MEMORANDUM OPINION
Plaintiff Evangeline Turner brought this action against her former employer, defendant Federal Express Corp., for breach of contract, defamation, and wrongful termination. Federal Express has moved to dismiss, arguing that certain defamation claims are untimely while others are subject to absolute or qualified privilege, and that Turner’s other claims are precluded by her at-will employment status. For the reasons explained below, the Court agrees and therefore the motion of Federal Express will be granted.
BACKGROUND
Turner was hired by Federal Express on September 3, 1997 as a courier with routes in the District of Columbia. Compl. ¶ 6. On January 20, 2006, she was advised by her supervisor that her vehicle had beеn in an accident on January 11, 2006. Id. ¶ 13. She denied having been in an accident, but was suspended with pay pending an investigation. Id. ¶ 14. Thereafter, on February 3, 2006, she was terminated from employment. Id. ¶ 19.
Turner appealed her termination through Federal Express’s Guaranteed Fair Treatment Procedure and provided statements in support of her claim, but her termination was upheld. Id. ¶¶ 20, 23. She also applied for unemployment benefits, which Federal Express contested by reporting that she was terminated “for cause.” Id. ¶¶ 24-25. After Turner provided the D.C. Department of Employment Services with documentation that she had not engaged in willful misconduct, her application for unemployment benefits wаs granted. Id. ¶¶ 26-27. Federal Express appealed that decision, but then failed to appear for a scheduled hearing; Turner therefore continued to receive benefits. Id. ¶¶ 28-30.
This action was filed by Turner in the Superior Court of the District of Columbia on February 22, 2007; it was removed to this Court by Federal Express on March 22, 2007. Turner asserts three claims in this aсtion. In Count I, she alleges that both the statements of Federal Express that she had engaged in willful misconduct and her suspension by Federal Express (with resulting communication to co-employees that she had performed a disgraceful or dishonest act) constituted defamation.
Id.
¶¶ 32-37. Count II asserts a breach of contract claim based on her termination in breach of “a written, oral and/or implied contract of employment” and Federal Express policies and procedures contained in an employee handbook manual.
Id.
¶¶ 42-48. Finally, in Count III Turner claims wrongful discharge, again based on her allegedly unjust termination in the face of the designation in her contraсt for employment that she could
Federal Express has moved to dismiss Turner’s complaint, 1 arguing that the defamation claims are either untimely or barred by privilege and that the breach of contract and wrongful discharge claims are barred because Turner was an at-will employee. That motion is fully briefed and ripe for decision. As explained below, the motion will be granted and Turner’s complaint will be dismissed in its entirety. 2
STANDARD OF REVIEW
All that the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure require of a complaint is that it contain “‘a short and plain statement of the claim showing that the pleader is entitled to relief,’ in order to ‘give the defendant fair notice of what the ... claim is and the grounds upon which it rests.’ ”
Bell Atl. Corp. v. Twombly,
550 U.S.-,
The notice pleading rules, however, are not meant to impose a great burden on a plaintiff.
Dura Pharm., Inc. v. Broudo,
DISCUSSION
Turner’s defamation claim in Count I is either untimely or barred by absolute or qualified privilege. Her breach of contract and wrongful discharge claims in Counts II and III fail because Turner was an at-will employee. These points are аddressed below.
I. Defamation
It is not altogether clear what alleged statements Turner claims were defamatory. In the Complaint, she focuses on the alleged statement by Federal Express that she engaged in willful misconduct, Compl. ¶ 32, and the alleged communication by Federal Express to her co-employees that Turner had been suspendеd and “had performed a disgraceful and/or dishonest act,” id. ¶34. In her opposition memorandum, she instead seems to focus on a letter from Federal Express informing her that she had lost the internal appeal of her termination. See Pl.’s Opp’n at 7. None of these alleged defamatory statements can survive here, however.
A one-yеar statute of limitations applies to claims of defamation.
See
D.C.Code § 12-301(4) (2003);
see also Jin v. Ministry of State Sec.,
The only defamatory statements alleged by Turner that may have been made after February 22, 2006 are the statement in the response by Federal Express to Turner’s application for benefits to the D.C. Department of Employment Services (“DOES”), see Compl. ¶¶25, 32, and the statement by Federal Express in a letter advising Turner that she had lost her appeal of her termination through the internal Federal Express Guaranteed Fair Treatment Procedure (“GFTP”) process, which Turner had raised in the briefing on the motion to dismiss, see Pl.’s Opp’n at 7. Even if these claims are timely, however, they are nоnetheless barred by absolute or qualified privilege.
Under settled District of Columbia law, “[rjeports to the unemployment compensation board (a.k.a. Department of Employment Services) concerning the ter
Turner’s recent assertion of a defamation claim based on alleged statements by Federal Express advising her, and certain co-employees, that she had lost her appeal through the GFTP process farеs no better. As Federal Express points out, “[t]he law has long recognized a privilege for anything ‘said or written by a master in giving the character of a servant who has been in his [or her] employment.’ ”
Wallace v. Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom,
Turner does not allege that the challenged statement was malicious or that publication was beyond the normal, expected scope and therefore excessive.
4
Hence, she has not overcome the presumptive qualified privilege for an “intra-company” examination of the type Turner challenges here. Equally telling, Turner would seem under the law to have consented tо the communication, which is an absolute defense to a defamation claim in the District of Columbia.
See Farrington v. Bureau of Nat’l Affairs, Inc.,
Turner has not alleged that the statement by Federal Express advising her and others that she had lost her GFTP appeal contained irrelevant information or was disseminated more broadly than warranted by Federal Express’s legitimate business and human resource interests. She does appear to assert that statements made to DOES are not privileged because they occurred in “far from ordinary” circumstances — i.e., in the cоntext of Federal Express’s appeal of the DOES decision. But the Court concludes that an employer’s appeal of an award of unemployment benefits is not such an unusual circumstance that an otherwise applicable privilege is overcome or should be ignored. And Turner has not alleged any circumstance thаt would overcome the presumptive qualified privilege for Federal Express’s limited internal communication of the outcome of her GFTP appeal, to which she gave implied consent by initiating the appeal in the first place. Turner is really arguing that Federal Express was wrong in its conclusion in the GFTP process and in the information it communicated to DOES. But such error, if it occurred, does not amount to malice, excessive publication, or any other circumstance that overcomes the privileges applicable here.
For all these reasons, Turner’s defamation claims as asserted in Count I of her Complaint, and then expanded upon in her briеfing of the motion to dismiss, will be dismissed. Any claims based on statements made prior to February 22, 2006 are untimely, and Turner’s defamation claims based on alleged statements by Federal Express to DOES or to its employees when communicating the outcome of Turner’s GFTP appeal are barred by absolute or qualified privilege.
II. Breach of Contract and Wrongful Discharge
Turner’s breach of сontract and wrongful discharge claims in Counts II and III fail for the same reason — she was an at-will employee. Turner contends that the employment contract that was breached, and that did not permit her termination in the manner it occurred, arose out of the Federal Express employee handbook. The Court rejects that сontention.
In the District of Columbia, “unless a contrary contractual intent is clearly expressed, all employment is at-will.”
Green v. Bowne of N.Y., LLC,
The Federal Express employee handbook plаinly refutes Turner’s contention that it created an express or implied contract. A disclaimer expressly states that the handbook “is not a contract of employment,” and should not “be read or implied to provide for one.” Def.’s Mot. to Dismiss Ex. A (Decl. of Lisa Monahan, Attach. 2 at 2). That language is repeated on the acknowledgment of receipt signed by Turner and all other employees when receiving the handbook. Id. The separate employment agreement Turner entered specifies that her employment is at-will and that she can be terminated by Federal Express without cause at any time. Id. Ex. A, Attach. 1 at 2-49. Clearly, then, the employee handbook does not create an employment contract, and Turner was — by virtue of both her employment agreement and the employee handbook — an at-will employee subject to termination by Federal Express at any time and for any, or no, reason.
Turner was, it is also clear, fully informed of her at-will employment status. She really has no response to Federal Express’s arguments. Hence, no contract based on the employee handbook existed, Turner was at all times an at-will employee subject to termination without cause, and her breach of contract claim in Count II must fail.
So, too, Turner’s wrongful discharge claim in Count III must be dismissed. She contends that she was tеrminated in a manner not provided for in her employment contract.
See
Compl. ¶¶ 50-58. But as an at-will employee she could “be terminated ‘at any time and for any reason, or for no reason at all.’ ”
Kerrigan,
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, Federal Express’s motion to dismiss will be granted. A separate Order accompanies this Memorandum Opinion.
Notes
. Turner contends that Federal Express’s motion should be converted to a motion for summary judgment because an authenticated copy of the Employee Handbook was attached through an accompanying declaration. However, Federal Express is correct that the motion remains one to dismiss where a plaintiff has failed to incorporate or attach an important document referred to in the complaint, and the defendant simply submits an authenticated copy to be considered on the motion to dismiss.
See, e.g., GFF Corp. v. Associated Wholesale Grocers, Inc.,
. Federal Express contends that Turner's opposition to its motion was not timely filed. Although it appears that the opposition was filed several days late, it will not be stricken and Federal Express’s motion will be granted on its merits.
. Federal Express apparently contends that Turner was terminated on January 19, 2006. This difference in dates is not material to resolution of the motion to dismiss, and Turner's asserted dates will be accepted for that purpose.
. Indeed, because this alleged defamatory statement was raised for the first time in Turner's opposition brief, there is scarcely little in the way of reliable allegations.
