According to the Court’s opinion, the plaintiff was eight years away from retiring from another college when he was hired by Capital to reorganize its public safety department. When he expressed reluctance to leave a secure position so close to his retirement age – particularly with friction that was likely to develop during the planned reorganization, he was assured by the VP/Treasurer that he would be employed at least eight years to retire at Capital. However, his offer letter only promised one year of employment. He was promoted the following year and given two more one-year appointments. When rumors surfaced about a possible budget deficit, he again sought reassurance about his job security and was again assured by the VP/Treasurer that his job was safe. When the VP/Treasurer was then fired, he sought and obtained similar assurance from the President, who then shortly thereafter left.
When an impending $12.5M deficit was revealed, a committee examined all positions and recommended the elimination of 72 positions, including that of the plaintiff. His termination letter informed him that his job was eliminated because of the budget difficulties and not because of his job performance. His public safety duties were reassigned to a 28-year old officer and his auxiliary duties to other employees. He then filed a lawsuit for $4.6M against Capital for age discrimination and promissory estoppel. The lawsuit received publicity in the local media and Capital’s attorney was quoted in two newspapers as stating that the plaintiff had been let go because of the budget difficulties and “job performance issues.” The plaintiff amended his claims to include the allegedly defamatory statements by the attorney. The trial court granted summary judgment to the defendants and the plaintiff appealed.
Defamation Claim
The Court of Appeals addressed the defamation claim first and found the attorney’s statement about the plaintiff being fired in part because of his job performance to be defamatory on its face (or defamation per se) since it had the tendency to hurt plaintiff’s career and ability to find another job. The Court rejected the defense attempt to
characterize this statement as vague and contend that if it is defamatory at all, it is only defamatory per quod. We disagree. No employer fires an employee for good job performance. The only reasonable reading of [the attorney’s] statement is that Capital terminated [the plaintiff’s] employment for two reasons, and one of those reasons was [the plaintiff’s] poor job performance. Thus, the statement in and of itself tends to injure [the plaintiff] in his occupation as any employer would hesitate before hiring a potential employee who underperformed in his previous job. Such a statement is defamatory per se.
Typically, damages in such situations are presumed without proof or pleading. However, in this case, the Court found the statement to also have limited protection from the First Amendment. Because the plaintiff worked for a private college, he was not a general public figure. Moreover, the fact that he filed a lawsuit – by itself – did not render him a limited purpose public figure. However, the fact that he sought $4.6M in damages from a significant private institution which was having very public budget difficulties rendered the issue of the reduction in force and his lawsuit a matter of public concern – as evidenced by the significant media coverage. Therefore, the claim was governed by the United States Supreme Court’s decision in Gertz v. Robert Welch, Inc. (1974), 418 U.S. 323, 345-46, which concluded that:
in such cases, the states could define for themselves an appropriate standard of liability, so long as they did not impose liability without fault. Gertz, 418 U.S. at 347. Subsequently, Ohio adopted the ordinary negligence standard as the standard of liability for actions involving a private individual defamed in a statement about a matter of public concern. Landsdowne v. Beacon Journal Publishing Co. (1987), 32 Ohio.St.3d 176, 180. In addition to requiring an element of fault, the Gertz court also limited the type of damages recoverable in defamation cases involving private individuals and statements regarding a matter of public concern. Given the constitutional command of the First Amendment, . . . the states could no longer permit recovery of presumed or punitive damages, at least when liability was not based upon a showing of actual malice. Gertz, 418 U.S. at 349, . . . Thus, in Ohio, a plaintiff must prove either: (1) ordinary negligence and actual injury, in which case he can receive damages for the actual harm inflicted; or (2) actual malice, in which case he is entitled to presumed damages.
Thus, the plaintiff was required to show actual malice or actual injury (i.e., “out-of-pocket loss, impairment of reputation and standing in the community, personal humiliation, and mental anguish and suffering”). However, the plaintiff’s testimony that he felt that his job hunt was impaired by “google searches” of the attorney’s statement was too speculative to support proof of actual injury. Moreover, he failed to introduce any evidence that the attorney knew that his statement was false at the time it was made. Therefore, summary judgment on his defamation claim was upheld.
Retaliation
The plaintiff also claimed that the attorney’s defamatory statement was made in retaliation for the plaintiff’s consultation with an attorney following his termination. However, the Court refused to infer causation (i.e., the defamatory statement from the consultation with counsel) based on the passage of two months between the demand letter from the plaintiff’s attorney and the newspaper accounts repeating the defamatory statement. Because there was no other evidence of causation or proving a link between the two events, the Court affirmed summary judgment.
Age Discrimination
Typically, a discrimination claim requires that the plaintiff show that he was replaced by someone outside the protected class. The Court noted that this is extremely difficult, if not impossible, to show when the plaintiff was fired in a reduction in force:
When a discharge results from a work force reduction, an employee is not replaced, instead his position is eliminated. Barnes v. GenCorp Inc. (C.A.6, 1990), 896 F.2d 1457, 1465. Logically, then, a plaintiff discharged as part of a work force reduction cannot offer evidence that he was replaced by a substantially younger person to satisfy the fourth element of the prima facie case. Moreover, even if such a plaintiff demonstrates that his discharge permitted the retention of substantially younger persons, no inference of discriminatory intent can be drawn. Id. In the context of a work force reduction, the discharge of the plaintiff and retention of a substantially younger employee is not "inherently suspicious" because a work force reduction invariably entails the discharge of some older employees and the retention of some younger employees. Brocklehurst v. PPG Industries, Inc. (C.A.6, 1997), 123 F.3d 890, 896. Permitting an inference of intentional discrimination to arise from the retention of younger employees "would allow every person age 40-and-over to establish a prima facie case of age discrimination if he or she was discharged as part of a work force reduction." Barnes at 1465.
{¶57} Consequently, when a plaintiff's position is eliminated as part of a work force reduction, courts modify the fourth element of the prima facie case to require the plaintiff to " 'com[e] forward with additional evidence, be it direct, circumstantial, or statistical, to establish that age was a factor in the termination.' " Kundtz v. AT & T Solutions, Inc., 10th Dist. No. 05AP-1045, 2007-Ohio-1462, ¶21 . . . The purpose of this modified requirement is to ensure that, in work force reduction cases, the plaintiff has presented evidence to show that there is a chance that the work force reduction is not the reason for the termination. Asmo v. Keane, Inc. (C.A.6, 2006), 471 F.3d 588, 593 . . .
Nonetheless, the plaintiff can also show discrimination if he was in fact replaced instead his duties being eliminated, consolidated or distributed among a number of different people:
An employee is not eliminated as part of a work force reduction when he or she is replaced after his or her discharge. However, a person is not replaced when another employee is assigned to perform the plaintiff's duties in addition to other duties, or when the work is redistributed among other existing employees already performing related work. A person is replaced only when another employee is hired or reassigned to perform the plaintiff's duties.
In this case, the plaintiff’s 2004 promotion involved him assuming certain duties outside the public safety department. When his position was eliminated in 2006, those duties were reassigned and only his public safety duties were given to the 28-year old officer. The reassignment of his auxiliary duties were more than cosmetic or superficial duties. Thus, there was sufficient evidence to show that his position was eliminated and his duties distributed in a genuine reduction in force. Therefore, without additional evidence or direct evidence of age discrimination, summary judgment on this claim was affirmed.
Promissory Estoppel.
Plaintiff brought this claim based on the three separate promises of job security which he received both before and after he was hired by Capital. As explained by the Court:
Promissory estoppel provides an equitable remedy for a breach of an oral promise, absent a signed agreement. Olympic Holding Co. v. ACE Ltd., 122 Ohio.St.3d 89, 2009-Ohio-2057, ¶40. In order to succeed on a claim for promissory estoppel: "The party claiming the estoppel must have relied on conduct of an adversary in such a manner as to change his position for the worse and that reliance must have been reasonable in that the party claiming estoppel did not know and could not have known that its adversary's conduct was misleading." . . . The elements necessary to prove a claim for promissory estoppel are: (1) a clear, unambiguous promise, (2) the person to whom the promise is made relies on the promise, (3) reliance on the promise is reasonable and foreseeable, and (4) the person claiming reliance is injured as a result of reliance on the promise.
The fatal flaw in his argument, however, is that he signed written contracts which promised him only employment for a year at a time. Therefore, his reliance on the oral promises was not reasonable under the circumstances:
[C]ourts cannot enforce an oral promise in preference to a signed writing that pertains to exactly the same subject matter, but has different terms. Ed Schory & Sons at 440. Thus, "[p]romissory estoppel does not apply to oral statements made prior to the written contract, where the contract covers the same subject matter.
The Court rejected the plaintiff’s argument that his employment letters were not binding contracts, but only acknowledgment of certain terms. The Court also rejected the argument that the plaintiff’s reliance on promises made during the budget crises were reasonable under the circumstances. In any event, the plaintiff did not provide any evidence that he relied on the promises to his detriment since there was not evidence that he rejected a job offer in reliance on the promises. On the contrary, despite the promises being made to him during the budget crises, he promptly began searching for another job and submitting his resume to other employers.
Insomniacs can read the full opinion at http://www.sconet.state.oh.us/rod/docs/pdf/10/2009/2009-ohio-5672.pdf.
NOTICE: This summary is designed merely to inform and alert you of recent legal developments. It does not constitute legal advice and does not apply to any particular situation because different facts could lead to different results. Information here can change or be amended without notice. Readers should not act upon this information without legal advice. If you have any questions about anything you have read, you should consult with or retain an employment attorney.