An employer’s whistleblower policy and its grievance policy are implied contractual promises that employees may enforce, notwithstanding the valid disclaimer that employment policies are not contracts contained in the company’s employee handbook. So says the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia in a recent case involving a non-profit organization’s employee who included multiple implied contract and promissory estoppel claims in her post-termination lawsuit. Leyden v. American Accreditation Healthcare Commission, No. 1:14-cv-01118, March 18, 2015. The court ruled that a whistleblower policy and a grievance policy were “rationally at odds” with the all-encompassing disclaimer, rejecting the employer’s motion to dismiss the contractual claims. Building on that conclusion, the court also ruled that the employee could assert breaches of the contractual duty of good faith and fair dealing in connection with those policies as well as claims founded on promissory estoppel. Christine Leyton was employed as a chief accreditation officer by URAC, a non-profit engaged in accrediting healthcare plans and providers to participate in insurance exchanges established under the Affordable Care Act. After a change in management, she complained of gender discrimination and retaliation for reporting alleged conflicts of interest and improper actions by certain members of the URAC Board of Directors. When her employment was terminated, she sued not only for gender discrimination and retaliation under Title VII and the District of Columbia Human Rights Act, but also for wrongful discharge for her reporting of the alleged conduct of the directors under breach of contract, promissory estoppel and the “public policy” exception to the employment at will doctrine. The URAC sought dismissal of her contractual and public policy claims, citing its express contractual disclaimer in its handbook and District of Columbia public policy claims limitations. The district court agreed to dismiss her public policy claims, but upheld her contractual claims. However, the court did not find that the express disclaimer of contractual promises in the handbook was invalid. To the contrary, the court acknowledged that under District of Columbia law, an employer “may disclaim that it is bound by the terms of” its employment policies. The court noted that there is a presumption of at-will employment in D.C., and that the plaintiff did not have a written employment contract. The court applied a little-recognized exception: the disclaimer would remove or retract the employer’s commitment to “protect” employees under the whistleblower and grievance policies, rendering them “meaningless” unless the employer is “bound to honor” the employee’s rights under those policies. The lesson to be learned here is that even a valid disclaimer of contractual promises based on employment policies, and the at-will employment doctrine, may have exceptions in the eyes of the courts where the purposes of the disclaimer and the purposes of the policies invoked by employees conflict. Only time will tell whether such an exception becomes more widely recognized or begins to seriously erode the validity of disclaimers.
When is a Disclaimer Not a Disclaimer?
RELATED ARTICLES
Michigan Employers Get New Year Relief With Revised COVID-19 Anti-Retaliation Law
December 30, 2020 | Currents - Employment Law, Employment Lessons
Does Same-Sex Harassment Support Gender Discrimination Claims? Texas Supreme Court to Decide
March 17, 2017 | EEOC, Employment Discrimination, Workplace Culture and Conduct, Currents - Employment Law
OSHA’s New Mandatory Electronic Recordkeeping Rule
June 23, 2016 | Employment Discrimination, Currents - Employment Law
New Year, New Laws: Welcome to 2016 in California
January 5, 2016 | Fair Labor Standards Act, Currents - Employment Law
Breaking News: Refusing to Allow an Employee to Rescind His Or Her Voluntary Resignation Can Get You Sued
November 21, 2015 | Employment Discrimination, Currents - Employment Law
Michigan Employers Get New Year Relief With Revised COVID-19 Anti-Retaliation Law
December 30, 2020 | Currents - Employment Law, Employment Lessons
Does Same-Sex Harassment Support Gender Discrimination Claims? Texas Supreme Court to Decide
March 17, 2017 | EEOC, Employment Discrimination, Workplace Culture and Conduct, Currents - Employment Law
OSHA’s New Mandatory Electronic Recordkeeping Rule
June 23, 2016 | Employment Discrimination, Currents - Employment Law
New Year, New Laws: Welcome to 2016 in California
January 5, 2016 | Fair Labor Standards Act, Currents - Employment Law
Breaking News: Refusing to Allow an Employee to Rescind His Or Her Voluntary Resignation Can Get You Sued
November 21, 2015 | Employment Discrimination, Currents - Employment Law
Choose Your Words Wisely
September 3, 2015 | Employment Discrimination, Currents - Employment Law
Pitfalls in Citing “Advice of Counsel” in Decision Making
May 7, 2015 | Employment Discrimination, Currents - Employment Law
Alleged Victim of Sex Discrimination Recovers $13 Million
April 30, 2015 | Employment Discrimination, Currents - Employment Law
Supervisors Are Employees Too … to the Tune of $6.6 Million
April 29, 2015 | Employment Discrimination, High Stakes Employment Issues, Currents - Employment Law
Abusive Work Environment Proposed Legislation Introduced in Minnesota
March 27, 2015 | Employment Discrimination, Currents - Employment Law
EEOC Data Released for 2014 Shows Uptick in Retaliation Charges and Allows For State-By-State Comparison of Charge Activity
February 6, 2015 | EEOC, Currents - Employment Law
Yikes!! AutoZone Hammered with Record $185 Million Dollar Punitive Damages Jury Verdict
November 20, 2014 | Employment Discrimination, Currents - Employment Law
Nassar A Year Later: Pennsylvania ADA Retaliation Case Considers Impact of Supreme Court’s Decision
November 3, 2014 | Letter of the Law, Currents - Employment Law
Remember the Basics
October 30, 2014 | Employment Discrimination, Currents - Employment Law
The Devil’s in the Details - Make Sure Your Agreements Mirror Your Intentions
May 29, 2014 | Employment Discrimination, Currents - Employment Law
EEOC Files ADA Claim Against Employer Due To “No Fault” Attendance Policy
May 20, 2014 | EEOC, Currents - Employment Law
How much can a Facebook post cost you? About $80K
February 27, 2014 | Social Media and Technology, Currents - Employment Law
Update: Still Legal to Fire the ‘Irresistible’ Employee in Iowa
July 15, 2013 | Employment Discrimination, Currents - Employment Law
Seventh Circuit Finds Menial Tasks, Isolation, and Allegations of Violence Provide Pipeline to Jury Trial
April 2, 2013 | Employment Discrimination, Currents - Employment Law
Some Basic Advice as “March Madness” Begins
March 15, 2013 | Employment Discrimination, Currents - Employment Law
Illinois court revives Whistleblower Act claim of employee who was fired following fine
March 8, 2013 | Employment Discrimination, Currents - Employment Law
Iowa Supreme Court Rules that Employer Lawfully Terminated "Irresistible" Employee
December 28, 2012 | Employment Discrimination, Currents - Employment Law
Plaintiff’s Efforts to Preclude Her Deposition in Discrimination/Retaliation Suit Rejected by U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of North Carolina
June 13, 2012 | Employment Discrimination, Currents - Employment Law
RELATED PRACTICE AREAS
Subscribe
Do you want to receive more valuable insights directly in your inbox? Visit our subscription center and let us know what you're interested in learning more about.
View Subscription Center