Wisconsin
Lawyer
Vol. 81, No. 4, April
2008
Employer Liability for Employment References
Many businesses today hesitate to provide information about their
former employees
to prospective employers because of the threat of potential lawsuits.
Lawyers should
understand the legal issues underlying employment reference checks to
help their
business clients establish best practices.
Sidebar:
by Matthew L. Mac Kelly
any businesses today are hesitant
to provide information about their
former employees to prospective employers because of the threat of
potential
lawsuits. Frequently, this fear is so strong that human resources
departments
institute policies against giving any employment references. Whether
this approach is
a "best practice," however, substantially depends on the
individual
circumstances. The following discussion highlights the legal issues
underlying
employment references and other information given by employers about
former employees.
There are primarily four potential sources of liability arising
out of
the provision of employment references to prospective employers: 1)
defamation arising out of the common law and Wis. Stat. section 895.487;
2) invasion
of privacy arising out of the common law and Wis. Stat. section 995.50;
3)
retaliation under the Wisconsin Fair Employment Act and Title VII of the
1964
Civil Rights Act; and 4) negligent referral or breach of duty to warn,
which has
yet to be recognized by the Wisconsin Supreme Court but represents an
expansion
of the existing claim of negligent hiring.
Defamation
Defamation generally. A communication is defamatory if it
"tends to harm the
reputation of another so as to lower him in the estimation of the
community or deter
third persons from associating or dealing with
him."1 When the communication can be
interpreted in both a defamatory and a nondefamatory way, the applicable
test is how the subject
of the communication interpreted the
communication.2 In other words, the question
is
whether the subject reasonably understood the communication as
defamatory, which is an issue
for the jury to decide.3
Both compensatory and punitive damages may be available for a
successful
defamation claim.4 The availability of
punitive damages is determined by the level of malice
toward the defamed party.5 Generally,
punitive damages may be available if the communication
was made with express malice (the defamatory communication was
made with motives of ill
will, envy, spite, revenge, or related motives) or
actual malice (the defamatory communication was made with
knowledge that the statement was false or with reckless disregard of
the truth).6
Defenses to defamation claims. The two defenses to
defamation claims are truth
and privilege. Truth is an absolute defense to defamation
claims.7 To establish this defense, however,
the employer must affirmatively prove the statement or information was
truthful.8 The plaintiff is not required to
prove the statement was false.
A frequently asserted defense is that the
employer has a particular privilege in making the defamatory
statement. In other words, the defense of privilege is that the
employer is immune from liability for making allegedly defamatory
communications.
The first type of privilege is absolute
privilege. When an employer has an absolute privilege regarding its
comments about former employees, the employer has complete
protection, regardless of the motive for the
communication.9 Absolute privilege extends
only to communications made by judicial officers, statements made in
legislative
proceedings, and communications made by certain governmental
officers.10 As such, this privilege
does not apply in most employment reference situations.
The second type of privilege is characterized as
conditional privilege. A conditional privilege gives protection
depending on the employer's motivation. Conditional
privileges usually extend to those individuals having a legitimate
common interest with the
recipient of the communication.11 A
legitimate common
interest exists when "any one of several persons having a
common interest in a particular subject matter correctly or
reasonably believe that there is information that another sharing the
common interest is entitled
to know."12 For example, a conditional
privilege may protect the
employer when the statement is made to business partners, fellow
corporate officers, fellow shareholders, and
co-employees about matters such as common property, business, or other
professional
interests.13
Conditional privilege and employer-employee
relationships. Wisconsin courts have held that a conditional
privilege attaches to certain communications between
an employer and individuals or entities having a common interest in the
employee's
conduct. Examples of situations in which a conditional privilege
attaches include the provision
of letters of reference from former employers to prospective
employers14 and the making of
communications by employers to employees about the reason for another
employee's
discharge.15
A conditional privilege may be lost, however, under any of the
following
circumstances: 1) The employer knows of or shows reckless
disregard for the falsity of the
defamatory communication. 2) The employer publishes the
defamatory matter for some
purpose other than that for which the privilege was given.
3) Publication of the defamatory matter is made to some person
not reasonably believed to have a need to know the matter
to accomplish the purpose for which the privilege is
extended. 4) The publication
includes a defamatory communication but is not reasonably necessary to
accomplish the purpose
for which the privilege is extended. 5) The publication includes
unprivileged as well
as privileged matter.16
Employment reference legislation. In 1995, Wisconsin
enacted Wis. Stat.
section 895.487, which codified the common law conditional privilege
regarding defamation
claims arising out of employment references. Section 895.487(2)
establishes a presumption
that an employer responding to a reference request is acting in good
faith and is immune
from all civil liability that may result from providing that reference
to a prospective
employer. This presumption of good faith, however, may be lost if there
is clear and
convincing evidence that the employer knowingly provided false
information, made the
reference maliciously, or made the reference in violation of Wisconsin's
blacklisting
statute.17
The case of Gibson v. Overnite Transportation
Co.18 gives guidance on the
application of Wis. Stat. section 895.487. In
Gibson, the plaintiff crossed a picket line to
complete a work assignment and was harassed by union supporters. The
plaintiff resigned
from Overnite Transportation (Overnite) and falsely informed his
supervisor he was quitting
to help his ailing grandfather's company. The plaintiff actually went to
work for
another trucking company.19
An agent for the new employer contacted Overnite for an
employment reference.
The plaintiff's former supervisor at Overnite allegedly made a series of
false and
disparaging statements about the plaintiff in response, and the
plaintiff's new employer
terminated his employment based on the negative reference from
Overnite.20
The plaintiff sued Overnite for defamation. The jury found that
the former
supervisor acted with express malice and held Overnite liable for
defamation, awarding the
plaintiff $33,000 in compensatory damages for lost wages and $250,000 in
punitive damages.
This award was upheld on appeal.21
The Wisconsin Court of Appeals clarified the type of proof
needed to establish
defamation in the context of responding to employment reference
inquiries under Wis.
Stat. section 895.487(2). The court stated that a plaintiff does not
need to prove the
employer acted with actual malice (that is, that the employer made
statements with either
knowledge the statements were false or with reckless disregard of the
truth). The
plaintiff only needs to prove that the employer provided the reference
information out of
ill-will, bad intent, envy, spite, hatred, revenge, or another bad
motive against the person
defamed.22
Privacy Implications of Employment Information
In Zinda v. Louisiana Pacific
Corp., the court analyzed the conditional privilege in
the context of privacy rights. In Zinda, the employer's
newsletter reported "comings
and goings" of employees. When an employee was terminated, the
newsletter indicated the
reason for the termination. The plaintiff's termination was reported as
being for
falsifying employment forms. The newsletter was allowed to circulate
outside the employer's
premises, including at the hospital where the plaintiff's wife
worked.23
Because of the publicity at the hospital, the plaintiff brought
a claim of
"unreasonable publicity" under Wis. Stat. section
895.50(2)(c) (now renumbered as
section 995.50(2)(c)).24 The Wisconsin
Supreme Court noted that employees of the company "had
a proper interest in being informed of the plaintiff's discharge,"
and concluded it was
up to the jury to determine if the employer lost its conditional
privilege by
"excessively publish[ing]" the
information.25 Although the employees had
an interest in knowing
the reasons for the plaintiff's termination, the newsletter may have
been an unreasonable
way to serve that interest.
Retaliation Claims for Negative References
A former employee may have a claim for retaliation if the employer
gives a negative
reference after learning that 1) the former employee has filed a
discrimination action
under the Wisconsin Fair Employment Act or Title VII of the 1964 Civil
Rights Act; or
2) the former employee complained about illegal
discrimination.26 For example, in
Robinson
v. Shell Oil Co.,27 the plaintiff
alleged that his former employer gave a prospective
employer a negative job reference in retaliation for the plaintiff's
filing of an
EEOC complaint. The U.S. Supreme Court held that the term
employees as used in the retaliation section of Title VII extends
to former
employees.28
Negligent Referral or Duty to Warn
Some states, such as California and Florida, have implemented the
doctrine of
negligent referral or duty to warn.29 Under
this doctrine, an employer may be held liable for
providing reference information that is untrue or omits knowledge of an
employee's
dangerous and criminal propensities. To date, the doctrine of negligent
referral or duty to
warn has not been adopted in Wisconsin in the employment context. The
Wisconsin
Supreme Court's decision in Miller v. Wal-Mart Stores
Inc., however, provides support for the belief that the court might
sometime uphold a negligent referral cause of
action.30
For example, the Miller court held that a negligent
hiring or supervision claim
is valid in Wisconsin. This claim requires only that the employer must
have some duty
of care to others (such as a duty to hire someone who is not foreseeably
likely to
cause harm to another31); the employer must
breach the duty; and the negligently hired or
supervised employee must cause the plaintiff's
injury.32 Similarly, in a negligent
referral or duty to warn case, a former employer would have a duty to
accurately represent
whether a former employee could pose a foreseeable risk of harming
another employee if
employed by the prospective employer.33
Comparing the standards in Miller to the standards in
negligent referral or duty
to warn cases, it seems the Wisconsin Supreme Court would only have to
make a very
short leap from its recognition of a duty to hire someone who is not a
foreseeable risk
to recognition of a duty on the part of employers giving employment
references or letters
of recommendation to also take reasonable care not to misrepresent (by
affirmation or
omission) the character of a former employee if the former employee
presents risks, such
as potentially harming people in the workplace or committing crimes
imputable to the
prospective employer.
Minimizing Risk
To help reduce the potential for defamation claims, consider some of
the following
when advising your business clients:
- When making representations about former employees to others, all
communications should be truthful and in good faith.
- Clients should make sure the people they give references to have
legitimate
business reasons to request the information. If requests are
received by telephone, legitimacy
may be difficult to determine. Clients should consider instituting a
policy that replies
will be made only to written reference requests. Callers should be
informed of this policy
and given an address where they can send reference requests.
- Information obtained from the applicant's references, such as that
obtained from
an application or interviews, should be kept confidential. This
information should be
shared only with people directly involved in the hiring process. If
responses to reference
requests contain defamatory statements, restricted access will help
avoid a claim of
unreasonable publication, as in the Zinda case.
- Clients should limit the individuals in the company who may give
employment
references. For example, information-giving could be limited to a
human resources officer
or direct supervisor who would only provide information documented
in the
employee's records.
- Clients' statements must be consistent with the justification
given to the
former employee at the time of termination. Clients should not
inform a prospective
employer that the former employee's departure was for a reason
different than the reason given
to the employee at termination.
- Clients should avoid accusations that an employee engaged in
illegal or
improper conduct. Employers have been found liable for defamation
for making statements to
the effect that a former employee was a thief, used illegal drugs,
or made improper
advances toward coworkers. If a client fired an employee because it
suspected the former
employee was engaged in illegal or improper conduct and the client
feels compelled to state
that reason for the termination, then the statement should be
restricted to the suspicion
with an explicit caveat that the reason was a suspicion. (For
example, "Employee was
fired because he was suspected of taking company
property,"
not "Employee was fired because he stole company
property."). However, the client should not state a suspicion
unless it
can be supported with objective evidence.
- Clients should avoid exaggerating an employee's misconduct. For
example, a
statement that an employee was fired for gross insubordination may
be defamatory when the
alleged misconduct was the refusal to adjust an expense account.
- The client should obtain a release from the employees for whom it
provides
references. If an employee leaves the company, the client should
bring up the issue of
future references. Clients should not tell employees that references
will not be given
unless they sign the release, however, because doing so could
invalidate the release if
employees do sign it.34 The client
should speak with the employee about what information
will be communicated to prospective employers if the employee elects
to sign a release.
The employee should be informed that, if he or she does not sign the
release,
information given to prospective employers will be kept to a bare
minimum.
- If the employer has reason to believe a former employee represents
a
foreseeable risk (such as violence, dishonesty, sexual harassment,
and so on) to a prospective
employer or his or her employees, then the employer should consider
making those
concerns known to the prospective employer upon inquiry.
These guidelines are an important part of an overall plan to
help business
clients lower their risk of being sued by former employees.
Matthew L.
Mac Kelly, Marquette 2001, is an associate of Cross Law Firm S.C.,
Milwaukee, practicing in employment-related issues,
consumer law, and accidental injury litigation. He previously was with
McCoy & Hofbauer S.C., Waukesha.
Endnotes
Wisconsin Lawyer