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Vol. 73, No. 7, July 2000 |
Hausman v. St. Croix Care Center:
Stretching the Employment-At-Will Doctrine
The Plaintiffs' Perspective
The Defendant's Perspective
Statutory Changes to Protect Reporters of Elder
Abuse
In Hausman v. St. Croix Care Center, the Wisconsin
Supreme Court expanded the public policy exception to the employment-at-will
doctrine to protect private sector employees who "whistle
blow" when they have a legal duty to do so. The authors
explore the rationale behind the decision, the decision's effects,
and the changes it has brought about in employment and health
care law.
t. Croix Care Center (SCCC), a private
nursing facility in Prescott, Wis., employed Jane Hausman, a social
worker, as the director of social services. She and coworker Karen Wright,
an LPN, were members of an interdisciplinary care team responsible for
ensuring that SCCC provided appropriate care to its residents. In 1992
and 1993, Hausman and Wright brought concerns of suspected abuse and
neglect of residents to the director of nursing and eventually to SCCC's
administrators, but no action or investigation was undertaken. Hausman
then contacted the regional ombudsman for the Board on Aging and Long
Term Care, who investigated their concerns. At Hausman's request,
the ombudsman contacted the state agency, the Bureau of Quality Control.
Both Hausman and Wright were terminated shortly thereafter. Hausman
was terminated in July 1993 for alleged unprofessional conduct and breach
of confidentiality. The St. Croix Care Center terminated Wright in September
1993, citing budgetary constraints.
Hausman
and Wright initially filed an administrative complaint against SCCC
with the Equal Rights Division (ERD), alleging a violation of section
46.90 of the Wisconsin Statutes. Because that statute protected only
those who reported to the designated county agency, rather than the
ombudsman, their claim was dismissed by the ERD and Labor & Industry
Review Commission (LIRC), which dismissal was affirmed by the circuit
court.1 They also filed a common
law wrongful discharge complaint in circuit court, alleging that they
were discharged for reporting suspected abuse and neglect, in violation
of the public policy that encourages the reporting of abuse and neglect
of the elderly, embodied in section 46.90.
Although Wisconsin generally recognizes that employees are employed "at
will," and can be discharged for any reason not prohibited by law,
the Wisconsin Supreme Court had earlier recognized a public policy exception
to employment-at-will in a 1983 case, Brockmeyer v. Dun & Bradstreet.2 This exception resulted in a line of employment
cases defining the parameters of the public policy exception. At the
time Hausman arose, case law provided that employees have a cause
of action for wrongful discharge if they are discharged for refusing
a command, instruction, or request of their employer to violate public
policy as established by existing law.
Because Hausman and Wright had not refused a command or request to
violate public policy, their wrongful discharge claim was dismissed
by the circuit court, which decision was upheld by the Wisconsin Court
of Appeals.3 However, in December
1997, in Jane Hausman and Karen Wright
v. St. Croix Care Center,4 the Wisconsin Supreme Court took the opportunity
to expand the public policy exception to the employment-at-will doctrine
to protect private sector employees who "whistle-blow" when
they have a legal duty to do so.
This article explores the rationale behind the decision in
Hausman, the effects of the decision, and the changes
it has brought about in employment and health care law. Authored
by the two opposing attorneys in the Hausman case, two different
perspectives of the case are presented. Because the case was
decided on defendant's motion to dismiss for failure to
state a claim, the two sides have stipulated to the facts of
the case as alleged in the first paragraph of this article.
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