Tortious Interference with At-will Employment
Wisconsin law affords at-will employees a cause of action for tortious interference
with contract if their termination was triggered by the improper motives
of coemployees, officers or directors, or outside third parties.
by Mark R. Hinkston
erformance-based
firings or financially motivated layoffs are facts of corporate life.
While the majority of at-will employee terminations are legitimate, sometimes
supervisors or colleagues induce employee terminations (or thwart promotions)
out of malice with no corporate benefit. When this happens, some employees
have sought relief via a claim for tortious interference with contract
- a claim long-recognized in Wisconsin, generally to salve the tortious
usurpation of a valuable deal.
The most recent high-profile example of tortious interference claims
in the at-will employment context is Mackenzie v. Miller Brewing Co.,1
more commonly known as the "Seinfeld case." Mackenzie, after his
termination, asserted tortious interference claims against his supervisor
for allegedly defeating a promotion, and a female coemployee for allegedly
causing his termination after he told her more than she wanted to hear
about a certain Seinfeld television show episode. Mackenzie also asserted
intentional misrepresentation claims against Miller Brewing and his supervisor,
alleging that Miller misrepresented that his position would not be affected
by a company reorganization.
The Wisconsin Court of Appeals rejected Mackenzie's tortious interference
and misrepresentation claims. Only the misrepresentation claims were the
subject of Mackenzie's appeal to the Wisconsin Supreme Court. The supreme
court held that an at-will employee may not sue for misrepresentation
when an employer fails to disclose facts relating to the employee's status.
Because the supreme court did not address Mackenzie's tortious interference
claims, any subsequent discussion herein of the Mackenzie case refers
to the court of appeals decision.
Mackenzie highlights an employee plaintiff's heavy burden in
pursuing a tortious interference claim against an employer. Corporate-actor
defendants are insulated by certain "conditional privileges." Also, success
hinges on evidence that a termination or demotion was the result of an
"improper motive" - generally considered to be akin to ill will or a malicious
act intended solely for self-benefit, to the exclusion of corporate interests.
This article addresses Wisconsin courts' treatment of tortious interference
claims in the at-will employment context, with specific focus on: 1) the
tort's genesis and development; 2) the categories of targeted defendants
and the "conditional privileges" they assert; and 3) the concept of "impropriety"
and the burden of proving it.
Tort Meets At-will Employment
Courts are reluctant to second-guess employment decisions2
and disfavor attempts to "shoehorn" tort causes of action into contractual
relationships.3
Thus, tortious interference with at-will employment claims occasionally
are greeted with initial suspicion.
First, some take the "employment-at-will doctrine" and the unavailability
of a breach of contract/wrongful discharge claim to mean that the at-will
employment relationship is not "contractual" and, thus, not entitled to
remedy via a tortious interference with contract claim. It indeed is true
that at-will employees can be terminated for "good cause, no cause, or
morally wrong cause."4
Yet the basis for at-will employment is a contract - albeit one "at-will"
- and "until it is terminated the [at-will employment] contract is a subsisting
relation, of value to the plaintiff, and presumably to continue in effect."5
Second, suspicion also arises because the interference tort sometimes
is viewed as a "back-up remedy" against breaches of contract6
- an attempt to get at an employer's "deeper pockets." Yet, the employer
is not a viable party in a tortious interference with at-will employment
claim. The employer cannot be liable for interference because liability
is not imposed for interference with one's own contract, in this case
the at-will contract between employer and employee. Thus, the employer
cannot be targeted and will not possess vicarious liability.7
However, corporate officers and directors may be targeted for personal
liability.
An employee's tortious interference claim in a civil action also may
be suspected as a means to skirt the Wisconsin Worker's Compensation Act.
Yet, such a claim is not preempted by the Wisconsin Worker's Compensation
Act to the extent that the plaintiff seeks "economic loss" rather than
damages for "mental or physical harm."8
Thus, an employee has potential to recover in a civil action pecuniary
loss of benefits, causally related consequential losses, and punitive
damages.9
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2: Metamorphosis of Tortious Interference
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