Why Most Employment Contract Breach/Wrongful Termination Claims Are Doomed In NY December 29, 2009
Before addressing the merits of a breach of contract/wrongful termination claim against an employer, the threshold question that must be asked is “if I win, is a judgment against my former employer collectible?” Unfortunately, in this economy, the answer to this question is increasingly “no.” Consequently, even if you have the most meritorious claim, external economic factors may render the claim moot before it even begins.
But assuming you clear that first hurdle, there is a second question that may prove even more daunting: Did you have a contract, or were you an “at-will” employee? And the answer to this question is critical, because absent a written contract, the agreement “is presumed to be a hiring at will that may be freely terminated by either party at any time for any reason or even for no reason. Lobosco v. New York Telephone Co./NYNEX, 96 NY2d 312, 316 (2001). Furthermore, there is no exception for firings that violate public policy such as, for example, discharge for exposing an employer’s illegal activities, UNLESS the employee made its employer aware of an express written policy limiting the right of discharge and the employee detrimentally relied on that policy in accepting employment. See, Weiner v. McGraw Hill, Inc., 57 NY2d 458 (1982).
As you might well surmise, this condition is rare indeed.
Jonathan Cooper is a New York Business Litigation and New York Commercial Litigation Lawyer with a focus on New York breach of contract and New York business fraud claims before the Nassau, Queens, Brooklyn, Bronx, Westchester and Suffolk County courts of New York State. For more information, feel free to contact his Long Island office at 516-791-5700.
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Posted Under: Breach of contract, at-will, commercial litigation, wrongful termination Tags: at-will, at-will employment, breach of contract, employee at-will, employment litigation new york, jonathan cooper, new york, new york law, wrongful termination






