Tortious Interference with At-will Employment
Page
1: Tortious Interference with At-will Employment
Metamorphosis of Tortious
Interference
Wisconsin has long recognized the tortious interference with contract
cause of action in many contexts. The tort has been applied to protect
against intermeddling with a variety of contractual relations, including
real estate deals, listing agreements, lease rights, contracts to perform
services, "exclusive rights" agreements, and business purchases.10
Wisconsin has adopted the Restatement (Second) of Torts formulation
and analysis for tortious interference claims.11
Section 766 provides that: "One who intentionally and improperly interferes
with the performance of a contract (except a contract to marry) between
another and a third person by inducing or otherwise causing the third
person not to perform the contract, is subject to liability to the other
for the pecuniary loss resulting to the other from the failure of the
third person to perform the contract."12
Tortious interference claims in the at-will employment context fall within
this paradigm, the claim being that the intermeddler has improperly induced
the third person (the employer) to terminate the at-will employment contract.
Wisconsin recognizes two additional species of tortious interference:
1) interference with a person's own performance under a contract, which
includes making the performance more expensive or burdensome;13
and 2) interference with another's prospective contract.14
Tortious interference with prospective contract is asserted sometimes
when an at-will employee loses a promotion or a new job.
Mendelson and its
Progeny: Improper Motive
In 1960, in Mendelson v. Blatz Brewing Co.,15
the Wisconsin Supreme Court addressed whether a discharged at-will employee
could maintain an action against others within the company for tortious
interference arising out of the employee's termination. Mendelson, the
brewery's minority shareholder, alleged that the majority shareholders
and officers conspired to remove him as general manager (so one of the
defendants' sons could have the job) and force him to sell his stock.
The supreme court held that Mendelson stated a claim, noting that "Wisconsin
has aligned itself with the majority in holding that a cause of action
is maintainable for unlawful interference with an employment contract
terminable at will."16
The court recognized a "privilege" for corporate officers or directors
in terminating employees, but noted that the privilege is destroyed if
the object "is to put pressure upon the plaintiff and coerce him into
complying with the defendant's wishes in some collateral matter."17
The court held that in order to state a claim against a corporate officer
personally, it is not necessary to allege malice, only an improper motive.18
The court in subsequent cases adhered to the corporate officer/director
conditional privilege, noting that "[i]f directors are acting in good
faith for the protection of the interests of their corporation and in
the course of their official duty, they should be protected" but that
the privilege "will be destroyed by a wrongful motive."19
"Wrongful motive" in the corporate director context has been interpreted
to mean a situation where directors exceed the scope of their official
duties and make bad faith "decisions which are antithetic to the interests
of the company" - in effect breaching their fiduciary duties to the corporation.20
Extension of Conditional
Privileges
The supreme court's recognition of a privilege for officers and directors
spawned conditional (or qualified) privileges for other groups targeted
by discharged at-will employees, including coemployees, third parties,
and attorneys giving advice.
Coemployee Privilege. Discharged employees have sued coworkers
for tortious interference. As noted, the most famous recent case is Mackenzie
v. Miller Brewing Co.21
Mackenzie, an upper-level manager, sued his employer (Miller Brewing),
his supervisor, and a coemployee arising out of a lost promotion and subsequent
termination.22
The coemployee reported to Miller that Mackenzie had inappropriately commented
on a Seinfeld television episode that, by innuendo, referred to female
sexual anatomy. Miller terminated Mackenzie for exercising "poor management
judgment." Mackenzie asserted a tortious interference with contract claim
against the coemployee for "fraudulently representing" that she felt harassed
by the conversation. The jury found tortious interference and awarded
$0.00 in compensatory damages and $1.5 million in punitive damages. The
trial court set aside the award on the ground that without compensatory
damages, there could be no punitive damages. The court of appeals upheld
the trial court, noting that the coemployee was protected by the "conditional
privilege" available to those reporting workplace problems.23
The court harkened back to the coemployee privilege it had first recognized
in Wolf v. F & M Bank,24
in which a discharged bank president blamed his termination on two female
coemployees who accused him of sexual harassment. The court found that
Mackenzie had not mustered evidence of "ill will" or "improper" motive,
which according to the court in Wolf was the sine qua non to overcome
the coemployee privilege.25
Recognizing "society's interest in encouraging complainants to report
sexual harassment," the court refused to carve out an exception to the
general rule of preclusion of punitive damages in the absence of compensatory
damages.26
Third Parties: Privileges to Assert Complaints and Truthful Information.
Discharged employees also have asserted tortious interference claims against
third parties to blame them for their termination. The right to be free
from unlawful third-party intermeddling from those outside the workplace
was recognized by the Wisconsin Supreme Court long ago in Johnson v.
Aetna Life Insurance Co.27
In Johnson, an employee injured on the job claimed that his employer's
insurer caused his termination after he refused to settle his injury claim
on the insurer's terms. The court recognized the plaintiff's cause of
action by stating: "[T]he plaintiff had the right to dispose of his labor
wherever he could to the best of his advantage. This is a legal right
entitled to legal protection.... and, if anyone assumed to meddle in his
affairs, he did so at his peril."28
Courts to this day continue to protect at-will employment from outside
threats. However, as with officers and coemployees, third parties receive
qualified insulation. For example, in Augustine v. Anti-Defamation
League of B'nai B'rith,29
the supreme court held that a radio listener who complained about how
a radio announcer handled comments made during a radio program was protected
because his complaints were made "in the exercise of a privilege to assert
complaints" emanating from the right of free speech guaranteed by the
U.S. Constitution.
In Liebe v. City Finance Co.,30
the court of appeals addressed a tortious interference claim brought by
a finance company employee who was discharged when his employer found
out that he had disseminated a flier criticizing finance company loans.
The employee sued a finance company that he alleged was responsible for
alerting his employer of the flier. The court held that the defendant
was privileged because the flier merely disseminated truthful information.
The court adopted Restatement (Second) of Torts section 772 (1979), which
provides that the transmission of truthful information is privileged and
proper.31
Attorneys: "Honest Advice" Privilege. Because attorneys often
are asked to advise corporate clients on termination decisions, they sometimes
are targeted by terminated employees. As with the other actors, there
is a line that attorneys may not cross. Although attorneys generally are
not liable to third parties for acts committed within the scope of the
attorney-client relationship, this immunity is qualified and does not
insulate the attorney who is guilty of fraud or a malicious or tortious
act.32
Thus, although attorneys who give truthful advice within the scope of
their representation are insulated, based on the "honest advice" privilege
of Restatement (Second) of Torts section 772,33
an attorney who is complicit with his client in terminating an employee
via improper motives invites liability.
Other Conditional or Qualified Privileges. Wisconsin courts recognize
privileges in several other contexts to thwart terminated employees' tortious
interference claims. For example: 1) elected officials have a privilege,
acting in their public capacity, to terminate political appointees,34
2) doctors operating a hospital have a "conditional privilege" when a
termination is motivated "to preserve the hospital's interests" in providing
medical care,35
3) doctors who decide whether to extend medical or surgical privileges
to a fellow doctor are insulated by Wisconsin's peer review statute (Wis.
Stat. section 146.37),36
and 4) those sharing a common interest or common enterprise have a privilege
to share employment information.37
"Improper Motive": When
Self-benefit Vitiates Corporate Interests
No clear-cut legal definition for "improper" or "wrongful" motive in
the employment context exists; however, courts generally have found that
where one promotes a "private agenda" for self-benefit, at odds with the
interests of the corporation, that suffices as "improper."38
While malice is not necessary to render a motive improper,39
when present, its existence almost always will be conclusive proof of
an improper motive (assuming that malice is the sole or predominant motive).40
Examples of improper motives include inducing a discharge: to coerce
the plaintiff to compel payment of a debt; to prevent the employee from
bringing suit or reporting a workplace regulation violation; to force
compromise of a claim; or to extort money.41
It also is "improper" for one to induce termination by transmitting false
information,42
such as a coemployee telling the employer that an employee has committed
a crime or slandered the employer when they, in fact, have not done so.
If an officer or director acts to further the corporation's interests,
there is no collateral or improper motive.43
Thus, improper motives do not exist where the employee's performance is
deficient,44
when a business suffers financial losses under the employee's watch,45
or when the employee's actions create a conflict of interest.46
Difficulty creeps in when "mixed motives" are alleged, such as where
a termination will benefit the corporation but also bring an officer or
director personal financial gain.47
However, courts have held that even if a termination is motivated by personal
"greed," it is not "improper" or "collateral" if it benefits the corporation.48
Courts generally give deference to corporate officers in view of the "business
judgment rule" and will consider the "rules of the game" for each particular
business context.49
Subjective Privilege: The
"Impropriety" Factors of Section 767
In contexts where there is no applicable conditional privilege, the trier
of fact will apply factors set forth in Restatement (Second) of Torts
section 767 to determine the "impropriety" of a defendant's actions.50
The factors include the actor's conduct and motive, the various interests
involved, the proximity of the actor's conduct to the interference, and
the relations between the parties.51
The Comments to Restatement (Second) of Torts section 767 provide that
"[i]t is in the application of [section 767] that the most frequent and
difficult problems of the tort of interference with a contract or prospective
contractual relation arise."52
In Mackenzie v. Miller Brewing Co.,53
in addition to targeting his coemployee over the Seinfeld conversation,
the plaintiff also asserted a tortious interference claim against his
supervisor for opposing a promotion. The jury awarded $100,000 on the
claim. The court of appeals reversed the judgment, applying the section
767 factors to determine that the acts of Mackenzie's supervisor were
privileged (apparently since Wisconsin courts had not previously expressly
recognized a "supervisor's privilege").54
After weighing the competing interests, the court noted that the supervisor
"was in a legitimate position to comment on Mackenzie's managerial abilities"55
and that "[c]ourts have been reluctant to recognize an at-will employee's
interest in a promotion and have protected a supervisor's freedom to comment
on a subordinate's qualifications for advancement."56
Although the court did not expressly create or recognize a "supervisor's
privilege" in rejecting Mackenzie's tortious interference claim against
the supervisor, its opinion strongly implies that one exists.
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3: From Privilege to Propriety: Confusion Creeps In
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