| Page 96 606 A.2d 96
121 Lab.Cas. P 56,900, 7 IER Cases
781 Richard L. MERRILL, Plaintiff Below,
Appellant,
v.
CROTHALL-AMERICAN, INC., a Delaware
corporation, and United
Health Services, Inc., a Delaware
corporation,
Defendants Below, Appellees. Supreme Court of Delaware.
Submitted: March 3, 1992.
Decided: April 21, 1992.
Page 97
Affirmed in part. Reversed in
part and remanded in part.
Gary W. Aber (argued), and Donald
L. Gouge, Jr., Heiman, Aber & Goldlust,
Wilmington, for appellant.
Richard G. Elliott, Jr. (argued),
and Theodosia Price, Richards, Layton &
Finger, Wilmington, for appellees.
Before HORSEY, WALSH and HOLLAND,
JJ.
WALSH, Justice:
This is an appeal from the entry
of summary judgment against plaintiff-below
Richard L. Merrill ("Merrill"). Merrill
brought this action against
Crothall-American, Inc. ("Crothall"), his
former employer, for wrongfully terminating
his employment, claiming breach of contract,
fraud and breach of an implied covenant of
good faith and fair dealing. The Superior
Court entered summary judgment against him
on all counts, ruling that no material
factual dispute existed on the record before
it. We affirm that ruling as to the breach
of contract and fraud counts. However, we
hold that the record before the trial court
posed a material issue of fact underlying
Merrill's claim of breach of an implied
covenant of good faith and fair dealing. We
therefore reverse the Superior Court's
summary disposition
Page 98 of Count III of Merrill's complaint and
remand the case to that court for further
proceedings.
I
The discovery record in the trial
court, viewed from a perspective which
favors Merrill as the non-movant, reflects
the following events.
In the summer of 1986, Merrill
was working as a store manager for a marina
in southern Delaware. Apparently
dissatisfied with that position, he answered
a help wanted advertisement appearing in the
Wilmington News Journal in August of that
year. The advertisement was placed by
Crothall and sought an individual, on a
temporary basis, to aid in the development
of a computerized preventive maintenance
system. Merrill sent a background resume to
the specified address.
In response to the resume,
Crothall contacted Merrill and set up an
interview for October 8. On that day Merrill
arrived for the interview, completed an
application for the temporary position and
was interviewed by Charlie Collins, a
Crothall employee. Their conversation lasted
only fifteen to twenty minutes, however,
after which Merrill was "taken across the
hall" to speak with another Crothall
employee, Bill Woomer ("Woomer"), about
another position Crothall was attempting to
fill. Unlike the advertised job this
position was not temporary, but full-time.
After meeting with Woomer, and later with
Woomer's supervisor, Merrill was offered the
full-time position in a telephone
conversation on October 14, 1986. The
proposed employment was that of Director of
Plant Operations at King's Harbor Care
Center ("KHCC"), a Crothall client located
in New York City.
Crothall is a contract service
organization which provides facilities
management for institutions such as schools
and hospitals. One of the duties Crothall
contracts to perform is the hiring of
management personnel. These personnel,
though working at the client's facility, are
in fact employees of Crothall. In the
present case, the Superior Court found that
Crothall had a contractual duty to provide
KHCC, a health care facility, with a
Director of Plant Operations by October 14,
1986, just six days after Merrill was first
interviewed and the very day he was offered
the position.
At the time of his interview with
Woomer, Merrill expressed concern as to
whether he was qualified for the KHCC
position. Although he possesses a degree in
chemical engineering and an MBA, Merrill had
no experience in the health care field nor
in plant maintenance. After being assured of
adequate support and training,
1
however, Merrill accepted the position
without visiting the site. The agreement was
formalized two weeks later by a letter from
Woomer to Merrill dated October 29, 1986 and
an employment contract between Crothall and
Merrill dated October 27, 1986.
The relationship between Merrill
and Crothall proved to be short-lived.
Crothall claims that less than a month after
Merrill accepted the position it began to
receive complaints from KHCC about Merrill's
performance. At one point, Woomer wrote to
Merrill citing some of his shortcomings,
including lack of interpersonal and
managerial skills and failure to develop a
specific program. Woomer informed Merrill
that his position was "tenuous." On February
9, 1987, Crothall terminated Merrill's
employment, citing numerous problems with
his performance.
II
Merrill claimed in the trial
court that the reasons asserted by Crothall
for his termination are not the actual basis
for his release. He contended that, from the
very beginning of their relationship,
Crothall intended that Merrill remain in the
position only until Crothall could find a
more qualified candidate. He argued that he
was merely a "warm body" who satisfied
Crothall's contractual duty to fill the
Director's position at KHCC by October 14,
1986. He supported this assertion with
documentation
Page 99 purporting to show that Crothall interviewed
the person who eventually replaced him, John
Blake, only two days after Merrill was
offered the job. Furthermore, Merrill has
produced an affidavit by K.C. Hoke, an award
winning engineer employed by Crothall, which
states, in part, that:
Mr. Woomer told me on several
occasions that Dick Merrill was hired to
fulfill the contract that was signed between
Crothall-American and King's Harbor Care
Center, until someone else could be hired.
Woomer also told me that Crothall-American
needed someone immediately because the
contract had already been signed.
On the strength of this evidence
Merrill posits three distinct theories of
recovery. He claims that his discharge
breached his employment contract because the
offer he accepted on October 14, 1986 was
for a "permanent" position. His fraud count
is based on Crothall's false representation
that his position would be "permanent" and
that he would be adequately trained. Finally
he asserts that by inducing Merrill to
accept the position without informing him of
its intent to replace him as soon as a
"qualified" candidate could be obtained,
Crothall acted in bad faith.
The Superior Court rejected all
these claims. It reasoned that the only
evidence Merrill had produced to support the
permanent position representation were
statements by Woomer made in February of
1987, well after the employment relationship
had begun. It further noted that in his
deposition Merrill admitted he knew from the
very beginning that his employment could be
terminated by Crothall at any time for any
reason. Given this evidence, the court
reasoned, Merrill had failed to make a
showing that he could rebut the presumption
under settled Delaware law that an
employment contract is at-will. The trial
court also ruled that this same knowledge of
the indefinite nature of his employment
precluded any assertion that Crothall
fraudulently misled him to believe his
employment was permanent.
In its grant of summary judgment,
the Superior Court failed to address
specifically the implied covenant claim.
However, in its order denying certification
of an interlocutory appeal to this Court,
the Superior Court seemed to imply that
there could be no breach of an implied
covenant of good faith and fair dealing here
because there could be no showing of fraud.
After the remaining issues in the case were
resolved, Merrill appealed to this Court.
III
This case comes from a trial
court's grant of summary judgment following
review of what is, essentially, a paper
record. Applying the case dispositive
provisions of Superior Court Civil Rule
56(c), the court ruled as a matter of law
that Merrill was unable to prevail. This
Court examines de novo questions of law
decided by a lower court and we thus
exercise plenary review. Fiduciary Trust Co.
v. Fiduciary Trust Co., Del.Supr., 445 A.2d
927 (1982).
The purpose of summary judgment
is to avoid the delay and expense of a trial
where the ultimate fact finder, whether
judge or jury, has nothing to decide. 6
Moore's Federal Practice p 56.04 (1992).
Thus, entry of summary judgment is proper
only where there are no material factual
disputes. Moore v. Sizemore, Del.Supr., 405
A.2d 679, 680 (1979). If, however, there are
material factual disputes, that is, if the
parties are in disagreement concerning the
factual predicate for the legal principles
they advance, summary judgment is not
warranted.
The role of a trial court when
faced with a motion for summary judgment is
to identify disputed factual issues whose
resolution is necessary to decide the case,
but not to decide such issues.
U.S. v. Diebold, Inc., 369 U.S. 654, 82
S.Ct. 993, 8 L.Ed.2d 176 (1962). In
discharging this function, the court must
view the evidence in the light most
favorable to the non-moving party. Adickes
v. S.H. Kress & Co., 398 U.S. 144, 157, 90
S.Ct. 1598, 1608, 26 L.Ed.2d 142 (1970).
This means it will accept as established all
undisputed factual assertions, made by
either party, and accept the
Page 100 non-movant's version of any disputed facts.
Adickes, 398 U.S. at 158-59, 90 S.Ct. at
1609. From those accepted facts the court
will draw all rational inferences which
favor the non-moving party. Id.
In Fiduciary Trust Co. v.
Fiduciary Trust Co., Del.Supr., 445 A.2d 927
(1982), this Court, in referring to the
standard of review which governs appeals
from the grant of summary judgment,
indicated that it would defer to the factual
findings of the trial court unless "clearly
wrong." In that case, however, the trial
court's decision had been rendered on
cross-motions for summary judgment. In such
a procedural posture the parties implicitly
concede the absence of material factual
disputes and acknowledge the sufficiency of
the record to support their respective
motions. Where, as here, appellate review is
directed to the granting of summary judgment
in the face the non-movant's claim that
factual disputes exist, no such deference is
warranted. This Court is thus free to
determine, de novo whether the record
reflects the existence of material factual
disputes.
From an appellate perspective, a
decision granting summary judgment over the
objection of the non-movant, does not,
strictly speaking, present for review
"factual findings" but rather presents the
legal conclusion that there is no factual
bar to the determination of the legal merit
of the movant's position. Since that
determination is made on a paper record we
are free to draw our own inferences as to
the legal significance of such evidence.
Given the same record, the Court is as
institutionally competent to discern the
existence of factual disputes as is the
trial court. 6 Moore's Federal Practice p
56.27 (1992). The scope of our review is
therefore unqualified.
IV
We now turn to Merrill's specific
arguments on appeal.
2
Merrill first contends that the Superior
Court erred in granting summary judgment on
his fraud claim because he had clearly
alleged and supported his contention that
Crothall had represented to him that his
position would be "permanent" when it in
fact was not. He complains that the Superior
Court mistakenly extended the broad
discretion accorded employers under at-will
employment contracts as constituting a
defense to a claim of fraud. He further
argues that the practical effect of the
lower court's ruling is to allow an employer
to misrepresent any aspect of a particular
job offer as long as the employee knows that
the position is "at-will."
A common law action for fraud is
well recognized under Delaware law.
Stephenson v. Capano Development, Inc.,
Del.Supr.,
462 A.2d 1069 (1983). An
essential element of such a claim, however,
is that the alleged victim not be aware of
the true facts which are misrepresented.
Harman v. Masoneilan Intern., Inc.,
Del.Supr., 442 A.2d 487, 499 (1982). In the
context of the fraud claim, Merrill's
arguments regarding the proper balancing of
freedom of contract and employee's rights
are essentially irrelevant. Although Merrill
alleges that Crothall misrepresented the
position as permanent, he clearly admitted
in his deposition that he knew at all
relevant times that it was not. This
admission, coupled with the written contract
he signed which plainly describes the
at-will nature of the employment, is
undisputed evidence of the extent of
Merrill's knowledge at the time he accepted
employment. Given this evidence, we believe
the Superior Court was entirely correct in
concluding that Merrill would never be able
to prove he possessed the requisite lack of
knowledge concerning the permanency of his
employment. The absence of such an element
is fatal to the fraud claim. We therefore
affirm the entry of summary judgment as to
Merrill's claim of fraud.
V
Merrill next argues the Superior
Court erred in granting summary judgment on
Page 101 his claim that Crothall breached an implied
covenant of good faith and fair dealing. In
a separate count of the complaint, Merrill
alleged that Crothall through Woomer, failed
to act in good faith by inducing him to
accept an offer of employment even though it
was Woomer's unspoken intention that Merrill
remain in the position only temporarily. As
a preliminary matter, we must determine
whether Merrill could recover on such a
claim, given any set of facts to support it.
We must thus determine whether this claim
constitutes a cognizable cause of action
under Delaware law.
Merrill relies on an unreported
decision of the Superior Court for the
proposition that an implied covenant of good
faith and fair dealing exists in every
employment contract in Delaware. See
Shockley v. General Foods Corp., Del.Super.,
C.A. 87C-DE-13, Chandler, J., 1988 WL 102983
(Sept. 28, 1988). That decision, however,
merely assumed without deciding that this
Court would adopt such a rule. Shockley,
slip op. at 9. We have, in fact, never
addressed this precise question.
The proposition that implied
covenants of good faith and fair dealing
underlie a contractual relationship, is not
a concept strange to Delaware law. In Blish
v. Thompson Automatic Arms Corp., Del.Supr.,
64 A.2d 581 (1948), for example, when
construing an underwriting agreement this
Court noted that the "question involved
[was] one of good faith, proper motive and
fair dealing, which by express terms or by
implication is written into every contract."
Id. at 597. At common law the duty of fair
dealing and good faith was deemed impliedly
to be a part of contracts of every kind. See
Restatement (Second) of Contracts § 204
(1979); 17 Am.Jur.2d Contracts § 380 (1990);
Corbin on Contracts § 654A (Supp.1991).
Other jurisdictions have expressly extended
the concept to at-will employment contracts.
See, e.g., Magnan v. Anaconda Industries,
Inc., Conn.Super., 429 A.2d 492 (1980);
Fortune v. National Cash Register Co., 373
Mass. 96, 364 N.E.2d 1251 (1977);
Monge v. Beebe Rubber Co., 114 N.H. 130, 316
A.2d 549 (1974).
We recognize that there is
tension between the self-interest which an
employer is legally entitled to pursue in
all contractual undertakings and the
requirement not to overreach in the hiring
process. In the absence of statutory or
collective bargaining restrictions, the
parties to an employment agreement are free
to pursue their separate economic goals. An
employer may be motivated by its own
legitimate business interests when making
employment decisions and it may advance
those interests, for the most part, however
it chooses. Fortune, 364 N.E.2d at 1256. We
believe, however, that holding an employer
to a requirement of good faith when making
employment contracts represents a minimal,
and wholly justifiable, interference in the
management of its business. Such a
requirement merely prevents one side from
obtaining an unfair advantage when
bargaining for a contract. An employer has
wide latitude in deciding how it conducts
its business including its employment
undertakings, but it may not do so by
trickery or deceit. We therefore hold that
every employment contract made under the
laws of this State, consonant with general
principles of contract law, includes an
implied covenant of good faith and fair
dealing.
What is required for a showing
that an implied covenant of fair dealing has
been breached is another matter. It has been
said that "to constitute a breach of the
implied covenant of good faith, the conduct
of the employer must constitute 'an aspect
of fraud, deceit or misrepresentation.' "
Magnan, 429 A.2d at 494 (quoting
A. John Cohen Ins. v. Middlesex Ins. Co., 8
Mass.App. 178, 392 N.E.2d 862 (1979)).
We think this characterization of an
employer's duty under the covenant is
accurate. The lodestar here is candor. An
employer acts in bad faith when it induces
another to enter into an employment contract
through actions, words, or the withholding
of information, which is intentionally
deceptive in some way material to the
contract. Such conduct constitutes "an
aspect of fraud, deceit or
misrepresentation."
Page 102
In the present case, Merrill
alleged that Crothall induced him to enter
into the employment contract by concealing
from him its intention to employ him only
temporarily while allowing him to proceed
under the belief that the duration of the
employment was, at the least, indefinite. So
stated, a valid claim for breach of an
implied covenant of fair dealing is properly
pleaded. An employer may not in good faith
knowingly allow an employee to assume that
the duration of an employment contract is
indefinite, when it is, in secret
contemplation of the employer, of limited
duration. The duration of an employment
contract is clearly material to one's
decision to accept a new position,
especially where, as here, the assumption of
the new position requires surrender of
present employment, however minimal by
comparison, and relocation to another state.
Our law provides a heavy presumption that a
contract for employment, unless otherwise
expressly stated, is at-will in nature, with
duration indefinite. See Heideck v. Kent
General Hospital, Inc., Del.Supr., 446 A.2d
1095, 1096 (1982). Just as this presumption
protects employers from being liable on the
employment contract for a period beyond
which future events dictate termination, the
covenant of good faith, in this context,
protects employees from receiving under the
contract less than what was bargained for.
To survive a motion for summary
judgment, Merrill was required to support
his claim with facts sufficient to show that
a material issue existed as to one or more
of the elements for recovery for breach of
the implied covenant.
Moore v. Sizemore, 405 A.2d at 681. We
believe he has done so. From the affidavit
of K.C. Hoke and the evidence that Crothall
was, from the inception of its approach to
Merrill, actively pursuing Merrill's
eventual replacement, John Blake, a rational
jury could infer that Crothall never
intended that Merrill stay in the position
longer than was necessary to secure a
suitable replacement. This evidence lends
support to Merrill's claim that he was
nothing more than a "warm body" hired to
satisfy Crothall's contractual obligation to
KHCC to have a facilities engineer on site
by a fixed date. The further evidence that
the position was represented by Crothall as
"at-will," i.e. of indefinite duration with
no preconceived fixed termination date,
would supply the "aspect of fraud, deceit or
misrepresentation" to support a jury finding
in Merrill's favor. Where the non-moving
party brings forth facts which, if believed
by the jury, would support a finding of a
breach of the implied covenant of good
faith, summary judgment is inappropriate.
Itek Corp. v. Chicago Aerial Indus., Inc.,
Del.Supr.,
248 A.2d 625 (1968).
VI
Although our holding in this case
permits Merrill's claim for breach of
contract to proceed, certain caveats are in
order. Merrill's claim for damages must be
considered in light of the fact that the
position he believed he was accepting,
although described as permanent, was of
indefinite duration to continue at the will
of his employer. If it appears from the
evidence that his employment would have been
terminated for reasons arising after the
inception of employment and unrelated to the
alleged bad faith of Crothall, his recovery
might well be limited to damages
attributable to inducement, i.e., that
previous employment surrendered and the
expense of relocation.
Finally, we do not rest our
holding on, nor did we consider, what
constitutes justification for termination of
an at-will employment contract. Although the
implied covenant of good faith and fair
dealing may be breached by termination in
some circumstances, see, e.g., Magnan, 429
A.2d at 494; Fortune, 364 N.E.2d at 1255-6;
Monge, 316 A.2d at 551, or some other public
policy implicated by such a termination, we
have not here addressed such concerns. This
case involves a claim that the employer
deceptively induced the employee to enter
into an employment contract. The termination
of employment merely gave effect to the
deception. The asserted bad faith is
therefore more analogous to a charge of
fraud in the inducement than one of wrongful
discharge.
Page 103 Nothing said here is to be construed as
limiting an employer's freedom to terminate
an at-will employment contract for its own
legitimate business, or even highly
subjective, reasons. Such a contract is
still terminable by either party for any
reason not motivated by bad faith.
The judgment of the Superior
Court is Affirmed in part and Reversed in
part and Remanded for further proceedings
consistent with this decision.
1 The exact nature of these assurances
are disputed by Crothall.
2 In this Court, Merrill has not raised
his breach of contract claim. Consequently,
the Superior Court's resolution of that
issue is final. |