Miracle v. Ohio Dept. of Veterans Servs. (Slip Opinion) , 2019 Ohio 3308 ( 2019 )


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  • [Until this opinion appears in the Ohio Official Reports advance sheets, it may be cited as
    Miracle v. Ohio Dept. of Veterans Servs., Slip Opinion No. 2019-Ohio-3308.]
    NOTICE
    This slip opinion is subject to formal revision before it is published in an
    advance sheet of the Ohio Official Reports. Readers are requested to
    promptly notify the Reporter of Decisions, Supreme Court of Ohio, 65
    South Front Street, Columbus, Ohio 43215, of any typographical or other
    formal errors in the opinion, in order that corrections may be made before
    the opinion is published.
    SLIP OPINION NO. 2019-OHIO-3308
    MIRACLE, APPELLEE, v. OHIO DEPARTMENT OF VETERANS SERVICES ET AL.,
    APPELLANTS.
    [Until this opinion appears in the Ohio Official Reports advance sheets, it
    may be cited as Miracle v. Ohio Dept. of Veterans Servs., Slip Opinion No.
    2019-Ohio-3308.]
    Torts—Wrongful discharge—Neither R.C. 124.27(B) nor R.C. 124.56 expresses a
    clear public policy that would provide basis for a claim under Greeley v.
    Miami Valley Maintenance Contrs., Inc., by civil-service employees
    terminated during their probationary period—Court of appeals’ judgment
    reversed and Court of Claims’ order dismissing former employee’s
    complaint reinstated.
    (No. 2018-0562—Submitted April 23, 2019—Decided August 20, 2019.)
    APPEAL from the Court of Appeals for Franklin County, No. 16AP-885,
    2018-Ohio-819.
    _____________________
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    FRENCH, J.
    {¶ 1} In Greeley v. Miami Valley Maintenance Contrs., Inc., 
    49 Ohio St. 3d 228
    , 
    551 N.E.2d 981
    (1990), we recognized a public-policy exception to the
    employment-at-will doctrine and held that an employee may maintain a common-
    law tort action when the employee has been discharged or disciplined for a reason
    prohibited by statute, 
    id. at paragraph
    one of the syllabus. This discretionary appeal
    requires us to determine whether Ohio’s civil-service laws express a public policy
    that would give rise to Greeley claims by public employees terminated during their
    probationary period.
    {¶ 2} Appellee, James Miracle, filed a complaint alleging that his former
    employer, the Ohio Department of Veterans Services, wrongfully terminated him
    during his probationary period at the direction of the governor’s office. The Tenth
    District Court of Appeals unanimously reversed the trial court’s dismissal of
    Miracle’s complaint under Civ.R. 12(B)(6). Appellants, the department and the
    governor’s office (collectively, “the state”), have appealed the Tenth District’s
    judgment.
    {¶ 3} We conclude that R.C. 124.27(B) and 124.56, the civil-service
    statutes invoked by Miracle, do not express a clear public policy providing the basis
    for a wrongful-discharge claim by a probationary employee. We therefore reverse
    the judgment of the court of appeals and reinstate the trial court’s order dismissing
    Miracle’s complaint.
    FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    {¶ 4} Miracle’s claims arise from the termination of his employment as an
    administrative officer and facilities manager of the veterans’ home located in
    Sandusky, Ohio. As alleged in Miracle’s complaint, prior to his hiring in 2015,
    Miracle had advised the superintendent of the Sandusky Veterans Home, known as
    the Sandusky Domiciliary, and a deputy director of the Department of Veterans
    Services of his adverse job history at the Ohio Department of Corrections. Miracle
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    January Term, 2019
    had previously worked as a building-construction superintendent at the Mansfield
    Correctional Institution. In July 2013, an inmate escaped from the Mansfield
    facility. After an investigation of the incident, the Department of Corrections
    terminated Miracle for failing to secure tools and for falsifying tool-inventory
    documents. Pending Miracle’s appeal of his termination before the State Personnel
    Board of Review (“SPBR”) and after the negotiation of a settlement, the
    Department of Corrections reinstated Miracle to a position at a different
    correctional institution.
    {¶ 5} According to Miracle, the superintendent of the Sandusky
    Domiciliary assured Miracle that his adverse job history would not pose a problem.
    Miracle began working in February 2015 as a probationary employee of the
    Department of Veterans Affairs. At his June 9, 2015 performance review, Miracle
    received ratings of “meets expectations” or “exceeds expectations” in each
    category. Six days later, during Miracle’s probationary period, the department’s
    human-resources director informed Miracle that the department was terminating
    his employment because it “was moving in a different direction.” The department
    declined to provide any additional information. Miracle later learned that Jai
    Chabria, a senior advisor to Governor John Kasich, had directed the superintendent
    to terminate Miracle because of negative press about Miracle’s alleged involvement
    in the Mansfield inmate escape.
    {¶ 6} Following his termination, Miracle filed a four-count complaint in the
    Ohio Court of Claims against the Department of Veterans Services and the
    governor’s office. Count One alleges that Miracle’s termination violated the public
    policy articulated in R.C. 124.27(B) in favor of retaining probationary employees
    who have satisfactorily performed their duties. Count Two asserts a claim for
    wrongful discharge in violation of the public policy articulated in R.C. 124.56. That
    statute provides for an investigation and possible removal of an appointing
    authority who has appointed, removed or suspended an employee in violation of
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    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    R.C. Chapter 124. Count Three asserts wrongful discharge in violation of the
    procedural protections guaranteed by R.C. 124.34 and the Fourteenth Amendment
    to the United States Constitution. Count Four asks for a determination that Chabria
    is not entitled to immunity under R.C. 9.86.
    {¶ 7} The state filed a motion to dismiss Miracle’s complaint under Civ.R.
    12(B)(6) for failure to state a claim. The trial court granted the motion.
    {¶ 8} On appeal, the Tenth District Court of Appeals reversed and
    remanded, reinstating the wrongful-discharge claims Miracle asserted in Counts
    One and Two based on R.C. 124.27(B) and 124.56, respectively. The court also
    reinstated Miracle’s request for an immunity determination in Count Four, which
    the trial court had dismissed for lack of an underlying state-law claim. But the court
    determined that Miracle had abandoned Count Three’s wrongful-discharge claim
    for failure to assert any related assignment of error.
    {¶ 9} We accepted the state’s discretionary appeal, 
    153 Ohio St. 3d 1402
    ,
    2018-Ohio-2380, 
    100 N.E.3d 422
    , which presents two propositions of law:
    1. A Greeley tort is not available under R.C. 124.27 or
    124.56 and, more generally, statutes about public employment
    ordinarily should not support Greeley claims.
    2. Only the employer is subject to a Greeley claim.
    {¶ 10} Miracle has not filed a cross-appeal challenging the court of appeals’
    holding that he abandoned his wrongful-discharge claim based on procedural due
    process. The only claims at issue in this appeal are Miracle’s wrongful-discharge
    claims based on R.C. 124.27(B) and 124.56 and his request for an immunity
    determination.
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    January Term, 2019
    ANALYSIS
    {¶ 11} The traditional rule in Ohio is that a general or indefinite hiring is
    terminable at the will of either the employer or the employee, for any cause or no
    cause. Collins v. Rizkana, 
    73 Ohio St. 3d 65
    , 67, 
    652 N.E.2d 653
    (1995). The tort
    of wrongful discharge in violation of public policy is an exception to this default
    rule. We first recognized the tort in 1990, holding that “[p]ublic policy warrants an
    exception to the employment-at-will doctrine when an employee is discharged or
    disciplined for a reason which is prohibited by statute.” Greeley, 
    49 Ohio St. 3d 228
    , 
    551 N.E.2d 981
    , at paragraph one of the syllabus. Since Greeley, we have
    recognized that sources of public policy other than statutes may provide the basis
    for a wrongful-discharge claim. Painter v. Graley, 
    70 Ohio St. 3d 377
    , 
    639 N.E.2d 51
    (1994), paragraph three of the syllabus.
    {¶ 12} To succeed on a claim for wrongful discharge in violation of public
    policy, a plaintiff must establish four elements: (1) that a clear public policy existed
    and was manifested either in a state or federal constitution, statute or administrative
    regulation or in the common law (“the clarity element”), (2) that dismissing
    employees under circumstances like those involved in the plaintiff’s dismissal
    would jeopardize the public policy (“the jeopardy element”), (3) the plaintiff’s
    dismissal   was    motivated     by    conduct    related     to   the   public   policy
    (“the causation element”), and (4) the employer lacked an overriding legitimate
    business justification for the dismissal (“the overriding-justification element”).
    Collins at 69-70. The clarity and jeopardy elements involve legal questions that the
    court determines. 
    Id. at 70.
    The causation and overriding-justification elements
    involve factual issues that the finder of fact decides. 
    Id. The clarity
    element
    {¶ 13} Miracle invokes two statutes as the basis for his wrongful-discharge
    claims: R.C. 124.27(B) and 124.56. To determine whether these statutes express a
    clear public policy against termination under the circumstances alleged by Miracle,
    5
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    our analysis focuses on the intent of the General Assembly. Sutton v. Tomco
    Machining, Inc., 
    129 Ohio St. 3d 153
    , 2011-Ohio-2723, 
    950 N.E.2d 938
    , ¶ 11. Our
    examination of the language and purposes of the relevant statutes governing civil-
    service employment leads us to conclude that neither R.C. 124.27(B) nor R.C.
    124.56 expresses a clear public policy that would provide the basis for a Greeley
    claim by civil-service employees terminated during their probationary period.
    R.C. 124.27(B)
    {¶ 14} R.C. 124.27(B) governs the appointment and removal of
    probationary civil-service employees and provides:
    No appointment or promotion [to the classified civil service] is final
    until the appointee has satisfactorily served the probationary period.
    If the service of the probationary employee is unsatisfactory, the
    employee may be removed or reduced at any time during the
    probationary period. If the appointing authority decides to remove
    a probationary employee in the service of the state, the appointing
    authority shall communicate the removal to the director.            A
    probationary employee duly removed or reduced in position for
    unsatisfactory service does not have the right to appeal the removal
    or reduction under section 124.34 of the Revised Code.
    {¶ 15} Miracle argues that R.C. 124.27(B) expresses a clear public policy
    against the termination of a probationary employee for reasons other than
    unsatisfactory performance. The state violated that policy, Miracle contends, by
    terminating him despite his having received satisfactory performance reviews. We
    accept the factual allegations in Miracle’s complaint as true and afford him all
    reasonable inferences from those allegations, as we must when reviewing a trial
    court’s decision granting a Civ.R. 12(B)(6) motion to dismiss. Volbers-Klarich v.
    6
    January Term, 2019
    Middletown Mgt., Inc., 
    125 Ohio St. 3d 494
    , 2010-Ohio-2057, 
    929 N.E.2d 434
    ,
    ¶ 12.
    {¶ 16} We nevertheless conclude that R.C. 124.27(B) and Ohio’s civil-
    service scheme as a whole do not express a clear public policy that would support
    recognizing a wrongful-discharge tort for probationary employees. The General
    Assembly has spoken clearly: probationary employees do not enjoy the same rights
    and protections afforded to tenured civil servants. Accepting Miracle’s argument
    would contradict this legislative design by treating probationary civil-service
    employees the same as, if not better than, tenured civil-service employees.
    {¶ 17} First, while Ohio law imposes specific restrictions on the removal
    from the civil service of tenured employees, it leaves the decision to remove a
    probationary employee to the discretion of the appointing authority. Tenured civil-
    service employees may not be removed except for one of the reasons specified in
    R.C. 124.34(A), including “incompetency,” “inefficiency,” “neglect of duty,” and
    “unsatisfactory performance.” “Unsatisfactory performance” includes the failure
    to meet established work standards, goals, and competencies, the failure to
    adequately perform duties, and the failure to complete a training plan or a
    performance-improvement plan. Ohio Adm.Code 123:1-31-05.
    {¶ 18} By contrast, an appointing authority may remove a probationary
    employee for “unsatisfactory service.” R.C. 124.27(B). Neither statute nor rule
    defines “unsatisfactory service.” But the ordinary meaning of the word “service”
    connotes acting “in the interest or under the direction of others” or “for the benefit
    of another.” Black’s Law Dictionary 1576 (10th Ed.2014). Here, even if we accept
    that Miracle satisfactorily performed his workplace duties, R.C. 124.27(B) confers
    discretion on the appointing authority to remove a probationary employee whose
    continued employment would not benefit or advance the interests of the agency.
    {¶ 19} We must also presume that by using the word “service” in R.C.
    124.27(B) but “performance” in R.C. 124.34(A), the legislature intended to impose
    7
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    different legal standards for the termination of probationary and tenured employees.
    See State v. Herbert, 
    49 Ohio St. 2d 88
    , 113, 
    358 N.E.2d 1090
    (1976) (“the use of
    different language gives rise to a presumption that different meanings were
    intended”). The General Assembly did not intend for the performance-based
    grounds for termination prescribed in R.C. 124.34(A) to govern the termination of
    probationary employees. The text of R.C. 124.27(B) does not support Miracle’s
    argument that that statute expresses a public policy disfavoring the termination of
    probationary employees for reasons other than unsatisfactory performance.
    {¶ 20} The General Assembly has also drawn distinctions between the
    posttermination remedies for probationary and tenured civil-service employees.
    Tenured employees have the right to appeal their removal to the SPBR. R.C.
    124.34(B). Probationary employees do not. R.C. 124.27(B). But the SPBR has
    jurisdiction only to affirm, disaffirm or modify decisions of the appointing
    authority.   R.C. 124.34(B).    Because of this statutory limit on the SPBR’s
    jurisdiction, certain remedies, like an award of back pay, may not be available to a
    tenured employee in an SPBR appeal. State ex rel. Weiss v. Indus. Comm., 65 Ohio
    St.3d 470, 476, 
    605 N.E.2d 37
    (1992). We would be turning R.C. Chapter 124 on
    its head if we were to recognize a full-blown tort remedy for probationary
    employees.
    {¶ 21} The evolution of R.C. 124.27 (formerly R.C. 143.20) also reinforces
    our conclusion that R.C. 124.27(B) expresses no public policy in favor of retaining
    probationary employees. Since the statute’s origin in 1913, the General Assembly
    has enacted changes expanding the removal authority of employers while reducing
    the procedural protections guaranteed to probationary employees. Originally, the
    statute allowed the removal of an employee for unsatisfactory service at the end of
    the probationary period, with the approval of the SPBR (formerly, the Civil Service
    Commission). G.C. 486-13, Am.S.B. No. 7, 103 Ohio Laws 704-705; see State ex
    rel. Artman v. McDonough, 
    132 Ohio St. 47
    , 
    4 N.E.2d 982
    (1936), paragraph two
    8
    January Term, 2019
    of the syllabus. If the appointing authority sought to remove an employee during
    the probationary period, the employee enjoyed the procedural protections of G.C.
    486-17, the predecessor to the SPBR appeal process. G.C. 486-13; Walton v.
    Montgomery Cty. Welfare Dept., 
    69 Ohio St. 2d 58
    , 60, 
    430 N.E.2d 930
    (1982).
    {¶ 22} In 1961, the General Assembly enacted a two-tier scheme under
    which a probationary employee enjoyed the full appeal rights of a tenured employee
    during the first half of the probationary period but could be removed during the
    second half. Former R.C. 143.20, Am.Sub.H.B. No. 126, 129 Ohio Law 1079,
    1080-1081; see Walton at 61. Later that same decade, the General Assembly also
    eliminated the requirement of SPBR approval of the removal of probationary
    employees. Former R.C. 143.20, Am.Sub.S.B. No. 297, 133 Ohio Laws, Part I,
    811, 862.
    {¶ 23} In 1998, the General Assembly took away the right to appeal to the
    SPBR and authorized the appointing authority to remove an employee at any time
    during the probationary period for unsatisfactory service.         Former 124.27,
    Am.Sub.S.B. No. 144, 147 Ohio Laws, Part IV, 8122, 8156; State ex rel. Rose v.
    Ohio Dept. of Rehab. & Corr., 
    91 Ohio St. 3d 453
    , 457, 
    746 N.E.2d 1103
    (2001).
    Recognizing a Greeley claim here would contravene the General Assembly’s
    unambiguous intent, as expressed over decades of statutory amendments, to expand
    the appointing authority’s power to remove probationary employees.
    {¶ 24} For these reasons, we conclude that R.C. 124.27(B) does not express
    a clear public policy that would support a Greeley claim by a probationary civil-
    service employee. And because Miracle cannot satisfy the clarity element of his
    wrongful-discharge claim based on R.C. 124.27(B), we need not address whether
    his termination jeopardizes any public policy expressed in the statute. See 
    Painter, 70 Ohio St. 3d at 385
    , 
    639 N.E.2d 51
    (dismissing Greeley claim for lack of clear
    public policy without addressing jeopardy element).
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    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    R.C. 124.56
    {¶ 25} We turn next to Miracle’s second wrongful-discharge claim.
    Miracle contends that the state terminated him in violation of the public policy
    articulated in R.C. 124.56, which prohibits the abuse of power by any person with
    authority to appoint or remove a civil-service employee. We disagree and conclude
    that R.C. 124.56 does not express any public policy that would provide the basis
    for a wrongful-discharge tort claim.
    {¶ 26} R.C. 124.56 states:
    When the [SPBR] or a municipal or civil service township
    civil service commission has reason to believe that any officer,
    board, commission, head of a department, or person having the
    power of appointment, layoff, suspension, or removal, has abused
    such power by making an appointment, layoff, reduction,
    suspension, or removal of an employee under his or their jurisdiction
    in violation of this chapter of the Revised Code, the board or
    commission shall make an investigation, and if it finds that a
    violation of this chapter, or the intent and spirit of this chapter has
    occurred, it shall make a report to the governor, * * * who may
    remove forthwith such guilty officer, board, commission, head of
    department, or person.
    {¶ 27} R.C. 124.56 authorizes the SPBR to investigate officials and to
    recommend the removal of officials who abuse their powers in violation of R.C.
    Chapter 124. But it does not confer any substantive rights on employees or impose
    any enforceable duties on employers apart from the rights and duties established
    elsewhere in R.C. Chapter 124. We have previously acknowledged that R.C.
    124.56 “says nothing about an adjudication of individual employee rights” and
    10
    January Term, 2019
    offers no relief to the employee aside from the investigation and removal of the
    offending official. State ex rel. Carver v. Hull, 
    70 Ohio St. 3d 570
    , 575, 
    639 N.E.2d 1175
    (1994). The statute provides a mechanism to enforce violations of R.C.
    124.27 and the rest of R.C. Chapter 124. It does not express a clear public policy,
    apart from the General Assembly’s already comprehensive scheme in R.C. Chapter
    124, that would support recognizing a wrongful-termination tort claim.
    {¶ 28} We therefore agree with the state that a Greeley tort remedy is not
    available on the basis of R.C. 124.27(B) or 124.56 and that the Court of Claims
    correctly dismissed Counts One and Two of Miracle’s complaint. While the state’s
    first proposition of law asserts more broadly that statutes concerning public
    employment generally should not support Greeley claims, we address only the
    statutes that Miracle invoked as the basis for his wrongful-discharge claims.
    The parties’ remaining arguments
    R.C. 9.86 immunity determination
    {¶ 29} Miracle’s remaining claim asks for a determination from the Ohio
    Court of Claims that Jai Chabria, then a senior advisor to Governor John Kasich, is
    not entitled to immunity under R.C. 9.86 for his alleged role in directing Miracle’s
    termination. R.C. 9.86 generally immunizes state officers and employees from
    personal liability for civil actions arising from the performance of their duties,
    “unless the officer’s or employee’s actions were manifestly outside the scope of his
    employment or official responsibilities, or unless the officer or employee acted with
    malicious purpose, in bad faith, or in a wanton or reckless manner.” R.C. 9.86; see
    also Theobald v. Univ. of Cincinnati, 
    111 Ohio St. 3d 541
    , 2006-Ohio-6208, 
    857 N.E.2d 573
    , ¶ 13.
    {¶ 30} Under the plain language of R.C. 9.86, the Court of Claims has
    authority to decide immunity questions only in “any civil action that arises under
    the law of this state.” See Conley v. Shearer, 
    64 Ohio St. 3d 284
    , 292, 
    595 N.E.2d 862
    (1992) (R.C. 9.86 applies only to state-law claims and not to federal claims);
    11
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    Cotten v. Ohio Dept. of Rehab. & Corr., 10th Dist. Franklin No. 18AP-240, 2018-
    Ohio-3392, ¶ 12 (same). Given our conclusion that Miracle failed to state any
    wrongful-discharge claim arising under state law, the Court of Claims has no basis
    upon which to conduct an immunity determination. Therefore, the Court of Claims
    correctly dismissed Count Four of Miracle’s complaint.
    Greeley claims against nonemployers
    {¶ 31} Finally, the state argues that the court of appeals wrongly allowed
    Miracle to pursue his Greeley claims against the governor’s office, an entity that
    was not his employer. Only the plaintiff’s employer, the state asserts as its second
    proposition of law, is subject to a Greeley claim. Because we have concluded that
    Miracle has not stated a Greeley claim as a matter of law, we need not address here
    whether his complaint properly named the governor’s office as a defendant.
    CONCLUSION
    {¶ 32} We conclude that R.C. 124.27(B) and 124.56 do not express a clear
    public policy that provides the basis for a wrongful-discharge claim for civil-service
    employees terminated during their probationary period. Accordingly, we reverse
    the judgment of the court of appeals and reinstate the trial court’s order dismissing
    Miracle’s complaint.
    Judgment reversed
    and trial-court order reinstated.
    O’CONNOR, C.J., and DEWINE, J., concur.
    FISCHER, J., concurs, with an opinion.
    DONNELLY, J., concurs, with an opinion.
    KENNEDY and STEWART, JJ., concur in judgment only.
    _________________
    FISCHER, J., concurring.
    {¶ 33} I join the majority opinion.      I write separately to address any
    potential concerns regarding the court’s rejection of appellee James Miracle’s R.C.
    12
    January Term, 2019
    124.56 wrongful-discharge claim by concluding that the claim fails on the clarity
    element.
    {¶ 34} In its opinion, the Tenth District Court of Appeals focused on
    whether Miracle had satisfied the jeopardy element in regard to his R.C. 124.56
    claim. 2018-Ohio-819, 
    108 N.E.3d 220
    , ¶ 13, 17. The court asserted that the state
    had conceded for purposes of its motion to dismiss that R.C. 124.56 expresses a
    clear public policy supporting Miracle’s claim. 
    Id. at ¶
    12 (“defendants admitted
    that R.C. 124.56 expressed a clear public policy ‘prohibiting the abuse of power by
    “any officer, board, commission, head of a department, or person” who possesses
    the power to remove a civil service employee’ ”).
    {¶ 35} The record in this case indicates, however, that the state made no
    such concession or admission. In its motion to dismiss, the state asserted that all of
    Miracle’s claims for wrongful discharge in violation of public policy “fail at the
    very first element: identification of a public policy allegedly violated by his
    employer, the Department.” Later in the motion, the state argued that even if R.C.
    124.56 established a public policy, Miracle’s claim would fail on the jeopardy
    element. Miracle acknowledged the state’s position in his response to the state’s
    motion to dismiss, in which he noted that “[d]efendants argue that ORC § 124.56,
    which prohibits the abuse of power by persons having the power to remove civil
    servants, does not provide a clear public policy sufficient to support Plaintiff’s
    wrongful discharge claim.”
    {¶ 36} Further, in the state’s brief before the Tenth District, it did not
    concede or admit that R.C. 124.56 expresses a clear public policy supporting
    Miracle’s wrongful-discharge claim. Instead, the state argued that even if one were
    to assume that the statute expresses a clear public policy, the Court of Claims
    properly dismissed Miracle’s claim because he had failed to satisfy the jeopardy
    element.   Thus, the state never did concede or admit that that Miracle had
    established a clear public policy as to R.C. 124.56 in support of his claim.
    13
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    {¶ 37} Miracle argues in his brief here that because the state conceded that
    R.C. 124.56 articulates a clear public policy, the clarity element in regard to that
    claim is not at issue in this appeal. The state, however, never made any concession,
    and, in fact, it has argued in both its memorandum in support of jurisdiction and in
    its merit brief that Miracle had failed to satisfy the clarity element.
    {¶ 38} Thus, because the state never conceded or admitted that Miracle
    satisfied the clarity element as to his R.C. 124.56 claim and because this issue has
    been raised and briefed in this appeal, the majority opinion properly disposes of
    Miracle’s R.C. 124.56 wrongful-discharge claim by determining that he failed to
    show that the statute expresses a clear public policy.
    _________________
    DONNELLY, J., concurring.
    {¶ 39} I join the majority opinion, including its holding that the particular
    statutes at issue here—R.C. 124.27(B) and 124.56—do not directly express a public
    policy that supports appellee James Miracle’s wrongful-discharge claim pursuant
    to Greeley v. Miami Valley Maintenance Contrs., Inc., 
    49 Ohio St. 3d 228
    , 
    551 N.E.2d 981
    (1990). I write separately to stress that our decision today does not
    reach the state’s sweeping assertion that Greeley is generally inapplicable to any
    and all statutes related to public employment. Therefore, I believe that the majority
    opinion should not be read as foreclosing the possibility that a probationary public
    employee could pursue a wrongful-discharge tort claim based on an employer’s
    violation of some other statute contained in the scheme governing public
    employment.
    _________________
    Adams & Liming, L.L.C., and Sharon Cason-Adams, for appellee.
    Dave Yost, Ohio Attorney General, Benjamin M. Flowers, Deputy
    Solicitor, Michael J. Hendershot, Chief Deputy Solicitor, and Lee Ann Rabe,
    Assistant Attorney General, for appellants.
    14
    January Term, 2019
    The Gittes Law Group, Frederick M. Gittes, and Jeffrey P. Vardaro, urging
    affirmance for amicus curiae Ohio Employment Lawyers Association.
    Willis Spangler Starling and Jason E. Starling, urging affirmance for amicus
    curiae Ohio Association for Justice.
    _________________
    15