Wonda Enis appeals from a judgment for Continental Illinois National Bank in her suit against Continental for wrongful discharge. , The only issue on appeal is whether the district court was cоrrect to dismiss, for failure to state a claim (see Fed.R. Civ.P. 12(b)(6)), the part of her complaint in which she alleged that the discharge was a breach of her employment cоntract under Illinois law. She had no employment contract, however — unless the employee handbook that Continental gave her when it hired her was a contract that forbade Continental to fire her without complying with the handbook’s provisions on discharge.
Judge Bua thought not,
Five cases trace the wavering line (cf.
Patkus v. Sangamon-Cass Consortium,
It is true that, considered as an issue of common sense rather thаn interpretation of precedent, the date of the manual in relation to when the plaintiff starts to work is unrelated to the essential question, which is whether the employer intended the employment manual to confer legally enforceable rights on the employee; if he did, the employee’s either starting or continuing to work for the emрloyer supplies the necessary consideration, enabling the rights to be enforced. See Note,
Employee Handbooks and Employment-at-Will Contracts,
1985 Duke L.J. 196, 208-09, for sharp criticism of the logic of the Illinois cases. But even if wе were free to disregard that logic, as we would be if (but only if) convinced that the Illinois Supreme Court would reject it, this would not help Enis. The obvious answer to the question as we have restated it is “no.” The purpose of an employment manual is to explain the rules of employment to the employee — not to confer tenure, or arm the employee with grounds for suing the employer if the latter fails to follow the rules in the manual to the letter. The curious
*41
implication of
Carter
is that the employer who issues an employment manual after thе employee has started work cannot alter the manual without compensating the employee — otherwise the alteration would be an unenforceable modification because not supported by consideration, unless, perhaps, the employer earmarked a portion of the employee’s next paychеck as compensation for the change. Thus the Illinois Supreme Court might not go as far as the Fifth District in
Carter.
It might instead decide to follow the supreme courts of Montana and Kansаs, which have held that an employment manual issued after the employee starts work does not give the employee contract rights — without implying that a manual issued before he starts work does. See
Gates v. Life of Montana Ins. Co.,
In
Kaiser v. Dixon,
That brings us finally to
Duldulao v. St. Mary of Nazareth Hospital Center,
Duldulao
is the only decision that supports Enis’s claim, assuming that
Figgie
should be deemed an authoritative retraction of the criticism of
Sargent
made in
Kaiser.
Granted, by the same token
Dul-dulao
is a retraction of
Sargent;
but the failure of
Duldulao
to cite
Figgie
detracts from the force of Duldulao’s criticism of
Sargent.
In addition,
Duldulao
is not easily described as a reasoned decision, for all it says is that “the manual is binding upon the employer since it does imposе obligations on both employee and employer,”
id.
at 765-66, 91 IlLDec. at 472,
We doubt that the Illinois Supreme Court is prepared to go as far as the First District in Duldulao. The main effect of its doing so would be tо discourage employers from issuing employee manuals, since by issuing them they would be giving contractual protection to all new employees (as well as to many old оnes — the implication of Carter and Kaiser). Even in tenured professions like teaching, there ordinarily is a probationary period before the new employee receives contractual protection, but there would be none under the view casually taken in Duldulao. It is no an *42 swer that employers can festoon their manuals with disclaimers of liability for violations of the terms and conditions set forth in the manual; courts frequently disregard disclaimers of liability, and anyway the disclaimers would not help the myriad of employers that had issued such manuals without foreseeing the possibility that by doing so they might be deemed to have granted a form of tenure to their employees.
So, forced to guess, we would guess that the Illinois Supreme Court would follow the line taken in Figgie and by the district court in the present case: the employee manual creates contract rights only if it is either a part of a pre-existing еmployment contract (that is, if the relationship was not in fact one of employment at will) or an enforceable modification of the employment-at-will relatiоnship. But we do not have to guess, for there is an alternative ground available to support the district court’s result. The part of the employee handbook on which Enis relies provides that an employee will be dismissed, without any of the safeguards that Enis claims she was denied, in “serious situations that can provide grounds for immediate dismissal. These excеptions include instances of extreme insubordination and certain security-related incidents — such as stealing, or selling, purchasing, using, or transferring illegal drugs or drugs not authorized by a physician, during time at work or on any CICorp premises.” The language cannot sensibly be limited to the instances given. That would imply that if an employee murdered a coworker he could not be immediately dismissed, because he was not being insubordinate, or stealing, or drug dealing. The words “include” and “such as” show that the specific instances are illustrative, not exhaustive.
What Enis did (as the trial on her other claims, which are not in issue in this appeal, showed) was not within the illustrations, but was a “serious situation.” Her desk was found to contain all sorts of critical mail from customers to the bank, which she had locked there, including such things as notices of deadlines for filing claims in bankruptcy. Some of the items were two months old. Deadlinеs mentioned in the mail had passed. It is hard to imagine more serious misconduct by a bank employee, short of embezzlement; discreet though illegal drug use would probably have harmed the bank less. The bank did not violate the conditions in the manual even if, as we greatly doubt, those conditions are enforceable under the law of Illinois.
Affirmed.
