The plaintiff further alleges that the action of the CT Page 11440 defendants are in violation of the plaintiff's rights under Section
The defendants move to strike all the plaintiff's claims on the grounds that plaintiff was neither terminated nor otherwise disciplined; rather, plaintiff quit her employment of her own volition.
The defendants also move to strike the plaintiff's claim that her rights under Conn. Gen. Stat. §
Additionally, the defendants move to strike plaintiff's claim for wrongful discharge and for breach of the covenant of good faith and fair dealing on the grounds that (i) the defendants' actions, as a matter of law, did not violate important public policy, and (ii) those causes of action are available to a plaintiff only where the plaintiff can show that she was discharged in violation of some important public policy and there is no other remedy provided by law. Here, the "public policy" plaintiff claims was violated by the defendants is the public policy underlying §
Lastly, defendant Moser moves to strike all of the plaintiff's claims on the ground that he was not her CT Page 11441 employer.
The plaintiff brought this action pursuant to §
Specifically, the plaintiff alleges that she was a newspaper reporter and editor for The Register Citizen, a daily newspaper with an office in Torrington and Winsted, Connecticut. Complaint, par. 1. Plaintiff alleges that The Register Citizen was owned, either directly or indirectly, by both the defendant Journal Register Company ("Journal Register"), and defendant Torrington Acquisition Corporation. Complaint, par. 2. The plaintiff also alleges that defendant Geoffrey Moser was publisher of The Register Citizen. Complaint, par. 3.
The plaintiff claims she was "in effect forced to resign" when defendant Moser, the newspaper's publisher, would not let her publish a certain letter to the newspaper's editor. Complaint, par. 9. The plaintiff asserts that she was "forced to resign" because she, as a newspaper woman, "felt compelled to publish" the letter at issue in order to provide "balanced" forum, and Moser refused to allow her to do so. Complaint pars. 7, 8, 9.
The plaintiff also claims that her "forced" resignation constituted a wrongful discharge and/or a breach of the covenant of good faith and fair dealing because (i) "[t]he Defendants as newspaper owners and publishers have violated a public trust to protect
The purpose of a motion to strike is to challenge the legal sufficiency of the allegations of a complaint.Gordon v. Bridgeport Housing Authority,
Seery's complaint alleged that she has been `constructively discharged' in violation of public policy. The hospital maintains that it did not discharge Seery, but rather that she voluntarily resigned.
`Constructive discharge occurs when an employer renders an employee's working conditions so difficult and intolerable that a reasonable person would feel forced to resign.' Neale v. Dillon,
534 F. Sup. 1381 ,1390 , aff'd,714 F.2d 116 (2d Cir. 1982). See generally, annoy., Constructive Discharge — Title VII, 55 A.L.R. Fed. 418. A claim of constructive discharge must be supported by more than the employee's subjective opinion that the job conditions have become so intolerable that he or she was forced to resign. Neale v. Dillon, supra; Bete v. Bureau of National Affairs,59 Md. pp. 642 ,649 ,477 A.2d 1197 ,1201 (1984).`Normally, an employee who resigns is not regarded as having been discharged, and thus would have no right of action for abusive discharge.' Bete v. Bureau of National Affairs, supra. Through the use of constructive discharge, the law recognizes that an employee's `voluntary' resignation may be, in reality, a dismissal by the employer. See id.
A constructive discharge in and of itself will not entitle an at will employee to prevail on a cause of action brought under Sheets, however, because CT Page 11443 the employee must still prove that the dismissal, in whatever form, occurred for a reason violating public policy. See Morris v. Hartford Courant, Co., supra, 679.
Here, the plaintiff alleges only that she "felt compelled" to resign as a matter of principle because the defendant would not allow her to publish a certain letter to the editor. Such a subjective inclination on plaintiff's part, unsupported by any factual allegations warranting a conclusion that her conditions of employment had become objectively intolerable, does not state a legally cognizable claim, under §
From the face of plaintiff Laschever's complaint, it is clear that she was not fired; rather, she quit as a matter of principle. She fails, as a matter of law, to meet the standard for constructive discharge; that the defendants' actions rendered her working conditions so objectively difficult and intolerable that a reasonable person would feel forced to resign. See Seery v. Yale-NewHaven Hospital,
To accept the plaintiff's argument would be to find that she had a right to dictate editorial policy of the employer newspaper. The communication which she wished to publish was not her writing but rather one which was submitted by another. Under these circumstances, there is no constitutional issue. An individual has no right to publish a letter in a privately owned publication. SeeRattner v. Neburn,
The rights of members of the news media are "coextensive with and do not exceed those of members of the public in general." In Re Greensboro News Co.,
Indeed, to construe §
The choice of material to go into a newspaper, and the decisions made as to limitations on the size and content of the paper, and treatment of public issues and public officials . . . whether fair or unfair . . . constitute the exercise of editorial control and judgment. It has yet to be demonstrated how governmental regulation of this crucial process can be exercised consistent with
first amendment guarantees of a free press as they have evolved to this time.
Id. at 258;
Here, in arguing that the defendants violated §
Section 5 of article
The legislative history of section
Here the "expression" plaintiff alleges as the basis for her §
A cause of action for breach of the covenant of good faith and fair dealing, which sound in contract, "is coterminous with, and extends no further than, a cause of action for wrongful discharge in tort." Battista v.United Illuminating Co.,
The Supreme Court in Morris v. Hartford,
expressly refused to enlarge the circumstances under which an at will employee may successfully challenge his dismissal beyond the situation where the reason for his discharge involves impropriety . . . derived from some important violation of a public policy . . . . [an at will] employee cannot sustain a cause of action in contract for breach of an implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing based solely upon a discharge without just cause.
Magnan v. Anaconda Industries, Inc., supra 572.
The plaintiff claims that her discharge violated "a public trust to protect
A cause of action founded pon [upon] §
PICKETT, J.
