MacDonald v. Tandy Corporation ( 1993 )


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  • USCA1 Opinion









    January 22, 1993
    [NOT FOR PUBLICATION]

    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
    ____________________

    No. 92-1802

    JOHN J. MACDONALD,

    Plaintiff, Appellant,

    v.

    TANDY CORPORATION,

    Defendant, Appellee.
    ____________________

    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

    FOR THE DISTRICT OF NEW HAMPSHIRE


    [Hon. Francis J. Boyle,* U.S. District Judge]
    ___________________

    ____________________

    Before

    Selya, Circuit Judge,
    _____________
    Higginbotham,** Senior Circuit Judge,
    ____________________
    and Cyr, Circuit Judge.
    _____________

    ____________________

    Andru H. Volinsky with whom Mary E. Davis, and Shaheen,
    ___________________ ________________ ________
    Cappiello, Stein & Gordon, P.A. were on brief for appellant.
    _______________________________
    Russell F. Hilliard with whom Ernest T. Smith, III, and Upton,
    ____________________ ______________________ ______
    Sanders & Smith were on brief for appellee.
    _______________

    ____________________


    ____________________

    _____________________

    * Of the District of Rhode Island, sitting by designation.
    ** Of the Third Circuit, sitting by designation.




















    HIGGINBOTHAM, Senior Circuit Judge. This is an appeal
    ____________________

    from a grant of a judgment n.o.v. in favor of defendant, Tandy

    Corporation, and against plaintiff, John J. MacDonald. MacDonald

    was fired from his job as a sales-trainee at a store owned by

    Tandy in Manchester, New Hampshire because Tandy suspected that

    MacDonald had stolen money from the store's cash register.

    MacDonald brought an action against Tandy, alleging wrongful

    discharge under New Hampshire law. MacDonald claimed that Tandy

    fired him because he had cooperated with Tandy's theft

    investigation. Cooperation with an employer's theft

    investigation, according to MacDonald, is conduct protected by

    New Hampshire public policy. Therefore, MacDonald argued his

    firing was unlawful under New Hampshire law.

    The action went to trial before a jury in the United

    States District Court for the District of New Hampshire. The

    jury returned a verdict in MacDonald's favor in the amount of

    $101,000 damages. Tandy moved for a judgment n.o.v. and, in the

    alternative, a new trial. The district court granted Tandy's

    first motion, and entered a judgment n.o.v.. The court found

    that MacDonald had failed to show that his conduct was protected

    by public policy. The court also found that, even if MacDonald's

    conduct was indeed protected by public policy, MacDonald had

    failed to show that he was fired because of the protected

    conduct.





















    MacDonald now appeals. Because we agree that MacDonald

    failed to show that he was fired because of conduct protected by

    New Hampshire public policy, we will affirm the district court's

    grant of judgment n.o.v. in favor of Tandy.





    I.

    John J. MacDonald (MacDonald), who had been employed by

    Tandy Corporation (owner of the Radio Shack stores) for six

    years, was working as a trainee at the Radio Shack store located

    in a shopping mall in Manchester, New Hampshire. On October 1,

    1986, the store was closed at 9:43 p.m. by three Tandy employees,

    David Jesperson (Jesperson), Al Aikens (Aikens), and Shirley

    Cunningham (Cunningham). Jesperson, Aikens, and Cunningham left

    the store together. As they left, the three employees set the

    store's electronically controlled motion detection alarms.

    At 9:47 p.m., Eastern Alarm, telephonically monitoring

    the alarms from its offices in Portland, Maine, received a motion

    alarm emanating from the Radio Shack store. Eastern Alarm called

    the Manchester Radio Shack store by telephone but did not receive

    an answer. Eastern Alarm received a second motion alarm two

    minutes later. Eastern Alarm then called the Manchester Police

    Department which dispatched a police unit to the store. Eastern


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    Alarm also called the store manager, Brad Ackerman (Ackerman),

    but was unable to reach him. Eastern Alarm therefore called

    MacDonald, the second person on the Radio Shack list of employees

    to be called. In response to the call, MacDonald left home and

    came to the Radio Shack store, arriving at approximately 10:35

    p.m. In his work with Tandy Corporation, MacDonald had

    previously responded to over thirty such alarm calls.

    When MacDonald arrived, he was met by mall security

    personnel and informed that the doors to the store were secure

    and that it was safe to enter. MacDonald used a key supplied to

    him by the store manager and entered the store alone. He

    remained alone in the store for approximately fifteen minutes.

    MacDonald reset the alarm, put a few things in order for the next

    day, locked the front door, and left.

    On the morning of October 2, 1986, MacDonald also came

    in alone to open up the store for the day's business. MacDonald

    discovered $530.02, including $200.00 petty cash, missing from

    one of two cash drawers. He immediately notified Ackerman.

    MacDonald also informed Bill Hanlon (Hanlon), a loss prevention

    manager for Tandy Corporation, of the missing funds.

    The police arrived and questioned MacDonald. Later,

    both Ackerman and Hanlon arrived and began a separate

    interrogation. They questioned Jesperson, Aikens, Cunningham,


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    and MacDonald individually. MacDonald stated that he did not

    observe, either on the evening of October 1, 1986 or the morning

    of October 2, 1986, when he opened the store, any signs of forced

    entry, with respect to the rear or front doors or the cash

    drawers. MacDonald also stated that he "did not notice if the

    cash drawer was open when he went to the store on the night of

    October 1, 1986."

    During MacDonald's questioning, the subject of taking a

    polygraph examination was raised. At trial, MacDonald testified

    that he understood that Tandy wanted him to take the polygraph

    and that Tandy planned to set up the polygraph exam. Further,

    MacDonald understood that he would lose his career with Tandy if

    he did not accede to the polygraph. On October 9, 1986,

    MacDonald went to the Manchester Police Department for the

    purpose of taking a polygraph examination with regard to the

    missing funds. Officer Anthony Fowler conducted the examination

    and scored it as a three chart cumulative total of -17 deceptive

    and two chart cumulative total of -10 deceptive. In substance,

    the conclusion was that MacDonald was not telling the truth.

    MacDonald informed Radio Shack personnel of the polygraph

    results.

    On October 21, 1986, the home office of Tandy issued

    orders that MacDonald was to be discharged. The reason for his


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    separation was stated as follows: "failed to clear integrity

    investigation. See Loss Prevention Report and Manchester, New

    Hampshire Police Report for details." Tandy's Loss Prevention

    Report, prepared by Hanlon, noted the circumstances of the

    disappearance of the money and that MacDonald had failed to clear

    the polygraph test.

    As noted above, the action went to a jury trial, the

    jury returned a verdict in MacDonald's favor in the amount of

    $101,000 damages, and the defendant moved for a judgment n.o.v.

    The district court then certified the following question to the

    New Hampshire Supreme Court:

    Do the facts and circumstances of this action
    support a finding that public policy
    encouraged the action of the plaintiff, or
    does public policy condemn any action which
    the plaintiff refused to take in connection
    with the termination of his at-will
    employment by the defendant?

    After the New Hampshire Supreme Court declined to respond to this

    certified question, the district court granted the motion for

    judgment n.o.v..

    The district court reasoned that the record failed to

    show that Tandy decided to terminate MacDonald's employment

    because he cooperated in Tandy's investigation of the missing

    funds. The court also reasoned that MacDonald's action in taking

    the polygraph was not in cooperation with an investigation being


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    conducted by his employer but was rather in cooperation with an

    investigation being conducted by the Manchester Police

    Department.



    II.

    The district court had subject matter jurisdiction

    pursuant to 28 U.S.C. 1332. We have appellate jurisdiction

    prusuant to 28 U.S.C. 1291. In the First Circuit, a judgment

    n.o.v. is reviewed under the same standard as a directed verdict:

    [T]he evidence and all reasonable inferences
    extractable therefrom must be examined in the
    light most favorable to the nonmovant and a
    judgment notwithstanding the verdict should
    be granted only when the evidence, viewed
    from this perspective, is such that
    reasonable persons could reach but one
    conclusion.

    Veranda Beach Club Ltd. Partnership v. Western Sur. Co., 936 F.2d
    _______________________________________________________

    1364, 1383-84 (1st Cir. 1991).

    New Hampshire law recognizes a wrongful discharge

    exception to the common law rule of at-will employment as

    follows:

    [P]laintiffs must meet [a two-part test] to
    establish a wrongful discharge cause of
    action. First, the plaintiff must show that
    the defendant was motivated by bad faith,
    malice, or retaliation in terminating the
    plaintiff's employment. . . . Second, the
    plaintiff must demonstrate that he was
    discharged because he performed an act that
    public policy would encourage, or refused to

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    do something that public policy would
    condemn.

    Cloutier v. Great Atlantic & Pacific Tea Co., 436 A.2d 1140,
    ________________________________________________

    1143-44 (N.H. 1981); accord Short v. School Admin. Unit No. 16,
    ______ ___________________________________

    612 A.2d 364, 370 (N.H. 1992) ("To support a claim of wrongful

    termination under State law, a plaintiff must establish two

    elements: one, that the employer terminated the employment out

    of bad faith, malice, or retaliation; and two, that the employer

    terminated the employment because the employee performed acts

    which public policy would encourage or because he refused to

    perform acts which public policy would condemn.") (citation

    omitted).

    Resolution of the second prong of this test, whether

    plaintiff's conduct for which he or she was discharged fell

    within the parameters of public policy, is usually a question for

    the jury:

    [T]he existence of a `public policy' also
    calls for the type of multifaceted balancing
    process that is properly left to the jury in
    most instances. . . . We believe it best to
    allow the citizenry, through the institution
    of the American jury, to strike the
    appropriate balance in these difficult cases.


    Cloutier, 436 A.2d at 1145. However, the jury's determination is
    ________

    not entirely without bounds. "Although ordinarily the issue of

    whether a public policy exists is a question for the jury, at


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    times the presence or absence of such a public policy is so clear

    that a court may rule on its existence as a matter of law and

    take the question away from the jury." Short, 612 A.2d at 370.
    _____

    Even if the alleged conduct is determined to be

    protected by a public policy, a necessary element of the

    plaintiff's case is to prove that he or she was actually

    discharged because of such conduct. Thus, a causal link between

    the conduct established to be protected by public policy and the

    reason for the allegedly wrongful discharge is necessary to

    satisfy the second prong of the New Hampshire test. As the New

    Hampshire Supreme Court stated:

    [T]he plaintiff must demonstrate that he was
    discharged because he performed an act that
    _______
    public policy would encourage, or refused to
    do something that public policy would
    condemn.

    Cloutier, 436 A.2d at 1144 (emphasis added). Where an employer
    ________

    essentially penalized the employee for taking his regularly

    scheduled day off, the court found "a sufficient nexus between

    the public policy asserted by the plaintiff and the reasons for

    his discharge." Id. at 1141; see also Cilley v. New Hampshire
    __ ________ _______________________

    Ball Bearings, Inc., 514 A.2d 818, 821 (N.H. 1986) (causation
    ____________________

    element satisfied where plaintiff had alleged his termination

    resulted from refusing to lie and that public policy supports

    such truthfulness).


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    In this case, we agree with the district court that

    there is no evidence on this record to demonstrate that the

    plaintiff was discharged because of conduct protected by a public

    policy. The specific public policy asserted by MacDonald as a

    justification for upholding the jury's verdict is that of

    "cooperation with an employer's theft investigation."

    Interpreted in the light most favorable to MacDonald, the record

    shows that MacDonald was suspected of stealing money from his

    employer, cooperated in the employer's investigation, was not

    cleared by the investigation, and was terminated. MacDonald was

    suspected of stealing the cash from Tandy because of the

    circumstances under which the money was taken from the store.

    MacDonald then cooperated with his employer's theft

    investigation, the result of which did nothing to dispel his

    employer's suspicions. We believe the district court drew the

    only possible interpretation from these facts when it concluded

    that MacDonald was dismissed because of the opportunity he had to

    steal the money and because he was not cleared by the subsequent

    investigation and not because he cooperated with his employer's

    theft investigation. What is missing from the record is any

    evidence to indicate that MacDonald was fired because he

    cooperated with the employer's theft investigation.




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    Without such causal linkage, MacDonald cannot assert an

    exception to the at-will employment doctrine. We cannot accept

    MacDonald's suggestion that his cooperation with his employer's

    investigation immunizes him from the findings of the

    investigation. It would defy logic if an employee by reason of

    cooperation could be absolutely protected from the consequences

    of the facts the cooperation yields. While it may not be the

    best of business practice, a company is within its legal rights

    to fire employees on such slender evidence indicating the

    possibility of theft as is offered in the present case. See
    ___

    Beery v. Maryland Medical Lab., Inc., 597 A.2d 516, 523-24 (Ct.
    _____________________________________

    Md. Ct. Spec. App. 1991) (firing an employee on the basis of

    unsubstantiated allegations can hardly be said to contravene any

    clear mandate of public policy); Gillespie v. St. Joseph's Univ.,
    _______________________________

    513 A.2d 471, 472-73 (Pa. Super. 1986) (discharge of an employee

    allegedly falsely accused of a crime of dishonesty not against a

    clear mandate of public policy).

    For the foregoing reasons, we will affirm the judgment

    of the district court.



    Affirmed.
    ________






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Document Info

Docket Number: 92-1802

Filed Date: 1/22/1993

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 9/21/2015