According to the Court’s opinion, after many years of employment, membership on the Board of Directors and the purchase of one share in the corporation, the plaintiff was fired after the Board all voted to resign and the new Board was elected. The Court found the verbal promises of employment for the lifetime of the majority shareholder to be too indefinite to be legally binding:
Death, although inevitable, is unpredictable. A future event that, by its very nature, could occur in ten minutes or ten years is too indefinite to constitute a "specific term" for purposes of promissory estoppel. Such statements are, at best, discussions of "possible future career developments and opportunities." . . . . Similarly, here, Laverne Hill's statements were tied to her own death and, as a result, suffered the same deficiency as those "promises" made in Callander: they fail to unambiguously promise continued employment for a specific period of time. Indeed, the statements lacked specificity in other aspects. The statements never included a discussion of job title, job responsibilities, compensation, or contingencies in the event the business closed or Laverne Hill decided to part with her ownership interest before her death. The complete lack of details suggests Laverne Hill's statements were anything but clear and unambiguous promises of continued employment. . . . .In any event, even if the promise were sufficiently unambiguous, the Court questioned whether a majority shareholder could bind the corporation since she was not an officer, did not make these promises in a meeting of the Board members, was never ratified by the Board and never reduced to writing. On the contrary, the Employee Handbook (created by the plaintiff) provided that all employees were employed at will unless given a written contract.
Finally, the Court rejected the breach of fiduciary duty claim by a minority shareholder because the duty is owed by the majority shareholder (who was not named as a defendant) and not the corporation (who was the only named defendant).
Insomniacs can read the full decision at http://www.sconet.state.oh.us/rod/docs/pdf/10/2009/2009-ohio-5716.pdf.
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