same day he confronted Strozinsky about the large deductions. Strozinsky explained that she "was going to tax it properly" and wanted it "done correctly in regards to taxes and with Wisconsin Retirement." She said the tax laws required her to make withholdings from the bonus check, and she therefore had deducted the required amount from the regular paycheck. Moe allegedly told her that he "didn't care" and instructed Strozinsky that he did not want his payroll check to reflect any withholding to compensate for the annual bonus payment. During this conversation, Strozinsky found Moe assertive and "threatening in his demeanor." She testified at her deposition that Moe threw the check across the desk at Strozinsky and demanded that she change it. Strozin-sky felt as if she were "being chastised like a child gets yelled at."
¶ 13. After this conversation, Strozinsky called the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) for advice. The IRS representative confirmed that tax should be withheld from the bonus payment, explaining that the deduction Strozinsky made was withheld properly from Moe's next regular paycheck. Strozinsky testified that the representative suggested that Moe himself should contact the IRS directly rather than arguing with *31 Strozinsky about the withholding. The IRS allegedly told Strozinsky that she personally could be liable for the amount owed as well as a penalty and compounded interest.
¶ 14. Strozinsky conveyed the information she had received from the IRS to her supervisor, Amund-son. She explained that she faced personal liability for any unpaid taxes, plus penalties and interest. Amund-son nonetheless directed Strozinsky to re-issue a new payroll check to Moe, this time without any tax with-holdings deducted, neither for the bonus nor the regular payroll amount. Amundson remarked, "This only happens once a year, just do it and get it over with and eventually he will make it up."
¶ 15. Strozinsky agreed to prepare the check if Amundson signed a written statement releasing her from liability in the event the IRS challenged the non-reporting. Strozinsky recalled that Amundson told her that he would take full responsibility, and he signed the statement. Strozinsky voided the check with the proper withholdings and prepared a new payroll check that withheld no taxes.
¶ 16. Moe received the replacement check, but Amundson returned it to Strozinsky. He informed Strozinsky that without any tax withheld, Moe thought the error may look too obvious and explained that Moe wanted her to issue a third check, this time with partial withholdings. When Strozinsky told Amundson that the District computer software prevented her from manipulating the software to change the withholding percentages, Amundson told her "to find a way to do it in the system." Strozinsky made repeated, unsuccessful attempts to issue the check.
¶ 17. As Strozinsky and Amundson struggled with the computer software, Moe approached Amund- *32 son and Strozinsky and conceded that he was required to pay the taxes that Strozinsky originally had withheld. Moe, however, addressed Strozinsky's decision to ask Amundson to sign the statement insulating her from potential liability, stating, "I'm offended by this memo [that you] documented something, and that you [ ] impl[ied] that I'm doing something illegal here when I'm not." Moe screamed as his veins bulged and spittle came out of his mouth. Strozinsky stated that Moe leaned over the desk red-faced, pointed to the door, and warned that if Strozinsky engaged in similar behavior in the future, she would be "out of here." Strozinsky attempted to justify her conduct; Moe told her, "It was your responsibility — It's your responsibility to advise me about tax." During this exchange, Amundson told Strozinsky to be quiet and not say anything else to Moe. Strozinsky conceded that before July 1995, she and Moe had had "a very good working relationship."
¶ 18. Strozinsky explained that this incident left her shaken. She cried, hyperventilated, and vomited. She told Amundson, "I cannot do this anymore. I cannot work here anymore." Amundson told Strozinsky to calm down and that she should then issue yet another payroll check, this time again with the full amount deducted as an adjustment for the withholding amount required from the bonus check. Strozinsky testified at her deposition that Amundson said, "what happened to [you] was terrible and it shouldn't have happened, but you know that he's not going to apologize to you. You know he'll never admit he's wrong." Amundson urged her not to quit.
¶ 19. Strozinsky nonetheless feared she would lose her job and decided that "nobody was worth breaking the law for." She submitted a written complaint to Karen Rutt, the District's Human Resources Manager, *33 asserting that Moe's treatment was demeaning, upsetting, and amounted to a "form of harassment." She provided a copy of the complaint to Amundson, who inquired, "Are you sure you want to do this? You know what he gets like. You're talking about the superintendent here." Amundson instructed Rutt to take no immediate action on the complaint until after Strozin-sky took a pre-planned family vacation scheduled for the following week.
¶ 20. When Strozinsky returned to work on August 2, 1995, Amundson handed the written complaint back to her, explaining that he would "pretend [he had] never s[een] it." Strozinsky told Amundson that whenever she saw Moe, her "stomach flipp[ed]" and she grew shaky. Amundson wrote this off to "a typical reaction that females have."
¶ 21. Moe, Amundson, and Strozinsky met the next day. Moe underscored that he and Amundson were Strozinsky's bosses, and that as a "payroll clerk," she had no authority or power. Strozinsky told the men she had tried to fulfill her job duties lawfully, following the advice she had received from the IRS and the information she had learned from the American Payroll Association. Moreover, she explained that she had asked Amundson to sign the written release because she did not trust Moe or Amundson to "back her up" in any dispute with the IRS. Moe replied that he and Amundson were the parties responsible, adding that "if [we] get caught that's why [the District] [has] errors and omissions insurance." Moe stated that if Strozin-sky did not trust him, she should not work for him.
¶ 22. After August 3, Amundson and Moe excluded Strozinsky from job duties in which she regularly participated previously, such as work on short-term borrowing projects and attending the orientation *34 designed to introduce and explain payroll benefits to new District teachers. Amundson ceased working with Strozinsky as he had in the past. She sensed that Moe and Amundson stopped communicating with her, reprimanded her without cause, and pressured her with rushed deadlines. Strozinsky felt threatened and believed that Moe was presenting her with "an ultimatum."
¶ 23. On September 13, 1995, Strozinsky spoke with Amundson about the workplace pressures. Amundson suggested Moe was the source of her unease and remarked "if this is what you think pressure is, you're working for the wrong guy, and perhaps you shouldn't be working here." Later that day, Strozinsky submitted a written resignation stating that she would terminate her employment effective September 29, 1995.
PROCEDURAL HISTORY
¶ 24. After her resignation, Strozinsky filed for unemployment compensation benefits, and the District challenged her application. After a three-day hearing conducted early in 1996, an administrative law judge found "good cause attributable to the employer" as the source of Strozinsky's departure. The tribunal found it irrelevant whether Strozinsky was correct in her interpretation of the payroll tax laws. The judge reasoned that the cumulative effect of the facts suggested that Strozinsky was subjected to unreasonable treatment.
¶ 25. The District appealed the decision to the Labor and Industry Review Commission (LIRC), and that commission affirmed the decision of the administrative law judge. LIRC concluded that Strozinsky "presented testimony that the pressure of the workplace became so severe that she was forced to quit." *35 LIRC reasoned that "requesting, suggesting, or directing an employe to violate Federal or State law is good cause" to quit.
¶ 26. Strozinsky filed a complaint against the District in Milwaukee County Court on June 12, 1996, alleging wrongful discharge in violation of the public policy mandate articulated in Wis. Stat. § 943.39 (1993-94). 4 The District moved for summary judgment on the grounds that Strozinsky failed to present any evidence that the District had violated a public policy, failed to allege that she refused to violate a public policy, and resigned from her position voluntarily. In addition, the District argued that even if a claim for wrongful discharge could be based on constructive discharge, Strozinsky could not demonstrate that her working conditions were so intolerable that a reasonable person faced with similar circumstances would be compelled to resign.
*36 ¶ 27. On May 21, 1997, the circuit court entered an order granting summary judgment to the District on the wrongful discharge claim. The court found that Strozinsky had not demonstrated that her case satisfied any of the public policy exceptions to the employment-at-will doctrine. The court's order, however, permitted Strozinsky to proceed on an alternative theory, constructive discharge. The court reasoned:
It's my view that there is certainly an issue of fact with regard to the constructive discharge. If that hasn't been raised, you ought to do that. Because I really think that what she says is true, conditions were intolerable. It's beyond the administration of the school district acting like that. Who the hell does this guy think he is anyway? I think the issue here is a matter of foregoing the constructive discharge. But the motion for summary judgment is granted.
¶ 28. Strozinsky filed a motion for reconsideration of the summary judgment order on June 6, 1997, seeking reversal of the court's decision about the wrongful discharge claim. The motion sought clarification about the constructive discharge claim, noting that Wisconsin law recognizes no such cause of action.
¶ 29. The circuit court denied Strozinsky's motion for reconsideration of the wrongful discharge claim. The District then moved to dismiss the remaining cause of action, constructive discharge. The District argued that constructive discharge presents a basis for recovery only when set forth in conjunction with an underlying cause of action. Strozinsky agreed that she would be unable to proceed on a free-standing claim of constructive discharge without the reinstatement of her original cause of action, wrongful discharge. The *37 court therefore dismissed the constructive discharge claim without prejudice.
¶ 30. Strozinsky appealed. The court of appeals held that summary judgment was inappropriate because Strozinsky presented genuine issues of material fact about whether she had been constructively discharged. The court of appeals applied the doctrine of constructive discharge without expressly deciding whether Wisconsin recognizes the doctrine in common-law, as opposed to statutory, claims. The court concluded that a jury should determine whether Strozinsky's working conditions were so intolerable that a reasonable person in her position would have resigned. In addition, the court reasoned that material facts were in dispute about whether the "discharge" violated public policy.
PUBLIC POLICY EXCEPTION
¶ 31. The first issue in this case, whether the claim identified a fundamental and well defined public policy sufficient to meet the narrow cause of action for wrongful discharge under the public policy exception to the doctrine of employment-at-will, presents a question of law that we review independently.
Kempfer v. Automated Finishing Inc.,
¶ 32. This issue also requires us to review the decision of the circuit court to grant the District's summary judgment motion. This court analyzes summary judgment motions
de novo,
applying the same methodology as the circuit court.
Tatge v. Chambers & Owen,
¶ 33. We begin by setting forth our established approach to employment relationships. Wisconsin, like many states, adheres to the doctrine of employment-at-will. The doctrine provides that when the terms of employment are indefinite, the "employer may discharge an employee 'for good cause, for no cause, or even for cause morally wrong, without being thereby guilty of legal wrong.'"
Tatge,
¶ 34. Over time, federal and state laws refined the complexion of the common-law doctrine. These statutory modifications to the rule of employment-at-will targeted the potentially harsh application of the doctrine by allowing employees to seek relief for certain types of terminations.
Brockmeyer,
¶ 35. Although modifications to the doctrine most often are the product of legislative enactments, occasionally courts also adopt exceptions to the rule of employment-at-will.
7
In 1983, the
Brockmeyer
court observed that statutory modifications do not always protect wrongfully discharged employees.
Id.
at 568. Some employees, for instance, lack the safeguards of collective bargaining agreements and civil service regulations.
Id.
We therefore formulated a narrow exception to the employment-at-will doctrine, recognizing that certain terminations are unjust.
Hausman v. St. Croix Care Ctr.,
¶ 36. The
Brockmeyer
court recognized a narrow public policy exception that allows a cause of action "for wrongful discharge when the discharge is contrary to a fundamental and well defined public policy as evidenced by existing law."
Brockmeyer,
¶ 37. Plaintiffs seeking relief under this narrow exception must: (1) first identify a fundamental and well defined public policy in their complaint sufficient to trigger the exception to the employment-at-will doctrine; and (2) then demonstrate that the discharge violated that fundamental and well defined public policy.
10
Winkelman v. Beloit Mem'l Hosp.,
¶ 38. In the years since deciding
Brockmeyer,
this court has emphasized that the public policy factors that give rise to an actionable claim under the exception remain very narrow.
See Tatge,
¶ 39. The clear public policy at issue must be "evidenced by existing law."
Brockmeyer,
¶ 40. Several cases illustrate how we recognize a provision that articulates a clear mandate of public policy. In
Hausman,
¶ 41. Similarly, in
Kempfer,
¶ 42. In
Winkelman,
¶ 43. The
Wandry
decision,
¶ 44. Other cases reveal which terminations do not implicate a fundamental and well defined public policy. The termination of an employee for failure to sign a nondisclosure and noncompete agreement does not give rise to a cause of action for wrongful discharge under the public policy exception.
Tatge,
*46
¶45. In
Schultz v. Production Stamping Corp.,
¶ 46. In
Bushko,
¶ 47. To sum up, then, the case law of this state recognizes that constitutional, statutory, and administrative provisions can articulate a fundamental and well defined public policy. Statutes rarely state the public policy underlying them in express terms.
Wan-dry,
*47 ¶ 48. In this case our inquiry therefore focuses on whether Strozinsky has identified a fundamental and well defined public policy in the spirit or the letter of constitutional, statutory, or administrative provisions sufficient to trigger the exception to the employment-at-will doctrine. Consistent with our precedent, this court interprets public policies narrowly. We do not deviate from the general tenets of the employment-at-will doctrine, and we do not apply public policy to diminish employer discretion in terminating at-will employees.
¶ 49. In her complaint, Strozinsky identified Wis. Stat. § 943.39 as the source of the well defined public policy, and she referred to her refusal to falsify payroll documentation and defraud "taxing authorities" as the reasons why the District forced her to terminate her employment.
13
This court construes the complaint liberally.
Wandry,
¶ 50. Wisconsin Stat. § 943.39 provides:
Fraudulent writings. Whoever, with intent to injure or defraud, does any of the following is guilty of a Class D felony:
*48 (1) Being a director, officer, manager, agent or employee of any corporation or limited liability company falsifies any record, account or other document belonging to that corporation or limited liability company by alteration, false entry or omission, or makes, circulates or publishes any written statement regarding the corporation or limited liability company which he or she knows is false.
The District argues that this statute has no force or effect "upon a mere clerical employee" and is "merely punitive in nature." Petitioner's Brief at 24, 27. We disagree. Section 943.39(1) prohibits the employees of corporations and limited liability companies from falsifying records, accounts, and documents. The statute is part of the Criminal Code, and it exposes violators to a criminal penalty. Wisconsin Stat. § 939.50(3)(d) explains that a Class D felony is punishable by a fine not to exceed $10,000, or imprisonment not to exceed five years, or both.
¶ 51. The public policy of proscribing false reporting in business dealings is fundamental and well defined. Section 943.39(1), both in letter and in spirit, deters fraud by threat of punishment. The statute expressly assigns a criminal penalty for falsifying records. The Criminal Code itself manifestly serves the public interest by seeking to eradicate criminal activity. Under this first step of the analysis, a showing that Strozinsky herself "intend[ed] to injure or defraud," contrary to Wis. Stat. § 943.39(1), is not necessary to identify a fundamental and well defined public policy. It is enough to demonstrate that the statutory provision evidences a fundamental and well defined public policy.
¶ 52. Strozinsky also identified her refusal to falsify records to federal tax authorities in her complaint. *49 In her brief, affidavits, and submissions of evidence in opposition to the District's motion for summary judgment, Strozinsky explained that Moe and Amundson's instructions exposed her to penalties under the Internal Revenue Code, namely 26 U.S.C. §§ 3101, 3102, and 6672(a) (1994).
¶53. Whether the public policy articulated in federal statutes applies to this state's narrow public policy exception to the employment-at-will doctrine is a question of first impression. State courts in other jurisdictions identify fundamental and well defined public policies in various federal laws.
14
Those courts recognize that federal laws often speak to the "honest administration of public affairs."
Peterson v. Browning,
¶ 54. Substantial public policy interests can reside in certain federal statutory provisions. Compliance with tax regulations is fundamental to the
*50
operation of local, state, and federal government. Statutes governing taxation are national in scope and "strike at the heart of a citizen's social rights, duties and responsibilities."
Russ,
¶ 55. Section 3101 of the Internal Revenue Code establishes the rate of tax individuals must pay, based on the percentage of wages. Section 3102(a) provides that, "The tax imposed by section 3101 shall be collected by the employer of the taxpayer, by deducting the amount of the tax from the wages as and when paid." Section 3102(b) imposes liability for failure to withhold payroll taxes:
Indemnification of employer. — Every employer required so to deduct the [social security] tax shall be liable for the payment of such tax, and shall be indemnified against the claims and demands of any person for the amount of any such payment made by such employer.
The enforcement provisions of 26 U.S.C. § 6672(a) hold others liable for failure to withhold as well:
*51 General rule. — Any person required to collect, truthfully account for, and pay over any tax imposed by this title who 'willfully fails to collect such tax, or truthfully account for and pay over such tax, or willfully attempts in any manner to evade or defeat any such tax or the payment thereof, shall, in addition to other penalties provided by law, be liable to a penalty equal to the total amount of tax evaded, or not collected, or not accounted for and paid over. No penalty shall be imposed under section 6653 or part II or subchapter A or chapter 68 for any offense to which this section is applicable.
This statute exposes the person responsible, as well as the employer, to its penalties. The District contends that § 6672(a) did not subject Strozinsky to sanctions because she was not a "responsible person" subject to personal liability under the statute: "Strozinsky merely typed the check. She did not sign it; she had no authority to set or change the amount of wages paid to any employee." Petitioner's Brief at 27-28.
¶ 56. Federal law treats the person with effective power to pay the tax as the "responsible person."
Howard v. United States,
¶ 57. In the responsible person analysis, the answer often pivots on whether the person had power to make tax payments in light of the enterprise's financial organization and decision-making structure.
O'Connor v. United States,
¶ 58. Furthermore, an individual who is otherwise a responsible person will not avoid liability if he or she only follows a supervisor's instructions.
Howard,
¶ 59. Wisconsin, like the federal courts, reads the term "responsible person" broadly. The person need not be an officer or other key employee because this state's penalty provision, Wis. Stat. § 71.83(1)(b)2, refers expansively to officers, employees, and "other responsible person[s]." Although the legislature has not defined "other responsible person," the Tax Appeals Commission gauges responsibility by examining whether the person had the actual or de facto authority to withhold, account for, or pay the taxes, the duty to pay the taxes, and whether the person intentionally breached that duty. Noard v. DOR, Wis. Tax. Rptr. (CCH) P. 400-401 (W.T.A.C. Dec. 18, 1998). Thus, an office manager who filed tax returns and made some payments could be held personally liable because she was fully apprised of *53 the company's tax problems. Green v. DOR, Wis. Tax Rptr. (CCH) P. 400-378 (W.T.A.C. July 3,1998).
¶ 60. In this case, Strozinsky was more than a mere clerical employee. She was responsible for preparing the District's payroll at its central office. Among her other duties, she computed and made the federal and state tax withholdings for all payroll checks issued to the District's employees. Strozinsky submitted payments to the IRS; she was in a position to prevent any default from occurring. She had knowledge of the tax delinquency and the authority to pay or not pay the withholding tax. At her deposition, Strozinsky testified that she knew the withholding tax was due from Moe's bonus check, and the IRS advised her that she should pay the tax.
¶ 61. Based on the advice from the IRS and her membership in the American Payroll Association, Strozinsky believed she personally could be held liable for any taxes that she did not withhold properly from Moe's check. Although Superintendent Moe told Strozinsky she was just a payroll clerk without power or authority, he stated that it was her responsibility to handle the taxes and provide advice. Strozinsky's expert witness recognized that accountants and bookkeepers, persons with authority to withhold and remit taxes, can be penalized as responsible persons if they fail to withhold payroll tax. The expert,
citing Howard,
¶ 62. The District maintains that 26 U.S.C. §§ 3102(b) and 6672(a) merely establish rules and do not evince a broader policy for the public good. The District argues that Strozinsky identifies no funda
*54
mental and well defined public policy because, unlike the nursing home employee in
Hausman,
¶ 63. Applying a narrow exception to the employment-at-will doctrine, we hold that Strozinsky has identified a fundamental and well defined public policy. The spirit and the letter of the tax laws are designed to ensure that parties file accurate tax information.
¶ 64. To date, this court has not departed from a narrow interpretation of the public policy exception to the employment-at-will doctrine, and we do not deviate from this accepted approach today. This conclusion opens no Pandora's Box for employment litigation. We do not believe that the legislature intended the employment-at-will doctrine to cloak the fundamental and well defined public policies evinced in criminal statutes or in the federal income tax laws. Moreover, we cannot presume that the legislature intended to condone the Hobson's choice of choosing between being fired or being exposed to criminal sanctions. In holding that Strozinsky's complaint adequately identified a funda *55 mental and well defined public policy, this court preserves both the letter and the spirit of the statute and the federal tax code. We thereby maintain the legislative goal of balancing the public interest and the private interests of employers and employees. 15
CONSTRUCTIVE DISCHARGE
¶ 65. Having concluded that Strozinsky identified a fundamental and well defined public policy exception to the employment-at-will doctrine, we next consider whether Strozinsky's claim can proceed under the second step of the public policy exception to the employment-at-will doctrine. Usually, this second step requires a plaintiff to demonstrate that the termination violated a fundamental public policy. This presents a question of fact for the jury.
Kempfer,
¶ 66. The District contends that a constructive discharge claim is not actionable because Strozinsky resigned voluntarily. Although Strozinsky conceded to the circuit court that constructive discharge does not constitute a distinct cause of action, she now asks this court to apply the constructive discharge doctrine to the element of "discharge" in a claim arising under the *56 narrow public policy exception to the employment-at-will rule.
¶ 67. This second issue requires us to review the decision of the circuit court to dismiss the constructive discharge claim. This court reviews the dismissal of claims
de novo. Hausman,
¶ 68. The doctrine of constructive discharge recognizes that some resignations are coerced, tantamount to a termination. 17 Usually, employers do not "discharge" employees who resign: An employee can leave an at-will position at any time — for any reason or no reason at all — just as an employer can *57 terminate an at-will employee at its discretion. An employee who departs from the workplace génerally cannot pursue a claim against the employer for wrongful discharge. Nonetheless, many courts reason that employers should not escape liability simply because the employer forced a resignation: 18
Actual discharge carries significant legal consequences for employers, including possible liability for wrongful discharge. In an attempt to avoid liability, an employer may refrain from actually firing an employee, preferring instead to engage in conduct causing him or her to quit. The doctrine of constructive discharge addresses such employer-attempted "end runs" around wrongful discharge and other claims requiring employer-initiated terminations of employment.
Balmer v. Hawkeye Steel,
*58
¶ 69. We agree with the decision of the circuit court that constructive discharge is not a generic, free-flowing cause of action. Other jurisdictions recognize that constructive discharge is not actionable by itself.
Turner,
¶ 70. The concept of constructive discharge first arose in federal statutory claims brought under the
*59
National Labor Relations Act.
See Balmer,
¶ 71. Outside the context of statutory claims, many courts now permit the constructive discharge defense in causes of action based on the public policy exception to the at-will employment doctrine and in other common-law claims.
21
Stated otherwise, these
*60
jurisdictions recognize that the concept of "constructive wrongful discharges" can arise in these claims.
See e.g., Turner,
¶ 72. Although this court has not considered constructive discharge under the public policy exception to the employment-at-will doctrine, we have allowed parties to raise constructive discharge in termination proceedings brought under our civil service statute.
Watkins v. Milwaukee County Civil Serv. Comm'n,
¶ 73. Subsequently, this court acknowledged that constructive discharge can play a role in statutory discrimination claims, and we analyzed the doctrine alongside the WFEA, Wisconsin's counterpart to Title VII.
Marten,
¶ 74. Although
Marten
addressed constructive discharge, that case did not present the forum in which to address what an employee must prove to show constructive discharge.
22
Other jurisdictions have adopted tests that echo the language of the United States
*62
Supreme Court in
Sure-Tan,
¶ 75. This court already has decided that it is appropriate to turn to federal case law when analyzing the theory of constructive discharge.
Marten,
¶ 76. We therefore must discern what conditions rise to this level of intolerability. A constructive discharge analysis implicates an objective inquiry, recognizing that employees cannot be overly sensitive to a working environment.
Brooms,
¶ 77. Criminal activity sometimes leads to intolerable conditions. The mere presence of illegal conduct at the workplace does not render the environment intolerable.
Id.
at 1032. Intolerable conditions can arise, however, when the employer requests or requires an employee to engage in illegal acts.
Smith v. Brown-Forman Distillers Corp.,
*65
¶ 78. Constructive discharge ultimately presents a question of fact for the jury.
25
Strozinsky's departure may have been a termination, not a resignation. A jury could conclude that a reasonable person in the position of Strozinsky would be forced to resign because of intolerable conditions. We therefore find that it is not "quite clear that under no conditions can the plaintiff recover."
Hausman,
¶ 79. There are facts indicating Strozinsky may have been forced to resign because of intolerable conditions. Moe and Amundson suggested Strozinsky might lose her job. Moe warned that she would be "out of here" and Amundson observed that "perhaps [Strozinsky] shouldn't be working here." Strozinsky summed up her reasons for leaving:
I had been excluded and not talked to since I got back from my vacation. I had been told by Mr. Moe that if I didn't trust him I shouldn't work for them. And Mr. Amundson was telling me I was working for the wrong guy and suggested, perhaps, I work someplace else. And I was also threatened by Mr. Moe that I'd be out of there the next time I would do anything that would upset him. So, yes, I guess I did agree, and I didn't feel I had a choice.
¶ 80. Strozinsky presented testimony that Moe verbally abused her after she made the tax withholding from his regular paycheck. She explained that he appeared hostile, threatening, and verbally abusive. *66 She became physically sick after the confrontation with Moe. Following the August 3, 1995, meeting with Moe and Amundson, Strozinsky's work responsibilities diminished and Amundson and others ceased communicating with her. She contacted the IRS to confirm that the shortcomings in Moe's tax withholdings did not comply with federal law. She had learned from the IRS and American Payroll Association that she personally could be held liable for breaking tax laws. Strozinsky did not wait five years before departing; she resigned on September 13, 1995, approximately seven weeks after the July 20 incident.
¶ 81. A jury also could find that the District knew, or should have known, about Strozinsky's work conditions and failed to implement remedies. When Strozinsky submitted a written complaint to the human resources department, Amundson held it back and later stated that he would pretend he never saw it.
¶ 82. Taken together, the cumulative effect of these circumstances present a factual question about the nature of Strozinsky's discharge. We therefore hold that a jury should determine whether Strozinsky's resignation was voluntary or whether it constituted a constructive discharge.
¶ 83. This holding recognizes that employers cannot escape liability by coercing a resignation instead of formally uttering the words "you're fired." Were we to prohibit this cause of action because the employer forced a resignation instead of expressly discharging the employee, we would elevate form over substance and eviscerate the essence of Brockmeyer and its progeny. Nonetheless, we emphasize that a plaintiffs burden to prove constructive discharge is *67 stringent. The plaintiff must prevail under an objective standard, establishing that conditions were so intolerable that a reasonable person confronted with same circumstances would have been compelled to resign. The level of intolerability must be unusually aggravating and surpass isolated incidents of misconduct, injustice, or disappointment.
¶ 84. We caution that today's rule in no way broadens the narrow public policy exception to the employment-at-will doctrine. Our decision does not permit as expansive an application of the constructive discharge doctrine as allowed by some federal courts for statutory claims. 26 This court expressly declines to sanction a generic, free-flowing constructive discharge cause of action. All we hold is that plaintiffs can raise an ancillary constructive discharge defense in those causes of action under the public policy exception to the employment-at-will doctrine in which the employer alleges voluntary resignation. An employee who invokes the constructive discharge defense still must identify a fundamental and well defined public policy and then must prove that the discharge violated that policy.
¶ 85. We do not, and need not, address the second step of the analysis under the public policy exception to *68 the employment-at-will doctrine, namely whether Strozinsky sustained her burden to prove that, if there was a discharge, the discharge violated fundamental and well defined public policy. Like the threshold issue that asks if the resignation constituted a legal termination, resolution of this second step requires an answer from a fact-finder, not an appellate court.
CONCLUSION
¶ 86. We conclude that the decision of the circuit court should be reversed for two reasons. First, Strozinsky identified a fundamental and well defined public policy in her complaint, and therefore the District was not entitled to summary judgment as a matter of law. Second, dismissal of the complaint is inappropriate in this case because the doctrine of constructive discharge in certain circumstances can satisfy the element of "wrongful discharge" in claims arising under the public policy exception to the employment-at-will doctrine.
¶ 87. Accordingly, the decision of the court of appeals is affirmed, and the matter is remanded to the circuit court for trial for a determination whether Strozinsky's resignation constituted a constructive discharge, and if so, whether the discharge violated fundamental and well defined public policy.
By the Court. — The decision of the court of appeals is affirmed.
Notes
Strozinsky v. School Dist. of Brown Deer, No. 98-0454, unpublished slip opinion (Wis. Ct. App. May 18, 1999) (per curiam).
All references to the Wisconsin Statutes are to the 1993-94 volumes unless indicated otherwise.
In a review of a summary judgment motion, this court interprets the facts, and all reasonable inferences drawn from those facts, in favor of the nonmoving party.
See Grams v. Boss,
Wisconsin Stat. § 943.39 provides:
Fraudulent writings. Whoever, with intent to injure or defraud, does any of the following is guilty of a Class D felony:
(1) Being a director, officer, manager, agent or employee of any corporation or limited liability company falsifies any record, account or other document belonging to that corporation or limited liability company by alteration, false entry or omission, or makes, circulates or publishes any written statement regarding the corporation or limited liability company which he or she knows is false.
The District argues that, "The public policy exception embodied in this statute is only arguably applicable to the present case because the District is neither a 'corporation' nor a 'limited liability company,' as those terms are defined in the Wisconsin statutes." Petitioner's Brief at 29 n.l. In paragraph 2 of her complaint, Strozinsky alleged that the District "is a corporation organized and existing under the laws of the State of Wisconsin." In its answer, the District admitted to this allegation.
42 U.S.C. § 2000(e)-2 (1976).
Wisconsin Stat. §§ 111.31-111.395.
See Michael D. Moberly & Carolann E. Doran, The Nose of the Camel: Extending the Public Policy Exception Beyond the Wrongful Discharge Context, 13 Lab. Law. 371, 371-74 (1997).
In
Brockmeyer v. Dun & Bradstreet,
See Wandry,
The Brockmeyer decision articulated four guidelines that gauge whether a discharge violates public policy:
1. An employer is liable for wrongful discharge if it discharges an employee for refusing to violate a constitutional or statutory provision. Employers will be held liable for those terminations that effectuate an unlawful end.
2. The discharge must clearly contravene the public welfare and gravely violate paramount requirements of public interest.
3. An employer is liable for wrongful discharge if the employer discharges an employee for conduct that is "consistent with a clear and compelling public policy."
4. An employer is not liable for wrongful discharge merely because the employee's conduct precipitating the discharge was praiseworthy or the public derived some benefit from it.
Wandry,
Over time, the first of the
Brockmeyer
guidelines emerged as the key factor in the termination analysis. Current case law
*41
requires discharged employees to show that the termination resulted from a refusal to violate public policy as established by existing law.
Tatge v. Chambers & Owen, Inc.,
Because our decision today does not require us to determine whether Strozinsky's discharge violated fundamental and well defined public policy, we do not add to this standing analysis except to note that courts generally find wrongful discharge when an employer terminates an employee for refusing to commit an illegal act.
See Brockmeyer,
In
Hausman,
Section "103.445 prohibits an employer from deducting certain work-related losses from an employee's wages without following certain procedures to establish the responsibility for the loss."
Wandry,
Strozinsky alleged in her complaint that Moe and Amundson ordered her to falsify Moe's "payroll documentation in an attempt to defraud the taxing authorities in violation of sec. 943.39, stats." Furthermore, she contended that she "was forced to terminate her employment. . .as a direct result of her refusal to violate the public policies established by sec. 943.39, stats., her refusal to falsify payroll documentation, and her refusal to defraud the taxing authorities." The complaint stated that the District wrongfully discharged her "in violation of the fundamental and well-defined mandates of public policy found at sec. 943.39, stats., which prohibit fraud through enforcement of criminal sanctions."
Peterson,
See Cluff, In Defense of a Narrow Public Policy Exception, at 449-50.
In
Winkelman v. Beloit Memorial
Hospital,
Lex K. Larson,
Unjust Dismissal,
§ 6.06[2] (1999)
(quoting Smith v. Brown-Forman Distillers Corp.,
Larson, Unjust Dismissal, § 6.06[2], Stated otherwise, "[t]his approach invites employers to engage in subterfuge as a means of evading the law prohibiting retaliatory discharge." William J. Holloway & Michael J. Leech, Employment Termination Rights and Remedies at 142.
In
Tennyson v. School Dist. of Menomonie Area,
Balmer v. Hawkeye Steel,
Balmer,
In
Marten Transport Ltd. v. DILHR,
"There appears to be no disagreement [in the cases] that one of the essential elements of any constructive discharge claim is that the adverse working conditions must be so intolerable that any reasonable employee would resign rather than endure such conditions.”
Turner,
See also Collier v. Insignia Fin. Group,
Miranda v. Wisconsin Power & Light Co.,
Downey v Southern Natural Gas Co.,
